5 - Mad Men - Season

We watch Megan fade away. We watch Peggy fly away. We watch Lane die. And we watch Don Draper, sitting in a dark bar, listening to a stranger’s problems, because he cannot face his own. The season ends with Don hearing the Rolling Stones’ "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" for the first time. He smirks. The song is a primal scream against consumerism, conformity, and the emptiness of modern life. It is the anthem of the revolution that Don Draper—ad man, liar, phantom—will never be able to join.

Best Episode: "The Other Woman" / "Commissions and Fees" (impossible to choose) Worst Episode: There aren't any. But "Tea Leaves" is the slowest burn.

Mad Men Season 5 is not comfort viewing. It is a punch to the gut. It asks the question we all dread: What happens when you get everything you wanted?

The answer, apparently, is that you hang yourself in your office. Your secretary quits. Your wife becomes a stranger. And you sit alone in the dark, listening to a song about a world that has left you behind. Mad Men - Season 5

Welcome to 1966. The pills are brighter, the skirts are shorter, and the existential dread has never been deeper.

There is a moment early in Mad Men Season 5 that perfectly encapsulates its thesis. Megan Draper (née Calvet) surprises her new husband, Don Draper, with a sultry, intimate performance of the French pop song "Zou Bisou Bisou" at his surprise birthday party. As she twirls in a sequined mini-dress, the room of stiff ad executives looks on with a mixture of envy, confusion, and barely concealed contempt. Don, the man who has everything, sits frozen, smiling with his teeth but screaming with his eyes.

In "The Other Woman," she finally asks for a raise and a title. Don refuses, not because she doesn't deserve it, but because he needs her to need him. The subsequent scene—where Peggy walks into the elevator of the Time & Life Building, leaving Don alone in the hallway—is the show’s most heartbreaking moment. No music. No slow motion. Just the ding of the elevator door. We watch Megan fade away

The answer is unsettling. Don tries to be "new Don." He’s monogamous. He’s supportive. He lets Megan have a career. He even laughs (genuinely!) at a Roger Sterling one-liner. But the rot is still there, hidden beneath a tailored suit. The season’s genius is watching Don attempt authenticity. He fails spectacularly.

If you’ve only watched Mad Men once, go back. Watch Season 5 again. Notice the cracks in the walls. Listen to the silence between the words. And try not to flinch when the elevator doors close.

After the revolutionary upheaval of Season 4 (the "Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce" era), Season 5 arrives like a hangover you didn't see coming. It is a season of transformation, but not the kind anyone wants. It’s a season about the terrifying gap between who we are and who we are pretending to be. In my humble opinion, it is the single greatest season of television’s greatest drama. Let’s address the man in the room. For four seasons, we watched Don Draper self-destruct. He left Betty. He hit rock bottom. He built a new agency from ashes. By the end of Season 4, he proposed to his secretary, Megan, in a diner—a frantic, impulsive grab at happiness. And we watch Don Draper, sitting in a

But here’s the thing: Megan is the only honest person on the show. She doesn’t want to be a mother. She doesn’t want to write copy. She wants to act. She wants the messiness of life, not the sterile order of the suburbs. Her famous "Zou Bisou" performance isn't just a sexy dance; it’s a declaration of war against Don’s secretive, buttoned-up world.

Notice how many scenes take place in hallways or elevators. Characters are always between places—between marriages, between careers, between sanity and breakdown. The season’s visual motif is the crack in the facade. A spilled drink. A wrinkled dress. A lipstick stain on a collar. We see the mess just beneath the polish. Some fans prefer the rocket-fuel of Season 1 or the breakup drama of Season 3. But Season 5 is the season where Mad Men stopped being a period drama and started being a horror movie.

5 Comments

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