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“Mad Men” stars Jon Hamm, right, and Elisabeth Moss on the set with Matthew Weiner, creator of the new AMC series. Weiner wrote the pilot script seven years ago.
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AMC’s ‘Mad Men’ looks at life through ’60s glasses

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - At first glance, the world of “Mad Men” seems as distant from the here and now as Neptune.

Welcome to an ambitious new drama on cable’s AMC, and to the Sterling Cooper advertising agency perched high above Madison Avenue. The year is 1960.

In this world, women of all ages are girls, and know it. Liquor punctuates the workdays of the men in charge. Everybody smokes despite the recent Reader’s Digest article that warns how cigarettes can kill you.

Meanwhile, the Pill has just burst on the scene. Desperate housewives are trying psychotherapy. A record

by a hot young comic named Bob Newhart is slaying listeners with his “button-down mind” (whatever that is).

Plenty of questions (if not so many answers) are blowin’ in the wind, and “Mad Men” identifies them vividly.

But the charm of this series premiering today is that it doesn’t treat 1960 as a quaint aberration. Instead, “Mad Men” provides an unexpected window on America in 2007.

“Things don’t change, people don’t change,” insisted Matthew Weiner, who created “Mad Men” (and was a writer for “The Sopranos”). “The rules change.”

A good barometer of those rules is advertising.

“It’s a reflection of the culture,” said Weiner, explaining that ad execs have always aimed “to find out how you feel, then tell you how their product is going to make you feel better.”

But in 1960 the advertising business, like so much else, was at a turning point. The rules had been upended a year earlier by the revolutionary Volkswagen campaign that invited drivers to “Think small” and choose the VW Beetle. The pitch was subversive and ironic.

And it’s remembered as maybe the greatest ad campaign ever. Advertising would never be the same.

How will Sterling Cooper adapt? That’s largely in the hands of its creative director, Don Draper. Played by Jon Hamm (“We Were Soldiers”), Draper is a star at the agency. He’s smooth, witty and tormented. And candid.

As he told an attractive woman over cocktails, “You’re born alone and you die alone, and this world just drops a bunch of rules on top of you to make you forget those facts. But I never forget.”

The woman asked if love might brighten his outlook.

“What you call love,” said Draper, “was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.”

But right now it’s Lucky Strike cigarettes he’s under fire to sell. And in a tough new regulatory climate, he must hatch a campaign that avoids any claim that Lucky Strikes are somehow beneficial to a smoker’s health.

Though barely over 30, Draper feels pressure from Pete Campbell, an even younger up-and-comer eyeing Draper’s job. Played by Vincent Kartheiser (“Angel”), Pete is also eyeing Draper’s winsome new secretary, played by Elisabeth Moss (“The West Wing”) — never mind he’s about to be married.

Smart, kicky and cosmopolitan, “Mad Men” is redolent of John Cheever short stories and “The Apartment,” the multi-Oscar-winning film about corporate climbers that happens to have been released in 1960.

“By talking about that era,” said Weiner, “I can talk about everything right now that I care about.” Social mores. Civil rights. Sex. Gender roles. The definition of adulthood.

“I love the division that has existed since then,” he added — “a countercultural wave and a conservative wave that keep co-opting each other.”

TO VIEW

“Mad Men” airs at 8 p.m. today on AMC.


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