7 insane 'Mad Men' conspiracy theories to ponder before the final 7 episodes
AMC just released this vignette for the final 7 episodes of Mad Men‘s series-ending 7th season. And while the character development and style evolution on the show is intriguing, we’re more interested in predicting how the show might end (fingers crossed we’re not getting St. Elsewhere’d). Here are our conspiracy theories:
1. Don Draper Has a Brain Tumor
Lung cancer is probably more likely with his 20+ year cigarette habit, but what if Don Draper has had a brain tumor this whole time, causing him to hallucinate far more than the dancing Bert scene in the last episode?
This isn’t the first time Don has hallucinated something unbelievable. Back in season 6 after hitting the hookah on a trip to California, Don hallucinated that he had drowned:
Don hallucinated his dead brother, Adam, when he went under laughing gas for his “hot tooth” (side note: WTF IS THAT?) in an earlier season. He also hallucinated Anna Draper’s death (the widow from whom he stole his last name).
For this theory, let’s assume Don Draper has suffered from a brain tumor for quite some time, and will succumb in the series finale.
2. Dick Whitman’s Purgatory
If you’ve seen beyond the first season of Mad Men (and if you haven’t what are you doing???), you know that Don Draper is actually Dick Whitman. Dick was an American soldier serving in the Korean war under Lieutenant Donald Draper. Shortly after Dick learned that Don’s tour of duty was coming to a close, he accidentally caused an explosion. Dick survived the explosion and upon realizing he was the sole survivor, he switched dog tags with the burned-beyond-recognition Don Draper.
Perhaps Dick Whitman died in the hospital shortly after stealing Don’s dog tags and is living in purgatory, spending an eternity paying for his sins as Don Draper. That would make Bert’s “The Best Things in Life Are Free” dance number seem more like a taunt than anything else.
3. We’re Being ‘The Notebook’d’
In the classic early-aughts film The Notebook, Allie (played by Rachel McAdams and Gena Rowlands) is a woman with Alzheimer’s misremembering the torrid love triangle of her youth. That plot line is effective, keeping the audience guessing which man she chose.
Don Draper leads an impressive life. He’s plowed through more women and ad accounts than almost all of his peers, and he’s seen little blowback (aside from his temporary suspension at the end of season 6) for his bad behavior. It is plausible, then, that Don’s memories are self-aggrandizing and faulty due to a future failing mental state. Only time will tell if his entire storyline was hyperbole.