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Ladies Room (Mad Men)

"Ladies Room"
Mad Men episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 2
Directed by Alan Taylor
Written by Matthew Weiner
Original air date July 26, 2007
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Mad Men (season 1)
List of Mad Men episodes

"Ladies Room" is the second episode of the first season of the American television drama series Mad Men. It was written by series creator Matthew Weiner and directed by Alan Taylor. Weiner has stated that the interval between writing the pilot and the second episode lasted seven years.The episode originally aired on the AMC channel in the United States on July 26, 2007.

In this episode, Don Draper's past is probed from different directions by different people and the viewer is presented with the mystery of, "Who is Don Draper?" At a dinner with Don and Betty Draper and Roger and Mona Sterling, where all of the attendees talk about their affluent, privileged childhoods, Don remains silent. Roger Sterling idly probes Don about his past but Don deflects him, suggesting he will reveal the mystery in his forthcoming novel. Don says, "it's a sin of pride to go on about one's self," to explain to Betty why he deflected Roger's inquiry. Betty, meanwhile, is troubled—her mother has recently died, and since that time, Betty has periodically experienced her hands going numb so that she cannot use them. She and Mona commiserate in the ladies' room at the restaurant. At home, in bed with Don, Betty also attempts to probe Don about his past, but he casts his past into the category of "politics, religion, and sex...why talk about it?" As Betty drifts off to sleep she turns to Don, fast asleep, and asks herself, "Who's in there?"

The workplace is portrayed as being staffed by men who behave as boys on shore leave and who view the women as toys, an environment which the women must navigate; the title of the show references the weeping women found in the ladies room. Sterling is portrayed as a cynical and distant alcoholic who has never grown up and who misses his big breasted, round-faced nanny. The members of the creative team, which Don leads, discuss a product and the question of "what women want" is brought up, but they are puzzled. In the meeting, Don is established as the whip-cracker with an incisive edge. Paul Kinsey, speaking in some form of Jamaican creole, tries to come across as the hep-cat man-of-the-world with the African-American man who comes to the office with a sandwich cart, but the man deflects Kinsey's comment. After Paul gives Peggy Olson the impression that he can be a good friend to her, he then comes on to her. Peggy too deflects him. Peggy begins to feel ill-used by the womanizing men of the office. Joan, the office manager who runs the secretarial pool, advises Peggy to enjoy the attention while she can. Bert Cooper, the senior partner of Sterling Cooper, is introduced as the eccentric, tolerant old man of the advertising world. The Draper's neighbor, Francine, gossips with Betty about their new neighbor, Helen, who wears the scarlet letter of divorce, and Francine suggests that a divorcée may be bad for real estate values.


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