Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Each track on this album was featured in one or more episodes of the series. Along with songs popular in the 1960s, [4] the album also features a song by The Decemberists, three songs performed by cast members (Christina Hendricks, Jessica Paré, and Robert Morse), two suites by Mad Men composer David Carbonara, [5] and the main theme music by RJD2.
If the fifth season of Mad Men has dealt with generational divides in a more abstract sense—the 'youth' movement versus the old guard—then 'At the Codfish Ball' dealt with this on a hyper-personal level." [5] Time magazine writer Nate Rawlings liked the episode's three solid plot lines for Peggy, Megan and Sally. About the latter two, he ...
"A Little Kiss" was the most watched episode of Mad Men to that point, with 3.5 million viewers and 1.6 million viewers in the 18-49 demographic. Before the fifth season, Mad Men had never got above a 1.00 in the 18-49 demographic. [24] The premiere's core viewer demographic was adults aged 25–54 at 1.7 million viewers.
Mad Men episodes: Episode nos. Season 6 Episodes 1 & 2: Directed by: Scott Hornbacher: Written by: Matthew Weiner: Featured music "Hawaiian Wedding Song" by Elvis Presley [1] Original air date: April 7, 2013 () Running time: 89 minutes: Guest appearances; Ray Abruzzo as Jonesy (the doorman) Kerris Dorsey as Sandy; Episode chronology
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
David Carbonara is an American film and TV composer. He is best known for his work on the critically acclaimed TV series Mad Men.His other television shows include Vegas, The Romanoffs, the mini series The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe, as well as producing original songs for the period drama The Last Tycoon.
Andrew Johnston, writing for Slant Magazine, considered it the show's "most entertaining" episode to date, and wrote that its ending "beautifully demonstrates the level of insight that makes Mad Men so special." [2] In December 2013, Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club gave the episode a full "A" grade, writing retrospectively: [3]
At the end of the first half of Season 7, Bert appears to Don as an apparition in the SC&P lobby, and goes into a song and dance of "The Best Things in Life Are Free", surrounded by smiling, dancing secretaries instead of showgirls, before disappearing. Later, during Season 7's "Lost Horizon", Cooper's ghost appears to Don in his car, chatting ...