Office Ladies - A Look Back on Diwali
Episode Date: November 24, 2021Happy Thanksgiving! Our “Office Ladies” team is enjoying a break with our families but before we left, Jenna and Angela share a “Diwali” deleted scene that reveals another Andy nickname and we... hear a clip from Mindy Kaling! While you enjoy the holiday, you can relisten to this amazing interview with the boss lady triple threat herself, Mindy Kaling! Mindy walks us through how she came to work on “The Office”, what it was like for her to be able to pitch and write “Diwali”, and explains why the show cast her actual parents in this episode. Then Jenna and Angela dig even deeper into this episode covering Kevin's sweaty feet, and what went into filming and costuming the Diwali festivities. Finally, we connect with Jaysha Patel, who played one of Mindy's sisters and get her memories of filming this episode, along with why sushi and bottle service don't mix, and we end with a great BFF catch. Watch Mindy Kaling’s new show on HBO Max: “Sex Lives of College Girls” Check out the “Office Ladies” merchandise Black Friday sale:https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladies On Cyber Monday, use code “FREESHIP” at checkout for free shipping on domestic orders
Transcript
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Hello everybody! Happy Thanksgiving! Yes, very happy Thanksgiving. Right now, as you
are listening to this, I am on my way to enjoy Thanksgiving with my family in St. Louis.
I am going to sit at my mom's Thanksgiving table for the first time in a long time and
I can't wait. That is so special. I love that, Jenna.
I'm going to be with my sister and her family. I have one request for Thanksgiving and Josh
knows what it is. I want his homemade chocolate meringue pie.
It's so good.
It's so good.
You do a chocolate meringue pie for Thanksgiving.
I do chocolate meringue pie whenever I can get it. My mom always makes pecan pie at Thanksgiving
and she just gave us so many pecans. I went to Texas to see her and her trees are loaded
down, Jenna. But listen, while you are celebrating, guess what you can do?
What can I do, Angela?
You can curl up and re-listen to Diwali.
Yes, today we are re-running Diwali. We have our interview with Mindy Kaling, which was
so fun.
So fun. Jenna, as I re-watched Diwali, I remembered a deleted scene I did not share with everyone.
Ooh.
And I bring it up because remember a few episodes back, I listed all of Andy's nicknames?
Yes.
You got to hear it.
At Cornell in my fraternity, my house name was Hubble because I was so good at finding
a party. It was like a powerful space telescope.
Okay.
Okay.
So add that to the list of Nard Dog and Nard Man.
Boner Champ, Baby Wawa.
Ace, Buzz and Puke.
Iceman.
And now we have Hubble.
So, they're amazing. I just love this episode and I have to say a big part of it is the
interview with Mindy. We reached out to Mindy to let her know we were revisiting this episode
in Ange. Mindy sent in the little clip.
Hey, Office Ladies fans. This is Mindy Kaling. I hope you're having a great Thanksgiving
and enjoy this rerun of Diwali. When you're done, you can catch my new show, The Sex
Lies of College Girls, streaming now on HBO Max. But I didn't come here just to plug my
new show. I came here to plug my old show. Diwali episode. Enjoy it. I hope you're eating
a lot of food. Happy Thanksgiving. Happy Diwali.
Yes, you guys. Mindy's new show is now streaming on HBO Max.
And it was created by Mindy and a friend of mine, Justin Noble. You might know his name
from Brooklyn Nine-Nine, but I did a pilot with him and Nicole Byer and Cat Dennings called
The Bluffs. He's so much fun. So is Mindy. I can't wait to see this show. The reviews
are amazing.
Yes. Once again, guys. Sex lives of College Girls. And thank you, Mindy. We love you.
And guys, one more plug before we get back into this episode. Office Ladies is having
a huge Black Friday sale on all of our merchandise. These are great deals. And you can find it
on OfficeLadies.com.
And on Cyber Monday, we are offering free shipping on all of our domestic orders. You
just have to use the code free ship at checkout. Okay. Lady, that's it.
That's it.
I think it's time.
And have a great Thanksgiving, everyone. We'll be back next week with all new episodes. But
for now, please enjoy Diwali.
I'm Jenna Fisher.
And I'm Angela Kinsey.
We were on The Office together.
And we're best friends.
And now we're doing the Ultimate Office Rewatch podcast just for you.
Each week, we will break down an episode of The Office and give exclusive behind-the-scenes
stories that only two people who were there can tell you.
We're The Office Ladies.
Hello, everyone.
Hi, you guys.
Welcome to Diwali.
I'm so excited for this episode, Jenna.
Me too.
It's a great episode, and we have a great special guest.
I just want to get to it.
All right. Well, this is Season 3, Episode 6. It was directed by Miguel Arteta and written
by our special guest, Mindy Kaling.
Woohoo!
It's going to be very exciting.
Well, let's get to it.
We are going to waste no time.
I'm starting with a summary.
Do it.
In this episode, everyone from Dunder Mifflin attends a traditional Indian celebration of
Diwali in honor of Kelly.
Now, Ryan is going to meet Kelly's parents, who are really less than impressed with his
commitment to their daughter.
Well, to be fair, he says, with extra money, he wants to travel and get like an Xbox or
something.
So, you know.
Yes.
He'll also be less than impressed.
Meanwhile, Michael proposes to his girlfriend, Carol.
Oh, Michael.
Wow.
Oh, Michael.
Michael takes a big step.
In front of a lot of strangers.
Yeah.
So awkward.
It's a bit of a crash and burn.
So awkward.
Pam enjoys herself for the first time as a single person, and Angela guards the shoes
while eating some dry naan.
Very dry naan.
And over at the Stamford office, Jim, Andy, and Karen work late into the night and booze
it up.
Yeah.
Yeager beister.
I mean, what's that look?
So gross.
Andy is a maniac.
I'm going to give you fast fact number one.
This is a really special episode because The Office was the first American television
comedy series to depict the Hindu festival of Diwali.
I love that.
Way to go, The Office.
It aired November 2nd, 2006, and it was seen by 8.8 million people on the night that it
first aired.
And now it's been seen by how many people?
I don't even know.
Did you know what Diwali was, Jenna, when we got the script?
Shelby B asked the same question, and I did not know about Diwali.
Did you know about Diwali?
I did, but I grew up overseas.
You know, I grew up in Indonesia.
Diwali has a very big Hindu population.
So I had heard of Diwali, and I thought it was awesome that we were going to do an episode
about it.
Had you ever celebrated Diwali?
I had never celebrated it, but myself, I went to an international school.
They did recognize, you know, many holidays, and there was like a Diwali day.
Yeah.
Well, they do that at my kids' school now.
They have a day where they celebrate Diwali, which I think is really cool, especially since
I grew up not knowing about it.
It is so beautiful, and it was so fun.
I remember we were all really giddy.
Of course, this meant we got to leave the office.
That brings me to fast fact number two, Angela.
Fan question from Juliet G and Phoebe Tomak.
Where did you shoot the scenes when you were celebrating Diwali?
Well, guess who I went to for the answer.
Does it rhyme with Shmentish Media?
It does, and we have a sting for it.
You do?
Kenton.
Kenton.
Kenton.
Kenton.
Kenton.
Kenton.
Kenton.
Yes, Angela.
That was sent in by Tyler Beckwith, and we love it, Tyler.
Thank you for our Kentopedia stage.
It is really great.
It sounds like something out of like a 1980s action kind of movie.
Exactly.
Well, Kentopedia told us that Diwali was shot at Grant High School.
We shot most of the scenes in their gym, which is called Grant Hall.
And we shot there at the end of August, and school was in session.
They had just started up the school year.
He said that we shot there for three full days, and we had to work around the school
schedule because school was happening in the hallways.
I have such a fond memory of our time shooting there because they parked our trailers facing
sort of like a little field with some trees, and normally they were just in a asphalt parking
lot.
And so I would open my door, and there'd be trees and grass, and Brian brought a football
and we like tossed the football out in the grass, and I have such fond memories of this
whole week.
I remember it, too, for those exact same reasons.
Well, this school is host to a lot of filmmaking, including Freaks and Geeks, Black-ish, Malcolm
in the Middle, and True Blood, and I've got a little bit trivia for you.
Yeah?
Malora Hardin went to Grant High School.
Get out of town.
Yeah, we shot at her alma mater.
Wow.
I love that.
It's like a true Hollywood kid.
She is.
All these things from her life right here.
To me, I still feel like a transplant in some ways in Los Angeles.
Still to this day, if I'm ever out and about and I see the Hollywood sign, I'm like, there's
a Hollywood sign.
Oh my God, it's a Hollywood sign.
But if I drive by and I see a film crew filming something on the street, I get as excited
as if they pulled up in my neighborhood in St. Louis as a kid.
And I'm like, oh, what are they filming?
Oh, look, I wonder what it is.
I wonder if we can find out who's the star.
Yeah, I look.
Like, I get that same reaction still.
Yeah, me too.
I drive by and I try to see, is there someone famous out there?
Exactly.
So true.
Well, I'm going to move us along, Angela, because I know we want to get to our interview
with Mindy.
Fast fact number three, I said earlier this was directed by Miguel Arteta.
Angela, I was such a huge fan of Miguel.
When I found out he was going to direct this episode, this is the only episode he directed,
I completely geeked out.
Okay.
What did you do?
Did you go up to him?
Were you dorky?
What'd you do?
Oh, Angela, I followed him around the entire week.
We bonded.
At the end of this week, I thought we were best friends and would work together forever
on every future project.
And I'm not going to lie.
Every time there was like a script that I was sent or when I was trying to produce a
movie myself, he was the first person I would go to because I was like, I'm literally like
this guy is a genius.
I love him.
I love that.
I didn't know you were like following him around everywhere.
Oh, yeah.
I wanted everything about him to rub off on me.
So he had directed this little indie movie called Chuck and Buck written by and starring
Mike White, who by the way, you're also obsessed, have stalked.
Yeah, I know, I know that you stalked him.
I got to work with him.
And then that made me feel one step closer to Mike White, who I eventually managed to
stalk and become, I became friends with Mike White.
And then I eventually got to be in a Mike White movie starring Ben Stiller.
And then after that happened, I was like, well, I can, I can now retire because I have worked
with my, my idol.
I wrote in my journal about this week.
Do you want to hear what I wrote lady?
Of course.
I always want to hear about your journal.
Your journal delights me.
That's, it does.
That's going to be your autobiography.
A journal delights me by Jenna Fisher.
I wrote that and I wrote this.
Me and the adorable Mindy Kaling are going to be doing really early morning interviews
together on all the local NBC stations.
We are going to talk to 16 cities and we have to get up at 5 a.m.
Oh my gosh, you guys did a little press junket.
I think this is my very first one.
Well, what's crazy about that, Angela, is you probably then after you were done had
to come to work.
Oh yeah, because they, we had to, I remember we had to be on stage.
We actually did them on the set with the set as the background.
And we got there and we met this satellite media tour is what they called it.
And we met their crew and we had to be there at 4 a.m. to go through hair and makeup.
And then we started doing interviews at 5 a.m. and we talked to a new city every 15
minutes for three hours.
Wow.
And that, you did it with Mindy.
Mindy was my first press junket.
Well, this is a wonderful segue into our upcoming segment.
We'll take a break, but when we come back, we're going to play our interview with Mindy
Kaling.
She came and talked to us.
It was amazing.
It was such a joy to have her here and I'm so excited for you guys to listen to this.
And then afterwards, we're going to fully break down the episode.
We'll get to that right after the break.
We'll see you with Mindy.
Mindy Kaling.
Hi.
Hi guys.
Hi.
I'm so happy to be here.
Welcome to office, ladies.
I'm giving you a hug through the Zoom user.
Thank you.
Congrats, you guys, on the massive success of this.
This is like, this is awesome.
This is everyone in my life is obviously such a fan and I'm like, I'm so proud of you guys.
This is so great.
Thank you.
Thanks Mindy.
Yeah, of course.
We love it.
We're having a good time.
It's fun to hear the way that the show was through your guys' eyes because it's so loving
and fun and super accurate and I like, I'm really enjoying it.
So this is great.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you.
That was so nice.
I feel like this is all just pure joy.
I'm just so delighted to see you and to talk to you in this such a fun episode.
So we just get to reminisce a little bit.
Love it.
Well, before we get into Diwali, we always like to ask all of our guests their office
origin story.
So how did you come to be on the show?
Well, it was 2004 and I had, I was off doing a play off off Broadway in New York called
Matt and Ben, which was a play that I wrote with my writing partner and friend at the
time, Brenda Withers, where it's like an hour long short play where I play Ben Affleck
and she plays Matt Damon.
It's so hard to tell this story without being like, just being like, okay, so just ignore
that kind of interesting fact and move on.
But so we did that.
It won the Fringe Festival, got some attention and sort of was our entree to LA.
And when we were in LA, I had like an arrested development spec and then that play.
And I had very few meetings, the climate for hiring writers, if you were like an untested
Indian American woman, it was very different 16 years ago than it is now.
And the only place that I got an interview at, I got two interviews.
One was at Nevermind Nirvana, which was a pilot about an Indian family.
And I was like, yes, I could, yes, I could write on that show.
And the other one was the office.
And I remember Joey was like, do you guys remember how huge Joey was when we started
shooting?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
The friend's spinoff.
It was like the NBC.
I think they put all their money in that.
And then Father of the Pride.
Do you guys remember that one?
No.
Father of the Pride was a cartoon, a Jeffrey Katzenberg produced cartoon about from the
point of view of two tigers that worked with Sink Freed and Roy.
Oh, yes.
What?
Yes.
It's coming back to me.
And it was an animated show.
This sounds like a bit on Saturday Night Live.
Yeah.
This doesn't sound like a TV show.
Not only was it a real show, it was like the hottest show.
Like you could not get an interview.
So I didn't get an interview on Will and Grace.
I didn't get an interview at Joey and I didn't get an interview at Father of the Pride.
And you can imagine, like just to show how things have become so different from them,
like can you imagine like now like a minority woman who won the Fringe Festival coming out
to LA, not getting a meeting on like on all the two shows.
So these have changed a lot.
So that's great.
But the two people who I got interviews with nevermind Nirvana and I went into their offices
in Burbank.
This has never happened to me before, but I sat in the office and as I was there waiting
to meet the showrunner, they got the call that the pilot hadn't been picked up to series.
So I sat there and then the assistant came out and was like, you should go home.
Like there's no jobs.
So I just like got up and left.
And then the second one was at the office with Greg Daniels.
And so I met with him and just so you know, my agent at the time who I won't mention was
really like, yeah, this show doesn't have a lot of heat.
Like I don't think it's really going to do anything.
Everyone likes the British one better.
So it's just like, you know, it's good to meet Greg Daniels.
He's like done a lot of good stuff, but like it's just good.
It's just good to like have a general.
So I went in there and there was not a lot of stakes and I had a, um, a very, a really
fun interview with Greg that lasted two hours, but you guys know Greg.
So it was actually probably only 15 minutes of talking in two hours.
And, uh, and then he hired me and, um, or he didn't, he didn't hire me in the meeting.
Like they still had to do up fronts and everything, but we had a great meeting and I heard it
went well.
And then like a month and a half later I was told I was coming back for six episodes, such
a small first season.
But I was so new and I think you guys were, you know, new enough too that it was just
like, Oh my gosh, any episodes, that's fantastic.
Not knowing that that was kind of an unusually small number of episodes, but that was, that
was how I got on the office.
And how did you end up then playing a role on the show?
You know, he had put, Greg had put into the contract, these acting, these writing contract,
these acting clauses for, I think a number of the writers, at least it was in mine.
And I think Paul Lieberstein's, so I guess in the back of his mind, he was thinking
in those terms, but the first season classic episode, diversity day written by the great
BJ Novak, um, I remember in the room, he loved this idea, Greg loved this idea of Michael
Scott offending all these people, but it's like, it's, it's kind of the funniest version
of it when there's like some minority people there too, who can get extra offended.
So at that time, I think it just made sense to have another minority person.
And I was like, I'll do it.
I actually, I didn't volunteer, he's like, we, I had two lines in that episode and he
said, do you want to be in it?
And I was like, of course.
And so diversity day, yeah, thank heavens that was the second episode because then that
I guess starred then and I think maybe once or twice that first season, I wasn't in it
very much.
And then second season was like, I sort of saw, I got more lines.
And yeah, that's how it happened.
What blew me away, Mindy, is when I think back on that and I was, I was sort of reading
back on, you know, Wikipedia about all of us and where we are at in our lives at that
time and you were 24.
And that blows my mind.
You had your act together for, to me, for someone at 24, you, you, you were amazing because
at 24, I was, I think I was doing takeout at Chin Chin's, I wasn't a waiter, I was just
doing a hostess job.
Do you know, you know what it is?
Well, thank you for saying that.
I mean, I love to feel like I was a wonderkin, but do you know what it is?
Is that it's just the life of a writer, a comedy writer in the life of an actor.
They're just so, they're so different, right?
Like it's so, it's very hard to break into comedy writing, but I do think that is easier
than breaking into acting because if you can write, you can write your own opportunities
and write a spec script that, you know, then you can use and send out where it's like when
you're a young actor, you're like, I just hope someone calls me in to see something.
So thank you for saying that.
But you know what?
Also it felt less special because BJ is there and he was the same age and he'd already written
on a show at 24, so it's just when I was like, oh, I guess I'm like young and cool.
He was like, oh yeah, I've already worked on, he was on a Bob Saget sitcom and Mike
Sher was like 28 and it already had like an Emmy and been an SNL for nine years or something
crazy.
There was no sense of like, you could ever think you were special or like ahead of the
curve or anything like that with that group of people.
Well I always thought you were special.
Thank you.
Thanks, Angela.
All right, should we get into this episode, Jenna?
Yeah.
Yes.
Did you get a chance to re-watch it?
Yes, I did.
What was it like for you to re-watch it?
I have to say, I feel really lucky that Greg wanted to do this episode because it feels
like now, you know, Angela was on my most recent show and we did an episode about Ganesh
Pooja and there's so much more, you know, there's so many more shows on the air with
like diverse cast and everything, but the fact that on primetime television and I don't
know, what year did it come out, 2007 maybe?
It aired November 2nd, 2006, it was seen by 8.8 million people and it was the first American
television comedy series to depict the Hindu festival of Diwali.
It was the very first one.
That's cool.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Go us for doing that.
And you know, the show Mindy's referring to is Never Have I Ever.
Mindy, I do want to give it a little plug here because it's so great and the cast is
great and you're with them from the beginning.
The young actors you got, I felt 100 years old on that set.
So did I.
So did everyone.
So did everyone who was in 17.
Oh my God.
And they were so cute and they love the office so much.
Oh my gosh.
They were so starstruck by you, Angela, it was so special that you got to be there.
Oh my gosh.
Mindy, what is the name of the lead actress on that show?
Maitreya Ramakrishnan.
I adore her.
Oh.
Because when you watch the show, you are so immediately in with her journey.
Yeah.
Immediately.
She is so like effervescent and open and just, wow.
What a find.
What a find.
Thank you.
She's going to flip out.
Jenna, she's the office is her number one favorite show.
If you go on her social media for more than two days, there's like an office meme or there's
like, yeah, I bet you've been on her Instagram like with like, please, like, please don't
throw trash at me.
Like, just like some, some like famous Pam line.
Okay.
So, so here we go.
So now we have Diwali, the festival of lights.
It's on network TV.
Mindy, you have been so amazing at just really, I feel like representing all different sides
of culture and on television.
It's just, you should know what it's meant to people.
We had a lot of people write in about having their community seen in this mainstream way,
what it meant to them.
It's, it's really moving.
Oh, wow.
That's so nice.
I mean, you know, the, one of the harder things about when you write the Diwali episode
is like, we couldn't believe that Greg said yes, because normally we would do like a Halloween
episode at that time of year because it's the end of October.
But then I, when he said yes, I had to kind of confront the fact that I'm Indian American.
I don't know very much about the holiday.
And the, that experience of being Indian American and talking about how you don't know very much
about the holiday kind of became a big part of the episode, which I loved.
I didn't, I liked that Greg thought that was just as interesting, if not more interesting
than me going and like pretending that like my family and I were these experts at Hindu
holidays and everything.
So I really liked that Kelly is, is, has this defiant attitude about it, that it's really
important while also not knowing anything about it at all.
Yes.
Except that she gets to wear a like an outfit that has some sparkles on it.
Yes.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And the music part, she's really excited about that.
Yeah.
And Michael in the cold open, I mean, Mindy, I love whenever Steve would do an impression
of us as our characters.
Yeah.
And so Michael's like, well, if you ask Kelly, it's like blah, blah, super fun.
Yes.
I know.
And he didn't get to do that that much, right?
Like I felt like that he didn't do impressions of us too, too much.
When he did, I just, it just got me so tickled.
I know.
It was so funny.
I have a gazillion things I want to say, Jenna, but go, go, you go.
One of my favorite lines in this whole episode is this, how long have you been married to
the cheerleader?
And that was your dad.
Oh my gosh.
To this day, my dad gets checks from, he gets residual checks.
It's like his, the thing he's the most proud of.
Oh, from the office?
Yes.
From the office, right?
Yeah.
And one time he was with my stepmom at Erawon and they got stopped and someone was like,
you are in the office, weren't you?
And that was like early when they were dating before they got married.
And my dad was like, felt so cool about it.
So yeah.
And that was like some good street cred right there.
Yeah.
I'm being recognized.
Yeah.
Completely.
I just remembered that that was like those episodes.
You know at the beginning of the season, it felt like one thing we did a lot was somehow
we pulled out someone from the main cast and there was somebody somewhere else and that
was Stanford for that season.
Yes.
And it was one of those ones where I really liked the Stanford episodes.
I think sometimes when we did that, it worked really well.
Sometimes when we pulled them out, we were like, oh, just come back.
We just like watch you back in the main cast.
But that was a time where I felt like it worked pretty well.
And I remember thinking because I was like at the beginning, I was like, what was Ed
and John doing?
And I was like, oh, they weren't there.
So it was fun to just, I forgot about that whole thing.
And I remember what I really liked about Stanford was like that was a really funny group of
people there.
Even the people that didn't have big parts like in the Stanford branch, I just thought
we nailed those prototypes or whatever.
I was never bored when I had to go over there.
No, it was so well done.
We talked a little bit about having over on the Scranton set, like Angela and I having
a little bit of like FOMO and jealousy of how much fun they were having over on Stanford
because everybody was so funny.
And also they would only have to work like one and a half days a week.
That's right.
Super relaxed and just like having the best time and then they got four days off.
And we were, we were just like, hey, I forgot about that.
Well, well, Jenna, the best example of that was the Michael Scott paper company, which
was like, which was like, to me, the one of my favorite arcs we've ever done.
And I don't think I wrote any of the episodes for you guys there, but like it has, I think
that pairing of people, that group of people on their mission was like one of the times
where I was like, wow, this is just like equally, if not more funny than like anything that's
going, wait, and that's what Idris Elba was.
Was that?
Yeah.
I guess if you cut back to Idris Elba, you're doing fine.
Yeah.
I loved being in Michael Scott paper company.
Oh my God.
I kind of didn't want that arc to end.
And Vikram, the four of you together.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
Amazing.
It was so, it was like, it could have been its own movie.
Like, I know we're not talking about the Michael Scott paper company right now.
We're talking about Diwali, but it felt like it was his own bad news bears type movie.
But you're, you're right, Mindy, there were these pairings that would happen that were
just as pure and beautiful as what was happening in Scranton.
And, you know, I got the DVD box set and I watched the deleted scenes.
And there's so many scenes at Stanford that never made it in.
And like, there's the, the, the character that's like always, like was always breastfeeding.
Oh yeah.
Make Hannah.
Yes.
Hannah would make Jim really uncomfortable.
And then as far as this episode, I do have a question for you because I was texting with
Rashida and she was like, this is the episode.
I was so worried everyone was going to hate me because Jim and Karen have this sloppy
make out out in the parking lot.
Yeah.
Like a tipsy make out.
It's not in the deleted scenes.
It didn't even make that cut.
And so.
It was in the shooting draft.
Oh yeah?
Did Rashida, did you guys end up shooting that?
Cause I was going to ask about that too.
When I was going, I have the shooting draft from this episode and I went back and I read
it and I was like, wait, wait, Jim and Karen kiss?
Yeah.
They're kidding you.
I said, why are they making out?
But then it's nowhere in the episode and it's not in the deleted scenes.
Well, I have a mind memory, even though I was the writer on set, obviously for the episode,
I have like zero memory of that.
But I will say that one thing that we used to do, I felt a lot was to write scripts that
advance story.
And then what we noticed when we only had 21 and a half minutes to air an episode that
such like a little one, such a long way, like if there is an attractive woman who is working
in the new environment and she seems to have some kind of rapport with Jim or together
they're making fun of Andy, you're like, oh, that's interesting, like that might be something.
And so it felt like we were always like pulling back that stuff.
Like, Jenna, don't you feel like you shot a lot of stuff with, with John?
That was like, not like, cause you guys weren't super, like super flirty in those early seasons,
like overtly flirty, but like that you'd watch it and you're like, oh, this was like,
they used like less than I thought they would in terms of like showing your guys is like
budding romance.
Yes.
And I would also add that there were some scenes where we would get in, I don't know
if I would call it fights, but there were some like disagreements in certain episodes
and they would pull back on those two and they, they would make them smaller.
I wonder if it's, it's, it's interesting, it's just like for so much of the show in
terms of romance, it was always like less is more, whereas for comedy, it was like, let's
hoist up Tony Gardner onto the table.
Like, yeah, like, but for all that stuff, it was, um, yeah, just a little goes a long
way.
But, um,
The relationships were so finessed.
I thought they were so smartly done.
One of the things I remember really well about this episode was again, like it's such a time
capsule of like 2006 or whatever, because the love interest, he wasn't really love interest,
but there was an Indian character who my parents preferred to Ryan, that was like a very small
part of it.
And it was played by this writer, Vali Chandrasekharan, who was kind of a friend of the writers
on the show, but not an actor, just a guy, like a guy we knew.
There was a real sort of casualness to our show of like, we're just kind of putting it
together.
Yeah.
We probably shot this, this is season three, right, for Diwali.
It was, we knew that season two had done well.
I don't, we'd been nominated probably at this point when we were shooting.
We'd been nominated, but we didn't know.
So I felt like now, I felt like at the beginning of season three, when we started shooting,
we started feeling like a little bit more like, okay, we're not going to just get canceled
or something because I remember so much stress earlier on thinking like, it's hard to enjoy
a show as much when you're like, is this even going to last?
And I do remember being able to enjoy things a little bit more starting like at the beginning
of a season three.
Sorry, I just keep going off of, because I don't get to talk about the office that
much.
I just, I'm talking really like, like holistically about the show instead of just about this
episode.
But don't worry, we're going to break down this whole episode and like, get into the
nitty gritty of it.
Okay.
So this can be your office memories.
There's no prescription for what we talk about.
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
Greg was on to talk about booze cruise and we just, we went everywhere, you know, but
that's, it's such a special chapter in all of our lives.
I think it's hard to compartmentalize it to one episode.
That's such a big part of us.
You know, one of the things I remember a lot about doing the office was we didn't realize
as writers, how rare it was for Greg to just say, okay, well, I'm just going to give one
person from the writer's world on set and that's just going to be the writer of the
episode.
Some people do that now, but it's usually like an upper level writer.
So it's your job to make sure that the intention of Alliance is being corrected, give alts,
answer questions from the actors.
And I was a story editor when I did this.
And I remember like, that was pretty stressful, I think.
Like I remember being on the set because Miguel Arteta was not one of our directors that we
had all the time.
And so I remember feeling like, is this like, am I being too, like on set because we're
on location a lot for this episode.
I was like, am I too much in his hair?
Is he going to yell at me?
Because I think season one, I was never alone for hot girl.
Like I think Howard and Greg were there for almost all the shooting because it was a lot.
I think one of the last ones we shot.
But for this one, it was just like, go manage set, answer all Indian questions and make sure
it's hilarious and do all alts.
It's so funny you say that, Mindy, because my impression of you as the writer on set
was just always that you were one of my favorites.
Really?
That's so nice.
Oh yes.
Mostly because you were so up to laugh.
Like you found, I always felt like you found everyone hilarious.
Oh my God.
You seemed to like everything.
You had the best alts, so you would sort of throw out ideas maybe based on something
you watched us do.
You'd be like, oh my gosh.
Oh my gosh.
Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
You have to do that again.
Do that again.
And then what do you think about saying this?
And it was like, oh my gosh, it was just like this uplifting, exciting.
That's so nice.
Oh, I loved it.
I loved it.
You talked a lot about that and Jen's lotto was very similar as well.
Well, Jen, you couldn't get, she just would laugh the whole time.
Like we'd actually have to throw her off because she would ruin takes, but yeah.
Yeah.
I thought, you know, there's this thing that we would do on the show where when a cut would
come out, the director's cut, and I've never seen it on any other show, we would all gather
and watch it together in the writer's room.
And director's cuts famously in other shows like make you want to kill yourself.
They're usually so bad, but the quality was so good because the cast was so good.
And so I remember it was like my favorite time.
We could interrupt all of our work and just go into the little living room area of our
writer's room and watch.
I mean, I was such a fan of the show.
I watched almost every cut of every episode and then I would watch it live too.
Like I, and I didn't realize how unusual that is for somebody who works on a show.
Most people do it and then they, a lot of actors don't even watch it when it airs.
But I, I really was such a huge fan of the show.
And a lot of times in those conference room scenes, like I'd have like no lines or one
line or something in these four page scenes.
And to me, it was like going to second city and just watching everyone just be so funny
and it just be for free.
And you'd be in this like freezing cold room and there'd be snacks every two hours.
And I was like, how could this be better?
I felt like such an abundance of riches.
I just loved sitting and watching everyone in character, just reacting.
Yeah.
Mindy, I remember one time you were on stage and BJ and you guys were at reception by Jenna
and you guys were talking and I walked up and you were having a conversation about some
type of like economics.
It was like some kind of like you'd, you'd expanded economics and I walked up and I was
like, I'm going to go over here.
I was just like, they are two of the smartest people I have ever met.
And I'm going to hard pivot and back away.
Wait, BJ and I were talking about economics.
We weren't fighting.
I'm so surprised.
Oh no, you were, it was a heated discussion.
Oh, it was a heated discussion.
You were on opposite sides.
That is so funny.
100%.
Well, I just, I remember you and Paul and BJ as a little trio, probably because you were
the writers who were with the actors.
So between takes, you guys would always kind of huddle up and talk like story ideas and
like what's happening in the writer's room.
And so you were having to kind of manage two jobs at once.
And I used to like hover around you guys and eavesdrop and just like hope you would invite
me in to your hilarious convert.
Yes.
Some of my favorite memories are listening to you guys discuss story and character and
pitch jokes to each other in between scenes.
Well, that's so funny because I felt like when we were in the annex, we, you know, we
were, the writers were in the annex.
I'm sure you're sure you guys have talked about this many times, but we were in the
annex obviously because then we could go be the writer's room and we wouldn't have to
be in some of the big group scenes.
But I remember also thinking like, but I want to be in the big group scenes.
Like I, like those were the funnest scenes to watch when like, you know, Dwight would
run in and be like, everyone to the roof.
Like I, we just were left out of those scenes like about Diwali.
So here's a couple of things that I felt were maybe interesting to say, which was that we
only cast my parents in it, which seems just like a complete act of nepotism and favoritism
because we had auditioned the parts and Greg had felt that the actors we had found of that
age group, like the late fifties, early sixties were like a little bit too either theatrical
for that style of acting on our show or too stilted because they had no acting experience.
Now I'm the first to say that my parents acting was also very stilted, but he was like, at
least they bear some familial resemblance to you.
So we'll just like, we'll just like put them in there.
And I don't know if you guys remember this, but I remember going into it.
My mom was like, had this energy of like, I'm just like going to be so much better than,
than your father.
Like I just know, like neither of them did any acting.
She was, she was a doctor.
He was an architect.
She had the sense like coming over that she's like, I just hope that you give me the most
lines cause I'm just naturally better on camera and like it's going to be good.
But then Miguel like fell in love with my dad.
Like he was like, we have to give him more lines.
Like he's killing it.
And you guys remember like this is the show where if anyone ever fell for anyone, Troy
underbridge, who was like just kind of like a, if anyone was interesting to a director
in the wrong reasons, like just cause like, oh my God, like I just love that guy's look,
they could recur on the show for a long time.
And I remember being like, I cannot have my dad and my mom come back here like ever again
to do this kind of thing.
So I remember Miguel Arteta was like, Hey, do you think we can add your dad to the background
of like another scene?
And I was like, no, we can't.
I was going to ask you what it was like for you to have them on set.
Uh, I was, I don't know if you guys feel this way.
Well, you don't really, because like your family, you guys are so tight.
So I don't think you have this, but I did not feel so established on the show as a writer
or as actor that I felt so comfortable having them there.
Like I was really worried about it, um, seeming unprofessional or just like that they would
tell boring stories to people and like Jenna would be like, Hey, can you get this guy away
for me?
Tell like an AD, like I can't hear, I can't hear the story anymore.
Like, can you please?
So I think I was worried and I think I told them like, don't like talk to people at craft
services for too long.
Like just say hi and answer questions, but don't like launch into, um, you know, other
stuff.
But that was one thing.
I thought they were delightful.
We were so excited to have them and they were so cute, Mindy.
They were so cute.
Well, they're both like five foot four.
They're just like both like little, they're both little people.
Yeah, they're my people.
I, I remember your mom complimented my blouse and I remember it.
It's nice.
She liked the color on me and I was like, Oh, thanks so much.
I don't know.
I thought they were delightful.
And by the way, I thought their acting was amazing.
Thank you.
I was watching them in that scene with Steve and I was like, they are killing it.
Oh my gosh.
Your mom ate him up.
Like that was amazing.
They were, I mean, I cannot believe because I was at the time where I was like, uh, I'd
like to have a scene with Steve, you know, like it felt so special and here they are.
Like he's at a crossroads with Carol and my dad is like, you should be with her.
I don't forget exactly what he said, but I remember being like, this is kind of a juicy
scene.
But you know, there's a nice little story because like, I feel like Pam's stories had
such an emotional impact, but they often didn't have like lots and lots of like lines to them,
but they always were so impactful as like, I thought your little story in this one was
pretty sweet, Jenna.
Like it was like, you know, you didn't really want to go and then you end up having like,
I don't know, I thought it was like a nice, I liked those kinds of Pam stories.
I liked it too.
I also, I was really struck by how incredibly good looking David Denman was in this episode.
I was like, Pam, Pam, stop for a second, open your eyes, see what's in front of you.
And just maybe, I mean, maybe just revisit that for one night, Pam.
It's one night.
That's what, that's what I was thinking the whole time.
Yeah.
David Denman.
He was really tan.
He was really, like, I don't know what David was doing in his real life, but he's super
tan.
Yeah.
In his shape.
He was good to show that Roy had good qualities and was good looking too, so that you weren't
just like, what the hell?
Like why, why is it not?
It's good that he was, yeah, David Denman is a legitimate smoke show.
He doesn't get enough credit.
Yeah.
Guys, this was so much fun.
Now that I've done it and you guys made me feel so welcome, I would love to come back
and do another one sometime.
We will have you back any time, Mindy.
I really, I'm sure you already did this and talked about it with somebody else on the
show, but if we ever do branch wars, Jenna, I have so many funny memories of it.
Like one thing I remember really well was normally you'd sit in a conference room type
scene and Michael would be the person that would just be so funny that you felt like
I'm going to break and die.
And I remember I was not, I was on set with you because I'd written the episode, but I
was not obviously at the branch as a character, I wasn't there.
And I remember when you had to take over for Michael because he was, had like a breakdown,
that was like some of the funniest moments of any episode I'd ever seen.
Like you in front of like just eating it and having to be like this valiant assistant
and friend to Michael.
I remember that and I also remember Michael cutting a piece of her sweater off.
Those were my two favorite moments of that episode.
Thank you, Mindy.
I had a great time.
Mindy.
Thank you so much.
It was such a joy to see you.
Thank you so much.
It was really fun.
Great to see you.
And yeah, guys, good.
I mean, I was going to say good luck, but you don't need good luck.
You're already, this is the number one podcast ever, but.
Oh, stop it.
By the way, speaking of, I can't believe legally, well, I'm three, I'm so excited.
Thank you.
We love you so much, Mindy.
Okay.
Bye.
Do not forget to like.
We are back.
Mindy Kaling.
So fun.
Please come back.
That was so great.
We have to have her back.
I know.
All right.
Lady, should we break down this episode?
We talked a little bit about this cold open with Mindy.
We open in the office.
Kelly is helping Ryan with his curta and Michael enters
and he starts laughing at it.
He calls it a dress, right?
But then Pam and Kelly gush about how handsome Ryan looks
and Michael suddenly wishes that he had one too.
He's such a child.
He's like, how come you didn't get me one?
I think you can see Mindy starting to break
when he says that.
And I wondered if that was an improvised line, Jenna.
No, it's in the script.
Because I feel like you can see Mindy starting
to do that break that she does.
Like she was taken by surprise?
Yeah, yeah.
No, that's just Mindy breaking because you said words,
which is what Mindy used to like to do.
Well, now we have a party planning committee scene.
You guys, we lived for these.
We got so tickled whenever there was one in a script.
I find it fascinating that in this party planning committee
scene, it is Ryan, Meredith, Pam, Angela and Phyllis,
and they are discussing who's gonna carpool with who.
There's a chart.
Clearly they couldn't plan this party.
They were invited guests.
So they had to have something to plan.
So they're planning carpools.
This is what Phyllis wrote on the dry erase board.
And Bob's Yukon, and she was very proud to say
that he had a Yukon.
And Bob's Yukon would be Phyllis, Stanley, Angela,
Kevin, and Pam.
And Meredith's minivan would be Meredith, Darryl, Lonnie,
Creed, Ryan, and Kelly.
Now, who is missing from the carpool?
Oscar, he's on leave.
Michael and Dwight.
Who's riding with Michael and Dwight?
They're on their own, I guess.
Yeah, good question.
Well, I guess Michael and Carol are gonna go together.
But how did Dwight get there?
He's solo, he's solo.
But I want you guys to know there is a fantastic
deleted scene.
There's an extension of this party planning committee scene.
And it's so funny because Angela doesn't want anyone to go.
And I actually have a talking head
where it sort of sets up why I'm so against Diwali.
And it's not really about Diwali.
It's because I think Dwight might still have a thing
for Kelly or maybe there'll be someone else there
he might be interested in.
So I really have this attitude that,
listen, I actually have this line where I say,
certain people in this office are a little too obsessed
with things from India.
Yes.
So she's jealous.
And that's really her filter through all of this.
That's why she's so salty all the way through.
And then Jenna, what I love is she's trying to like
talk people out of going.
And Ryan was like, well, Kelly's kind of into it.
I thought we could go.
And then he's like, I don't care.
Actually, we can bail.
I don't care.
Ryan was like, you guys want me to bail?
Fine.
We actually got a lot of mail wondering why Angela
was so salty about this festival.
And so I'm really glad you shared that deleted scene
because there was this whole extra storyline element
that it's you and I think you kind of see it a little bit
in the scene where Pam is telling Kelly,
she might not go and this and that,
and your head has popped up behind that partition.
And you are a little jealous when Dwight with such authority
says he's single.
He's not seeing anyone.
Yes.
Because Kelly suggests maybe Pam go with Dwight
if she doesn't want to go alone.
And she's like, you're single, right Dwight?
And Dwight's like, oh yeah, I'm totally single.
And I think you see that little jealousy right there
from Angela like, ooh, don't like it.
There's deleted scenes that really sort of play out
this Dwight Angela storyline and her jealousy
and how it resolves itself.
But that's what was going on for Angela Martin.
So Michael gets aware of the fact
that people might not be as enthusiastic
about this Diwali festival as he would like.
He says he thinks it's because people are just ignorant
about other cultures and he really does not want
to be embarrassed by everyone's ignorance
in front of his girlfriend Carol.
Yeah, so he's got to educate everyone.
So this means we're all going in the conference room.
Yes.
Once again, where does Michael get these posters?
It feels last minute, but yet he has all these posters.
Does he send Dwight on like a mad dash?
There's all kinds of posters once we get
in the conference room.
It's so true.
And when he starts showing us this slideshow,
you notice how there's a photo of Michael and Carol kissing.
It's so awkward.
That accidentally makes its way into this presentation.
Yeah.
Well, then he passes out the Kamasutra to the employees.
And remember, Angela, those were like little booklets
that Phil Shea had to put together in print
of all these Kamasutra positions
and they were blurred out for television,
but they were not blurred out in real life.
We're all sitting in the room as actors
and we get these little booklets.
And I remember being totally like, oh, oh, wow.
Okay.
Of course, Kevin says this is the best meeting
they've ever had.
The best one.
If you guys get a chance and rewatch the scene,
at the end, Toby takes away the Kamasutra.
And I want you to look at Phyllis' face
because she makes an expression
like she's really bummed out to lose the book.
Oh my gosh, I missed that.
Oh, I can't wait to go back and see that.
Well, Angela, should we talk a little bit
about what's going on in Stanford?
You mean with Josh Porter's like biker shorts
and his fancy bike and Jim and his clunky bike
with a big basket?
What's happening, Jim?
What's going on?
Well, Jim has started biking to work.
Just like Josh, he says, I'm gonna save gas money.
It keeps me in shape.
He did not anticipate how sweaty he would be.
That talking head is so funny.
How much sweat they put on him.
Angela, do you remember how they used to make us sweaty
when you have to be sweaty?
They spray you.
Yeah, they would either spray you with like a bottle
that you would mist your plants with,
or they would spray you with like those Evian mist sprays
and they have to like spritz you under the arms.
But then they'd have to come and do it
like between every take because it would dry.
But then sometimes they would put like baby oil
around like your hairline and then spray you
so it would look especially sweaty.
Yeah.
I've just given everybody a little inside info
on how you make an actor sweaty.
You can try it at home.
Jenna, I'm just laughing at how many times
you just said sweaty.
Sweaty.
All right, so now at four minutes, 23 seconds.
Sam, will you play Mustang?
Flirty Karen.
Flirty Karen.
That's my mom, Birdie Kinsey.
Flirty Karen, Karen says, hey, nice basket.
Ever since the whole chips incident, she's smitten.
Yep.
So then Josh comes over and gives Karen
the company credit card because they have to work late
and they're allowed to buy dinner.
But he says, you know, no more than $20 a person this time.
This time, $20 a person, we shot this in 2006.
Is there a meal out there that you order
that's more than $20 a person?
Maybe there's a reason Stanford doesn't make it.
I mean, my gosh.
I don't know.
Maybe I just don't eat at very fancy places for my takeout,
but I feel like I would be challenged to order a meal
for more than $20 a person in 2006.
Yeah, especially late at night in Scranton.
What are they getting?
Like, Thai food.
I know.
Exactly, this is not difficult.
Andy, though, busts out some Jagermeister.
He's got other plans.
He's ready to party.
Ed Helms' face when he holds up that Jagermeister bottle
and the shot glasses is hilarious.
You get a window into who Andy was in college
and you're like, oh, buddy.
Well, back in Scranton, things are getting exciting
because everyone is showing up to Diwali.
They're arriving, they're walking in.
It's really, really bright and colorful
and there's music playing.
And Phyllis is like, isn't it fun to take our shoes off?
And Angela's like, I wish not everyone took their shoes off.
And Kevin's like, stop it.
I told you it was a condition.
So you guys remember in grief counseling,
we talked about a deleted scene
that would have been in the episode
where Angela and Kevin go off again about his sweaty feet.
Yes, this is a callback to a deleted scene.
So it's gonna go unappreciated by most viewers,
but those diehard viewers who watch those deleted scenes
will know what this means.
I feel like someone in the writer's room
was really determined to make sure
we had scenes about Kevin's feet.
I feel like it was a note card on the wall
that said Kevin's sweaty feet and someone loved it
and kept wanting to get it in the episodes.
Well, this is Angela's worst nightmare,
people taking off all their shoes,
even minus Kevin's sweaty feet.
I mean, this is just not how she wants to be at a party.
No, no.
So Angela, we got a fan question about these Diwali scenes.
It comes from Sarah Beth Miller.
She asked, was this a real Diwali celebration
happening in the filming of this episode?
How did you get all of those people
in those beautiful costumes?
Great question, Sarah Beth.
I mean, there are so many people in this scene.
So here's the thing, it was not a real Diwali festival.
That was all put together by our amazing crew,
just specifically for this episode.
Yes, our set designer, Michael Gallenberg and his team,
they decorated that whole gym.
Michael had to do a lot of research
in order to transform the gymnasium
to feel like a real Diwali festival.
So I think he would be very proud to know
that you wondered if this was real,
like maybe we just stepped into an existing festival.
No, they made the whole thing.
They did a fantastic job.
As far as costumes go,
my character did not get to dress up Jenna.
I was so bummed, you know?
I mean, she actually is just wearing what she wore to work.
She didn't even change out of her work clothes.
I know.
But some of the cast did get to dress up.
BJ, Rain, Mindy, and I'm sure our wardrobe stylist
was thrilled to do something
other than just drab office attire.
They used to get so excited
every time we got to wear anything
other than our office attire.
And Pam didn't really dress up,
but she is not in her office attire,
which was fun.
I had a whole separate fitting for that.
We got to see casual Pam.
And did you notice I got to wear my hair differently as well?
But we did find out some interesting trivia
about all the other background actors
who were dressed up for this festival.
Yes, we went to Kintopedia
and he said our casting office worked with Central Casting.
Now, Central Casting is a casting agency in Los Angeles.
They specialize in sort of the background actors
and filling out the picture, right?
Yeah.
Central Casting reached out to a lot of the Indian community
here in Los Angeles to hire those background players.
All in all, Kint said we had 100 extras working this episode
and every single one of them brought their own
very beautiful costuming for us to use.
And to kind of fill out the world,
Kint also hired a professional dance company
to come and lead us in some of the dances.
He found a company called NDM Dance Productions
and he hired their director choreographer, Dev Mahajan.
And Dev hired eight dancers.
He choreographed, rehearsed their dance in the morning
of that day four of shooting
is when we shot all the dancing.
And then we filmed it later in the afternoon
and all the dancers were their own costumes as well.
I actually went to the website.
Of course you did, lady.
You went to the dancers website.
What'd you find out?
They have appeared on tons of shows.
So you think you can dance, E live Oscar coverage,
Good Morning America, Superstars of Dance
and MTV's America's Best Dance Crew.
If you wanna look them up,
you can find them at ndmdance.com.
It was super cool and it really did end up feeling
like a real party, like a real celebration.
It really did.
I wish my character wanted to participate more
because me, Angela, that is me
would have been right out there
like just having a great time.
So it was always hard in these moments
to not get to be in costume
and not participate and be kind of the grump on the wall,
you know?
I do and we'll talk a little bit about my dancing later
but I did get to dance a little bit and I was thrilled.
Yes. Very fun.
All right, so yeah, so there are people
that got to dress up, people that didn't.
Michael and Carol walk in
with a whole different idea of what this party is.
Michael has clearly told Carol
that this is a costume party
so she arrives dressed as a cheerleader.
With pom poms.
With pom poms.
And Michael has his old Halloween costume on.
He has his paper mache head.
We had a fan question from Melinda O'Brien.
Was Michael's costume the same one from the Halloween episode
or did they have to make another one?
Oh no, Melinda, we save everything.
Everything that anyone wore or held or used
or interacted with on the office
goes into a giant warehouse.
It's tagged.
It's almost like an evidence room.
So when they wrote that into this episode,
they just went to that warehouse
and they picked up that paper mache head
and put it right on his shoulder again.
That's right.
It's like the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark.
It's like rows and rows of boxes with dates, tags,
episode names.
So they went right to that box
and of course Michael, you know,
he can take the head off
and then he just looks like he's in a suit
but Carol is stuck now as a cheerleader
because Michael thought this was Indian Halloween.
Yes, I know.
Poor Carol.
She is such a sport in this episode.
She has to endure so much.
And Nancy Krill just knocked it out of the park.
She plays it so perfect of just sort of like
quietly enduring this awkward evening
while dressed like a cheerleader.
Yeah.
Well, let's move over to the buffet.
Angela's at the buffet.
She asks if they have any vegetarian options.
She doesn't even seem satisfied
when she learns that everything is vegetarian.
It's all vegetarian.
She's just in full grump mode.
She's like, just give me some bread.
And then the guy hands her the bread with his hands.
And Angela, you have a line here
that I am fairly certain you improvised.
Oh yeah.
I say, can you use your hands as I walk away?
And I did improvise that
because the guy literally did hand it to me with his hands.
And I thought, that's not good.
You shouldn't use some tongs.
Some tongs.
He just handed it to me with his hands.
And so I improvised that line and it stayed in
and it makes me laugh.
Of course she goes ahead and eats it.
So I guess she's not too concerned.
But it's clearly she's just like not having a good time.
And she's a little like grossed out
because she's seeing a lot of feet.
And now a guy just handed her bread with his hands.
A stranger.
Well, in the script, it says that you take a bite
and say, ugh, garlic.
We had some fan questions about the foods.
Stacy and Rutby both wrote in to say,
was any of that delicious looking buffet food real?
Did you get to sample some of the cuisine
while filming this episode?
Guys, it was all real food.
It was all real, it was all delicious.
Kent told me we hired a specialty food stylist
to create the food that it was authentically prepared
and we had it all three days of filming
and we got to eat it.
And I remember that it was delicious.
It was delicious.
I only got to eat the naan, but it was very good naan.
Oh, I ate between takes.
I just ate it.
You don't even see Pam eating it on screen.
I was like, I will eat this.
Well, now we come to one of the moments in this episode
that is one of my favorites, Angela.
This is when Ryan meets Kelly's giggly sisters.
Yeah.
It's so, so cute.
We got some fan questions from Lindsay Bridget and Dan
who all wanna know, do you know what Kelly's sister
is saying when they're talking to Ryan?
They're saying something about Zach Braff.
Okay, here's what the three little girls say.
They say, Kelly likes Zach Braff.
That's what they're saying in Hindi.
And they're sort of like teasing him.
They were so cute and they were played by Tanvir Atwal,
Ananya Keper and Jayshia Patel.
Well, the little girl who plays Kelly's sister
that says the Zach Braff line, that's Jayshia.
I found her on Instagram and I reached out to her
to ask her about what it was like to be on the show
and she wrote back.
I can't wait to share.
She must be like a grown lady now.
She is a grown woman now.
She told me she was 13 years old
when she shot this episode.
She said she had not really heard about the show.
She was still watching Disney Channel, she said.
But she said her dad took her to the audition
and she remembers walking into the casting office
and just seeing tons of other kids
who were all there for the same role.
And she said the audition was just her
saying that one line in Hindi.
And she said she didn't speak any Hindi.
So her dad told her how to say it
about five seconds before she went into the audition room
and then she got the part.
So she said she was so excited
and I asked her what it was like to be on set
if she had any memories
and she sent back the sweetest message.
So we're gonna play it for you now.
I remember Rainn Wilson walking up to me
and shoving a lightsaber in my hand
and yelling lightsaber war.
I also remember getting to know Mindy Kaling
and BJ Novak who were so sweet to me.
Meeting Mindy Kaling really meant a lot to me growing up
because I didn't really see many Indian actresses
in the entertainment industry at that time.
And I love what Mindy has done with her platform
and she is still a huge inspiration for me till this day.
I also remember all of the delicious Indian food on set
and getting to dance all day.
And I remember being so happy
that I had the chance to wear my Indian clothes.
Isn't that so sweet?
And that is wonderful.
That as I listened to it, I was just smiling so big
because that is everything about that message is lovely.
I love all of her memories.
She's absolutely right about Mindy
and what Mindy has done.
And she's such an inspiration to so many people.
Yes, yeah.
She told me after the episode aired
she had classmates and family members reaching out
that they had recorded it
and taking pictures of her name in the credits.
So that was when she was 13.
She really wanted to be an actress.
She said when she was 15,
she decided she wanted to go into journalism.
And now Jayshia is the morning news reporter at NBC 15
in Mobile, Alabama.
She told me she has to go to bed at four o'clock
in the afternoon
because she has to be in the studio at 3.30 in the morning.
I have always heard that
about these morning anchors on the East Coast
that they have to get up so early.
That's amazing though, Jayshia.
That is so cool.
Isn't that so cool?
She said all her coworkers know
about her appearance on the office
and that fans will mention to her because she's Indian.
They'll mention the Diwali episode
and then she always like blows their mind when she says,
oh no, I was in it.
So I thought that was so sweet.
I was in it.
I say a line that offends Ryan the temp.
Yes, exactly.
Except he doesn't quite know
he's being the butt of a joke.
But she said being on the office
was one of her most memorable moments of her childhood.
I also love that, you know,
I'm sure Rain improvised going up to her
with that lightsaber.
There's a bunch of deleted scenes
where he's fighting with kids with lightsabers.
And it didn't make it in,
but he, Rain looked very much in his element.
Like that's how he bonds with children.
Yes.
Angela, should we check in on those folks at Stanford,
see how they're doing?
You mean the folks drinking Jagermeister?
Yeah, how are they?
And Angela, did you see what they ordered for dinner?
Oh, Jenna, you and I know firsthand.
You do not drink a lot of alcohol and only eat sushi.
Now, Angela, why do we know that firsthand?
We know that because at the Golden Globes,
was it the Golden Globes, Jenna?
Oh, lady, I was thinking of my Bachelorette party
that you planned for me.
Oh, well, there was the Golden Globes,
but the Bachelorette?
Wait, have we repeated this mistake multiple times?
Except the second time I did better.
The first time it did not work out well for me.
The second time, if memory serves,
sorry to say this on here,
but it hit your sister pretty hard.
Yeah, guys, Angela planned a Bachelorette party for me
when I was getting married to Lee
and she took us all out for her sushi dinner.
It was a fancy schmancy sushi place in Beverly Hills
that I'd never eaten at, I'd only dreamed of.
And I was like, can we go there for my Bachelorette?
They were thrilled to have us.
It was so cute.
All of the ladies from the office were there.
All of my other friends were there.
And afterwards, you took us to a dance club.
Hold up, lady, we're gonna get this right.
First of all, the sushi place was your idea.
And then after the sushi place,
you guys, I got cupcakes with her face on it.
It was so cute.
We had lots of free drinks sent over.
The restaurant was very kind and lots of great sushi.
And then after the dinner, I was like,
well, thank you guys and Jenna was like, what's next?
And I was like, uh, what?
Wait, what?
Is this true?
I do not remember this.
No, lady.
All I had planned was the dinner.
I didn't plan anything after.
Is this the first time you're ever hearing of this?
Yes.
This is putting the dance club into perspective now.
Cause I thought at the time it was an odd choice
cause we've never in a million years gone clubbing.
And now we were suddenly clubbing for my bachelorette,
but I was like, this is great.
What a fun idea.
Yeah, I should say, you guys, we had a car.
I got one of the big limos, you know,
that we could all pile in.
And I called a friend of mine who was like,
always kind of like, got, you know,
you have that one friend that's like, I got a hookup.
I got a hookup.
Yeah, I'm in the know.
I called my friend Tess and I was like, Tess.
I, Jenna wants to go dancing.
I were in Beverly Hills.
What do I do?
What do I do?
And she was like, I'm on it.
Give me like five, 10 minutes.
I said, okay.
So we kind of hung out a little bit.
And I was like, um, I'm starting out some stuff guys.
I do remember hanging out on the sidewalk outside the.
Yes.
It's because I didn't have a plan.
Cause the restaurant.
All I had planned for was fancy sushi.
And our evening would have been over at like 10 o'clock.
Yeah.
Anyway, I get a call from Tess and she goes, all right,
Angela's pretty last minute.
It's like, you know, a Thursday night in Beverly Hills.
So I did get you in this one club.
I know this guy, he's got a booth for you.
And they're going to give you drink service.
It's kind of a random club, but it'll be fun.
You guys can dance.
Angela, it's the only time I've ever experienced bottle service.
Bottle service is where you like, they bring you just bottles
of alcohol and then mixers and like little cut lines
to your table and you make your drinks.
Also when they walk it over, everyone starts doing,
at least for us, I think this was the norm
cause I would see different people get bottle service.
And it was like, they shut off like Fetty in the air.
It was so weird.
It was so bizarre.
They had, it was crazy dancing.
I remember we got in trouble because we were dancing
on top of the couches and we got reprimanded for that.
But guys, on our stomachs of sushi mixed with bottle service
long story short, at the end of the night
as the limo is dropping everyone off,
my sister puked in Ellie Kemper's bushes.
I puked when I got home, it was in my hair.
I slept in it.
It was an epic night, but that's what you get
when you mix sushi and a lot of booze.
And that is what is in store for these guys in Stamford.
Yeah, as Jenna and I rewatched this episode,
I texted her and I was like, oh, lady, alcohol,
and sushi, it's so true.
It is so true.
Should we go back to Diwali because Roy has arrived
and he is watching Pam dance and have fun.
And I have a full Mindy catch for you right here.
You do?
And we've got a sting for it and everything.
What?
Full Mindy.
There you go.
It's a full Mindy catch.
Mira During wrote in to say at the Diwali party
when Roy walks in, Beyonce's crazy in love
is playing in the background.
And Angela, this was a note in the script.
Mindy wrote in what song would be playing
when Roy walks in and that it would be a Beyonce song.
So I think this is a full, full Mindy.
I love it.
It's a very subtle full Mindy.
It's like full Mindy when you don't even see Mindy,
but her presence is still there.
Exactly.
And you know, my dance partner, we talked about this
in the interview with Mindy, my dance partner, Vali.
Okay.
He was well-known by the writers
because he was a writer on My Name is Earl at the time.
And he went on to write on 30 Rock
and was one of the executive producers of Modern Family.
Oh my gosh.
I know.
Well, that Mindy did say, guys, he wasn't an actor.
He was like a friend of ours.
That's so funny.
A friend of ours, that's so wild.
Well, can I ask you a little bit
about your dance moves there, Ms. Fisher?
You can.
What are you gonna say?
I've danced with you.
And I can tell you right now, folks,
that was not a choreographed dance routine.
That was just Jenna being Jenna.
Yeah.
We had a fan question from Zaria Collins
who asked that same question.
Were those dance moves choreographed?
Oh no.
Oh no.
That's all Ms. Fisher.
That's me fully dancing with my heart and soul.
That's hello, St. Louis.
St. Louis prom.
That sounds a Scranton right there.
That's the same girl who made a sounds
of Scranton playlist, everyone.
There I am.
You could almost rewind me
and put me in my high school gym right there.
Well, something is gonna happen that is super awkward
because that is Michael's way.
Michael's way is to take a wonderful moment
and make everyone cringe.
And the Diwali was going to be no exception.
He has this amazing scene with Mindy's parents
that play Kelly's parents, which we already talked about.
And he's so inspired by their love.
He's gonna do it.
He's gonna do it.
Their commitment.
He's gonna propose to Carol
in front of a whole room of strangers
on their ninth date.
Yes, she's like,
Carol, will you do me the honor of making me your husband?
Of making me your husband.
And she's like, can we talk about this in private?
And this is one of my favorite moments in movies and TV
where he's like, what?
Into a microphone.
She's like, can we talk about it in private?
And then he's like, oh man, oh crap.
Well, they have this scene out in the parking lot, Jenna.
And it made me laugh so hard that, you know,
Carol is like, I can't do this, Michael.
I can't do it.
And his last ditch effort, his last few moments,
what is he gonna say that might change her mind?
He's gonna go for it.
What could he say to change this woman's mind?
Do you know what he says?
Let me come with you.
I have this book, the Kamasutra.
She says, exactly.
She's like, good night, Michael.
Well, at this point, Pam is, she's talking to Valley
and she's realizing something.
She wants to reach out to Jim.
So she's gonna text Jim.
Well, that thing happened.
That thing happened, which is, you know,
this crazy moment just happened
and who does she wanna share it with, right?
This is how you know you really care about someone.
Your person out there, folks,
is the person you wanna tell everything to
right after it happens.
It's who you bounce everything off of
and Pam wants to tell her person what just happened.
But she runs into Angela.
She needs to get her shoes
and there is Angela guarding the shoes, she says.
Well, and eating her dry naan.
By the way, Angela, fan question from Rainey Gregg.
Was the naan dry?
No.
Was it actually dry?
No, it wasn't.
It was perfectly fine.
No, I would say that too.
I ate some of that naan.
It was wonderful.
I was glad to have it.
I was probably hungry.
Well, Jen and I used to always get so tickled
to have scenes together,
because it rarely happened.
So we were really excited about this.
I loved shooting this scene with you
and I love it so much.
I just want us to play it.
Sam, can you play it?
It's hot in there.
How's the naan?
Dry.
Looked like you were having fun.
I am.
You should come dance with us.
I have to watch our shoes so they don't get stolen.
Who are you texting?
No one.
But also, lady, my character is so nosy.
So nosy.
Who are you texting?
Yeah, it looked like you were having fun.
Who are you texting?
I mean, who am I to ask you who you're texting?
You're the party police.
Also, you're single.
Dwight made this big announcement that he's single.
I don't know.
Maybe you're texting Dwight.
What's happening?
Angela's spinning out in this episode
and a lot of those scenes ended up getting deleted,
but it would be a fun watch to go back and watch them
because that is why you are so intense in this episode.
So now Pam is gonna make it outside.
She hasn't received a text back from Jim
and she sits with Michael.
Michael tries to relate to her.
He's like, wow, they're both victims of broken engagements.
And Pam's like, well, I mean,
except that you were never actually engaged, but whatever.
She tries to bond with Michael.
And of course, he does that thing
that you were just talking about
where he just takes it one step too far
and he starts to lean in like he's gonna kiss her.
So awkward.
We got a lot of mail about it, Angela.
Ruby, Alexandra and Vanessa Ortiz all wrote in to ask
if that was a scripted moment
when Michael tries to kiss Pam, what was it like?
It was scripted, you guys.
That was in the script.
And then the thing, that great line that Pam has
where she says, I'm rejecting your kiss.
He's like, she's like, what are you doing?
He's like, what are you doing?
She's like, I'm rejecting your kiss.
That's what I'm doing.
Yeah, what are you doing?
That was all scripted.
And Angela, I was so excited to do that scene
because I remember staying late that evening
and shooting outside.
I talked about this before when I had that scene with John
up on the roof where Pam and Jim eat the grilled cheese
sandwiches, it was one of those warm summer evenings
in Los Angeles, they're the best.
This was another one of those.
And it's one of my fondest memories from shooting the show
because I got Steve all to myself
and I got Miguel Arte to all to myself
and Mindy was there and it was just us doing the scene,
getting it just perfect.
It felt like we had all the time in the world.
There was no rush and I just absolutely loved it.
Yeah, well Mindy mentioned that she was kind of jealous
of her parents that they got to have this great scene
with Steve because there are several characters,
myself included, that rarely got to have one-on-one
scenes with Steve.
It just wouldn't make sense in the world of the show.
And whenever I did, it felt so special
and I think you got to have some amazing scenes with him
throughout the course of the show
and this is just one of those that was just beautiful
and so fun and funny and cringy and heartfelt,
just all of it.
That's all true.
Angela, we did have someone right in with an old tech alert
that I thought you would appreciate.
Hit me up, how'd I miss it?
What is it?
Kayla Whitehead said Pam's cell phone.
Oh yeah.
It's such old tech, but she's like,
but also when she walks outside,
Michael sees her on the steps and he notices
that she's holding her phone and he says expecting a call.
She was like, no one would say that to you today.
If you have your phone in your hand today,
no one's like expecting a call
because we always all have our phones in our hand.
That is a brilliant catch.
I am applauding that catch.
I love that observation.
That is an amazing observation because back then,
yeah, your phone was in your purse.
We didn't walk around holding phones like flip phones
like that because we did hardly anything with them
other than talk to someone.
So if you're holding it,
you'd probably just spoke to someone
or you were about to.
Yes.
That is a great observation.
Pretty great.
Well, I wanna take us back to Stanford
because I think there is a moment in this episode
that is the happiest we have seen Andy
since he has appeared on the show.
It's happy Andy and I wanna share happy Andy with you.
Happy Andy happens at around 15 minutes.
They have had a lot of Yeager.
Karen though, she's just tossing her Yeager shots
into the trash.
No one knows it.
She's not getting wasted.
And Andy starts singing acapella.
Karen's like, no acapella Andy,
but he's drunk and he's singing.
The indigo girl's closer to fine.
And as he drunkenly sings,
all of a sudden Jim who's super wasted
starts joining in and singing.
And it's so adorable.
Andy's like, tuna, are you kidding me?
Like, he's so happy.
He's so happy.
They're having like an acapella moment.
And this is happy Andy.
He is thrilled.
Well, Angela, we had a fan catch for Renata Torres.
She says at 17 minutes, 58 seconds,
you can see a pair of white flip flops under Karen's death.
Ah!
And she wanted to know if that was on purpose,
but we know why those are there.
We do, those were Rashida's flip flops.
Yeah, the wardrobe department would give us
Uggs or flip flops to wear
to and from our trailers and set,
so we didn't have to walk in our
kind of like high heel office shoes, right?
Yeah.
Yes.
You caught Rashida's flip flops.
You know, wardrobe actually told me one time also,
our trailers were not close to the soundstage.
It was a little, you know, quite a walk.
And they said that also they would take our shoes
to protect our shoes because if we walked
across the parking lot back and forth
and sometimes if there was weather of any kind,
they preferred actually to leave our shoes
on set by our desks rather than us walking around
in them all the time.
We were delighted because that meant less time in heels.
We had our travel shoes.
Those were Rashida's travel shoes.
Well, as they're leaving for the night in Stanford,
Jim is gonna ride that bike home.
He's gonna ride his bike home.
Or is he?
Well, yeah.
He falls over.
Well, you know, it's the end of the night at Stanford.
They've had Jaeger.
They've bonded over Indigo Girls.
I mean, Andy's busting out his air mattress.
He's like.
Oh yeah.
He's staying in for the night.
Jim is gonna try to ride his giant bicycle
with the big basket home.
And he like tips over into the bushes
and Karen's in her car.
She's like, hold up, get in my car, drunkie.
And Jenna, do you remember how freaked out
people were about this moment?
Yeah.
I mean, people thought Karen was shady,
that she let them get so wasted
and that was she waiting for Jim?
Like she had planned it all along.
Yeah, was she waiting out in the parking lot for Jim?
And I was like, hey, Mr. Tipsy, get in my car.
And remember this, in this episode,
it was written that they were gonna like kiss.
I talked to Rashida about it.
I texted with her and I want to read you guys
what she said.
She said in this episode there,
they had written a scene where Jim and Karen
get sloppy drunk and make out.
So maybe I guess she had been drinking too
in that different version, right?
In that different version,
because I have the scripted version of that,
the three of them go to a bar
and they all get drunk together at a bar
and then they were supposed to make out on the street
outside of this bar.
And Rashida said they actually filmed the scene
in the parking lot.
Oh my God.
And she said she was really worried,
she was like, everyone's gonna hate me.
And then she told me Steven Merchant
actually suggested that they cut the scene out.
That he got to watch of her.
Cause Steven and Ricky would watch our episodes
and they would give the producers notes rarely,
but sometimes and their notes were always correct.
They were always like,
they knew don't move that needle so far.
Yeah. And Rashida said she felt like
Steven really understood the relationships
and that this was going too far, too bold, too quickly.
And it would sort of sabotage anything
that Jim and Karen might,
could possibly be as a foil for Pam.
It was just too much.
Yeah. I think if you wanted to believe
in their relationship, which you will,
like Jim and Karen are gonna really have
a great relationship.
You don't want it to start off
with like a sloppy drunk make out
on the side of the street.
Kids, are you listening?
Nothing good happens after midnight.
Okay, go home.
This is what aunt told me when I went off to college.
She said, here's my advice to you
about sleeping around.
This is what she said.
She said, you're gonna go to these parties,
you're gonna do some drinking,
and you might in the moment
wanna make a decision that's impulsive.
She said, my advice to you is go home
because you can always wake up in the morning
and say, oh, I wish I'd slept with that guy
and you can do something about it.
But you can't undo.
You can't undo.
Yeah. I'm with your aunt.
You can't undo.
But I was kind of lame in college.
When I turned 21, I had a big paper due
for a class I was taking.
And all my friends were like,
you're gonna go out it's your 21st birthday.
And I said, oh, no, I need to work on my paper.
So I worked on my paper and my dad had a Texaco gas card
and he would pay my Texaco gas card.
Just like reality bites,
I would go to that gas station and I would get gas,
bread, sandwich, meat, potato chips, soda, like everything.
And I went to Texaco and I bought myself a Coronita.
It's not even the big Corona.
It's a Coronita because I was 21 and I went
and I worked on my term paper and I had my Coronita.
And that was my 21st birthday.
That is literally adorable.
That is adorable.
I was a big dork lady.
That's why we would have been friends.
I would have hung out with you and your cat.
We would have been besties.
This is also why as adults,
we mixed sushi with a lot of hard liquor.
Because we didn't learn in college, we didn't learn.
Where are we at?
I don't even know where we're at
except that Karen put Jim in his car.
And now we go back to Diwali
and it's one of my favorite moments ever.
Dwight and Michael are gonna perform
a cover of Adam Sandler's Hanukkah song,
dedicated to Indians everywhere.
Yes, the crowd loves it.
Angela, so many people wrote in asking about this song.
Was it improvised?
A lot of people thought that because Steve
was holding a piece of paper
that maybe we wrote this on the fly.
No, this was in the script.
And in fact, Kent told me it had been in the script
as far back as the pre-table draft.
This is kind of a writer's term,
but they send out a draft of the script
before they let anyone see it
and they have to give it to all of the main producers
so that they can start planning wardrobe and locations.
And Kent said that at that pre-table draft,
this was the tag for the episode
and it remained there until we shot it.
So they got permission and all that kind of stuff.
And he said Steve asked for that piece of paper
because he felt like his character wrote it at the party.
And that would sell the idea that this was
like a last minute idea by Michael.
Yeah, yeah, I thought the same thing.
I thought Michael needed those notes.
Steve did not.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, it's so good and I have a really great catch.
I'm gonna call it a BFF catch.
What is it?
At 20 minutes, 34 seconds,
after he's finished singing and it pans to the crowd
and everyone cheers,
you and I are sitting side by side on the floor together.
Oh my gosh, Angela, you know we did that ourselves.
I know, we sat together, we probably were,
I mean, I remember them doing that song.
We were all just elated and along for the ride.
It was so fun.
And I think we just sat next to each other
because they probably weren't even sure
if they were gonna use that big swing back to the crowd,
right?
Yeah.
And so there we are, there we are on the ground
next to each other, BFF catch.
That is the perfect way to end
this podcast episode of Diwali.
We did it with a BFF catch.
We did it and thank you so much to Mindy Kaling
for stopping by.
I just felt like we could kept talking and talking
and I can't wait for her to come back.
And if you guys get a chance,
go check out Mindy's new show
that she co-created with Lang Fisher.
It's so cute.
It's a coming of age kind of comedy drama
called Never Have I Ever
and the cast is wonderful and the writing is great.
And you guys, if you watch it,
you'll see Angela on it
because Angela's in it in a couple of episodes.
Yes, I'm in two episodes.
I play the mom.
I play one of her nemesis' mom and it was really fun.
I'll be the mom all day long, Jenna.
I know.
Yeah, casting folks out there,
if you need a mom with a little bit of sass,
give me a call.
You know where to go.
Guys, thank you so much.
This was a really fun one
and we will be back next week with Branch Wars.
See you then.
Bye.
Thank you for listening to Office Ladies.
Office Ladies is produced by Earwolf,
Jenna Fisher and Angela Kinsey.
Our producer is Cody Fisher.
Our sound engineer is Sam Kiefer.
And our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
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and our bonus episodes Candy Bag,
go to StitcherPremium.com.
For a free one month trial of Stitcher Premium,
use code, OFFICE.