The Peterborough Examiner

Low-key‘mad Men’ finale gets record audience

- JILL SERJEANT Reuters

LOS ANGELES — Emmy-winning drama Mad Men drew a record 2.7 million viewers for its low-key Season 5 finale, bringing to an end its most watched and most controvers­ial season yet.

Cable channel AMC said on Monday that the TV show set in a 1960s New York advertisin­g agency enjoyed its biggest weekly audiences during a season to date, drawing an average 2.6 million U.S. viewers, up 15 percent over last season.

“We make Mad Men for the fans. My goal is to tell a compelling story and entertain people and it thrills me that people keep watching,” creator Matthew Weiner said in a statement.

Mad Men, starring Jon Hamm as enigmatic advertisin­g executive Don Draper, has won four consecutiv­e Emmy awards for best TV drama series despite a relatively small audience.

Season five, with a fist fight, hallucinat­ions, a suicide, and an LSD trip, was both darker and more dramatic than the slowburn storytelli­ng that marked the show’s previous years. And after Sunday’s finale, it drew mostly positive reviews.

Mike Hale at the New York Times said this season’s final episode — which closed with Draper propositio­ned in a bar and contemplat­ing a reply — left fans with “smaller and more intimate questions to ponder” than the gruesome suicide of English character Lane Pryce the week before.

Time magazine’s James Poniewozik said the show had “purposely upped its scale” this season. “The show seems to have been driven by an imperative to produce more big moments, more arresting images and set pieces, more ... scenes that fans will talk about all week,” he wrote.

The Los Angeles Times was less favorable, saying Mad Men ended “with a whimper” after what writer Meredith Blake said was a “rudderless” season of forgotten storylines and missed opportunit­ies to engage in the social changes of the 1960s.

Despite some of the critical reservatio­ns, Mad Men is expected to do well again when nomination­s for this year’s primetime Emmys are announced next month, putting the show on course for a potential fifth trophy for best drama series.

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