(via falseeeyelashes)
Mad Men, 3x13 Shut the Door, Have a Seat
- Don: ... Because there are people out there who buy things, people like you and me. Then something happened. Something terrible. And the way that they saw themselves is gone. And nobody understands that. But you do, and that's very valuable.
- Peggy: Is it?
- Don: With you or without you, I'm moving on. And I don't know if I can do it alone. Will you help me?
- Peggy: What if I say no? You'll never speak to me again.
- Don: No. I will spend the rest of my life trying to hire you.
DON DRAPER: the number one most influential man in America (according to askmen.com) - and he’s not even a real person.
Shahdaroba - Roy Orbison
Dammit why do I know so few people that watch Mad Men?!?! I practically had to talk to myself through the entire season finale because it was that good. Matthew Weiner, I love you, but the next nine months might kill me.
….now let’s try and throw in a few more episodes next season that involve Don Draper kicking doors in.
“If I did have a tumor, I would name it Marla. Marla, the little scratch on the roof of your mouth that would heal if only you would stop tonguing it, but you can’t.”
I could never see anyone else playing the part of Marla…Helena was made to be Marla.
youre-theocean:infinitebutterflies:beautifuldecay:isthisblood:mynoisyheart:
Taken: 1939
Discovered: 2008
In Anne Frank’s Diary Anne called Peter Schiff her “one true love.” In 1940 at the age of 11 she writes ‘Peter was the ideal boy: tall, slim and good-looking, with a serious, quiet and intelligent face. He had dark hair, beautiful brown eyes, ruddy cheeks and a nicely pointed nose. I was crazy about his smile, which made him look so boyish and mischievous.’ For more than 60 years there were no photographs known of Anne Frank’s childhood sweetheart. The photo above was discovered when a childhood friend, Ernest Michaelis, now 82, came to realize that the childhood friend that gave him this photograph (before Michaelis had left Germany for Britain) was the 13-year-old boy Anne Frank wrote about in her diary.
(via loveyourchaos)
“I was asked to act when I couldn’t act. I was asked to sing ‘Funny Face’ when I couldn’t sing, and dance with Fred Astaire when I couldn’t dance - and do all kinds of things I wasn’t prepared for. Then I tried like mad to cope with it.”
— Audrey Hepburn
