Bad news for "Mad Men" fans who thought they were watching a five-season documentary -- Don Draper is not a real person. We know, we know -- your mind has been blown.
On June 8, Tom Scocca's Slate article, "Don Draper’s Shocking Secret: He Doesn’t Exist," blew the lid off that secret for good, and managed to anger some of the show's fans.
Twitter user Eric Thurm called the article "one of the most condescending things" he'd ever read, while Dov Friedman, called it "aggressively awful."
In the article, Scocca explains that "Don Draper is a made-up person inside your television set. He is a pattern of lit-up dots moving in front of your eyes for one hour, on Sundays, during the season run of the Mad Men program, which mercifully ends this weekend."
Though viewers of the AMC drama are more than aware that Draper, his family and...
On June 8, Tom Scocca's Slate article, "Don Draper’s Shocking Secret: He Doesn’t Exist," blew the lid off that secret for good, and managed to anger some of the show's fans.
Twitter user Eric Thurm called the article "one of the most condescending things" he'd ever read, while Dov Friedman, called it "aggressively awful."
In the article, Scocca explains that "Don Draper is a made-up person inside your television set. He is a pattern of lit-up dots moving in front of your eyes for one hour, on Sundays, during the season run of the Mad Men program, which mercifully ends this weekend."
Though viewers of the AMC drama are more than aware that Draper, his family and...
- 6/10/2012
- by Stephanie Marcus
- Huffington Post
Bad news for "Mad Men" fans who thought they were watching a five-season documentary -- Don Draper is not a real person. We know, we know -- your mind has been blown.
On June 8, Tom Scocca's Slate article, "Don Draper's Shocking Secret: He Doesn't Exist," blew the lid off that secret for good, and managed to anger some of the show's fans.
Twitter user Eric Thurm called the article "one of the most condescending things" he'd ever read, while Dov Friedman, called it "aggressively awful."
In the article, Scocca explains that "Don Draper is a made-up person inside your television set. He is a pattern of lit-up dots moving in front of your eyes for one hour, on Sundays, during the season run of the Mad Men program, which mercifully ends this weekend."
Though viewers of the AMC drama are more than aware that Draper, his family and advertising company...
On June 8, Tom Scocca's Slate article, "Don Draper's Shocking Secret: He Doesn't Exist," blew the lid off that secret for good, and managed to anger some of the show's fans.
Twitter user Eric Thurm called the article "one of the most condescending things" he'd ever read, while Dov Friedman, called it "aggressively awful."
In the article, Scocca explains that "Don Draper is a made-up person inside your television set. He is a pattern of lit-up dots moving in front of your eyes for one hour, on Sundays, during the season run of the Mad Men program, which mercifully ends this weekend."
Though viewers of the AMC drama are more than aware that Draper, his family and advertising company...
- 6/10/2012
- by Stephanie Marcus
- Aol TV.
The front page of today’s Wall Street Journal features an “A-Hed” story on adults who play with Legos, written by Daniel Michaels from Belgium. The print story includes a hedcut, or dot-ink portrait, of a Lego sculpture by artist Nathan Sawaya, called “Yellow,” of a Lego man ripping open his chest.
For the first time, The Wall Street Journal Online created a rotating hedcut, with “Yellow.” Readers can click and drag the hedcut and turn it 360 degrees. The rotating...
For the first time, The Wall Street Journal Online created a rotating hedcut, with “Yellow.” Readers can click and drag the hedcut and turn it 360 degrees. The rotating...
- 11/17/2011
- by Barbara Chai
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
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