Welcome to our RH Reality Check roundtable on Mad Men, featuring staff writers Pamela Merritt, Amanda Marcotte, and Sarah Seltzer. Sarah kicked off our salon Wednesday, Amanda responded on Thursday, and Pamela adds her thoughts below. After the premiere (August 16), we'll start a second round of conversation!
I loved Mad Men from the first scene of the pilot episode "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes," which presents an awkward-as-hell exchange at a bar between Don Draper and a black man waiting tables. Draper tries to engage the man in a discussion of cigarette brands; after a few moments a supervisor comes bustling over to make sure the black man isn't "bothering" Mr. Draper. The establishment of discomfort within that scene is amazingly well done. The viewer feels the the black waiter's concern, his expression anxious and his eyes averted, that Don Draper may have just cost him his job by acknowledging him as a human being and asking for his opinion. But we also witness the lack of concern, the lack of discomfort from the other patrons over the dismissive tone and paternal language used by the supervisor toward the waiter. In that one exchange, Mad Men served up a mixed drink of America's struggle with race and class, shaken not stirred.
I was hooked and have been since.
The cast of Mad Men isn't racially diverse. As a matter of fact there were few characters of color in the first two seasons. Mad Men doesn't present an uplifting or empowering view of race nor does it hit a viewer over the head with 1960s Civil Rights history. Rather, Mad Men keeps it painfully and often awkwardly real by exploring race issues within the framework of Sterling Cooper and the people connected to the advertising agency.
From that first smoky scene in the first episode, to a later scene when employees at the agency were asked if they were okay with a black maintenance worker riding with them because the service elevator at the building was out, onward to the acknowledgement of Civil Rights work through the character Paul Kinsey's interest in it, and the introduction of Paul Kinsey's black girlfriend as part love interest part liberal affectation, Mad Men presents an exploration of race, class, and gender in the not-so-distant past that challenges the notion that all was well back in the day and keeps this fan coming back for more.























