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The answer is unsettling. Don tries to be "new Don." He’s monogamous. He’s supportive. He lets Megan have a career. He even laughs (genuinely!) at a Roger Sterling one-liner. But the rot is still there, hidden beneath a tailored suit. The season’s genius is watching Don attempt authenticity. He fails spectacularly.
Season 5 asks: What happens after the fairy tale ends?
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.
The answer is unsettling. Don tries to be "new Don." He’s monogamous. He’s supportive. He lets Megan have a career. He even laughs (genuinely!) at a Roger Sterling one-liner. But the rot is still there, hidden beneath a tailored suit. The season’s genius is watching Don attempt authenticity. He fails spectacularly.
Season 5 asks: What happens after the fairy tale ends? Mad Men - Season 5
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. The answer is unsettling