When the final season arrived a year later, it felt like a denouement—a long, slow walk to the famous Coca-Cola ad. But without the annihilation of Season 6, that ending would have no meaning. We needed to see Don hit absolute zero: fired, divorced, alienated from his children, and stripped of every illusion. We needed to see him sitting alone on a bench, the ghost of a dead soldier on his back.
The infamous “soprano” scene, where Don forces Megan to engage in a degrading sexual roleplay (a bizarre recreation of the Dottie incident), is not merely transgressive—it is a confession. Don is no longer just a philanderer; he is a man compulsively recreating his own degradation. His affair with Sylvia Rosen (a sublime Linda Cardellini), the wife of his neighbor and friend Dr. Arnold Rosen, is not about conquest. It is about punishment. He keeps Sylvia in a cheap hotel room, locks her in a closet, and treats her like a dirty secret. He isn't seeking pleasure; he is seeking the feeling of worthlessness he learned as a child. It is the least sexy affair in television history, and that is precisely the point. If the season is a long, slow crucifixion, the climax is the eleventh episode, “The Quality of Mercy,” and the spectacular self-immolation of “In Care Of.” Don’s pitch for Hershey’s chocolate is the single greatest scene in the series’ run. For years, we have watched Don Draper invent nostalgia, manipulate desire, and sell happiness. But when faced with the most innocent of products—a chocolate bar—the lie collapses. Mad Men - Season 6
The genius of the scene is that it is both a disaster and a liberation. Don Draper, the persona, dies in that boardroom. He is put on immediate leave. His partners look at him not with anger, but with the horror of seeing a naked man in a church. For the first time, Dick Whitman has spoken in public, and the result is professional annihilation. It is the most honest moment of Don’s life, and it costs him everything. While Don implodes, Season 6 is equally the story of how the women of Mad Men finally stop asking for permission. Peggy Olson (Elisabeth Moss) leaves the creative shadow of Don to flourish at CGC, only to realize that a glass ceiling is still a glass ceiling. Her relationship with Abe is a disaster of 1960s idealism clashing with professional reality—ending with him literally being stabbed by her neighbor. It’s darkly comic, but it signals that Peggy has chosen the city, the career, and the power over the commune, the peace, and the man. When the final season arrived a year later,