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  • NBC: Your In-Flight Entertainment

     

     After over ten years of Young and the Restless, CSI and Cold Case re-runs on your cross-country flights, American Airlines is switching networks...

     

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  • "Mad Men" Recap: Sunday Worst

     

    There's nothing quite as dramatic as what happened last week in this episode, but Mad Men is keeping its position as the most intricately gripping drama currently on TV.

    So let's get to our overriding theme: As per the episode's title, "Three Sundays," it's all about how our characters spend what's supposed to be a holy day. Fat chance! Those who aim for religion miss the point, and those who care more about work get jerked around completely.

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  • "Mad Men" Recap: Something Special in the Air


    Wow. This was another genius episode, full of plot points both huge and tiny, countless character revelations, and endlessly competing views on ethics, loyalty and the right thing to do.

    We start with a party at Paul's apartment in an "artsy" section of New Jersey, because apparently Greenwich Village just doesn't cut it anymore. With his beard and pipe and with-it attitude, Paul is trying so hard to be hip that he actually comes off as square. Which ex-girlfriend Joan calls him on, but not before telling his new squeeze, an African-American checkout clerk at the local supermarket, that she's just part of the hipster package. (Which may be true, but still.) Although Joan's always been a snob, we later find out that she's been extra-bitchy lately because she recently turned 31 -- which is clearly over the hill for a single career gal.

    In the city the next day, everyone's commute is fouled up by the ticker-tape parade honoring John Glenn's early space flight. (Image-conscious Don, of course, immediately senses how popular Glenn will be.) But that's not what they're all talking about at the office: According to the radio, an American Airlines flight from New York has crashed into Jamaica Bay for no apparent reason. (This is based on real life -- both events actually happened on the same day in 1962.) After shocked responses quickly give way to sick jokes, news of the crash leads to the main action of the episode:

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  • about the blogger

    Bloggers


    Lindy Parker has worked as a ghostwriter, editor, dance instructor and a purveyor of dreams, one beer at a time. She loves Charles Dickens and Gabriel Garcia Marquez and also, straight-to-video releases with Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. It's possible she reads more teen fiction than she should. She hails from Los Angeles, her hometown and soul mate, but she lives in Brooklyn, the fling she'll never forget.

    Olivia Purnell left Ohio for sunny Los Angeles; then found that she couldn’t ignore New York City’s call, and brought herself to Brooklyn where she has worked with GenArt, BlackBook, the School of American Ballet, and finished an M.A. in Creative Writing from N.Y.U. She loves one-liners with sting and hates the stench of the subway in the summer. That said, she can’t get enough of either.

    Jake Kalish is a freelance journalist and humorist whose work has appeared in Details, Maxim, Stuff, New York Press, Spin, Blender, Men's Fitness, Poets and Writers, and Playboy, among other publications. He is also the author of Santa vs. Satan: The Official Compendium of Imaginary Fights.

    Contributors


    Ben Kallen is an entertainment, health and humor writer who's been lectured to by Sidney Poitier, argued with by Lea Thompson and smiled at by Jennifer Connelly. He's the coauthor of The No S Diet and author of The Year in Weird, along with hundreds of magazine articles. He lives near the beach in Los Angeles, just like the gang from Three's Company.

    Nicole Ankowski has lived in Ohio, Oakland, and on the high plains of South Dakota, but is now proud to call Brooklyn home. She wrote for alternative weekly papers in the first two states, and tried to learn Lakota in the last. (The vowels can be tricky.) She just earned her MFA in Creative Writing and has been published in Beeswax literary journal. She is unable to resist good writing or bad TV.

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