And I agree that Don’s talking about not only what he likes/dislikes in a man, but also a worker, a black man, and even a woman. Flair and “uppitiness” — and selling one’s image — is not for him, as evidenced by his initial hesitance to reveal anything of himself or his work in the newspaper profile that opens the season.
]]>Don has, on several occasions, revealed that he is more progressive than his peers (as when he comdemns Roger’s blackface performance and in his intial reaction to Sal’s homosexuality). But comments like these highlight the racial politics of the time, reminding us that even more progressive individuals still harbored these beliefs. Given that Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce is an entirely white work place, the show needs these moments to remind the audience about the world outside the office doors.
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