@@stonefaceBRC He was showing dominance. He didn't talk to her about her looks. He didn't try any cheesy loser pickup lines. He basically came right out saying let's have a one night stand - and if she says no he doesn't care. He's leaving after 1 night anyway, so its no strings attached. Whereas, the Italians were practically begging for it and looking desperate and cheesy. They obviously felt threatened by him, whereas he minded them very little attention and kept it on her. --- granted, keep in mind that is Don's wife and they were playing a little prank on the Italian gents.
“I am only in Rome for one night. I won’t have my heart broken.”. Again. This was what Don Draper was. Again and again, and what made women fall for him. What made him a saint, and a monster. A genius boy with a forever broken heart.
Shows how little you know. They might not look like much now, but don't let that distract you from the the fact that in 1946, Alberto Bundino (the one on the left) scored four goals in a single game while playing for the Perugia Panthers in the 1946 city championship game versus Benito Mussolini High School, including the game-winning goal in the final seconds against his old nemesis, Bambino "Ricambio Pneumatica" Diccione.
I take it you haven't seen the show at all? Only scenes where Don role-plays being confident and at ease with himself? He proves time and time again he is anything but.
@@andrew7taylor it's a persona of confidence and charisma. Hes built a life and career from it, but on the inside hes always run from his problems, his problems are not bothering him here so hes in his character
I’m an Italian-American woman and I can say without a doubt that these 2 actors playing Italian men behaved exactly as Italian men do. They don’t ask they just assume. And they are shocked as sh!t when you don’t find it charming. And not just in the 1960’s…today.
When I first saw this scene it was humorous, becuase I speak Italian and I was surprised that they actualy got the subtitles right, but now when I watch it makes me sad. In the mid 60s, when this scene would have taken place, my father would have been around the same age as as the two guaglioni hitting on Betty. He would have been just out of the army and passing through Rome on his way back home. He as also a burino, a country bumpkin from Sicily. Literally a sharecropper, as he and his father worked land that they didn't own, growing wheat and fava beans for "il Barone" as they called the landowner. Soon after he left the service he decided he couldn't bear to live in the countryside anymore, as a nobody, so he came to America and landed in Brooklyn in June 1963. He worked two jobs my whole childhood, days as a bricklayer and nights driving trucks at JFK Airport. He sent my sister and I to school and went into busines for himself as a general contractor, doing cement work and home repairs. He was too trusting and was taken for a ride financially not once but twice, both times by brothers-in-law. He was not able to save enough to provide a comfortable retirement for himself, which is what he deserved. In January of 2022, on the night of his 90th birthday, he had a stroke in front of us at the dinner table. Our tradition had been that my mom would cook pizza for him on his birthday, the only time all year she would make it. By this point she wasn't able to do it anymore so I took over the duty. I'll never forget the look in his eyes when the EMS took him out of the house, a mix of fear and strength. He never spoke or walked again, and spent the rest of the year bed bound. He finally passed in December, but not after hanging on for a week in a near death state. Even after they removed the feeding tube he still fought to live. During that final week my mother also fell ill, with an infection and covid at the same time. She ended up at the same hospital as dad and after a night in the ER she was admitted and placed on the same floor as him, by coincidence. The nurses then realized they were husband and wife and would wheel her into his room every chance they could so she could see him and hold his hand. Then they broke protocol and moved her bed into his room as they knew he was near the end. The very next morning after they did that he was gone. I don't know how but he willed himself to hold on. I swear on my son's life this is all true. I don't know why I'm writing this, as I suspect no one will ever read it, but that's not the point. The point is he was a great man to me, a lion. Nothing could stop him. I hope I can be as strong as he when my time comes.
TV or movies at their best evoke a memory, a feeling, a hope--like this did for you. Thanks for sharing your dad's story. I'm going to hug my declining pop extra hard next time I see him.
Thank you for sharing your story. It moved me to tears. I lost my dad over 15 years ago and I miss him every single day. Then I lost my mom last December. They both had such dignity and strength in the end. I'd be so completely lost without my sister now that they are gone. I hope you aren't alone and you have someone too. Anyway, I just wanted to let you know that someone had read your family's story.
Thank you for sharing. As a father myself, I think it’s incredibly beautiful how much you revere your dad. It’s great this scene evokes memories of him.
I pulled a move like that one time in my life, stepping in while other guys were trying to hit on a beautiful woman. It worked, and it was a fantastic moment and a beautiful memory.
cosMICjester Hahah she was a stranger but we ended up dating for a while. We’re still friends. Luckily mine resulted in a few confused and angry stares when we walked away, but no scrap necessary. Mine happened in a national park… If it had been a bar it might’ve been a different story:)
I worked at some high end night clubs in the Miami area in the 80's and I couldn't even tell you how many times I'd see guys hitting on hot girls & I'd come over if it looked like they needed help from these wolves & I'd play the protective brother or boyfriend & tell these girls if you don't want to be bothered tell the guys just that !!
This is a beautiful scene. Betty nowhere in the show looks more desirable and sexy. Don handles his competition with effortless grace, and non reactivity. And as others have said it's role playing. Don is pretending to be a charming stranger that must win over the prize. Don's lack of availability demonstrates his superior value versus the other guys. He's only in Rome for 1 night...
Reminds me of the sopranos. Oh well Matthew weiner worked in both shows I reckon^^ Still, Don Draper's acting was spot on and he managed to summarize the essence of masculinity and self-confidence in one scene.
I just started watching Mad Men, and this is my favorite scene so far. I love Betty and Don together. They have their issues, but when they're good, those are some of the best moments on the show. I know they divorce, but I still hope they somehow end up together again.
This should be a lesson to all the immature young punks who feel the need to fight over women....Don Draper was like, "let them insult me all they want...lol.....I'm the one going home with the girl tonight!"
Authority + Self-confidence. No matter who you are, where you are (obvioulsly not outnumbered by gangbangers etc.), it mostly comes down to these two factors. They key is that, in order to display aufthority, you have to have a high degree of self-confidence, often earned by confronting situations like this and losing but LEARNING from them. So you enter them practically not giving a fuck, leading to a RELAXED attitude, that leaves you in control of your actions, emotions. Learning by doing.
Confidence is a universal display of believing in yourself, which almost can't be faked. But there's two ways of attaining it: By skill or by stupidity (see dunning kruger effect).
Your cliched "pickup artist" nonsense shows you don't understand the point of this scene. Don and Betty, who are married, are clearly screwing with these Italian guys.
Lol not just anyone can be like Don. Sure a lot of it is learned and perfected but it is something that you're also born with. A mixture of genetics and a superior personality type. Anyone who says any different is coping.
See, this is where Betty shines. Being a socialite, speaking a beautiful language like Italian, dressing up to the hilt, loving the lifestyle of Rome. She was a gorgeous woman, so could've landed an Italian, French or British aristocrat for a husband if she had played her cards right. But she never played the field. She literally went with the first handsome, successful man who wanted to marry her--Don Draper. If she had given herself more time, been more strategic, been a loose and free woman without settling down for a few years, Betty would've landed the child-free lifestyle where she shined. Alas, she didn't. She was too constricted in her imagination, and had a child-like need for predictability. Which ended up shoving her into a glass cage she hated--as a housewife and mother in a prosperous American suburb. Her bitterness (it leads to A LOT of smoking) and terrible lack of imagination ultimately killed her...
Everyone is bagging on the two Italians. They may not look like much now, but don't let that distract you from the the fact that in 1946, Alberto Bundino (the one on the left) scored four goals in a single game while playing for the Perugia Panthers in the 1946 city championship game versus Benito Mussolini High School, including the game-winning goal in the final seconds against his old nemesis, Bambino "Ricambio Pneumatica" Diccione.
Something tells me this scene wouldn’t be as civilised today. There’d be name-calling, swearing, and in worst case a fight filmed on someone’s phone...
January is indeed 60s-tastic here but for me there is a genuine original European precedent:type 'the Champions-opening scene' and marvel at Alexandra Bastedo
You know I just don't get why the writers had to turn Betty into this horrible woman...Don and Betty are made for each other, I don't care that he is with Megan now...Betty will always be the one for him...you know why? Because read the letter Don wrote to her in s2...it speaks for its self. They are perfect for each other because they are both cold, yet warm, selfish, yet caring - they only love themselves and each other. I still hope they come back to being together!
I loved this scene a lot. I've watched a couple of Hollywood series and I have seen couples go out on dates and role-play (e.g Phil & Claire from Modern Family). I've always wanted to know if this is a very common practice amongst American couples. Context: I am from Nigeria and never lived in America. Just curious.
The "pick up your significant other as if they are a stranger at a drinks place" has actually been done a ton on US shows and is something therapists sometimes recommend to couples to add spark to a dying relationship. Boston Legal did a bit with it that got way out of hand and was funny. th-cam.com/video/Mx3w3lXruME/w-d-xo.html
American here. It is DEFINITELY not common practice. You see way more of this on American TV shows than in real-life in the U.S. This role-playing among married couples is done mostly for comedic effect and to shake things up a bit in a show.
The worst thing about all of this is that Betty was not only beautiful but talented and had something special. However, she was desperately unhappy because she needed more in her life and Don never understood that. Men only saw Betty as a trophy on their arm and not an equal.
Furio sitting alone in the distance..."Stupida fackin' game"
HAHAHAHA, I now relate anything Italian with Furio
Fan Made Videos 😂😂😂
"Those two suck each others dicks"
Don goes over and smacks him on the top of his head: "You godda bee onna you had"
you gotta bee on your had
"That's right near my room."
*GAME OVER*
"I'm only in Rome for one night, I won"t have my heart broken"
The Italians then knew they lost.
I'm only in Rome for 4 more hours
Why? I cannot for the life of me understand why it's such a potent line
@@hussianahmed1145 Literally same, someone please explain
@@stonefaceBRC He was showing dominance. He didn't talk to her about her looks. He didn't try any cheesy loser pickup lines. He basically came right out saying let's have a one night stand - and if she says no he doesn't care. He's leaving after 1 night anyway, so its no strings attached. Whereas, the Italians were practically begging for it and looking desperate and cheesy. They obviously felt threatened by him, whereas he minded them very little attention and kept it on her. --- granted, keep in mind that is Don's wife and they were playing a little prank on the Italian gents.
@@MrTCHOSS wow, I see now. What a genius!
“I am only in Rome for one night. I won’t have my heart broken.”. Again. This was what Don Draper was. Again and again, and what made women fall for him. What made him a saint, and a monster. A genius boy with a forever broken heart.
Still can't infer that line
He even drinks to them, so savage.
January Jones is a beautiful woman obviously, but man did they make her extra luminous for this episode. Every frame, every look is otherworldly.
She's the best
Those two never had the makings of a varsity athlete
Shows how little you know.
They might not look like much now, but don't let that distract you from the the fact that in 1946, Alberto Bundino (the one on the left) scored four goals in a single game while playing for the Perugia Panthers in the 1946 city championship game versus Benito Mussolini High School, including the game-winning goal in the final seconds against his old nemesis, Bambino "Ricambio Pneumatica" Diccione.
@@paulgilbert2506 I'm gonna let that one slide as I think you're being ironic.
Can you imagine that? Never having had the makings of a varsity athlete?
That is freaking hilarious. Maybe next they come, they better come heavy, or not at all.
Yep, that why they left to get their shine box.
Draper didn't get jealous, defensive or angry. He was confident and at ease with himself. Also he role played with his wife which she loves.
I take it you haven't seen the show at all?
Only scenes where Don role-plays being confident and at ease with himself?
He proves time and time again he is anything but.
"Don Draper" might be but Dick Whitman definitely isn't...
@@andrew7taylor it's a persona of confidence and charisma. Hes built a life and career from it, but on the inside hes always run from his problems, his problems are not bothering him here so hes in his character
draper didn't get jealous, defensive or angry here BECAUSE it was roleplay
Don couldn't have been less confident and at ease with himself on the insecurest day of his life if he had an electrified insecurity machine.
I’m an Italian-American woman and I can say without a doubt that these 2 actors playing Italian men behaved exactly as Italian men do. They don’t ask they just assume. And they are shocked as sh!t when you don’t find it charming. And not just in the 1960’s…today.
What a large sample to justify a generalization, 2 Italian actors in a scripted scene.
@@bonir2003thanks! 😁
If you're an italian american you definitely have no idea how italian men are. Are you saying that men from the US don't make assumptions on women?
When I first saw this scene it was humorous, becuase I speak Italian and I was surprised that they actualy got the subtitles right, but now when I watch it makes me sad. In the mid 60s, when this scene would have taken place, my father would have been around the same age as as the two guaglioni hitting on Betty. He would have been just out of the army and passing through Rome on his way back home. He as also a burino, a country bumpkin from Sicily. Literally a sharecropper, as he and his father worked land that they didn't own, growing wheat and fava beans for "il Barone" as they called the landowner. Soon after he left the service he decided he couldn't bear to live in the countryside anymore, as a nobody, so he came to America and landed in Brooklyn in June 1963.
He worked two jobs my whole childhood, days as a bricklayer and nights driving trucks at JFK Airport. He sent my sister and I to school and went into busines for himself as a general contractor, doing cement work and home repairs. He was too trusting and was taken for a ride financially not once but twice, both times by brothers-in-law. He was not able to save enough to provide a comfortable retirement for himself, which is what he deserved. In January of 2022, on the night of his 90th birthday, he had a stroke in front of us at the dinner table. Our tradition had been that my mom would cook pizza for him on his birthday, the only time all year she would make it. By this point she wasn't able to do it anymore so I took over the duty. I'll never forget the look in his eyes when the EMS took him out of the house, a mix of fear and strength. He never spoke or walked again, and spent the rest of the year bed bound. He finally passed in December, but not after hanging on for a week in a near death state. Even after they removed the feeding tube he still fought to live.
During that final week my mother also fell ill, with an infection and covid at the same time. She ended up at the same hospital as dad and after a night in the ER she was admitted and placed on the same floor as him, by coincidence. The nurses then realized they were husband and wife and would wheel her into his room every chance they could so she could see him and hold his hand. Then they broke protocol and moved her bed into his room as they knew he was near the end. The very next morning after they did that he was gone. I don't know how but he willed himself to hold on.
I swear on my son's life this is all true. I don't know why I'm writing this, as I suspect no one will ever read it, but that's not the point. The point is he was a great man to me, a lion. Nothing could stop him. I hope I can be as strong as he when my time comes.
Your father sounds like one of the old breed. It would have been an honor to meet him. Now when I watch this scene, I will be reminded.
TV or movies at their best evoke a memory, a feeling, a hope--like this did for you. Thanks for sharing your dad's story. I'm going to hug my declining pop extra hard next time I see him.
Thank you for sharing your story. It moved me to tears. I lost my dad over 15 years ago and I miss him every single day. Then I lost my mom last December. They both had such dignity and strength in the end. I'd be so completely lost without my sister now that they are gone. I hope you aren't alone and you have someone too. Anyway, I just wanted to let you know that someone had read your family's story.
Thank you for sharing. As a father myself, I think it’s incredibly beautiful how much you revere your dad. It’s great this scene evokes memories of him.
Well written and heartfelt, thank you.
“An American millionaire”
When I first watched the series I thought the guy mistook don, on the second I realized his assessment was spot on
Me too.
I still wonder how did the know he was american and rich??? I don't get it
@@leticiaaraujo2476 his clothes, his accent? lol you wouldn't need to be sherlock holmes
@@leticiaaraujo2476 oh my sweet summer child
@@bardgold4553 excellent reference 😂
This was the sweetest thing Don did for Betty in the whole show
Don is so handsome they know they have no chance as soon as he sits down.
Because of his looks? Typical. Its not the looks. It was the confidence.
*****
No. It was Hollywood.
TheWinterShadow it's a mixture of the two. You can't be that dapper with just one and not the other.
TheWinterShadow umm no way, u dont get anywhere with confidence if you dont have the looks to back it up
They’re in Italy. It’s not hard to find men that look like him. Even the poliziotti are dashing. 😄
I don't remember that scene. Damn it, I'm going to have to go back and watch the whole series again
Conrad Hilton sends them to Rome to check out the hotel and give him some feedback. It's a good episode.
@@jamlane I also don't remember this scene. Which episode is this in?
It's season 3, episode 8... the souvenir.
I use that excuse ALL the time.
Damn it!!!
I pulled a move like that one time in my life, stepping in while other guys were trying to hit on a beautiful woman. It worked, and it was a fantastic moment and a beautiful memory.
I'm ready for the story!
Me too ... at Adam's Apple in NYC. Deborah Dussair ...
cosMICjester Hahah she was a stranger but we ended up dating for a while. We’re
still friends. Luckily mine resulted in a few confused and angry stares when we walked away, but no scrap necessary. Mine happened in a national park… If it had been a bar it might’ve been a different story:)
You gotta tell us dude.
I worked at some high end night clubs in the Miami area in the 80's and I couldn't even tell you how many times I'd see guys hitting on hot girls & I'd come over if it looked like they needed help from these wolves & I'd play the protective brother or boyfriend & tell these girls if you don't want to be bothered tell the guys just that !!
As awesome as Don is here--Betty OWNS this scene. Fluent Italian? Poise? And drop dead gorgeous? We are not worthy, Betty :)
Actually she wasn't. But she was the stage-setter. Don was the focus.
TheWinterShadow get out. This whole scene was about Betty.
@@missydiamond9310 There are many scenes about Betty, but this one is about Don and how he handled those 2 guys
Would’ve been more classic if he spoke Italian
Mama Mia betty draper
Yanki.. go home!!! LOL.. no mater how many times I watch this can't stop laughing my head off....
Why?
Cause he finds it funny ... what’s so hard about that? Bruto.
And no matter how many times I hear it...
@@AmandaFromWisconsin bro cause it sounds funny as fucj ahahha
I tell this to every American I meet
Don Draper, no matter all his issues, still the coolest guy in the room!!
That toast at the end "To whatever they were saying." CONFIDENCE.
This is a beautiful scene. Betty nowhere in the show looks more desirable and sexy. Don handles his competition with effortless grace, and non reactivity. And as others have said it's role playing. Don is pretending to be a charming stranger that must win over the prize. Don's lack of availability demonstrates his superior value versus the other guys. He's only in Rome for 1 night...
Smooth cat
I hate the hair.
Silky smooth rhyming cat
Freakin love this scene probably one of my favs. in the entire show
Don:"I am only in Rome for one night. I won’t have my heart broken"
Guidos: * damn that was good *
Reminds me of the sopranos.
Oh well Matthew weiner worked in both shows I reckon^^
Still, Don Draper's acting was spot on and he managed to summarize the essence of masculinity and self-confidence in one scene.
Betty looks amazing here 😍
Right? So fucking gorgeous.
Crazy hot
With a tower on her head? Am I the only one who thinks she looks ridiculous?
@@HolyManta ur a tower
@@HolyManta yes. You're the only one.
I just started watching Mad Men, and this is my favorite scene so far. I love Betty and Don together. They have their issues, but when they're good, those are some of the best moments on the show.
I know they divorce, but I still hope they somehow end up together again.
JerseyLoveee poor guy. 😅 such high hopes.
They do fuck at one point after the divorce
"I still hope they somehow end up together again."
Reality: she dies of cancer.
Ouch.
Even after their divorce, Don still call her Birdie. Don with his issues, there is no end to it.
@Luigi lol were you forget how many times Don cheat on her
This should be a lesson to all the immature young punks who feel the need to fight over women....Don Draper was like, "let them insult me all they want...lol.....I'm the one going home with the girl tonight!"
colderbeer yeah, it only cost him a wedding ring and a divorce settlement
@@jokerman1964 his cheating caused that actually
in real life its like 50/50 chance that you are going home with your wife tonight in such places.
Don had a slight advantage.......
She's his wife!!!
there is no lesson here, don is literally married to her lmfao in real life of course you should shoot your shot with a beautiful woman
Authority + Self-confidence.
No matter who you are, where you are (obvioulsly not outnumbered by gangbangers etc.), it mostly comes down to these two factors. They key is that, in order to display aufthority, you have to have a high degree of self-confidence, often earned by confronting situations like this and losing but LEARNING from them. So you enter them practically not giving a fuck, leading to a RELAXED attitude, that leaves you in control of your actions, emotions. Learning by doing.
In the end, they all lose. The girl climbs higher and higher on the rungs, and stepping on the faces of previous men to climb.
+TotallyNot aCreep I don't know about that. You seem to be spinning out of control there.
Confidence is a universal display of believing in yourself, which almost can't be faked. But there's two ways of attaining it: By skill or by stupidity (see dunning kruger effect).
Your cliched "pickup artist" nonsense shows you don't understand the point of this scene. Don and Betty, who are married, are clearly screwing with these Italian guys.
Lol not just anyone can be like Don. Sure a lot of it is learned and perfected but it is something that you're also born with. A mixture of genetics and a superior personality type. Anyone who says any different is coping.
1:26 Lmao Seeing John Hamm's face and know what he is thinking is funny asf. Especially when it transitioned to him. 😂😂
They insulted Don a little bit, they were a bit out of line themselves
No no no, they didn’t insult him
Drinks on the house
Lmaaoo
Nah I didn’t insult him
@@DavidTheRoss The Drinks are on the HOUSE! 🤣🤣
Break up my party
My favorite scene in Mad Men so far Don coming in like Sean Connery's Bond here. "That's my bitch, italian homies, step off!"
To whatever they were saying.
What I love about this is that it shows Betty and Don at their best.
& then the Alpha Male shows up...
See, this is where Betty shines. Being a socialite, speaking a beautiful language like Italian, dressing up to the hilt, loving the lifestyle of Rome. She was a gorgeous woman, so could've landed an Italian, French or British aristocrat for a husband if she had played her cards right. But she never played the field. She literally went with the first handsome, successful man who wanted to marry her--Don Draper. If she had given herself more time, been more strategic, been a loose and free woman without settling down for a few years, Betty would've landed the child-free lifestyle where she shined. Alas, she didn't. She was too constricted in her imagination, and had a child-like need for predictability. Which ended up shoving her into a glass cage she hated--as a housewife and mother in a prosperous American suburb. Her bitterness (it leads to A LOT of smoking) and terrible lack of imagination ultimately killed her...
Fantastic comment. Poor Betty could have done so much better for herself than the serial cheater that was Don.
“it is whatever they were saying “ - Don is marvellous
January Jones looked her most stunning in this serene! Wow!
You missed the shittest she had for him when she says they called him ugly. Don passed.
*Calls Draper ugly*
Draper: Been called a lotta things... But never that
It's scenes like this that make me wish Don treated Betty better
I love the scene.. and especially what comes next
Back when women didn't freak out about creepy come ons. But then again most men knew when to give up gracefully.
My aunt went to Italy in the early 70s, she's blond, Men followed her around the country, would camp out under her hotel room balcony
good way to get a restraining order lol
Loved this scene and Betty looked beautiful.
Italians have more tact irl than Americans, especially nowadays. 60s was the last generation where masculinity was admirable in the states.
He didn't have to flex this hard
“Parla molto bene italiano!”
“Crazi!”
"Parla molto bene italiano!"
"Gracias!"
Parla molto bene l’italiano
- arigatooooo
🤣🤣🤣
The best moment for their relationship consists in Don pretending to court her again
Everyone is bagging on the two Italians.
They may not look like much now, but don't let that distract you from the the fact that in 1946, Alberto Bundino (the one on the left) scored four goals in a single game while playing for the Perugia Panthers in the 1946 city championship game versus Benito Mussolini High School, including the game-winning goal in the final seconds against his old nemesis, Bambino "Ricambio Pneumatica" Diccione.
I knew it!
Who would name a school after Benito Mussolini in 1946, a year after the dictator was captured and hung upside down dead in Milan?
Don...always selling product. Especially, if the product...is him.
Was Betty going for the Monica Vitti look or what?lol
only the guy on the left is neapolitan, the other one is roman
Best multi-season drama series ever: Sopranos, Breaking Bad, The Wire, Mad Men. Game of Thrones, Narcos, ER
These moves are a lot more effective if you look like Jon Hamm.
Nah, it's even better if you're brutto.
Based on the title, I thought Don was going to challenge them to an Ice-Cream eating contest, and to do it eating something plain like Vanilla
Something tells me this scene wouldn’t be as civilised today. There’d be name-calling, swearing, and in worst case a fight filmed on someone’s phone...
Unh, a beatdown of the very smooth persuasion variety.
Similar thing happened to me in Wigan.
What happened? Italians in Wigan? I wouldn't be surprised if they were Polish or Afghani. I need details, please!
"To whatever they were saying" the ultimate F U LOL
I mean, when you look as good as Betty & Don do together, what are you gonna do?
That was so f*king smooooth.
Not really. They were already married.
@@Pdmc-vu5gj Actually, that was my point. It was smooth because the two guys trying to hit on Betty never had a clue to what was really happening.
They knew in that instant they were outmatched
Love this scene...
"And he’s ugly" sure lol
For the last time grazie is pronounced grah-tsyeh not grah-tsee
Nobody pronounces it that way outside of Milan and the alps.. You either never left your corner of italy, or you get all your info from the internet.
Well to paraphrase Churchill, "we've established what you are, now all we have to do is negotiate the price."
Loved this scene
"and he's ugly" :D
drapper won because he is the main character
January is indeed 60s-tastic here but for me there is a genuine original European precedent:type 'the Champions-opening scene' and marvel at Alexandra Bastedo
It’s like watching the bridge and tunnel crowd in Manhattan.
i'm only in rome for one night...i won't have my heart broken
Don, so smooth and seductive in every language
Only one guy is neapolitan, the other one is from Roma!
You know I just don't get why the writers had to turn Betty into this horrible woman...Don and Betty are made for each other, I don't care that he is with Megan now...Betty will always be the one for him...you know why? Because read the letter Don wrote to her in s2...it speaks for its self. They are perfect for each other because they are both cold, yet warm, selfish, yet caring - they only love themselves and each other. I still hope they come back to being together!
Victrola66 lmao. Everything that you didn’t want to have happen happened
Betty isn't as horrible as you think. She's a very complex character.
I wish more women would wear their hair up like Betty.
But then we'd have to put up with the neck tattoos.
''If I were that cigarette in your mouth, I would die of happiness''
Wonder what her lungs have to say about that...
i know i'm going to get roasted for saying it, but i was kinda pleased when her character got lung cancer
@@dennisatkinson22 yeah you’re right totally unnecessary and uncalled for
"To whatever they were saying." 🥂
Betty is GORGEOUS here!!!
This is the first time I took joy in seeing fellow Italians being humiliated
and it was worth waiting 2 seasons for that:)
Whiskey. Neat.
Masterclass from Don
Men today are like 'hold my beer', Don meanwhile ORDERS a whiskey neat!
About to try this line. Let’s see if it works for me
4 people are Neapolitan guys
It is the perogitive of the victor to be magnanimous.
0:00-0:04, my favorite part of the video
I loved this scene a lot. I've watched a couple of Hollywood series and I have seen couples go out on dates and role-play (e.g Phil & Claire from Modern Family). I've always wanted to know if this is a very common practice amongst American couples.
Context: I am from Nigeria and never lived in America. Just curious.
I sincerely doubt that it’s common practice. The Phil and Claire role-playing scenes on modern family are absolutely hysterical and also sexy!
@@jefffawcett yes, the scenes are hysterical and "sexy." I totally forgot I had asked this question here lol thank you for answering.
The "pick up your significant other as if they are a stranger at a drinks place" has actually been done a ton on US shows and is something therapists sometimes recommend to couples to add spark to a dying relationship.
Boston Legal did a bit with it that got way out of hand and was funny.
th-cam.com/video/Mx3w3lXruME/w-d-xo.html
@@LSSYLondon, that's interesting. Thank you for sharing the video from Boston legal; it made my evening 🤣😂
American here. It is DEFINITELY not common practice. You see way more of this on American TV shows than in real-life in the U.S. This role-playing among married couples is done mostly for comedic effect and to shake things up a bit in a show.
@1:14 .... omg. Don, Don, Don...... =)
"If I were that shinebox in your mouth, I would die of happiness."
Man flirts with his wife
Comments: omg it was the confidence
Gentlemen, take notes. This is how it's done.
This scene is epic.
And Betty is smoking hot in this eppy.
as a half italian, i should confess don screws us in this episode. but it doesnt hurt my pride. viva!
One of the funniest moments
The worst thing about all of this is that Betty was not only beautiful but talented and had something special. However, she was desperately unhappy because she needed more in her life and Don never understood that. Men only saw Betty as a trophy on their arm and not an equal.
They start with "Oh!"
Little did the Italians knew, the game was already rigged from the start lol
My favorite scene from Jackie Brown
What episode is this ?