Tag Archive for 'Mad Men'

Mad Men Season 3 - Episode 12 “The Grown Ups” - chronologizing other people’s memories of the Kennedy assassination

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The Fog of Chronology

What year was Kennedy assassinated? After tossing and turning over the fog of chronology half the night, I needed to know.

Lay awake thinking after finding out. 1963.  That was 20 years after the end of World War II — the same distance between now and the first Gulf War.

Will distances between historical events preceding my existence always seem greater than distances between historical events I can recollect?

The Demographics of AMC’s Character Driven Mad Men

I’m actually not sure what the Mad Men demographics are but going by the disproportionate percentage of air time devoted to Lipitor, Viagra and Clorox, I’ll guess that the majority of Mad Men watchers remember where they were when Kennedy was assassinated.

The Grown Ups,”  Mad Men’s Kennedy assassination episode

Sunday, November 1st, Mad Med episode, The Grown Ups, was the penultimate finale of Season Three and I can’t help wonder how next Sunday’s season finale will get anywhere close.

We have the satisfaction of knowing the historic outcome and significance of Mad Men’s chronological collisions in advance of the characters knowing.  This gives us access to their losses and their misunderstandings.  Their discoveries and their disconnects.

I just can’t get enough David Carbonara’s music, by the way.  Those melliflous counterpoint that begin a pause and a heartbeat after a clipped stream of dialog ends.  Why isn’t more television like this?

The Mad Men show I watch is different from the Mad Men show that Mom watches

Mom insisted on replaying the two Mad Men Season 2 episodes that I was featured and uncredited in –Three Sundays and Six Month Leave– over and over in a way that only a mom can.

Mad Men is the black and white television screen I never had

Mad Men is the corridor to those custom framed, soft toned hand painted photographs on the wall of the guest room that my Bubby once had.  Mad Men is a photo album full of square shaped black and white snapshots of my newlywed collegiate parents holding a simese cat.

From

From Susannaspeier.com
Mad Men is the font of the copper colored “flour,” “tea” and “sugar” canisters that once lined my Buby’s kitchen countertop and now lines the countertop of my mom’s kitchen.

Mom insists television receptions were not all that bad.  In fact, all her friends seem to agree they were actually quite sharp.  Does the distortion came from Mad Men creator and writer, Michael Weiner’s own fog of chronology, then?

Click here if you’d like to submit a Mad Men Politiku to my Huffington Post column

Click here for reviews of other blogs following Mad Men Season Three

Click here for a babbley but well intended (was new to blogging and didn’t get how spacing for the web and headers worked) and comprehensive description of my experience working as a featured background performer on the Mad Men, Season 2 episodes Three Sundays and Six Month Leave.

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Best reviews of Mad Men Season 3 and why I don’t “Mad Men” myself on Facebook

MadmenBlueStumbled across a Mad Men Season 3 Newsweek review that I found particularly lively, in that it gently interweaves the obvious and un-obvious allegorical nuances of the epic.  Decided to further investigate.  Blogger Dan O’Brien, understandably, prob gets a zillion times as much traffic as I do and his “Why You are an Idiot for Not Watching Mad Men” shows why. I’m cheating a bit by adding my friend Hollie’s blog entry about MM, since it’s actually about Season 1 and not 3 but truth to be told, Hollie’s blog is well worth reading in its entirety. Not only has she gone from being an actor to being a staffed writer on Cold Case in a period of a little over a year due to sheer determination, dedication and talent, but her insights about on-screen chemistry (which come from her acting talent and training) are actually applicable to all seasons, not just 1 or 3. In fact, while we’re backpedaling, I’d have to say that New York Magazine’s patented Don Draper Likability Index covering seasons 1 and 2 is still pretty fresh. Finally, please forgive my laziness (I’m not really lazy but I do really have to get started on my job hunt now, being that its a Friday and everything) if you really want to read Mad Men reviews, this metacritic link’ll be you there is no time flat. If I had more time, I’d try and dig up commentary on the music and on the cinematography and set design but that’d be another entry, I guess. Okay, so one more thing before signing off. For those of you wondering, why –despite the fact I can’t remember being this far gone over a show since Commander-in-Chief (which is actually what got me to start watching television for the first time since I was a teenager) there is a very specific reason that I don’t “Mad Men” myself on Facebook, The Costume was uncomfortable.  I adapted.here goes: while I loved working with this creative powerhouse during Season 2 and am not at all surprised to see Janie’s vision going viral in the form of the Mad Men Yourself phenom, I am apprehensive about embracing avatar altering fan rituals because, I dunno.  It’s not really where or who I’m at, I guess.  Then there are also those articles my dad forwarded me about virused Flash downloads and finally, because I’ve already got pics of my Mad Men’d self from the two Season 2 episodes I was in and I got em w/out downloading problematic software!

Click here to read my post about the Mad Men Season 3, episode 12 Kennedy Assassination episode titled “The Grown Ups.”

Click here for a bit of a babbley thought well intended (was new to blogging and didn’t get how spacing for the web and headers worked) and comprehensive description of my experience working as a featured background performer on the Mad Men, Season 2 episodes Three Sundays and Six Month Leave.

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Now, through open windows, breathing in the August night

Saw Anne Waldman read Manatee/Humanity. Brunch on the patio with my friend, Jill and discussed what sort of work environments we should look for, according to the Myers Briggs.  Finished watching season 2 of Mad Men, watched a one-year old discover birthday cake, realized that the camera that I thought was broken wasn’t.  Night walk with boyfriend to look at flowers and swans and ducks and lake in moonlight.  Some wealthy company is throwing all of their money at trying to get advertising on the moon, he said.  We swiftly concluded that the likelihood of that occurring during our lifetimes is…not very. Cleaned and organized stuff a little bit but not too much.  Didn’t solve and didn’t break anything.  Took a bubble bath. Learned that my super supportive, inspiring and hyperprolific friend Hollie Overton just officiated her WGA membership and interpreted it to mean that, despite what it can sometimes seem, Hollywood does reward talent and hard work.  Watched 15 minutes of that new King Arthur show on TV only to realize that the only ones who ever succeeded in adapting anything Arthurian were Monty Python/Terry Gilliam and Eric Rohmer Managed to actually get a little bit of work done.  Live broadcast of Leonard Cohen’s London concert. Time isn’t moving too quickly or too slowly.  Now, through open windows, breathing in the August night.  Still thinking about the moon.  Remembering the Smashing Pumpkin’s Tonight, Tonight video. What was that old silent movie they were referencing in the video? Loved how they created a video to rise to the level of the music’s fantasticalness.  Wanted to see it; figure out more about the history  Went foraging.  Didn’t find it but found something else instead.  A treasure in its own right.  History of Moon movies presented as an Apollo 40th retrospective, no less.  Windows are still open.  Check out:

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How Many Things Can Get Done in a Day?

images-2 Had this idea that Superbowl Sunday would be my ultimate catch-up day of catch-up days.  Meaning, because I’m not into football and the rest of the known universe is (well, not really but enough of it, at any rate) that all the papers I need to organize into color coded file systems with labels printed out on my P Touch label maker would be either organized, recycled or shredded.  All my bills would be paid and if not paid, at least, payments negotiated for a later date.  Each and every item on my to-do list checked off.  All books and screenplays I’m in the middle of reading would be read.  Laundry done.  Emails caught up on.  Trash taken out.  Everything I no longer need either sold on Craigslist or eBay.  And I don’t think I managed to do any of it.  Well, a little bit, I guess.  Like the laundry, I finished that.  Went on eBay — not to sell stuff, though.  To look at hipscarves and zills that I use when I bellydance.  Okay and played with my cat, Kee-hap.  Watched some Superbowl commercials cause, lets face it, no one acutually watches for the game, right?  Watched “Thirteen Going On Thirty” and “The Devil Wears Prada” on FX and contemplated the nature of the ‘chick flick.’ Wondered if I could ever write one.  I don’t particularly think of my creativity as being chick flick friendly, per se.  But then, on the other hand, something about this blog entry feels very chick flickie.  Hmmm.  At the same time, it’s not exactly the sort of thing my imagination feeds off of, exactly.  My imagination is more about taking the universe apart and putting it back together again.  At the same time, I’m fascinated w/ the power dynamics that distort ones humanity in hi-rise, hi-stakes, hi-rewards, vertical, Manhattan skyscrapers.  Certainly got squished into roadkill enough times in those jobs to understand how things look as they fall apart and then fall into place.  Oh, seeing The Apartment, the other night for the first time.  Reminded me so, so, much of Mad Men.  Okay, so I’ve got a Manhattan story in me, afterall.  Is that what this blog entry was really about? images-4

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The Summer Months

Have you ever been to The Standard? It’s something of a Graceland-esque modernist bar/club/lounge restaurant/hotel West Hollywood romping ground for the swankily dressed and of course I fell totally in love with it. Fell in love with it to the extent that I had to go and check out the other Standard, the Kubrick-esque Standard complete w/ rooftop terrace w/ films projected onto adjacent buildings in Downtown LA, the very next night w/ my friends Cathy and Bob. Real gem of the place, of course, was the Jenny Holzer light emitting diode sign next to the exit in the downstairs lobby. What brought me there the first night, btw was the wrap party for the energy drink that myself and the peops in the photo’d just wrapped. Will loop back to that topic at the end of this blog entry, tho.

Okay, so while Hollywood is supposedly, officially more-or-less hiatus-ing during this oppressive desert season, it’s still a busy time for me. And I love being busy. Busy squared. Busy times a google-plex before the website hijacked the term used to describe a one with a hundred zeroes behind it and re appropriated it causing the literal and considerably more poetic connotation to morph into a mere secondary definition.

Where’d this thread originate from again? Oh, right, summer in the desert land. Heinous weather. Hot and dry and hostile ultra v rays and all. In other words, I would still jump at the chance to get out of town, given the opportunity & resources. Temperatures where I live in Burbank, in fact, been hitting 106 this week, casing my basil and mini roses to wither and the leaves of fikus to turn black all within a few days. My jade, however, (the only actual desert plant I have —the plant that required grow lights in Brooklyn to maintain— continues to thrive.

Writing-wise, I’m waiting for my writing partner, Barney Cohen, to finish his draft of our Cupid and Psyche script. I miss my characters and want them back but am trying to be patient.  Acting-wise, I acted in my first Webisode. It’s part of a series called The Director, created and directed by Michael Weinreich, and the role I played is way-improv-ie and inspired by/configured around a beautiful hand made dress that my sister-in-law brought me back from her trip to Tanzania. Will, of course, post the episode once its available online. Played a small role (also very improv-ie) in Ron Kraus’ short, Amexica, and acted in a couple of student shorts. Also, shot a commercial (the one mentioned in the beginning and then the end of this blog entry) Been doing a lot of background work, which is more-or-less the lowest rung of the totem pole far as acting work goes. You’re rarely actually have the opportunity to ‘act’ during the shoot and often your scenes are blurred and/or cut. Also, the pay is abysmal. At the same time, it’s a way to be on set everyday. When lucky, I can watch parts of the directing process. It enables me to familiarize with various lots and film sets, internalize the rhythm of the production process and, well, being on set feels –more or less– normal for me now. It’s also a way of getting into SAG.

Now, here’s the thing— writing is and always has been my major career focus. The craft of acting (and I do consider acting to be much more craft than art form), however, is something that’s I’ve continued to do, in one capacity or another, throughout my writing career because, well, because I like to do it. And if I wanted to intellectual-ify it, talk about how it augments my senses and sensitivity to the rhythmic subtleties of dialog and the twittering contradictory nuances behind text and subtext in character drives, then I suppose I could talk about that as well. Of how about saying, maybe, that maintaining this skills enables me to breathe more freely in and throughout the creation process, thereby bringing characters to life as I write them. Shakespeare acted, Sam Shepard did as well. Even Suzan-Lori Parks studied Shakespearean acting at a conservatory in London for a year after graduating from Mt. Holyoke because she said that she needed to be able to perform Shakespeare in order to be able to write

Scored my first SAG voucher playing a fire performer on CSI-NY. Other specialties I’ve had have been used for background, such as skating and dancing but neither of those has scored me a voucher yet. Most of the background stuff I do is period because I am petite and there is a really high demand for petites on shows that use vintage costumes because people were smaller way-back-when. Here is a photo of me a the Santa Anita Racetrack which was where we shot Public Enemy, a Michael Mann directed film starring Johnny Depp about a 30s gangsta named John Dillinger. I’m standing next to the Jockey of horse #7 in this pic. The Jockey, Chris Russell, is a regular jockey at the Santa Anita racetrack.

Jockey’s don’t require vintage costumes because, with the exception of padded vests beneath their jackets to protect their chest from horse hoof damage (should they get thrown), what they wear today is more or less the same as what they wore in the 1930s. This was, by far, the most meticulous wardrobe dept I’ve worked with yet. Everything that they put me in, down to the slip beneath the dress, was vintage. Okay, the sport bra they gave me to wear was contemporary but the goal of the sport bra —to flatten my chest— was done for the purpose of obtaining a more 20s 30s look. Several actors were sent back from set to get their hair re parted beneath the hats they wore because the parts weren’t far enough to the side, despite the fact that their parts were mostly covered by hats. Even our pantyhose were authentic w/ seams going up the back. Men were given haircuts and close shaves if they weren’t clean cut enough and bright red nail polish was passed down the line of women waiting in the makeup line. Complaints, of course, were abundant all around. Generally when an environment becomes overly complain-ey I focus my attention on whatever it is I’m reading or find some other way to redirect my focus, energy is so contageous in an environment like that. Besides, I didn’t particularly mind how detail oriented things were, In fact, I found it fascinating. Since I’m the same way when it comes to detail oriented perfectionism.

Went through a phase where I was really had to grapple with my detail oriented perfectionism. Was thinking it was counterproductive, getting me stuck, holding me back. The Doug Petrie, one of the writers for C.S.I. really validated this for me and convinced me that as a writer, you DO have have be “attached” to what you’re doing in order to do a good job. I saw things different, as a direct result of this conversation I had with Doug. He introduced me to directors, prop people and asked me to address that same question to them. Was getting too attached to your work something one needed to be careful of. The overall consensus, of course, was ‘no.’ That even if it meant being a bit on the obsessive side from time to time, getting attached and staying attached to ones projects was necessary up until those projects were completed. Being detail oriented regarding your work was the inevitable result of this sort of attachement. Granted when you’re done w/ a project you’re done. It’s also important to let go in the end but when you’re there, in the creative zone, you gotta fully attached. Okay, so that C.S.I. example, though contextually relevant, was actually a digression from the original trajectory which, was Public Enemy, this Dillinger story. So now, back to 1933. Or at least, back to the set of the 1933 horserace in Florida that Dillinger was betting on. Gangsters as well as legit gamblers are attached and detail oriented, obviously. As was the costume designer, Colleen Atwood, who, I later learned, had won two Oscars. One for Chicago and one for Memoirs of a Geisha. Things were done and redone multiple times. Women who had their hair parted too close to the center were sent back to hair and make-up and told to have their hair entirely redone. Call time was 3:00a.m. and we wrapped at 7:00pm, due to Michael Mann’s detail oriented style of directing. Can’t wait to see the finished product.

Within a week, was back to time traveling. This time, for the show Mad Men. The costumes for MM are equally detail oriented. Was utterly thrilled when Janey Bryant, the Emmy award winning costume designer (of Deadwood fame) brought on the black & white bow-front dress. The paraboloid bulleted bra, I’d initially been fitted in, was quickly swapped for a black corset and the waist and then hourglassed accordingly. In the meantime, Janey’s smartly groomed poodle as she (somehow I’m inclined to call her Lucy—though I’m not 100% sure this was the poodle’s name, I remember it was a girl poodle) wove in and out of these elaborate vintage clothing racks, occasionally trotting over to deposit a chomped up tennis ball at my feet and lick my face before I’d dutifully throw the tennis ball across the room, again.

Here is a picture of me holding my head very still, as instructed to do by the hairdressers who insisted I sit quietly and “try not to move (my) head so much when I talk.” I compliantly took seat and one of the hairdressers re-poofed my boof. It took me two hours of soaking in conditioner in order to be able to finally get a comb thru. Another hour conditioner soak and wash later, it’s not quite spray-free but certainly getting there.  These top-of-their-form hairstylists are all detail oriented perfectionists who get attached to their work, as well.

Okay, so, looping back to this commercial. It was produced for AFI as part of a competition sponsored by the makers of an energy drink. Although we didn’t win the competition, we did make it to the final round. It was wonderful to have the opportunity to collab with this really fun, clever, talented and well-organized posse of AFI peops. After an intense, day long shoot we wrapped and celebrated at The Standard in West Hollywood, which brings me back up to the beginning of this blog entry. And in the final shot, here we are, post wrap, at The Standard again. (See how I looped back just like I said I would?) Michael Gianini, the writer/director of “Use What You’ve Got” is the one behind me in the photo, wearing the sweaty, blue-t-shirt. The buxom blonde next to me is the producer, Ariane Von Kamp. check out the three min “Use What You’ve Got” ad we made and if you like it, please give it a good rating to punch it up in the YouTubeArchy….

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