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In 2007, Moses joined the cast of AMC period drama series Mad Men playing a recurring role as Herman "Duck" Phillips. [5] In 2009, he received another Screen Actors Guild Award, this time for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. [2] The series ended in 2014.
Instead, Duck uncovers Bob's secret: much like Don Draper, Bob's adopted an assumed identity to compensate for an embarrassing and impoverished past. None of his college references check out, he's from a poor area of West Virginia, and he was the manservant of a vice-president at Brown Brothers Harriman – not an employee of the firm itself in ...
Herman "Duck" Phillips informs Don that Sterling Cooper's client, Playtex, wants a new campaign more like the Maidenform "dream" campaign. Peggy, Salvatore, Ken Cosgrove, Paul Kinsey, and Frederick Rumsen discuss the Playtex campaign.
The next day at work, Jane brings in shirts from Menken's for Don to use. Freddy drops by to see Peggy and realizes the executives loved the presentation when she stood in. Don is summoned to Roger's office, where he finds Duck Phillips and Pete. He is finally informed about Freddy’s accident in the office.
Pete confronts Don with the information that he knows Don's real name is Dick Whitman and attempts to blackmail him for a promotion. Don neutralizes the threat by telling Bert, "I've pulled the trigger on hiring Duck Phillips," which he knew would incite Pete to reveal Don's true identity to Bert.
Duck Phillips calls her to gift her the creative director job at the ad agency he intends to start. She acts flattered, but turns him down. She acts flattered, but turns him down. Meanwhile, Don receives a message from Stephanie, Anna Draper's niece, that he should call her back immediately.
Sterling Cooper travels further into the "Pepsi Generation" as signing youth talent becomes a priority at the behest of "Duck" Phillips, Draper's choice as head of accounts from the previous year. Duck then convinces the firm to try and sign his old client, American Airlines , after the airline publicly announces a shift in marketing.
Peggy becomes romantically involved with Duck Phillips , who is seeking to lure her and Pete away to his firm. In considering the move, Peggy is motivated by how underutilized she has been at Sterling Cooper, and by Draper in particular, who has shut down her attempt to get a raise.