Mad Men - Season 5 ●
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.
Season 5 asks: What happens after the fairy tale ends? Mad Men - Season 5
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. The answer, apparently, is that you hang yourself
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. And you sit alone in the dark, listening
It is a season about the terrifying passage of time. "Are you alone?" Don asks the ghost of his dead brother in the finale. The answer, for everyone on this show, is yes .
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.
The turning point is the epic, feature-length episode "The Other Woman." Don loses his coolest account (Jaguar) because he refuses to prostitute his star copywriter, Peggy Olson, to a sleazy client. It’s a noble stand—but it’s too late. The damage is done. Later that night, he watches Megan in a commercial for her acting career, and the look on his face isn’t pride. It’s alienation. He realizes he can’t control her. And for Don Draper, a woman he can’t control is a mirror he can’t break. Megan Draper is the most divisive character in Mad Men history. In Season 5, she is a Rorschach test. To some, she’s a breath of fresh air—warm, modern, maternal with Don’s children. To others (hello, Joan and Peggy), she’s a usurper who slept her way to the creative department.