Bryan Batt chats with PopEater

The explosive third season of AMC's award-winning 'Mad Men' managed to stun, dazzle and break the hearts of viewers in just thirteen episodes. Bryan Batt's character, Sal Romano, Sterling Cooper's art director and closeted gay man, was dramatically fired from the advertising agency in the wildly-charged episode 'Wee Small Hours.' Coming off his role on the TV hit, Batt's newly released memoir, 'She Ain't Heavy, She's My Mother,' tells the story of his relationship with his mother, Gayle, through a series of heartwarming tales seeped in Southern charm and hilarity. Bryan sat down with PopEater to discuss the possibility of returning to 'Mad Men,' his writing debut and whose body he considers Hollywood's best.