Carlos Rivera after a while don characters was just disgusting to watch i hated him after a while bc of all his ethics he could at any time be the man he wanted to just he chooses not to and then cried about it whenever things didn’t go his way
One of the best running gags in the show is how Roger ended up giving an employee all the money in his pocket like 3 different times. Not to mention he gets robbed at gunpoint in the season before this one. Then eventually he says something like “I gotta stop carrying around so much cash” lmao
@@bighands69 lol maybe in the 60s when cash was worth far more. Nowadays real men carry a card and a smartphone because they aren't children and need to buy real things that cost more money than you can conveniently carry in cash. Also cash is filthy and there's a global pandemic occurring.
@@tuscanyiscol Only weaklings cannot go without a smartphone. Real men can live for days without a smartphone. Real men love women, cash and beer. And they also love V8 engines and turn their noses up at electric cars and do not care about manginas and the global warming. Real men do not care about social justice of frogs. .
@@bighands69 What the hell are you babbling about? Sure you CAN go without a smartphone, but it's a tool, and an useful one. Defining yourself by some jackass Luddite ideal of masculinity sucks any merit out of whatever argument you were trying to make.
I totally disagree. You don't hate someone and give them nearly $8000 in today's money to stay in your company. You fire them and then hire someone for less who wouldn't know the better from having a crappy office.
@@swarleystinson6733 That was a completely different episode. Harry had been asked to change offices with Pete. Durung the lead up to that, he thought he was being fired.
What most people today do not realize is that $1100 would have bought a Rolex or put a series down payment on a car. A 1967 Ford Galaxie 500 would have cost about $2700. A 1965 Mustang would have cost about $2500.
Every single line in this scene is perfect and feels so hand-crafted. The dialogue in this show is just.. wow. The thought that it's been over for years makes me really sad, not sure how long it'll take before a worthy contender enters the ring!
Not a worthy contender but close - Better Call Saul is great show with great writing. The cast isn't as spread out as Mad Men but it grows during the first season
Harry made the mistake of trying for a personal connection. Roger's confidence level is equal to Don's, and Harry's is nowhere near close. Roger can deal with Harry more comfortably as a paid employee than as an acquaintance.
Black Star It wasnt that much, considering he was arguably the one who was bringing the most money to the agency. He was as important to the agency as any partner, which is why he never got fired even when pretty much all the partners hated him.
Whenever you see Harry Crane and Roger Sterling alone in a scene, it is pure comic gold. My favorite lines are "You're always up to something aren't you Crane" and "If you don't like it, we can have the conversation you thought we were going to have". Roger was doing all of this just to spy on Pete, which makes it even funnier.
Pete was asking for a bigger office and at that point he eventually would get Roger’s, so to cure on health Roger got him a bigger office just so he keep quiet about it and stop making evident that Roger wasn’t being as good as Pete.
Samuel Tan Not all the time. The whole point of him carrying around so much cash around this time is as a means to flex his ego since he's feeling marginalized by younger blood like Pete who are proving to become more important to the firm. Roger flashing so much cash is intended to be desperate and pathetic. It's only 'boss' to a guy like Harry who has no idea what's going on with Roger.
this has some hard 2020-2021 vibes "Here's $1200." "Okay but you owe us" "No we don't, we just gave you $1200." "...Is this every month?" "Get the hell out of here"
The difference is that $1,000 was worth about $10k today. Think about that. Roger gave Harry $10,000 to change offices, and the government gives us a measly $1,200 OF OUR OWN MONEY during a once in a lifetime pandemic and economic emergency.
I disagree, he was the only one to take TV as an advertising medium seriously, he was actually one of the most valuable people in the office. Trouble is no one liked him. If this were real life, he would have jumped ship to a TV studio pretty early
This is like the perfect opposite of when Harry asked for a raise. Back then, he was able to convince Roger to professionally give him a small raise to $225 BEFORE TAXES on his CHECK. Here Roger gets a personal favor 'as a friend' to have Harry switch to Pete's office for a hefty price of $1100, valued as a month's wages AFTER TAXES in CASH. Both while Harry assumes he's in the office to be reprimanded. Beautiful parallelism
@@dielaughing73didn’t really matter who he was. it was a segue to his absolutely correct point that he should be meeting (entertaining) those bigwig clients on location
Honestly it was a ridiculous name drop. If you were a media planner from a boutique ad agency (like SCDP was at the start of S5), there was zero chance of you getting face time with William Paley, let alone getting him to come to your office. Maybe by Season 7 he could have pulled that off. Maybe.
@@untexanTo be fair, Harry was the head of media at this point. And I’m presuming-given the timeskip from Season 3 to 4-he’s already made connections with the right people to be able to even meet Paley.
I just LOVE how Roger instantly changes his tactic after Crane says William Pailey. He clearly did not expect Crane to mention a prominent name, so he changes the angle and strokes Crane's ego instead by saying "you're too good to be in this office then" in a heartbeat. Roger may have inherited the business, but no one other than Don can sweet talk as fluently as him.
Yeah lol Roger was floored by the name drop he expected Harry to just not have anyone and stay silent. BUT Roger is also smooth so he wheeled to a different tactic to cover for it. Harry could've called him on moving the goalposts (Who do you know that you could bring in -> You shouldn't be bringing such important people into your office!)
One of my favorite exchanges of the entire series because it’s absurd that anybody would just casually carry around $1100 but its totally within Roger’s personality to do so
@@standerlc Happens all the time. Lots of people still carry lots of cash. Its a little harder now because the max denomination is still $100. Only £50 here in the UK.
1100 USD in 1966 is even exactly at 8,017.47 USD in 2014. I think any soul worth its lot today will accept to switch from a city-view office to a windowless one for 8017 USD, even if it's an one-time payment! :)
I love that people argue on Harry Crane's behalf. The dude is about as toxic as any other man on the show but he's low enough in the hierarchy that no one values what he actually brings to the table. Cutler is probably the only person that recognized Harry's value.
i cannot imagine a more intimidating boss. 0:56 look at the extremely cold color scheme. he's so quick too, the guy could insult me like three different ways with one word.
Harry was annoying, but man you gotta respect the balls on that dude. Goes from "please don't fire me" to "you're gonna owe me" in a matter of seconds.
He's not trying to make it sound like more money than it would be gross. He means it's tax free. If you make $1,100 a month, you bring home less than that. If someone hands you $1,100 cash and says it's "after taxes" money, you bring home the whole $1,100.
Honestly Mad Men could've just been a show about how Rog deals with daily bs and I'd still watch the hell out of it.
Better than any sitcom
JHB Luck Roger was always a good offset after a deep, agitated don scene. But don’t get it twisted don is the story, roger is the comedic relief
The office style sitcom with roger as the main protagonist
@@maximussaktish I'd watch the shit out of that
Carlos Rivera after a while don characters was just disgusting to watch i hated him after a while bc of all his ethics he could at any time be the man he wanted to just he chooses not to and then cried about it whenever things didn’t go his way
One of the best running gags in the show is how Roger ended up giving an employee all the money in his pocket like 3 different times. Not to mention he gets robbed at gunpoint in the season before this one. Then eventually he says something like “I gotta stop carrying around so much cash” lmao
Real men carry cash.
@@bighands69 lol maybe in the 60s when cash was worth far more. Nowadays real men carry a card and a smartphone because they aren't children and need to buy real things that cost more money than you can conveniently carry in cash.
Also cash is filthy and there's a global pandemic occurring.
@@tuscanyiscol
Only weaklings cannot go without a smartphone. Real men can live for days without a smartphone. Real men love women, cash and beer.
And they also love V8 engines and turn their noses up at electric cars and do not care about manginas and the global warming.
Real men do not care about social justice of frogs. .
@@bighands69 What the hell are you babbling about? Sure you CAN go without a smartphone, but it's a tool, and an useful one. Defining yourself by some jackass Luddite ideal of masculinity sucks any merit out of whatever argument you were trying to make.
@@glenndallas7171 he's clearly just being sarcastic/ironic/funny
whoever came up with that "so this is every month?" line is a genius
So what happend to harry? Never saw the show but enjoy these clips on youtube
@@mattm7798he found himself a nice, cushy, well paid job at McCann-Erickson. He also became the biggest dilweed to ever live
@@mattm7798how about you watch the show you goober
matthew weiner. and yes, he is in fact a genius
Roger's snap back also perfect..quick and sharp..😂😂
"She doesn't speak French. She doesn't like me." Classic Roger.
In the end he ends up with Megan's french-speaking mom, a bit of foreshadowing there? 😉
@@KathySolita My gf and i both laughed out loud when he said that. So sad yet funny af because it's all his self doing and he accepts that.
"you can buy yourself a very beautiful picture of something to look at." lol
And could have bought a nice Rolex as well and a nice suit and several things for the house. A 1965 Mustang was selling for about $2500.
An Octupus pleasuring a woman maybe? He tried to give that painting to Peggy for her new office lol.
@@AnnaLVajda And succeeded
"You're always up to something, aren't you, Crane?"
Lool
I never noticed that haha
@Anti-Federalist 1776 he never was
He was up to being the creepiest fucker in the office
@Anti-Federalist 1776 Crane ultimately ended up with nothing.
Harry and Roger are always hilarious together. Roger hates him so much.
Me too.
Harry's cool!
"I didn't think you had it in you. And I mean that."
I totally disagree. You don't hate someone and give them nearly $8000 in today's money to stay in your company. You fire them and then hire someone for less who wouldn't know the better from having a crappy office.
I don't think its hate, but more of just 1:16
"If you don't like it, we can always have the conversation you thought we were having." LOL....😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Roger at his best damn Roger.
*Did he mean the conversation about Zou bisou bisou?*
@@swarleystinson6733 That was a completely different episode. Harry had been asked to change offices with Pete. Durung the lead up to that, he thought he was being fired.
@@swarleystinson6733 he meant the one where he thought he was being fired
"Between me and you and the window washer" He is a legend.
Harsh- the writers are really the hero’s tho, keep that in mind.
"That's more than a thousand, Harry"
the deadpan delivery just gets me
“Why do you carry so much cash?”
“That’s more than a thousand Harry”. 😂😂😂
The way he says thousand kills me
FYI in terms of context this is equivalent to someone pulling close to $10,000 out of their pocket today.
Willing to bet he had more cash in other pockets. Because Sterling
Even funnier cause last season he was robbed yet he still Carrie’s around the modern equivalent to $11,000
So this is every month? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hahhaa
What most people today do not realize is that $1100 would have bought a Rolex or put a series down payment on a car.
A 1967 Ford Galaxie 500 would have cost about $2700. A 1965 Mustang would have cost about $2500.
@@bighands69 Lmao, when don orders 12 oysters and a scotch for a $1:20 lmao
@@bighands69 bruh forget about rolexes n shit, every month it would have literally doubled his salary, would be a 100% raise.
Hahaha the audacity
Roger Sterling is the best on this show imo.
idk i feel like you can never trust him
Sly fox
pretty crappy character, but Slattery portrayed him to perfection, radiates charisma throughout the show, even despite his wickedness
Of course he is, his name’s on the building.
"So this is every month?".....cracks me up everytime
Get the hell out of my office!!!
if you dont like it, we could have the conversation you thought we were having.
funniest line of this scene
No it isn't
Funniest line in the scene is "so this is every month?"
I like it too. And "you could buy yourself a very beautiful picture of something to look at." 😂😂😂
"Ok, so you shouldn't do that"
I also liked "You're not getting fired. And what the hell did you do?!?"
Every single line in this scene is perfect and feels so hand-crafted. The dialogue in this show is just.. wow. The thought that it's been over for years makes me really sad, not sure how long it'll take before a worthy contender enters the ring!
Not a worthy contender but close - Better Call Saul is great show with great writing. The cast isn't as spread out as Mad Men but it grows during the first season
@@sierra7534 personally i think better call saul is actually better than mad men
@@shahzadmunawarnizamani7186 Personally, you're very wrong
@@wordthefourth not personally,i am not, its a fact
I love the pure joy that comes over Roger when he says "So did I" 😂😂😂
she doesnt speak french, she doesnt like me..
Such a great line. He adds the second part like it's incidental.
...i dont wanna hear that!
So he finds someone from France
My favorite Roger line. Hahah.
@@AxelQC Not quite.......from Quebec.
The delivery of "Is that a crime? No" and "It's more than a thousand, Harry" is so good, gives me a chuckle every time
I love how Roger has no idea what Harry’s talking about but still just dives right in lol. He knew it would be leverage.
One of the best exchanges in the series ever. "Get the hell outta my office"
I did love that comeback because Harry is always trying to push it two steps too far.
Wow, $1,100 in 1965 is today $8,595. Nice chunk of change just to move from an office...
Harry didn't trade an office for 8.595. He traded his status for it.
Literally £11,000 today 2024
"I don't wanna hear that" Lmao
He was crossing the line
Harry made the mistake of trying for a personal connection. Roger's confidence level is equal to Don's, and Harry's is nowhere near close. Roger can deal with Harry more comfortably as a paid employee than as an acquaintance.
"You're gonna owe me". "No, I'm not." LOL
-"There is no window in there.."
-"You could get yourself a beautiful picture, something to look at.."
Best line
that $1100 would be $8000 today
+KingDT2007 Yes, because the money would have had money babies of its own by now. A little money family. I studied in ecklonomics.
+James Ash thanks for the laugh
ahahahahaha
thats how much he makes in a month? holy crap
Black Star It wasnt that much, considering he was arguably the one who was bringing the most money to the agency. He was as important to the agency as any partner, which is why he never got fired even when pretty much all the partners hated him.
Whenever you see Harry Crane and Roger Sterling alone in a scene, it is pure comic gold. My favorite lines are "You're always up to something aren't you Crane" and "If you don't like it, we can have the conversation you thought we were going to have". Roger was doing all of this just to spy on Pete, which makes it even funnier.
it wasn't to spy
He was just busting his balls.
Pete was asking for a bigger office too as he was a partner and Harry wasnt.
Pete trolled Roger by making him go to Staten Island.
Pete was asking for a bigger office and at that point he eventually would get Roger’s, so to cure on health Roger got him a bigger office just so he keep quiet about it and stop making evident that Roger wasn’t being as good as Pete.
"Ok, so you shouldn't do that"
That was my favorite line 😂
She doesn't speak French, she doesn't like me.
You know what's so boss about Roger? He carries Harry Crane's entire month of salary in cash in his pocket all the time like pocket change.
Samuel Tan Not all the time. The whole point of him carrying around so much cash around this time is as a means to flex his ego since he's feeling marginalized by younger blood like Pete who are proving to become more important to the firm. Roger flashing so much cash is intended to be desperate and pathetic. It's only 'boss' to a guy like Harry who has no idea what's going on with Roger.
Or it could just be that hookers didn't take credit card back in the day, just saying..
haha
best comment i’ve read so far
Roger does have the high ground on Harry
Cla Spe Don wanted 35 dollars for the hooker he got Lane
this has some hard 2020-2021 vibes
"Here's $1200."
"Okay but you owe us"
"No we don't, we just gave you $1200."
"...Is this every month?"
"Get the hell out of here"
best comment here
The difference is that $1,000 was worth about $10k today.
Think about that. Roger gave Harry $10,000 to change offices, and the government gives us a measly $1,200 OF OUR OWN MONEY during a once in a lifetime pandemic and economic emergency.
harry passive aggressive office guy
"you're always up to something aren't you Crane" I dunno why but theres something so funny about that line!
It's because Crane couldn't scheme his way out of a paper bag.
"This was a transaction. If you don't like it, we can have the converation you thought we were having" That was great😆
Roger later..
*bribes another employee*
Roger: I have to stop carrying so much cash
"I consider myself reprimanded."
"Great" Roger doesn't know why he feels that way but he likes that he feels bad
And then again next season "How come every time there's a change around here I get bumped down to a worse office?"
Harry Crane was the epitome of failing up.
well crane is hot af
You are obviously to dumb to get it...You are the epitome of failing up.
Naaaaaa he was very good at what he did, tbh he deserved to be a partner. But nobody liked him like Don told Pete at the beginning.
HE WAS VERY GOOD AT HIS JOB, BUT HE WAS ALSO REALLY UNLIKEABLE.
I disagree, he was the only one to take TV as an advertising medium seriously, he was actually one of the most valuable people in the office. Trouble is no one liked him. If this were real life, he would have jumped ship to a TV studio pretty early
"Ok, but you are owed me."
"No, I am not. I just gave you a lot of money."
DEAD XD
jake_ lolol wrong show
That's what the money is for!
This is like the perfect opposite of when Harry asked for a raise. Back then, he was able to convince Roger to professionally give him a small raise to $225 BEFORE TAXES on his CHECK. Here Roger gets a personal favor 'as a friend' to have Harry switch to Pete's office for a hefty price of $1100, valued as a month's wages AFTER TAXES in CASH. Both while Harry assumes he's in the office to be reprimanded. Beautiful parallelism
How did Harry go from $225 a month to $1k a month after taxes?
@@NR-rv8rz he was making 225 a week
So this is every month? lol
Carlos Soler Nice last-ditch try.
"she doesnt speak french.. she doesnt like me" 💀
Great acting from both.
"so this is every month?" The nerve!!!
I was thinking Pete could take your office.
It's been decided that you should trade.
Who decided that?
I did LOLOL
"Whos the most important person you could bring into this office?"
"William Pailey"
"OK so you shouldnt do that"
LOL
Dang. Just looked him up. He's the founder of CBS.
@@SergeantExtreme Aha. So Roger, realising how important he actually is, immediately changes tack. Clever.
@@dielaughing73didn’t really matter who he was. it was a segue to his absolutely correct point that he should be meeting (entertaining) those bigwig clients on location
Honestly it was a ridiculous name drop. If you were a media planner from a boutique ad agency (like SCDP was at the start of S5), there was zero chance of you getting face time with William Paley, let alone getting him to come to your office. Maybe by Season 7 he could have pulled that off. Maybe.
@@untexanTo be fair, Harry was the head of media at this point. And I’m presuming-given the timeskip from Season 3 to 4-he’s already made connections with the right people to be able to even meet Paley.
I just LOVE how Roger instantly changes his tactic after Crane says William Pailey. He clearly did not expect Crane to mention a prominent name, so he changes the angle and strokes Crane's ego instead by saying "you're too good to be in this office then" in a heartbeat. Roger may have inherited the business, but no one other than Don can sweet talk as fluently as him.
I love how he just pulls over a grand cash out of his pocket. Let's be honest we all wish we could do that.
It was a set up. He doesn't carry that much cash
That’s almost $10k with inflation today which makes it wilder😂
When he says we can have the conversation you thought we were having is one of the best lines from the series.
Boy, Harry's opening comment is a great example of the rule 'always say less than what's necessary'.
Love this show, years and years watching it and never gets old!!!
"It's been decided..."
"Who decided that?"
"I did."
WHy do you carry so much cash?
Roger looks at Harry like he's eight years old.
“It’s more than a thooussand Harry…”
😂😂😂
Masterful dialogue
Genius “ is this every month?”
Black mailing your boss
William Paley was the head of CBS for many years. Harry knowing him is impressive.
Yeah lol Roger was floored by the name drop he expected Harry to just not have anyone and stay silent. BUT Roger is also smooth so he wheeled to a different tactic to cover for it. Harry could've called him on moving the goalposts (Who do you know that you could bring in -> You shouldn't be bringing such important people into your office!)
I didnt take at is Harry knowing William Paley, only that he was someone that could potentially be a client of the firm at some future point in time.
One of my favorite exchanges of the entire series because it’s absurd that anybody would just casually carry around $1100 but its totally within Roger’s personality to do so
And it’s about 10K in todays money. Absurd
@@standerlc Happens all the time. Lots of people still carry lots of cash. Its a little harder now because the max denomination is still $100. Only £50 here in the UK.
‘She doesn’t speak French, she doesn’t like me’ * lights cig
"first of all, petes office isnt all that different"
"well then he's fine where is"
I love how they almost start bonding over making fun of zu-bi-zu
Crane: "I made fun of zou bisou"
Roger: "lol, so did I, is that a crime? no"
lmao
"That's more than a thousand, Harry."
Gets me every time.
So, is this every month?
Get the hell out of my office!
"so this is every month" part always gets me
"Ok but your gonna owe me" haha
That comes to about $8,500 in today's dollars.
1100 USD in 1966 is even exactly at 8,017.47 USD in 2014.
I think any soul worth its lot today will accept to switch from a city-view office to a windowless one for 8017 USD, even if it's an one-time payment! :)
***** I wouldn't if it were only a month's salary, but he also was being threatened so it's a little different
Think about some dude just carrying 8500 bucks in cash. He's a mugger's dream
Roger is too alpha to get mugged.
He did get mugged you idiot LOL
Roger has got to be the coolest and smooth characters of all time.
Roger Sterling for President !!
I just caught that!
Rich Sommer is very underrated because we all hate Harry. His performance in this scene, opposite the great silver fox John Slattery is pure gold.
Speak for yourself. I love Harry. I think a lot of people do. He's flawed, but a great guy. He's real enough to be relatable.
wrongo. harry hottest one on the show
@Anti-Federalist 1776 harry was a creep
I love that people argue on Harry Crane's behalf. The dude is about as toxic as any other man on the show but he's low enough in the hierarchy that no one values what he actually brings to the table. Cutler is probably the only person that recognized Harry's value.
The thing is, Harry became comically sleazy as the show went on. Kind of a reverse Ken Cosgrove.
I fucking love Harry. He is such a weasel but it just works and its funny asf.
i cannot imagine a more intimidating boss. 0:56 look at the extremely cold color scheme. he's so quick too, the guy could insult me like three different ways with one word.
Harry didn't make fun of Zou Bisou, as he claims to Roger. He talked about what he would sexually do to Megan. totally different thing. :P
Nice dodge
As I remember it he did both.
"Is this every month?"
"Get the hell out of my office!"
Crane could only be ever described as “shifty”
The interaction with the characters on this show is pure (Sterling’s) gold.
Or we could have the conversation you thought we were going to have 😂
“So this is every month?”
“Get the hell out of here”
"If you don't like it, we can have the conversation you thought we were having" Roger straight up spitting fire!
"So did I, is that a crime?No."😂
Sterling is obviously the best character of the show
Sterling is gold.
Roger was bit light on the Benjamin's when he and Peggy had a similar transactional conversation. Another classic scene.
Harry was annoying, but man you gotta respect the balls on that dude. Goes from "please don't fire me" to "you're gonna owe me" in a matter of seconds.
These two are hilarious together.
"so this is every month?" LOL
“So this is every month?”
“Get the hell out of my office.”
"Get the hell out of my office" - your welcome
Rodger S
*you're
I love when he does this to Peggy and she fleeces him and he’s like, “I gotta stop carrying so much cash on me” lol.
"You could buy yourself a very beautiful picture, of something to look at."
"I don't wanna hear that." X_X
Love the way he says “that is a months salary AFTER taxes!” As if that’s a good thing.
That's a Lot of money in the 60s. That 1g a month is probably like an 80k salary now
Plus this is in the 60s when the corporate tax rate was over 50 percent so a months salary for someone like Harry was about $2000 that's crazy
It's a common idiom to mean that you wouldn't be paying taxes on this cash lol
He's not trying to make it sound like more money than it would be gross. He means it's tax free. If you make $1,100 a month, you bring home less than that. If someone hands you $1,100 cash and says it's "after taxes" money, you bring home the whole $1,100.
@@blahblah14722, why would personal income be taxed at the corporate tax rate?
"Is this about the Easter baskets?"
One of the most hilarious scenes in whole series. Absolutely.
this is great comedy
I love how Harry did Roger a pretty big favor and the conversation still ends with "Get the hell out of my office"
he didn't do him a favor he just gave him a bunch of money, it was a transaction
Roger always stole the show for me. He was hilarious
"drop the big one, TWICE"
1100 dollars.
Thats more than a thousand.
I like how Roger casually carries around 10k dollars (in todays money)
So this is every month?
Get the hell out of my office.
Worth a shot.
Gosh I miss this program.
Watching these clips again reminded me how good this show was.