Metro

Ad firm’s ‘Mad Men’ sex suit

It’s enough to make Don Draper blush.

The randy antics at a Manhattan ad agency look like they could have been pulled from a script of the TV hit “Mad Men,” a new lawsuit charges.

The New York ad giant Saatchi & Saatchi Wellness was slapped with a sexual-harassment lawsuit in Manhattan Supreme Court yesterday by a 37-year-old account director who claims her handsome boss demanded sexy romps in his Hudson Street office.

Laura Gurievsky, of the Upper East Side, says former digital marketing chief William Martino, 36, a married father of two young children, “asked her to have sexual encounters with him” during meetings in his office, say the court documents filed yesterday.

“Ms. Gurievsky rejected Defendant Martino’s advances, but he persisted until she succumbed,” the papers say.

And in a move recalling Draper and the AMC show’s other 1960s admen, Martino told his underling to bill clients for the illicit trysts, which included pricey dinners and outings to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the suit claims.

Martino supposedly dangled the promise of a $10,000 raise contingent upon his assistant’s “acquiescence to his sexual demands,” the papers say.

Gurievsky’s attorney, Liane Fisher, told The Post, “Sexual harassment lawsuits are generally about unequal power relationships.”

Gurievsky claims the salacious behavior was rampant in the workplace, with an unidentified creative director calling women “pretty prostitutes” and commenting that he “liked the style of Ms. Gurievsky’s hair because it made her look like she had ‘just been f–ked.’ ”

Gurievsky, who started with the global marketing firm in 2009, says she tried to escape the atmosphere by working out of a nearby hotel lobby, but Martino allegedly retaliated by threatening to fire her last August.

Martino did not return phone calls for comment. A Saatchi spokeswoman declined to comment.

Additional reporting by Lia Eustachewich and Aaron Feis