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Every Woman Don Draper Has Slept With on 'Mad Men' - So Far. Mad Men’s Don Draper has used his impossibly good looks and charm on more women than any one (mostly) married man has the right. For seven seasons, we’ve watched him hook up with an artist, teacher, businesswoman, psychologist, several secretaries, even the occasional slap- happy hooker.
Some of them he’s even loved. As the show begins its final seven episodes on April 5, we’ve made our own version of Draper’s little black book - - a complete list of all the lothario’s ladies, or at least all those we’ve seen him with on- screen. Aimee (Megan Ferguson)Don’s sexual issues make slightly more sense when you take into account where they started: Dick Whitman (Draper’s original identity) is “a whore’s child,” as his stepmother liked to remind him, who lost his virginity as a terrified teenager to Aimee, a prostitute in his uncle’s brothel. The fact that Aimee then bragged about how she “took that boy's cherry for five dollars,” resulting in him getting beaten up, explains a lot. Photo: AMC. Betty Francis, formerly Betty Draper (January Jones). Don sweeps his model first wife off her feet, believing she’ll help him create the picture- perfect life Dick Whitman aspires to.
But as we all know, looks can be deceiving, and Betty’s gorgeous exterior belies the ice queen beneath. She’s as cruel, manipulative, and withholding as her husband (not to mention a neglectful mother). When she discovers Don’s duplicity, she becomes even less inclined to forgive him, despite all his success, ultimately leaving him for the older, more stable politician Henry Francis. Still, there’s no denying their sexual spark, which is reignited years later when they reconnect while visiting Bobby at camp. You’re as beautiful as the day I met you,” he tells her, admitting later in bed that he misses her. That poor girl,” Betty says of Don’s second wife, Megan. She doesn’t know that loving you is the worst way to get to you.”.
Midge Daniels (Rosemarie De. Witt). Midge is the first lover of Don’s we meet in the pilot, even before we learn Don’s a married man. She’s the anti- Betty, a bohemian artist who doesn’t want to be domesticated, throwing a TV set he’s gifted her out the window of her Greenwich Village apartment and eventually turning down his marriage proposal. You think I’d make a good ex- wife?” she asks. Years later, she turns up addicted to heroin and Don takes pity on her and buys one of her paintings. Rachel Menken (Maggie Siff). The no- nonsense, sophisticated Jewish department store heiress demands Don up his game if he wants her business.

An early challenge to his ideas of a woman’s place in the world, naturally, he tries to seduce her! Though Rachel initially rebuffs him, she ultimately succumbs. But their relationship ends soon after he asks her to run away with him to Los Angeles. This was a dalliance, a cheap affair,” she replies. You don’t want to run away with me; you just want to run away.
You’re a coward!”. Photo: AMC. Bobbie Barrett (Melinda Mc. Graw). Sterling Cooper’s hiring of comedian Jimmy Barrett for an Utz potato chip commercial turns into a package deal with his tough- talking manager/wife Bobbie along for the ride. When Jimmy insults the Utz owner’s wife, Don tries to do damage control with Bobbie, but she puts the moves on him, suggesting Jimmy will apologize if he knows “he's got a shot at your wife.” Later at the apology dinner, she tries to shake Don down for $2. His response: grabbing her and putting his hand up her skirt, and threatening to ruin Jimmy if he doesn't apologize before the main course. Later, Peggy will rescue them when they get into a drunk- driving accident, and Jimmy will retaliate by telling Betty about Don’s affair with Bobbie, leading to the Drapers’ first separation. Joy (Laura Ramsey).
On a California business trip, Don meets Joy, a glamorous dilettante introduced to him by a European count at a poolside hotel bar. Why would you deny yourself something you want?" she asks Don, when she runs into him the next day, after he’s turned down the count’s dinner invitation. Joy ultimately gets Don to a friend’s Palm Springs house, where she spends much of the time topless — and Don learns the count is her father! Photo: AMC. Shelly (Sunny Mabrey). On yet another business trip, this time to Baltimore with art director Sal, Don meets Shelly, a flirtatious and engaged stewardess who happens to be staying at the same hotel as the ad men. Their tryst is interrupted by the hotel’s fire alarm.

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- Judge Judy is a long-running American arbitration-based reality court show presided over by Judge Judy Sheindlin, a retired Manhattan family court judge. The show.
As AMC's cultural phenomenon nears its end, ETonline takes a look back at the show's main lothario. Adele at her Adele Live 2016 concert tour, March 2016. Born: Adele Laurie Blue Adkins (age 29) Tottenham, London, England.
Don gives his daughter Shelly’s airline pin. Photo: AMC. Suzanne Farrell (Abigail Spencer). Don and a very- pregnant Betty first meet Suzanne at a parent- teacher conference when Sally acts out after Betty’s dad has died.
After an early- morning drive to work when Don sees her out jogging, their attraction turns into a full- blown affair. At first Suzanne says she doesn’t care that he’s married, but later she laments the fact they can never be seen in public. I just wanted more than I thought I would want,” she tells him. But it'll pass.” Don cruelly leaves her in his car outside his house as Betty confronts him about his true identity. Candace (Erin Cummings). Don spends his first post- divorce Thanksgiving at his new apartment with Candace, a prostitute whom he pays to slap him around.
Harder,” he demands. Later, he and account man Lane will hook up with her and her friend Janine at a nightclub. Allison (Alexa Alemanni).
Don’s faithful secretary’s duties go from business to pleasure when Don drunkenly leaves his keys at the office after a Christmas party and Allison delivers them to his door. My goodness,” she giggles after they do it. The next day, it’s back to business for Don.
But try as she might to remain professional, Allison soon loses it during a focus group where the secretaries talk about their love lives as Don looks on. He turns on the charm and then yanks it away,” she later confides to Peggy before resigning. When she asks Don for a recommendation, he tells her to write it herself, and he’ll sign it. So she throws a paperweight at him! Bethany Van Nuys (Anna Camp). Roger sets Don up on a blind date with Bethany, a dumb- blonde actress who can’t even keep his interest when she’s going down on him in a taxicab.
She wants me to know her, but I already do,” he later writes dramatically in the journal he’s started keeping. He also knows the effect she’ll likely have on Betty after they unexpectedly run into her and Henry. Alice (Amy Motta) and Doris (Becky Wahlstrom).
Don ties one on at the 1. Clio advertising awards ceremony, taking home a statuette and Alice, who’s sized him up at the bar and asked Roger whether he’s single.
The next day, he awakens to a ringing phone — beside a completely different woman. Betty’s called to say he’s missed his day with the kids. I’m coming on Sunday,” he tells her. It is Sunday,” she hisses. He also learns the woman in his bed is a waitress named Doris, and she knows him as “Dick.”. Photo: AMC. Dr. Faye Miller (Cara Buono). A consumer- research analyst consulting for the Sterling Cooper Draper Price, Dr.
Faye is the total package: smart, beautiful, independent and no pushover. But Don likes a challenge, so even the woman with a Ph. D. eventually falls for him. It’s a tad Freudian: Don reminds her of her father, “a handsome two- bit gangster like you.” Don does let his guard down with her, revealing his true identity. And she goes against her ethics, setting up a meeting for him with Heinz, because she knows they’re unhappy with their agency.
Just as her company severs ties with Don’s and they can date openly, Don jets off to California, returning infatuated with his new secretary, Megan. When he finally tells Faye he’s getting married, she says she hopes Megan knows he only likes “the beginnings of things.”. Photo: AMC. Megan Calvet Draper (Jessica Paré).
Judge Judy - Wikipedia. This article is about the court show. For the eponymous star of this court show, see Judy Sheindlin. Judge Judy is a long- running American arbitration- based reality court show presided over by Judge Judy Sheindlin, a retired Manhattanfamily court judge.[3] The show features Sheindlin adjudicating real- life small claim disputes within a simulated courtroom set.[4] All parties involved must sign contracts agreeing to arbitration under Sheindlin. The series is in first- run syndication and distributed by CBS Television Distribution. Judge Judy, which premiered on September 1.
Only two other arbitration- based reality court shows preceded it, The People's Court (its first life canceled in 1. Jones & Jury (lasting only the 1.
Sheindlin has been credited with introducing the "tough" adjudicating approach into the judicial genre, which has led to several imitators.[6] The only two court shows that outnumber Judge Judy's seasons, The People's Court and Divorce Court, have both lasted via multiple lives of production and shifting arbiters. Thus Sheindlin's span as a television jurist or arbitrator has lasted longer than any other—a distinction that rewarded her a place in the Guinness World Records in September 2. With no cancellations or temporary endings in its series run, Judge Judy also enjoys the longest- lasting individual production life of any court show.[7][8]By 2. Judge Judy had been nominated 1. Daytime Emmy Awards without ever winning.[9][1. Judge Judy won its first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Legal/Courtroom Program in 2.
It is the first long- running, highly rated court show to win an Emmy. Since its premiere, Judge Judy has gained enormous popularity and has led the ratings in courtroom programming in the United States.[1. The show was also the highest- rated daytime television program from its 3rd (1. After that, the show lost this title but regained it by its 1.
For its 1. 6th season (2. It regained the position as leader in all of syndication for its 1.
On March 2, 2. 01. Sheindlin and CBS Television Distribution extended their contract by four years, keeping it on the air at least until completion of the 2. The court show's 2. Monday, September 1.
Court show background[edit]Origins[edit]Sheindlin's pre- court show reputation as one of the toughest family court judges in the country was the topic of a Los Angeles Times article in February 1. On May 2. 1, 1. 99. Joseph Wapner was released from The People's Court.
Sheindlin called up the program and said, "You know, if he doesn't want to do this show any more, I can do it." The receptionist snapped, "Are you crazy, lady?" and hung up.[1. The Los Angeles Times article on Sheindlin caught the attention of 6.
Minutes, which aired a segment on her on October 2. The segment brought her national recognition and first led to an offer for her to write her own book. Sheindlin accepted the book offer, writing Don't Pee On My Leg and Tell Me It's Raining.
In 1. 99. 5 two former People's Court producers, Kaye Switzer and Sandi Spreckman, asked Sheindlin if she would like to preside over her own courtroom series,[2. Sheindlin and her producers originally wanted the show title to be "Her Honor" but the production company, Big Ticket Television, decided on calling it "Hot Bench",[2. Hot Bench With Judge Judy" for some time prior to the show's début.[2. However, Big Ticket ultimately decided on "Judge Judy".[2. Petri Hawkins- Byrd, the court show's bailiff, was also Sheindlin's bailiff throughout her career in the Manhattan Family Court system.
When Byrd found out about Sheindlin's show, he sent her a congratulatory letter, stating, "If you ever need a bailiff, I still look good in uniform." She phoned Byrd at his home in California to accept his offer and he has been the show's bailiff since its debut. Byrd is the longest- running bailiff in courtroom programming history. Sheindlin has stated that the show's producers desired different individuals for the role, but she refused. Sheindlin appeared again on 6.
Minutes on April 3. During the interview, Sheindlin stated: I have a contract with the company to do the program through the 2. At that point, we will have produced this program for 1. Right now, I would be satisfied with a good 1. I think that would really be phenomenal. It would be lovely if we could end on a high note and for me to say "1. I still had people watching and I had a second career that was a blast."[2.
On September 1. 4, 2. Sheindlin began celebrating her 2. Judge Judy. The program is the first in the court show genre to make it to 2. Her distinction as television's longest serving judge or arbitrator rewarded Sheindlin a place in the Guinness World Records on September 1. On- air format[edit]Each episode of Judge Judy begins with an introductory preview of the main case, sensationalizing various moments of the case with dramatic music, voice- over commentary, graphics, etc.
This is followed by the show's opening music video. At the beginning of each court proceeding, information regarding who is suing whom and what for is revealed originally by voice- over artist Michael Stull, who was later replaced by the show's current voice- over artist Jerry Bishop. Sheindlin typically begins each case by questioning the parties as to dates, times, locations and other facts central to the lawsuit. Monopolizing the discourse throughout the cases, Sheindlin will sometimes only listen to bits and pieces of each of the testimonies as she is quick to reply and tends to disallow responses that are not concise or made during her desire to speak.[2.
Sometimes, however, Sheindlin will allow one or both of the opposing litigants to recount the entirety of their testimony. While delivering their testimony, litigants are not allowed to hesitate and must maintain fixed eye contact with Sheindlin at all times. Further, litigants are not allowed to speak out of turn or talk to each other. Small children who do not testify are usually removed from the court room at the start of the litigation, and unruly co- litigants and witnesses (and once an observer who was using his cell phone) are ejected for disobeying the judge. Like most modern court shows, cases on Judge Judy imitate small claims court cases in which civil trials (non- criminal cases) are heard and ruled on.
Typically Sheindlin handles cases among former lovers, disputing neighbors, or family and friend relations.[2. Disputes generally revolve around issues such as broken engagements, unpaid personal loans, contract breaches, personal injuries from other litigants or their pets, minor property damages (e. As is standard practice in small claims court and most reality court shows alike, Judge Judy proceedings operate in the form of a bench trial (as opposed to its more common counterpart, the jury trial). Moreover, lawyers are not present and litigants must defend themselves.[2. When the show goes into the first two commercial breaks, the voice- over sounds, stating "Judge Judy continues in a moment", followed by a preview of the remainder of the ongoing case, sometimes along with the following case, is typically shown. When the show comes out of the first two commercial breaks, the voice- over sounds, stating "Real cases, Real people, Judge Judy", followed by a verbal recap of the ongoing case.
When the show comes out of the last commercial break, the voice- over sounds again, this time providing the show's telephone number and website to submit cases.[4] Generally each show presents two cases, but infrequently, an episode will present a single long case, three shorter ones, or even four shorter ones. After expressing her views of the circumstances and behaviors of the litigants with regards to their testimonies, Sheindlin renders the judgment either by finding for the plaintiff (typically with the statement, "Judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of x dollars. Watch Online Watch Race To Witch Mountain Full Movie Online Film. That's all."), by dismissing the case, or by dismissing the case specifically without prejudice.