TV
2009-10 Midseason
2009 Fall Season
2009 Summer Season
2008-09 Midseason
2008 Fall Season
2008 Summer Season
Best Of 2009
Best Of 2008
Best Of 2007
Best Of 2006
Best Of 2005
Recent/Upcoming
Movies & Specials
84
Temple Grandin
HBO, 2/6
83
Soul Train: The Hippest Trip in America
VH1, 2/6
52
A Family Is a Family Is a Family: A Rosie O'Donnell Celebration
HBO, 1/31
40
Live for the Moment
CBS, 1/28
38
The Pregnancy Pact
Lifetime, 1/23
76
Return to Cranford
PBS, 1/10
64
The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special: In 3-D! On Ice!
Fox, 1/10
Recent/Upcoming
Series Premieres
44
Past Life
Fox,
Tuesday
56
Celebrity Fit Club: Boot Camp Season Seven
VH1,
Monday
59
Undercover Boss
CBS,
Sunday
44
The Michael Vick Project
BET,
Tuesday
44
Kell on Eath
Bravo,
Monday
82
Damages Season Three
FX,
Monday
60
La La Land
Showtime,
Monday
72
The Inbetweeners
BBC America,
Monday
77
Emma
PBS,
Sunday
71
Caprica
Syfy,
Friday
54
Spartacus: Blood and Sand
Starz,
Friday
40
The Deep End
ABC,
67
24 Seaon Eight
Fox,
Monday
70
Human Target
Fox,
Wednesday
78
Archer
FX,
Thursday
70
Big Love Season Four
HBO,
Sunday
73
Chuck Season Three
NBC,
Monday
51
Demons
BBC America,
Saturday
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
Mad Men
EMAILPRINTSERIES: AMC, Thursday 10:00p (60 minutes)

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 31 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 102 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Drama
Created By: Matthew Weiner
First Air Date: July 19, 2007
Summary
Starring Jon Hamm, Vincent Kartheiser, John Slattery, Elisabeth Moss, Christina Hendricks, Aaron Staton, Rich Sommer, and Michael Gladis
In the 1960s, Don Draper is the man in charge at one of the top advertising agencies in New York.
Episode Guide & More Info: More about this show at TV.com
Also On The Web: Official Show Site Television Without Pity Recaps
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
San Francisco ChronicleTim Goodman
The acting (from a mostly unknown cast), cinematography (you can just stare at this series) and especially Weiner's writing carry the series to exceptional heights.
Read Full Review >USA TodayRobert Bianco
Mad Men is a joy to watch - the clothes, the clocks, the furniture, it's like a mid-century night's dream. But this is no mere period piece. It's a smart, complex drama that attempts to get through the facades that have always hidden the truth.
Read Full Review >New York PostAdam Buckman
If you check out Mad Men tonight, I guarantee you'll be back next week.
Read Full Review >TV GuideMatt Roush
This sleek, sexy, smartly cynical drama about selling everything from cigarettes to Nixon also nails the era's attitudes of casual prejudice and sexual manipulation.
Read Full Review >San Jose Mercury NewsCharlie McCollum
The series is a funny, knowing, sometimes dark, sometimes romantic take on the time just before the power of advertising was fully realized.
Read Full Review >Pittsburgh Post-GazetteRob Owen
"I'm living like there is no tomorrow because there isn't one." Not a pretty sentiment, to be sure, but it makes for an intriguing character in what's likely to be the best new summer series of 2007.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles TimesMary McNamara
Mad Men has found a strange and lovely space between nostalgia and political correctness and filled it with interesting people, all of them armed with great powers of seduction.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-TimesDoug Elfman
It's hard for an artistic entity to balance that kind of American duality. Mad Men does so in a subtler and more natural way than "Natural Born Killers" did satirically.
Read Full Review >Christian Science MonitorGloria Goodale
It's very filmic both in execution and ambition as it explores life before Betty Friedan and the Surgeon General's warnings on cigarette packs.
Read Full Review >Entertainment WeeklyKen Tucker
What gives Mad Men its zing is that play is part of work, sexual banter isn't yet harassment, and America is free of self-doubt, guilt, and countercultural confusion.
Read Full Review >LA WeeklyRobert Abele
Mad Men may thrive on a certain heartless suspense, but it’s definitely got a brain, one that’s interested in how our lives are a battle between the narrative we imagine for ourselves and the path we happen to be on.
Read Full Review >The New YorkerNancy Franklin
Mad Men is smart and tremendously attractive, and it stirs you more than it probably should.
Read Full Review >Arizona RepublicRandy Cordova
The premiere is so well constructed in every department, it would be near-impossible to skip the next episode. If the show can keep up this level of quality, it could wind up being one of the greats.
Read Full Review >Detroit Free PressMike Duffy
As a witty social history viewed through the tempestuous prism of office and sexual politics, Mad Men is big fun ... classy entertainment with a brain.
Read Full Review >Seattle Post-IntelligencerMelanie McFarland
It is something rare and wonderful, a remarkable, original vision.
Read Full Review >The New York TimesAlessandra Stanley
Mad Men is both a drama and a comedy and all the better for it, a series that breaks new ground by luxuriating in the not-so-distant past.
Read Full Review >Chicago TribuneMaureen Ryan
Mad Men is first and foremost an intelligently made character drama.
Read Full Review >SalonHeather Havrilesky
Mad Men is smart, funny, eye-opening, and probably 10 times better than anything you'll see this fall, so don't miss it.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
This show, and the world it reconstructs, gets much better, and more comfortable, as it goes along.
Read Full Review >SlateTroy Patterson
Some us also go in for TV shows that have the potential to ripen into astringent Billy Wilder-style examinations of what lust can do to the white-collar soul.
Read Full Review >Newark Star-LedgerAlan Sepinwall
The show does such an amazing job of evoking a world not that long-gone, and in a way that makes it equal parts alluring and appalling.
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
As a serialized drama, the program's situations aren't especially stirring, even with its solid, perfectly outfitted cast. The sheer atmosphere, however, proves intoxicating.
Read Full Review >Wall Street JournalDorothy Rabinowitz
Mad Men is infinitely more concerned with entertainment, an effort at which it succeeds, thanks mostly to its first-rate cast, disarming humor and period detail.
Read Full Review >NewsdayDiane Werts
To steal from the old beer slogan, (this show) looks great, (but it's) less filling (than it intends).
Read Full Review >Hollywood ReporterRandee Dawn
There's much to admire about Mad Men, and much worth tuning in for. But so far, it's all soft sell.
Read Full Review >New York MagazineJohn Leonard
This series feel like a fifties leftover, chock-full of unimportant secrets.
Read Full Review >The New RepublicSacha Zimmerman
The mood is serious, not campy, and there aren't laugh-out-loud moments, just a lot of groaners--at which point, the show simply becomes a reflection of its characters: depressing.
Read Full Review >Washington PostTom Shales
The costumes and sets are just ducky and highly evocative, but the people in and around them spoil the show, gum up the works and shatter veracity.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 8.6 (out of 10) based on 102 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Elias C gave it a9:
It has taken me awhile to get around to this series, and I have only watched the first 3 episodes, but my initial impression is that this will be a great series. I originally thought that this show was a boring time piece on 1950/60's advertising. Instead I watched 3 episodes that expertly captured the cultural mores and human interactions of that period of history. This is a show for those who remember those times. Some people may wax woefully about the good old days of the early 60's, but for most of us THIS was the reality. The actors behave as if they stepped out of 1960 complete with their cynicism, twisted morality, sexism, and racism. Thankfully most of us have matured beyond the behavior portrayed in 'Mad Men'. For the rest, this show will be a painful reminder.
Emily W gave it a10:
Stunning.
Marie G gave it a3:
I anxiously awaited the second season. I was greatly disappointed in the homosexual scene. I was offended by the visual content. I felt that it crossed the line and was very inappropriate.
Eva R. gave it a10:
This series is marvelous. I would only point out to the writers that back in 1960/63, people had not yet started to talk in the absurd way they do now, using "they" all the time instead of "he" (or "she" in appropriate places). I heard, "Of course it's possible someone could distinguish THEMSELVES..." spoken by a BRITISH member of the cast! NOT in 1963!
Eric S gave it a3:
My wife and I watched two episodes. We won't be watching a third. Mad Men is a hamfisted portrayal of a some of the more obvious biases and blindnesses of the early 60s. As if every day dawned in 1960 in order to provide white men with opportunities to manifest their sexual and racial biases and -- along with all the women and negros -- to smoke all the day through. I can only explain the positive reviews of this show by surmising that the critics like to be assured -- as this show does minute by minute -- that we in the early 20th century are so much more enlightened than those Neanderthals in the mid 20th. Don't waste yout time on this one.
Nathan S gave it a6:
This show was fun at first, but the twists and turns are predictable and boring at times. I just watched the first seasons and will not be tuning in for the second. How did this get such rave reviews from the masses? The masses are distracted by pretty clothing, this show is junk. My friend Alison Murphy recommended this show to me and I will never take her advice again.
Joanne G gave it a10:
I am stunned by the realistic complexity of the characters and plot. I'm addicted.
