peterm1
Veteran
With all of the sentiment in this specific thread, I think it is time for me to insert a video (that I may have posted somewhere on RFF before -or not, I cannot recall). It's a poignant and lovely scene from the long running "Madmen" series of a decade ago about characters in an advertising firm on Madison Avenue. In this scene Don Draper (the main character and top salesman / advertising guy makes a "pitch" to the Kodak Eastman firm for the contract to create the advertising program for their new "Carousel" slide projector. (Who else here is old enough to recall this product? - I can vaguely recall an older relative demonstrating his.)
In the pitch he brings in sentiment, nostalgia, sadness, longing and memories of lost love. (Don has recently broken from his wife and family which provides added meaning and poignancy to his words.) It's a wonderful scene and shows what really good story telling can do and of course how photographs can contribute to life, which is the central theme of this clip and the real point of me posting it here.
I found it very moving. (Something I seldom do in T.V. mini series). As a slightly humorous aside, I especially enjoy the "stunned mullet" look on the faces of the potential clients as the presentation ends, which demonstrates more than words that Don Draper has hit the mark.
In the pitch he brings in sentiment, nostalgia, sadness, longing and memories of lost love. (Don has recently broken from his wife and family which provides added meaning and poignancy to his words.) It's a wonderful scene and shows what really good story telling can do and of course how photographs can contribute to life, which is the central theme of this clip and the real point of me posting it here.
I found it very moving. (Something I seldom do in T.V. mini series). As a slightly humorous aside, I especially enjoy the "stunned mullet" look on the faces of the potential clients as the presentation ends, which demonstrates more than words that Don Draper has hit the mark.
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