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The Mad Men Season 3 Ultimate Fan Quiz

Sure you've watched all thirteen episodes... repeatedly. But only a true Maddict can score ten out of ten on this ultimate fan quiz. Remember where Peggy and Duck had their first tryst? Know where Smitty went to school? Shut the door. Have a seat. Take the quiz. Take Quiz »


Answer the following bonus question in the comments section below before midnight ET on Sat., Nov. 14 for a chance to win a Season 2 DVD set. We'll randomly choose a winner from the correct submissions.

Bonus Question:
Who comes up with the idea of having Lane fire Don, Roger and Bert?
 
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Comments

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Don Draper comes up with the idea to fire the three.

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Don Drapper

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Don Draper.

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Don.

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Don Draper did!

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it was Don's idea!

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Don Draper. This is the best episode yet!

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Don!

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Don Draper!

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Amazing episode...Don Draper of course!

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Gotta agree.... the brilliant Don Draper !!

The Magin Man!

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Make that Magic Man.....sigh

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Who comes up with the idea of having Lane fire Don, Roger and Bert?

Why Don Draper of course!

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Don Draper of course.

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Don Draper, of course!

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Why my husband, Don (Damn he's hot) Draper, came up with that plan.

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don

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Don Draper.

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Don Draper!

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Don Draper

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Don Draper

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Don Draper

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I guess that I'm the second member of the age 55 club to participate on this thread. Matthew Weiner has set before himself a fairly daunting task: how to make the 1960s look and sound authentic to viewers who were alive in those years.

Matt needs to avoid at least the following cliches: the civil rights movement, the Vietnam war and the anti-war movement, the murders of RFK and MLK, flower power/hippies, the sexual revolution, generation gap, the Cold War, etc.

Don Draper going to love the '60s! Good luck, Matt. It's a tall order.

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Don did, brilliantly.

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It was Don's quick thinking!

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Don Draper

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Don Drapper comes up with the idea

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Don (I see everything) Draper

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In my previous post, I did not mean to suggest that Matt Weiner try to ignore the principal social changes and events of the 1960s. His daunting task is to weave them into the story without viewers getting ahead of him, anticipating the next "big thing" with: 'Oh, this is about (name of cast member) protesting the Vietnam war,' or 'Here is where we lose MLK, then RFK').

That's not going to be easy, primarily because the Boomers, who lived through those years, still remember in some detail how they felt when these events took place.

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