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The seventh and final season of the American television drama series Mad Men premiered on April 13, 2014, and concluded on May 17, 2015, on AMC.The season consists of 14 episodes split into two, seven-episode parts: the first half, titled "The Beginning", aired from April 13 to May 25, 2014; and the second half, titled "The End of an Era", aired from April 5 to May 17, 2015. [2]
"Person to Person" is the series finale of the American drama television series Mad Men. It is the fourteenth episode of the seventh season and the 92nd episode overall. The episode was written and directed by series creator Matthew Weiner, and originally aired on AMC on May 17, 2015. The finale received critical acclaim and in the years ...
A New York Times reviewer called the series groundbreaking for "luxuriating in the not-so-distant past." [45] Regarding season 3, Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe wrote "it's an absolutely gorgeous, amber-tinted vision of the early 1960s" and added "detailed with enough 1950s-era accoutrements to seem authentically Camelot."
Disney/Mike Taing 9-1-1 left fans on a major cliffhanger after Eddie Diaz found himself drawn to a mysterious figure who reminded him of someone from his past. Warning: Spoilers below for Season 7 ...
The New York-born character actor was also known for his work in ‘Entourage’, ‘Sex and the City’ and ‘This Is Us’ Eddie Driscoll death: Mad Men actor dies aged 60 after cancer battle ...
Later in the Season 4 episode "Blowing Smoke", when the agency is forced to radically downsize its staff following the loss of the Lucky Strike account, an angered Cooper tells the other partners he is quitting, partially in response to Don Draper's ad in The New York Times, which he feels is a needlessly reckless career move, and he does not ...
Even though it feels like we just climbed back into the camper with Graham and Sam, Men in Kilts’ Season 2 finale is upon us! In a moment, we’ll want to know what you thought about the second ...
The New York Times, the Daily News, and the New York Post were the subject of a strike in 1978, [47] allowing emerging newspapers to leverage halted coverage. [48] The Times deliberately avoided coverage of the AIDS epidemic, running its first front-page article in May 1983.