And then there was Weiner’s unbearably cruel treatment of poor Betty Draper (luminous January Jones, pictured below) and the Draper children. It was enormously responsible and impressive of him to strike one of the core characters on this profound period drama with terminal cancer, given all the chain-smoking in which so many of them indulged (another frank and damning period detail in this fully immersive series). But why Betty? The obvious answer is that cancer is malevolent and insidious thing that kills indiscriminately without regard for its victims. And yet, it seemed to me that Betty and her kids had already suffered enough and that she was too easy a target because she had been infuriatingly marginalized during the second half of the series.
So with all those complaints, why is “Mad Men” on this list? Because this show -- a singular sensation throughout most of its run -- will always be remembered as one of TV's all-time best. From the beginning "Mad Men" demanded that viewers smarten up, pay attention and think about what they were watching even as they were being entertained. Weiner had so much to say about yesterday, today and tomorrow that his relative economy of storytelling was beautiful and breathtaking. Next spring will not be the same without its annual arrival. I miss it terribly, even more than AMC”s “Breaking Bad.”
“Bad” ended at just the right time and in just the right way. Dragging it out any further would have egregiously compromised the impact of its story – one that, left as it is, will continue to thrill new viewers for decades to come precisely because it was told in a compact and efficient manner. “Mad,” on the other hand, could have run another 20 years (almost like a British primetime serial), taking its characters, their children and newcomers to its narrative through the Seventies and Eighties with the same insights into each decade’s cultural, political and psychological shifts that Weiner and his team brought to the show’s deconstruction of the Sixties.
Also, for all its faults, the final season of “Mad Men” ended on a note as impactful in its own way as that unforgettable sequence at the very end of “The Sopranos.” Did Don Draper really come up with