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Mad Men - Creating Bertram Cooper (Paley Center)

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  • Опубліковано 30 чер 2009
  • Actor Robert Morse (Bertram Cooper) talks about his experience on Broadway in "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." Series creator/executive producer Matthew Weiner discusses why he chose Morse for the role of Bert.
    ABOUT THE PALEY CENTER:
    In an era of rapid change in media and technology, the not-for-profit Paley Center for Media explores the evolving ways in which we create, consume, and connect through media. With locations in New York and Los Angeles, and the foremost public archive of television and radio programming, the Paley Center produces and curates programs, forums, and educational activities that engage the general public, industry professionals, and the creative community in an ongoing conversation about the impact of media on our lives. The Paley Center for Media is a hub of innovation and connection for entrepreneurs, investors, and consumers with its finger on the pulse of the next big thing in media. Go to www.paleycenter... to learn more.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 45

  • @psychicriver
    @psychicriver 12 років тому +29

    I love Bert Cooper! You think he's so aloof, yet he's perhaps the sharpest man in the company. Oh, and his eccentricities (and everyone else's reactions) are so funny.

  • @philipciaffa6643
    @philipciaffa6643 3 роки тому +5

    I was fortunate to have occasional glimpses into this lost corporate civilization in the Sixties and Seventies. The corporate headquarters of a Fortune 100 company on Park Avenue in Manhattan was an elegant showplace until they became an A & M casualty, diversified manufacturing divisions sold off and now disappeared for their cash value by their new owners. The executive office spaces (after they vacated) became functional, utilitarian and pathetic clerk cubicles for the consulate of a foreign government. The CEO was reminiscent of Bert Cooper - patrician, educated, well compensated, suave and artful. Matthew Weiner and company captured it all masterfully.

  • @ece421
    @ece421 7 років тому +26

    I kind of want to see a spin-off of this series set twenty or thirty years before madmen

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 6 років тому +2

      Emily Edmonds
      I bet the idea that the show be set in the 60s was more central to Mad Men than almost any other idea.

    • @tabbypappy
      @tabbypappy 6 років тому +7

      Better Call Bert!!

    • @francescotamburini5790
      @francescotamburini5790 3 роки тому

      “1923, we were giddy”

  • @seanocean4745
    @seanocean4745 11 років тому +9

    Matt wiener is totally right.. Robert morse is a talented actor, he's so real and his mannerisms and how he says things sounds so natural and good and you really never know how he will say things, he says things in different ways and nails it every time.. the acting on the show overall is good.. i feel each actor embodies their character very well.. good casting

  • @josiahthomas9649
    @josiahthomas9649 5 років тому +12

    I really like the character of Bertram Cooper. I think he’s one of the most underrated characters on the show even though he runs half of the company through out the series and founded it along with Sterling. However I do think Sterling a much more popular character along with the others compared to Cooper. Overall, I find Cooper to be a very fascinating character and someone who as an audience we don’t know a lot about as person. I don’t we ever look inside of his world and see his point of view. He also is grounded character and does seem to be way more content than his collaborators and partners at work.... just my thoughts

    • @MrRocksW
      @MrRocksW 3 роки тому +1

      I loved his send off in the show

  • @5hambino497
    @5hambino497 Рік тому +1

    it's a total shame we didn't get an entire episode following bert Cooper.

    • @diamonddog13
      @diamonddog13 Рік тому

      "Cooper After Hours" would have been awesome.

  • @thewkovacs316
    @thewkovacs316 Рік тому +2

    he never lost that twinkle in his eye

  • @mobile513
    @mobile513 13 років тому +5

    @giantsean
    Of course, I forgot to note that., but I was thinking of them as both part of the same 18th century Orientalism trend where artists and intellectuals were fascinated with this generalized idea of the "Far East". I've always imagined Burt's parents, or one of their "eccentric" friends was a follower of it and passed it on to him at a young age.

  • @slamarmarcus600
    @slamarmarcus600 2 роки тому

    Late discovery from UA-cam with this show,well written

  • @walterlevesque4879
    @walterlevesque4879 6 років тому +25

    "Take off your shoes"

    • @joejohn.
      @joejohn. 3 роки тому

      Damn it, Alice, I don't ask for much.

  • @DrHogfan
    @DrHogfan 5 років тому +2

    How many group interviews did these people do ?

  • @marleneg7794
    @marleneg7794 4 роки тому

    Bertram is one cool ass dude.

  • @beepandbop
    @beepandbop 14 років тому +3

    @bonomo012 he's a right leaning, libertarian guy, that's why he likes Ayn Rand.
    As far as the Japanese go, conservative peeps tend to admire the Japanese martial and competitive culture.

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    do you know the theme song called living in harmony yes or no

  • @mobile513
    @mobile513 14 років тому +2

    Well, Ayn Rand was the hip thing for big corporate dudes to be into then, it shows he was ahead of the curve. For the next 50 years corporate executives would depend on Rand to affirm in their minds that greed was in fact good. Also, Rand was based in NYC at the time.
    The Japanese thing could relate to the Art of War, another popular work amongst corporate executives, which he quotes. He's also old and into modern art, Japan was all the rage in the field at the turn of the century.

    • @nobad6134
      @nobad6134 4 роки тому +1

      mobile513 Funny he’d be into Japanese culture after the war though with many war veterans from the Pacific in senior positions in the corporate world like Roger Sterling.

  • @cumomsandcureloms
    @cumomsandcureloms 4 роки тому +2

    The men on the show often did treat secretaries like toys

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    hi robert morse how are you today

  • @Lootroq
    @Lootroq 12 років тому +1

    Ayn Rand certainly was not the first to bring that idea up. Its thousands of years old.

  • @mobile513
    @mobile513 13 років тому

    @beepandbop
    Yeah, you said what I did in a lot less words. I feel silly.

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    have you ever tried it before yes or no

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    how are you doing today

  • @squattingheads
    @squattingheads 6 років тому +1

    The actor looks like the great nagus

  • @adammcgirt7123
    @adammcgirt7123 3 роки тому

    There are other rules!!

  • @mobile513
    @mobile513 14 років тому +1

    @bonomo012
    Oops, part 1s at the top. I don't think he has ties to the Japanese people themselves, it's all about Sun Tzu. An admirable, clever guy for him to learn from, no more or less, and he's thus interested in the period. Maybe he feels kinship to their pure, logical warrior mentality. How he got into it, who knows. Again, maybe modern art, or maybe he knew some Japanese immigrants, and maybe they were in the camps. It's unlikely to come up otherwise though, no one talked about it then.

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    do you like butter noodles and ketchup yes or no

  • @mjl1621
    @mjl1621 14 років тому +1

    One of the brilliant things that Ayn Rand pointed out is that without individualism, there is no collectivism, because collectivism is built on the achievement of individuals.

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    can you sing it yes or no

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    can you watch trollstopia for me yes or no

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    do you like gum drops yes or no

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    yes or no

  • @savanabittner1303
    @savanabittner1303 2 роки тому

    do you like poppy troll yes or no

  • @LazlosPlane
    @LazlosPlane 6 років тому +1

    Well, that was dull and pointless.