Updated: Bring Back The Silent Steely Type

Celebrity,Feminism,Film,Gender,Hollywood,Pop-Culture,The Zeitgeist

            

Steve Sailer: “After the Tom Cruise generation of boyish, small, and energetic stars, it’s refreshing to see a Golden Age of Hollywoodish leading man like tall, dark, and handsome Jon Hamm, who plays creative director Don Draper as the strong, silent type” in “the cable period drama Mad Men.”

Too true, but bless Steve: In an article about “Mad Men” the series, this is one of the few mentions the MM get.

I’ve watched Mad Men a couple of times, mainly for the Draper character. He’s perfect. As is evident from his tender affair with a teacher, the viewer recently discovered that this complex character (now that’s a novelty) would probably not be quite such an incorrigible philanderer were his beautiful wife not so icy and hostile. Poverty, military service, and a marriage of necessity—these are all interesting facets revealed recently about the Draper character.

I watch it, when it doesn’t get too tedious, for the nostalgia the production triggers—nostalgia for the days when women had soothing, soft voices, spoke in complete sentences, and seemed so much smarter and refined than their modern-day, emancipated shrew sisters.

One more thing: The Cruise generation has been followed by a slew of androgynous, unisex actors supposedly in possession of the Y Chromosome. For example, Ryan Phillippe. Yuk. Unwatchable. Or Leonardo DiCaprio; a fair actor, but frightfully undeveloped physically. I hope Hamm makes a lot of films, thrillers, especially. Maybe a couple of new-generation “Dirty Harry” flicks.

Steve’s spot on: “the show relentlessly exposes the sexism of pre-feminism men like Don Draper, seemingly for today’s women to cluck over.”

MadMan_med

Update (Oct 31): Oh for heaven’s sake: “Perfect” to describe the Draper character is meant to compliment his dashing looks, manly demeanor, and complexity. There is a lot of good about him.

Asserted and assimilated by men in the Comments Section is the feminist truism whereby saying that a man would be a good husband if he only had a loving wife is an excuse for the man’s innate badness.

Given the profile of the average woman—leftist, whining, romance-reading, Oprah-watching idiot—it makes perfect sense to feel sorry for a lot of men.

I have only to watch couples purchasing homes on the “House and Garden” channel to marvel at why more men don’t stray. The average woman shopping for a home:

“The dog would love this yard. This yard is not large enough for the dog.” Here’s a fem checking over a $1.3 million home: “my couch will go well in this living room; no, I can’t fit that grand sofa I purchased at Target in here.”

And I’m saying to Sean: “The agent is kind of cute. She gets that you don’t purchase a home to accommodate your ugly old furniture. Or dog! He should go for her.”

It’s also possible that TV reflects the worst of America.

However, certain verbose individuals should take a cue or two from the silent steely type. Never shutting up; never censoring yourself—spewing forth with every infarct of a thought the misfiring brain produces: now that is bloody off-putting.

Draper does not talk a lot. My favorite people ration speech.

An exchange with writer Rob Stove produced these BAB memories/thoughts some time ago:

“When my daughter was seven-years old, her school assigned her the task of describing her parents. On her father, daddy’s darling heaped unrealistic praise (the tables have since turned. Excellent!). For her affection-starved mother, the little lady reserved a matter-of-fact appraisal. ‘My mother,’ she wrote in her girlie cursive, ‘is a quiet woman who speaks mainly when she has something to say.’ (Rob’s riposte: ‘if everyone rationed speech thus, the entire mainstream punditocracy would cease to exist.’ Amen.)”

Pinpointed by my perceptive chatterbox of a child, this economy explains the lack of gush in my writing. Cutting and slashing at a column are one of the best things a writer can do. That’s my advice to budding writers (or people who believe they are writers). Slash mercilessly.

10 thoughts on “Updated: Bring Back The Silent Steely Type

  1. Van Wijk

    I’ve watched Mad Men a couple of times, mainly for the Draper character. He’s perfect. As is evident from his tender affair with a teacher, the viewer recently discovered that this complex character (now that’s a novelty) would probably not quite such an incorrigible philanderer were his beautiful wife not so icy and hostile.

    An oath-breaker hardly seems a symbol of perfection.

  2. M. B. Moon

    Alright Ilana, I will get in shape, I already tan nicely but I am only medium height. But I will not be silent!

  3. George Pal

    The contrast to Hollywood’s decades long types, beautiful, shapely women and handsome men (without so much as a hint of cute), with today’s girls with attenuated figures (without so much as a hint of the lithesome) and man-boys that swish is not so much evidence of a crush with Androgyny as it is a lust for egalitarianism – and it’s all very unbecoming.

  4. M. B. Moon

    Wait, the “Mad Men” are Madison Avenue types and you call that manly? I could have done that but something about selling my soul to sell lies was frightening to me.

    But there seems to be a global conspiracy to loot each other and then respect the more successful at doing so.

  5. Haym

    At 6 foot two and fullback-size then I am John Galt to your Dagny Taggart. Non-smoker. Black hair – thin at the top. Lean toward libertarian, ready to blow up buildings for you.

  6. Robert Glisson

    The acting personality I felt most drawn to was Glenn Ford. Man’ man. I’ve never found a man to tell my kids to watch. My wife runs the television, I try to ignore it, and she ignores Mad Men. That is a “stereotype” though. “OH, he would be a good husband if he only had a loving wife.” or the goodie. “My wife don’t understand me.” I can’t accept it. A man has only two choices- divorce or sticking it out by the rules. I have to stand with van Wijk on this one.

  7. Eric Miller

    The writers occasionally include scenes that are calculated to offend viewers, lest we become too hypnotized by Don Draper’s charisma or too wrapped up in nostalgia for what he represents. For example, Don’s “you people” comment to Salvatore a couple of episodes ago was clearly intended as homophobic (to use current terminology). Similarly, Roger’s blackface scene from earlier in the season came across as a deliberate slap in the face to the type of person who goes to “Mad Men parties” where everyone is decked out in period garb. The amazing thing is how quickly the male characters are forgiven by a largely liberal and/or female audience that might otherwise feel compelled to apply 21st century social norms to an early 1960s setting. I think that Don is going to have to be in collusion with Lee Harvey Oswald if he is going to lose any of his fan base.

  8. M. B. Moon

    “However, certain verbose individuals should take a cue or two from the silent steely type. “ Ilana Mercer

    Oh, I can be quiet off the Internet but I notice I cease to exist when I try to be quiet on the Internet.

    I think I’ll call a girlfriend on the phone and maybe just grunt once if I am feeling verbose.

  9. Robert Glisson

    “Asserted and assimilated by men in the Comments Section is the feminist truism whereby saying that a man would be a good husband if he only had a loving wife is an excuse for the man’s innate badness.” Perhaps I mis-wrote earlier, I thought I reputed that type of behavioral statement in my earlier comment along with Mr. Van Wijk, maybe I cut and slashed too much. I do not disagree with your statement that “dashing looks, manly demeanor, and complexity. There is a lot of good about him.” is an important asset in a leading television character and one that has been missing from the screen for close to a half century now… On to cut and slash writing- That’s why I make comments on your blog- the 200 word limit, the almost Catholic Nun Schoolteacher editorials, teach me to narrow my views, improve my skills, as a hobby writer (non-author) it is perfect for training me to write and I see improvement, thank you.

Comments are closed.