
- Gene to Sally
So far this season has been dripping with historical foreshadowing, hinting at both the impending assassination of Kennedy and the generational rift that's about to bust loose. So the comment from a very lucid Gene to Sally (in the context of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) takes on extra weight. Edward Gibbon's book (from 1776) argues that Rome's demise began, in part, by the men becoming effeminate -- metrosexual, if you will. Something Im sure Gene sees going on in
"This is the way the world ends...not with a bang but a whimper." - Kinsey reciting TS Elliott's poem "The Hollow Men"
"We got it, you're education." - Smitty in response.
This episode had more literary references than the first two combined, like Gibbons and TS Elliott. And then there's the music. First song that plays at Roger's Kentucky Derby themed party was "Swing Low Sweet Chariot", which is an interesting choice in that by this time, folk artists had started to use it as a sort of theme song for the civil rights movement, climaxing with Joan Baez singing it at Woodstock in 1969. Looking at it with that in mind, it's just more foreshadowing.

Of interest is that one of the theories of the song's origins has Stephen Foster writing "My Old Kentucky Home" inspired by Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, that belief based in part by the song's original title of "Poor Uncle Tom, Good Night."
More to come...
Playlist: Mad Men - Episode 3.03
1. "Swing Low Sweet Chariot" (Glenn Miller Orchestra) - Roger & Jane's party
2. "My Old Kentucky Home" (Stephen Ford) - Roger sings in blackface
3. "Hello My Baby" (The Barbershop Singers) - Kinsey sings
4. "C'est Magnifique" (Cole Porter) - Joan sings
5. "Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue" (Art Landry and his orchestra): The Campbells dance!
Previously: "Love Among the Ruins": Demolition Men (Episode 3.02)