The Crash (Mad Men)
"The Crash" is the eighth episode of the sixth season of the American television drama series Mad Men and the 73rd episode of the series overall. It was written by series creator and executive producer Matthew Weiner and writer Jason Grote, and directed by Michael Uppendahl. It originally aired on AMC in the United States on May 19, 2013.
The episode takes place over a weekend, telling several stories in a non-linear narrative. In it, everyone in the advertising agency is injected, by a physician, with his proprietary cocktail of B vitamins and stimulants that will give them energy and focus over the weekend while working on the Chevrolet campaign. Meanwhile, as Don's children are left at his apartment with Sally to babysit, a stranger enters.
"The Crash" was watched by 2.16 million viewers and achieved 0.8 million viewers in the key 18–49 demographic. It is widely considered to be the show's most experimental episode, and was initially met with largely unfavorable reviews from television critics. In the years since first airing, however, it has come to be regarded by some as one of the series' greatest episodes.
Plot
"The Crash" follows events in three different settings: Don and the rest of the agency at the office over the weekend, a younger Don during the Depression era, and the Draper children.Ken Cosgrove gets into a crash with drunken Chevrolet executives. When the agency is informed of yet another unsuccessful Chevrolet pitch, Don says the team will have to work over the weekend. Sylvia then calls Don, giving her name as "Arnold" to the secretary. She chastises Don for leaving cigarette butts outside her apartment, rousing Arnold's suspicions, and says she is more afraid of Don than her husband. Don tries to reassure her but fails. She hangs up. He throws the phone in anger. Don then comes down with a strong cough, after which a flashback begins. A young Don is coughing at the dinner table with a fever. His stepmother Abigail tells him to sleep in the cellar.
Back at the agency, the death of Frank Gleason is mourned. The agency is informed of an energy serum available upstairs that is purported to result in one to three days of "uninterrupted creative focus, energy, and confidence" for those taking it. Don walks in for a dose and exits to find members of the creative team acting highly informally. As Don begins to cough walking downstairs, a flashback begins of young Don going to the cellar but being invited into another room by a young woman.
At the agency, while on the stairs, Don sees a woman on the lower floor and stares at her, wondering if they know one another. He briefly hears the noises of the office, such as telephones, very loudly. That evening, Don rummages through a magazine pile and asks for Ken. He tells Ken that the former will brainstorm many Chevrolet campaigns, and that Don must be able to look the executives in the eyes. Ken begins tap dancing and, in exclamations that match the rhythm, states enthusiastically what his job responsibilities are. Don then visits the creative team and gives them an impromptu motivational speech, with Peggy calling his words inspiring but asking for an actual idea.
When walking back to his office, Don is reminded of his past once more. In bed, a young Don is served soup by the young woman. This instantly gives Don an ad idea. Upon visiting the creative team again on Saturday, he is introduced to Wendy, the daughter of the deceased Frank. Don tells Peggy to look in the 1950s archives for a Sterling Cooper account about soup. Don goes back to his office and finds Wendy, who says she is there "to make feel better". He tells her he is busy. She nonetheless walks up to him, gently puts a stethoscope to his heart, and says it's broken. Don at first thinks she means his heart, but she tells him it's the stethoscope itself. He tells her to leave.
Don calls Megan to inform her he will have to work longer. She is angered, having to leave. Sally is told to babysit the children. Meanwhile, Stan is injured in a target-throwing game played by the creative team, and Peggy carries him off. Don arrives at Sylvia's apartment, leans against the door and hears only a song playing, with lyrics including: "I must think of a way into your heart." Back at the office, Stan kisses Peggy but is turned down. When he tells her that his cousin Robbie was killed in action, Peggy advises Stan that "you have to let yourself feel " and that it cannot be dampened with other things. She suggests he go home, but thanks him politely when he makes a sexually suggestive compliment.
Sally hears noises in the apartment and finds a black woman has entered the living room, claiming to have raised her father and to be named "Ida". Sally remains somewhat skeptical, but the woman pressures her into sitting down to eat some eggs, and begins acquainting herself with Sally. Don meanwhile manages to find the soup commercial in the archives. It depicts a boy being served soup by a woman, with the caption, "Because you know what he needs." In another flashback, young Don is told to refer to the woman who invited him in as "Aimée". The next morning, Don has recovered. She admits her real name is "Amy", then seduces him with the assurance: "I'll do everything." Although he acquiesces to Amy's advances, Don never quite consents, either.
Back at the apartment, Ida and Sally are in conversation, with the latter continuing to ask questions. Ida introduces herself to Bobbie and asks about a gold watch of Don's that she says she wants to fix. Sally calls the police once Ida leaves the room to look, believing still that the latter is a con woman. Ida enters the room, grabs the phone from Sally, and convinces the police that Sally is simply performing a prank call. She then warns the children to go to sleep.
At the agency, when Peggy and Michael arrive at Don's office, Don says he has an idea. Peggy is frustrated by his inability to articulate it, however. Don leaves. Peggy finds Jim surreptitiously watching Wendy and Stan in flagrante in another room. Annoyed, Peggy goes home. Don goes to his own apartment, although seemingly while preparing to talk to Sylvia. He finds Megan, Betty, Henry, and the children in the living room with the police. Betty scolds Don, who then remembers having left the back door open, for what has occurred. Don then faints. In a final flashback to his past, Aimée is kicked out of the house, and Don is beaten when Abigail learns that Amy had "taken his cherry", assuming that it was his fault.
Don later wakes up in his apartment, and Megan apologizes for the earlier events. Don and Sylvia later run into each other on the elevator; both say nothing. Don calls Sally at work to tell her he's okay, and assures her that he's "sure she's fooled plenty of adults too". Sally says that she's embarrassed and that she realizes that she knows nothing about him. He asks her to forget about the earlier events, admits that he had left the apartment door unlocked, and takes the blame himself. Don visits Ted and Jim. The former is greatly disappointed in the results of the past 72 hours, noting that Chevy was even spelled wrong in the "work". Don stands his ground, saying to call him when Chevy is ready to run an ad, maybe in two years, and he then argues that automobile accounts have not been good for the company: "Every time we get a car, this place turns into a whorehouse." Ted and Jim watch Don silently and blankly as he goes back to his office and shuts the door.
Production
Kevin Rahm, who plays Ted Chaough, notes that Gleason's death has a strong impact on his character, as the former was "the guy that he could bitch to, and that he could yell at and with, and he was his rock". Weiner, the show's creator, said that such serums as the agency was injected with were well known in the 1960s and that the substances heightens one's sense of time's passage. He also discusses the theme in the episode of sex as escape from trauma.Reception
Critical reception
Upon its initial airing, television critics' reviews for "The Crash" were mixed to negative. Its departure from the standard Mad Men episode structure was described as the strongest yet, and many found it off-putting. Matt Zoller Seitz wrote, "I’m convinced that metafiction/jazzing around is the only prism through which “The Crash” is anything other than audaciously annoying. More so than any Mad Men episode I can recall, it doesn't quite feel like a Mad Men episode, but a bunch of half-formed ideas for a Mad Men episode". While praising the episode's humor, Seitz criticized the subplot with the African-American burglar in Don's house, viewing it as part of a pattern in the show of minorities being disappointingly uninteresting characters. He also considered the flashbacks to Don's past to be poorly edited and written, and felt that their intended message had already been established by that point in the show's run. Maureen Ryan of The Huffington Post argued that the episode "was amped up and yet often came off as filler", also disparaging the flashbacks as "embarrassingly thin, predictable slices of melodrama in a show that, at its best, embraces complex, thoughtful ambiguity."Alan Sepinwall was mixed, writing that much of the episode "was memorable, and a lot of it was funny – even before Ken started tapping and rapping, we got Don shouting about the timbre of his voice and being uncertain about whether he would be “forceful or submissive” – but a lot of it played like parody: This is “Mad Men.” Now this is “Mad Men” on drugs. Any questions?" He predicted as a result that he would remember the episode chiefly for its unconventionality. Jenny Lower of Los Angeles magazine argued, "Where Roger’s acid trip became a plot device for him and Jane to reveal unspoken truths, it’s unclear exactly what this episode accomplished." Sarene Leeds of Rolling Stone similarly wrote, "If there was anything I learned from "The Crash" – other than Aaron Staton does a mean soft shoe – it was that I'd much rather watch Roger get high." Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter said, "As a one-off experiment, it’s hard to fault for trying. A series creator should be allowed that. But I hope Dr. Hecht and his needles don’t show up again any time soon."
In The A.V. Club, however, Emily VanDerWerff assigned the website's highest grade to "The Crash" and interpreted it as "an episode of Mad Men that’s about writing Mad Men, about locking yourself in a room and driving yourself crazy to come up with that one perfect idea, about wasting a weekend on that process, about trying to top yourself and feeling like you’re losing your mind." She considered no other television episode from the 2013-14 season to be more thought-provoking, and opined, "The whole thing is like a bunch of strands of yarn, lying parallel to each other, and then a cat comes through and starts knocking them around, because it was promised a ball of yarn, and it’s not going to go home without it." Slate magazine's Seth Stevenson identified vulnerability as its overriding theme, and questioned whether "the amphetamine clockwork of the episode—skies flickering dark then light, days whirring together— meant to evoke the frightening velocity of the era". Paul MacInnes of The Guardian called it "a grand episode" and praised the writers' ability to make "the viewer as if they're on drugs too."
In 2014, a year after it first aired, Oliver Lyttelton of IndieWire ranked "The Crash" as one of the series' best entries and wrote, "The episode proved highly divisive when it aired, with some finding it empty and pretentious, but further rewatches have made clear that it’s anything but." Kyle Russell of Business Insider and Verne Gay of Newsday also listed the episode as a series highlight, with the latter lauding it as "a glory of comedy, writing, direction and sheer nuttiness." In the International Business Times, Alex Garofalo ranked "The Crash" as second only to "The Suitcase" among Mad Men episodes, hailing it as "an experimental high for the series" and a "manic fever dream of an episode" in which "each character aggressively numbed his or her personal pain." It was also ranked the show's ninth best episode in a poll of Entertainment Weekly staff, with Keith Staskiewicz comparing it to the works of David Lynch.