I’m fond of the AMC show The Pitch and highly recommend it. Basically, two ad agencies are invited to meet a company’s headquarters. The company then states what they are looking for, and seven or ten days later the two ad agencies come back and pitch their ideas, and the viewer is along for the ride the whole way. In one episode, all employees were asked to stay overnight to work and had to turn in their personal cell phones. I think in the same episode you got to see the social media department track how many times the competing agency visited their website. It’s a real treat to watch the emotional roller coaster of ideas being shot down and praised and seeing it all to fruition.
There was another episode where technical difficulties (the audio) was destroying their presentation, but oddly enough, that team won.
I also found it interesting to see how casually dressed the executives are on trips to visit their client . . . I know theses are creative folks and all, but I would think jeans would be a no-no, even with a sports coat. Times have changed.
I like it that Megan is no longer in the office because we get to see the old creative and competitive Don again.
Next time I need to go to the store for something like a light bulb, I’m going to leave a note like Don and address it as “Lovely WifeGeeding”.
Lane Pryce sure has been absent for a while, but then again, he did have some major time earlier this season.
Betty sure can be one heck of a B, but I like how Megan is smart enough to see the game that she is trying to play. This is one reason why the all-female writing staff of this show just works.
Speaking of Betty, she’s now on Weight Watchers which was actually founded in 1963, and this season is taking place in 1966. Interestingly enough, Heinz owned Weight Watchers from 1978-1999.
I’m willing to bet most women have done something silly for sweets like Betty spraying whipped cream in her mouth, and I’m willing to be most men have had day dreams like Pete Campbell. But i doubt most men have cooked a steak in the middle of the night.
I’m really liking the Ginsberg character. I wonder if his suggestion of a pig being hit with a snowball had anything to do with the character from the book Animal Farm. I’m gonna guess that Ginsberg is going to be forced out out SCDP much like Snowball was forced out of the farm.
It seems like the elevator has become kind of a confessional box.
The title of the episode was “Dark Shadows”. That was the same title of the gothic type show Megan’s friend was auditioning for and actually aired during this time, and oddly enough, Johnny Depp starred in the film adaptation that opened the same weekend this episode aired.
I wonder if there’s a connection with the empty elevator shaft from earlier this season and Don bringing up the devil in his advertising.