“What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.” —Don Draper (played by Jon Hamm, pictured) in Mad Men, Season 1, Episode 1, “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” original air date July 19, 2007, teleplay by Matthew Weiner, directed by Alan Taylor
Fifteen years ago, Mad Men premiered on AMC,
propelling the cable station away from vintage movies and more towards original
programming.
More important, it solidified a trend that began
nearly a decade before with The Sopranos: an anti-hero (in this case, a
smoking, drinking, womanizing ad agency creative director) who kept viewers
coming back week after week, despite (or maybe that’s because of) his
continual falls from grace.
I know that I couldn’t bear to miss a single one of
its 92 episodes in its seven seasons.
For a fine summary about why this quintessential
period drama was “a show built to last,” read this blog post by Vulture’s
Matt Zoller Seitz.
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