Office Ladies - A Look Back on Grief Counseling
Episode Date: May 12, 2021As Jenna and Angela prepare for Season 5 of The Office, Office Ladies takes a look back at Grief Counseling. This episode starts off with some real life bird trouble, and we get some special audio tre...ats from Mindy Kaling and the episode writer herself, Jen Celotta. Then we dig into chip rankings, we clear up a fan theory around Ed Truck’s death, and we find out who’s been moving the conference table. Finally, we get a writer’s room deep dive on Dwight’s absorbed twin speech, and Jenna learns to not touch melons in France. Amen! Audio excerpt courtesy Penguin Random House Audio from Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) by Mindy Kaling, narrated by the author. © 2011 by Mindy Kaling, ℗ 2011 Penguin Random House LLC
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Hey office ladies family, guess what?
We are done with season four.
I can't believe it.
I can't believe it.
We're moving into season five,
but we need a beat to prepare.
Yeah, we need a week off.
We gotta get our notes ready.
So we are gonna rerun grief counseling.
You remember grief counseling?
Season three, episode four.
This was a great episode.
A lot happens in this episode.
We have audio clips from Jen Solada.
We have an audio clip from Mindy Kaling's book.
We have a twin absorption deep dive.
Yeah.
I talk about poking some melons in France
and Angela gets to the bottom of
who is moving that conference table
in and out of the conference room.
I mean, it drove me crazy for years.
You had to find out.
We also have a special guest on this episode,
my daughter busts in while we were
in the middle of recording.
With an actual bird emergency.
Yes.
So guys, we thought this is perfect.
It's spring again.
I've got birds in a nest again at my house.
I know me too.
So enjoy grief counseling
and we're gonna see you next week with season five.
Season five.
Holy moly.
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.
Hi everybody.
Hello.
Welcome to office ladies.
I'm so excited about this episode.
It's so good, right?
Yeah.
And we reached out to lots of folks.
So we have some fun, fun stuff.
This is grief counseling.
And guys, if we can get you depressed
by the end of this podcast, we've done our job.
Oh, Michael.
It's season three, episode four,
written by Jen Salada and directed by Roger Nygaard.
Jen Salada is one of my favorite people, Jenna.
100%.
She is just such a delight
and was so much fun on set
because she would always crack up.
Oh yeah.
She was one of our worst laughers
which made her the best laugher.
Yeah.
Hey, Jenna, you know what I'd love right now?
I hope it's a summary.
It's a summary.
What?
All right, here it is.
Michael finds out that his former boss, Ed Truck,
was decapitated in a self-induced drunk driving accident.
Nobody seems upset though
or certainly not upset enough
which causes Michael to question
if anyone would care about his death.
Of course, he doesn't know
that that's what he's worried about.
Yeah, he doesn't understand
really the depths of his sadness.
Yes.
He wants everyone to love him
and be sad for him if he wasn't around.
Yeah, make a fuss about him.
Well, first he leads everyone in some grief counseling
but then later he forces everyone
to participate in a bird funeral.
Meanwhile, over in Stanford,
Jim is put in charge of supervising Karen for the day
but decides to put their work on hold
so they can search for her favorite bag of chips.
Mm-hmm.
So we're gonna have so much to say about that.
This is a really odd tangent
and I don't mean to take this really weird, really fast.
Do it.
Jenna, while I was re-watching this episode,
I hear a commotion outside of my, that's what she said.
No.
And a squirrel is eating a little bird.
That's worse than what I thought you were gonna say.
Yeah, and so I was like, wait, what's he eating?
What's he eating?
I start filming it.
I have video of me filming the squirrel
and in the background,
you can hear grief counseling and a bird funeral.
Oh my God.
It was, like, it was so crazy.
But apparently squirrels are like,
they're like an opportunist, you know?
If there's a little bird's nest,
they go for a baby bird, they do it.
Squirrels are terrible.
Everyone thinks they're so cute
because of their fluffy tails, but they're awful.
Look it up, everybody.
Squirrels carry more disease than rats.
Bleh.
Look it up.
Okay, sorry, but it just was kind of crazy
that I was watching an episode that had a bird funeral
and then I saw a squirrel attack a bird.
It was crazy.
Yeah.
Okay, how do we get back from that?
Hit me with some fast facts.
All right, fast fact number one.
This episode was written by Jen Salado, we said that,
and Angela reached out to Jen for this episode.
Yes, Jen and I traded emails and texts
and she was so much fun to talk to about this episode.
She was so excited to share information
and so she sent in a whole bunch of audio clips
that we are gonna play
and she is gonna come back as a full, awesome guest
for maybe two episodes coming up, Jenna.
Ooh.
Ooh, we're trying to figure out scheduling and whatnot,
but she is in and I cannot wait.
Well, let's play her hello audio clip, Sam.
Okay.
Hey guys, it's Jen.
I miss you.
I'm loving your podcast.
I am learning so much.
I had no idea of the drama behind the scenes of Booz Cruise
where you were floating away at Sea Angela
with Phyllis and Rain and Brian.
Amazing.
Anyway, I'm loving it
and I'm gonna answer some grief counseling questions.
So I'll send them in separate audio files.
Isn't it nice to hear her voice, Ange?
I love her voice.
I find her voice really soothing.
Now listen, we were chatting back and forth
and I was listening to her voice a lot.
And Jen, I think you have real good podcast voice.
I know.
Jen, are you doing voiceover work?
Like I'd buy anything you're selling with your voice.
Or just call me and talk to me at the end of my day.
Just leave me a message every day.
Just kind of telling me what you did.
Yeah.
Cause I will listen to that as I like do the dishes.
I agree.
And Angela, in one of the clips that Jen sent,
she explains a little bit about the process
of writing this episode for her, right?
Yeah, it's so, it's so fascinating.
Sam, can you play it?
Enjoy Jen's voice, everyone.
One thing about this episode that really stuck
with me personally was it was a thrill
because it was hard to tell stories on other shows
about characters going through internal things.
And in this case with Michael, it was even more than that
because this character was going through something internal
and he was unaware of it,
which made it really exciting to write
because I love internal stories,
but it also made it kind of difficult to explain at times.
And I remember that I created a little chart
where it said, here's what Michael is doing
and saying in the scene.
And then in bold under it,
I wrote what was actually happening to Michael
underneath it all.
And of course, Steve got it all intuitively
and he's a genius.
It was such a treat to be able to write
and tell that kind of story.
And then Jenna, to have you be aware of what it was
that was going on with Michael, to have Pam sort of sense it
and see it and fix it without it being spoken
was just such a delight as a writer.
Isn't that amazing?
I love it.
I love that she had like a secret notes and charts
in her script about the emotional journey of characters.
Yeah, I find all of that so interesting,
just like the writer's process
and what she wrote and how then it ended up playing, you know?
Oh my gosh, Angela, I just realized something.
What?
She was tracking.
She was tracking Michael's emotional journey.
She tracked it.
All right, well, we are gonna hear more from Jen
throughout the episode.
So Jenna, why don't you fast fact me?
Okay, I'm calling fast fact number two, the big fight.
Oh, you did a shoulder shimmy.
I know, are you intrigued?
I am.
In Mindy Kaling's book, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?
She writes a chapter about working on the office
and being a writer and also being a performer.
And she said in her book that she and Greg Daniels
got into such a huge fight during this episode
that she stormed off the set.
She kicked his car.
Yes, yes, oh, that's so good, I forgot about that.
But rather than have me read you the passage,
Angela, wouldn't you rather hear it in Mindy's voice?
Yes.
Well, guess what, there's an audio book.
Oh, oh my God, oh my God, hit play, Sam, I wanna hear it.
All right, here is the clip from the audio book
of Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me and Other Concerns.
It's published by Penguin Random House, LLC
and read by Mindy Kaling.
I tend to fight with Greg the most.
My friend and fellow office writer, Steve Healy,
believes it is because I am emotional and intuitive
and Greg is more cerebral and logical.
Or, as I like to think of it, I am a sensitive poet
and Greg is a mean robot.
Our fighting is legendary.
One time, late at night, our script coordinator, Sean,
and our head writer, Danny, both brought in their dogs
and upon seeing each other,
they got into a violent barking fight.
Paul Lieberstein glanced over and joked,
oh, I thought that was just Greg and Mindy.
What do we fight about?
I wish I could say there were big, smart,
philosophical issues about writing or comedy,
but sometimes they're as small as,
if we do that cold open,
where Kevin dumps a terrine of chili on himself,
I will quit the show.
We did that cold open, by the way, and it was a hit,
and I'm still working at the show.
I can get a little theatrical,
which makes sense because after all,
I came up through the theater,
said in my snootiest masterpiece theater voice.
I will tell you about the worst fight we ever had.
In a very heated rewrite session
for the season three episode grief counseling,
I was arguing with Greg so much,
he finally said in front of all 12 writers,
if you're gonna resist what I'm doing here,
you can just go home, Mindy.
Greg never sends anyone home or even hints at it.
Greg is the kind of guy who is so agreeable,
I frequently find him on our studio a lot,
embroiled in some long, boring conversation
with a random person while his lunch is getting cold
and his to-go container.
And he's a boss.
I would never talk to anyone if I was the boss.
I would only talk to my attorney and my psychic.
So anyway, my very nice boss had just hugely reprimanded me.
Greg suggesting I go home
unless I adjusted my attitude was the harshest
he'd ever been to anyone in the three years
I'd been on the show.
There was silence, no one looked at me.
People pretended to be absorbed in their phones.
One writer didn't even have a phone,
he just pretended to be absorbed in his hand.
I was so embarrassed and angry that I got up,
stomped out of the room,
stole a 24 pack of bottled water from the production office,
kicked the bumper of Greg's car and left the studio.
Is that amazing?
It's amazing.
I love the detail that she took a 24 pack of water.
She was like, oh, I'm leaving, I am leaving.
But I'm gonna be hydrated.
Well, listen, she goes on to say that after this,
she went to a nail salon to get a pedicure.
And the woman asked her, oh, do you have the day off?
And Mindy was like, no, my boss threw me out of work.
And the woman was like, oh, you got fired?
And that's when Mindy was like, oh, wait, wait,
what am I doing here?
And she drove back to work
and she told everyone she'd been in the bathroom.
But Angela, she did keep that water.
Good for you, Mindy.
Her book is so fantastic.
I own this book, it is hilarious, it is a great read.
Mindy, thank you so much for letting us use
a little excerpt from it and you have to come on the show.
And she is, guys, because I texted her
and she's coming on, just wait.
She's coming on, we won't say when, but it's happening.
It's soon.
You guys, if you're looking for entertainment right now,
give it a try, the audio book is available
on the Penguin House audio website and SoundCloud.com.
And thank you to Penguin Random House
for letting us play the clip.
I love knowing that this was going on
in the backdrop of us filming this episode.
You're kicking a car, you're taking water,
Jen Salata's on set, cracking up.
What is happening in the writer's room?
Should we move on to Fast Fact number three?
I mean, I don't know how you beat one and two,
but go for it.
Well, I'm not sure I will,
but I got a little scoop from Kentopedia
about this episode.
Ooh.
All right, on the first shoot day of this episode,
Kent reminded me that we had our big season three
photo shoot for NBC,
where we did a big cast photo shoot,
we did individual photos all in character.
And since there weren't a lot of scenes
happening in the break room,
that's what we use for the photo shoot.
I don't know if you remember it, Angela.
I do.
They set up a desk and then they would switch out
the props on the desk and we would take single photos.
And I have this very stern,
single photo of me holding a pencil
and a pad of paper with a drawing on it
that I've never felt properly represents
the character of Pam,
because I think I look like,
I think I look like a teacher
who's ready to scold you in this photo,
as opposed to a woman going through
a life altering journey of love and expression.
I have a photo of me looking very stern
in a sort of a severe ponytail
and I'm holding up a card with a cat on it.
Well, then they took the desks away
and they loaded the break room with paper boxes
and we all posed in front of them.
Do you remember that one?
I do because it was actually a very small space
and when they got us all in there,
they then couldn't figure out
how to get us all in the photo.
We were so jam-packed.
So they had tiered these boxes like a little pyramid
and guess who had to crawl up to the tippity top
and is at the very top
and really I just look like a very tiny floating head
in the way back of the photo.
It's me.
Well, then they moved us all over to the warehouse.
Do you remember this?
And they made it rain paper on us.
They blew paper in a giant fan.
This was a little insane because it took,
I mean, I can't even remember how many times
to blow the paper.
Yeah, I have a great photo from this day.
I don't know who took it actually,
but it's in between whenever they blew the paper in the air,
then they'd have to stop and reset it.
Yeah, they'd have to pick up all the paper from the ground.
Yeah, and then someone would have to bring it back
and toss it back in the air, right?
So it was like a 20 minute turnaround between these setups.
And in between the setups,
we all had to just stay there in the warehouse.
We're like on the loading dock area, right?
Yeah.
And I'm in my skirt and my blouse, my severe ponytail
and I squat down, lady like in a skirt,
did you know how you can tuck your skirt up
in your leg and squat down
so you're not ruining the mystery for anyone?
Sure.
Jenny, you said sure like you weren't sure.
I squat down in my Angela Martin outfit
to talk to Paul Lieberstein.
So there's this great photo of everyone sort of
kneeling about in between this paper setup
and I'm squatting down so completely out of character
talking to Paul.
I love it.
Well, it was really crazy
because we would have to shoot these whole episodes
but then also like when they would be setting up
a new scene, we would run off to the warehouse
and take pictures with the paper coming down on us.
Yeah.
It was a bizarre day.
It was super, it was super bizarre.
And when Kent wrote me and reminded me of that,
it all kind of came flooding back.
Like, oh yeah, remember how weird that was?
Yeah.
Well listen, should we take a break
and then get into this episode?
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
All right, we'll be right back.
All right, so we're back.
We are in the bullpen.
That's what we would call the big main room
where, you know, Michael would always come out
and talk to everyone and he is doing a bit, guys.
He has stacked up.
Oh, he's got a bit.
He has stacked up some boxes of paper.
Jenna, now that I remember that we were doing the photo shoot,
I feel like those were the boxes
that were in the break room that we took pictures on.
I'm not even kidding.
They very may well have been.
So Michael's doing that classic like stairs
or escalator bit, you know, where you stack up a bunch of stuff
and then you slowly just kind of crouch down.
And Dwight thinks it is the funniest thing he's ever seen.
Oh, Rain's reaction is like if you showed that
to a five-year-old.
Yeah, yeah.
Utter glee and just this is the best joke he's ever seen.
Ever seen.
And also, he's laughing as if he's never heard of it.
Yes, this is all leading him.
He made it to be an adult man and has never
seen the fake stairs bit.
But, you know, I think, you know, in this episode,
Pam is a little bit of the gym.
Pam has taken on the jokester role, right?
Yeah.
So Ryan and Kevin joined in.
They asked him to get little things, like a pen, you know.
But then Pam, showing a little bit of Pam's ass,
is like, how about a cup of coffee?
How about you give me a cup of coffee?
And Michael's like, ugh.
Well, I have a lot to say about this cold open, Ange.
Oh, I want to hear it.
First of all, this was not the original cold open
in the script.
Somebody has the original script.
I've got a shooting draft of grief counseling.
Let's hear it.
The original cold open was in Stamford.
And it involved, yeah, and it involved a coworker of Jim
wanting him to look at photos of her baby.
Oh, oh, I saw this in a deleted scene.
And she gets really put out with him,
because she shows him a picture of her husband
and the baby in the bathtub.
And Jim is like, finds it off-putting.
He's like, oh, god, they're in the bathtub.
And she's like, oh, you know what?
Come back to me when you have kids, OK?
She gets really mad at them.
Well, this was the original cold open.
This cold open was added later.
And we shot it at the end of the week, because it was an ad.
And we had all those boxes.
We had all those boxes from our photo shoot.
Oh, my gosh.
I wonder if they were inspired.
They were like, wait, I know what we can do with these boxes.
We have all these boxes just stacked
in the middle of the soundstage.
We got it.
Yeah.
A lot of people wrote in and said, oh, my gosh,
how many takes did you guys do of this cold open?
Because if you notice, Steve looks
like he's like sweating when he brings
him her coffee.
He is sweating his butt off.
He is so tired.
Kent told me we did 10 takes 10 times.
And every time we did a take, Steve went up and down
the stairs three times.
Oh, my god.
So he did that 30 times.
He was getting like a major like one of those like your quads
says the person who never works out.
What are those called?
Your quads.
He was getting like he was probably some quad and glute.
Quad and glute.
And then he had to crawl around.
Any wonder of poor guy.
And Kent also told me that we actually
did six different camera setups for this scene
because they had to move the camera in different places
to do the shot when he's crawling,
when he goes inside the kitchen for his talking head, which
is technically part of it.
So yeah, but he walked up and down the stairs 30 times.
Oh, my gosh, Steve, your butt.
It must have been so sore.
Well, I have two little things in this opening scene.
First of all, at 51 seconds, I think Angela kind of smiles.
Oh.
When Pam says get a cup of coffee,
Angela kind of has a smile.
Like there is a brief moment where I think she's on your side.
I just wanted that to be documented.
Oh.
And then I have a great fan catch at 1 minute, 27 seconds.
Ready for this?
Yeah.
Kelly and Chloe Harrigan and Shannon Rajowski,
they wrote in and they noticed that when Michael returns
from the kitchen when he's crawling on the ground,
that that is Jim's coffee mug.
That's the coffee mug that Jim always uses.
Oh, my gosh, yes.
Isn't that a great catch?
And I was like, I wonder if that was a little nod to Jim
so that Jim's presence got to be in Scranton for a little moment.
I love that.
Great catch, guys.
Great catch.
All right, so then we move into Michael's office.
And he's on the phone with Jan, who
informs him that they have lost Ed Truck.
And then Michael's like, well, I have his number somewhere.
I can find it for you.
Yeah.
And she's like, no, Michael, Ed Truck has died.
He goes out into the room.
He breaks the news to everybody.
Kelly rushes up, gives him a hug.
Oh, we have a special appearance by Kelly's extensions
and her bangs.
They make a special appearance.
They are hugging Michael, giving him some comfort.
And then Michael approaches Pam for a little awkward hug.
So awkward.
And, lady, I have a track moment.
I'm tracking it.
I'm tracking it.
What are you tracking?
You know I love to track the plants at front reception.
Are there more new plants?
Well, whatever happens to them, they make an appearance
and then we never see them again.
At three minutes, 29 seconds, I am pretty sure
that's a succulent.
We have a succulent.
Suculent alert.
Suculent alert at front reception.
We'll probably never see it again.
But when Michael hugs Pam awkwardly,
you get a nice shot of that succulent.
I'm not kidding.
I really need to start a spreadsheet.
A really complex spreadsheet.
All the things we're tracking.
Well, next we move over to the Stanford office.
And a staff meeting becomes very awkward
when Josh is super sexist and condescending to Karen.
Oh, he was.
He's sort of just totally dismissed her.
What a search.
I know.
Yeah, seriously.
And then he puts Jim in charge of her for the day.
Oh, gross.
Oh my gosh.
Gross, Josh.
This is like a physical representation
of mansplaining, I feel like.
Yeah.
You know what?
Jim, why don't you check in on that?
Yeah, why don't you oversee that, Jim?
Why don't you check in on that?
And she's like, yeah, thanks.
Yeah, thanks.
Yeah, thanks.
Well, we had a fan catch from Brandon.
He says, at 3 minutes and 42 seconds,
when Karen is flipping through her stack of papers,
I think I see a page from the script in her note.
Oh, oh, that's such a good catch.
You do.
I froze it.
Oh, yeah.
She's got a little script page.
We used to do that.
Remember, Ange, we used to hide script pages in our notebooks.
I used to keep them in a drawer.
Like, in between takes, I would open my drawer
and I would be like, OK, wait, did I get it?
Did I get it to get it?
And then I shut my drawer again.
Yes, we had scripts hidden everywhere on that set
that we could just peek at between scenes
to make sure we were on our lines
or if we wanted to prep right before.
I mean, obviously, we had worked on them and we knew our lines.
But when you're doing a bunch of takes,
sometimes you're like, oh, wait, crap, what was that?
And you just want to do a quick peek.
But also, you know, they would have their writer's draft
and then we would read it at a table read
and then they would make a bunch of changes
and they would start on Monday with what
was called the shooting draft.
And that's what I have.
I have a bunch of shooting drafts left over.
But every single morning we would arrive to work
and there would be a stack of new pages.
They were rewritten scenes just for that day.
They would hand you the pages sometimes that morning
and be like, OK, here we go, guys.
These are your changes for the day.
You better believe we were hiding pages in our desks
and notebooks.
But yes, Brandon, you saw one.
That just tickled me because that is so true.
That was a good catch.
OK, so now at four minutes, two seconds,
Karen is really disappointed, you guys,
because the chips that she likes,
they're not in the vending machine.
But I think Jim felt bad at the way Josh treated her
and he now wants to make amends, right?
He wants to try to help her find these potato chips.
And this whole scene about Karen and her potato chips
just got me thinking about Rashida's breakfast order.
OK, do you remember her breakfast order?
No.
OK, well, we often were in hair and makeup together
at the same time.
And I texted her because I was like, Rashida,
I totally just had this memory of your breakfast order.
Here was the great thing about our caterer, Sergio.
First of all, he was amazing.
But if your order became kind of popular,
if other people liked it, you would get your name on the menu.
Yes.
So you would walk up to the truck to order
breakfast in the morning, the food truck,
and you could order a Rashida Angela size.
Because I always wanted everything half portion,
because it was just big.
The portions were big and I'm a little person.
So I'd always say, can I have half of that?
So they started calling it Angela size.
So here's what the Rashida was.
And Sergio, I ran into Sergio a while back
because I was working on a Netflix show
and he was the caterer for it.
For Mindy's show, never have I ever.
He was the caterer.
Yeah, Mindy hired him, which was fantastic.
We had a little mini-office reunion.
And here's the Rashida, which you can still order from Sergio.
Ready?
Yes.
A corn tortilla, poached egg, black beans, avocado, turkey
bacon, chalula on the side.
And I was texting with Rashida about it, and she was like,
I don't even know how I functioned after eating that.
Like, why should I have just gone and taken a nap?
But that's called the Rashida.
But I can get that Angela size if I'm not that hungry.
Yeah, I'd like the Rashida Angela size, please.
Oh, my gosh, that brought back so many memories.
Molly Neck wrote in to say, guys, you
can see her favorite chips in the vending machine Slot B1.
OK, so there's a row of potato chips in the vending machine.
But apparently, those aren't the ones that Karen wants.
Yes, Karen wants salt and vinegar potato chips.
I did a mini deep dive on hers potato chips.
And Philadelphia Magazine did a ranking of all the hers potato
chips, and salt and vinegar was their number one chip.
So it might make sense that it was hard to find,
because it's the number one chip.
Close behind was Cheddar horseradish,
Pam's favorite sour cream and onion
was number four.
Our favorite is their barbecue chips.
I love their hers barbecue chips.
I don't know where that is in the ranking.
On the ranking?
OK.
I'm sorry, I didn't look that one up.
OK.
But I do have a script catch for you as well.
We're not done talking about this yet.
In the shooting draft of the script,
her favorite chips were going to be salsa verde Doritos.
Wow.
So here we go.
We're going back to Scranton, and Creed is in Michael's office.
With Dwight and Michael.
And he tells them that Ed was decapitated.
And Michael's like, what?
And he goes, yeah.
He was flying down the road.
He'd been drinking.
And I guess he ran into a semi truck, right?
And was decapitated.
Yeah.
Angela, we got a lot of mail about this scene with Creed.
OK.
There is a very, very big debate online
over whether or not Creed the character is making it up
that Ed was decapitated, or if it's the truth.
The truth within the show.
And you know, Creed told some crazy stories,
both on camera and off camera.
So I can see where this sort of like controversy,
if you will, around Creed's retelling of this.
Is it true?
Is it not?
Fiona, Danielle, Kelly, Danny, Mackenzie, Adam, and Valerie.
They all said, how did Creed know the details of Ed Truck's death
if Michael was the first to know from corporate?
So their theory is that Creed's making it up
because there's no possible way for him to know more details
than Michael.
And then Maria pointed out that Creed lies later in another episode
and says that Dwight was decapitated.
That's in the episode, The Return.
So she's like, maybe Creed is just obsessed with decapitation
because he's a weird character?
I don't know.
Well, here's the thing.
I love that you guys were all writing back and forth about this.
I think that because Creed knew Ed, he actually knew Ed.
Maybe there was someone he called.
But we decided, hey, let's go to the source.
Let's ask Jen Solada.
Was this story made up by Creed the character
or was it truth in the sort of scope of the show?
Did this really happen?
So here's what Jen had to say.
Did Ed Truck really get decapitated?
Sadly, for Ed Truck, he did really get decapitated.
It sounds like a Creed story,
but it actually was a true story in the world of our show.
There is no Ed Truck and he didn't really lose his head.
However, in the world of the office,
he did get decapitated for real.
I think it was Greg that came up with the decapitation.
I can't quite remember and Greg can't remember,
but I remember spending a lot of time talking about the way
Michael's former boss would die
and how it had to be something very sudden and jarring
so that it could be a shock to Michael Scott's system
that he could just freak out one day
because he's just living his life and going into the office
and then all of a sudden he could be dead.
So I think that is where the decapitation came from.
Unfortunately, I also can't remember who came up with,
his capacitated from his head.
I feel like it wasn't me
because I would have been really proud of it
if it was me and I'd remember that.
But yeah, the decapitation was real for Ed Truck.
Sorry, Ed Truck.
There you have it.
Ed Truck really got decapitated.
Creed actually got some facts that Michael didn't know.
This is the slippery slope with Creed
and let me tell you, this is true in real life
and as this character, he'll say something
and you're like, that's not true.
And then it's 100% true.
And then he'll say something else and it's total BS.
Yes.
Welcome to the world of Creed.
That is true.
Well, after this, Michael decides to break the news
to the whole office.
I love the little couplet.
I just loved it.
I watched it over and over of Michael being like,
I don't know how to tell you this.
And then Dwight is like, Ed Truck was decapitated.
And Michael's like, what are you doing?
He's like, you said you didn't know how to say it.
You said you didn't know how to say it.
Dwight is so literal, right?
So literal, yeah.
Oh my God.
It made me laugh so hard too.
Well, lady, I want to talk about something in this scene
because at five minutes, 38 seconds,
I wrote down Angela's face.
What'd they do?
I feel like in this moment,
you have what I would consider to be
a quintessential Angela reaction.
You made so many sour faces on our show
and they are so funny to me
because I never see you make these faces in real life.
They are so not your personality,
but they have been turned into memes.
You are known for this just disapproving look.
But it's like, it's just funny to me
because in real life, you are nothing like this.
You know, people write in and say,
oh, you have resting bitch face.
You've heard that expression, right?
RBF.
But now they're just calling it
resting Angela Martin face.
It's like resting Angela face.
But this is cracking me up right now,
like in a whole different way
because I am doing this show called Be Our Chef.
You know, I'm hosting this family cooking competition.
Lady, you know I know this.
We watch it.
We watch it religiously.
Thank you.
My kids love this show.
You guys, it's a cooking show.
It's on Disney Plus.
You have to watch it.
It's families cooking and competing.
And Angela is the host
and it is just the sweetest, most uplifting,
most just pure fun.
Oh, that is so sweet.
Here's the thing my family is doing.
So you're saying that you froze on my face
making the sour face?
My family keeps doing like freezing the screen
when I'm making the weirdest faces.
I guess in Be Our Chef,
I have learned that I talk really animated
and I move my hands around
and it's like I'm Jim Carrey.
My kids think I look crazy most of the time
on Be Our Chef.
And their favorite thing now
is to screen grab it and text me.
I'm loving it.
And Angela, I have to say this last Friday
when it came on, I was like,
guys, guys, we're going to watch Be Our Chef
and Angela's on and my daughter goes,
you really love Angela.
Aw.
She is your best friend.
And I said she is my best friend.
Aw, that is so sweet.
I know, I know.
That is so sweet.
Okay, so yes, I make weird faces everybody.
I make weird faces.
While we're talking about my weird faces, Jenna,
in the scene, we're Dwight asked Angela
to put his head on ice, right?
Oh, yes.
Okay, this is around five minutes, 44 seconds.
Right at the top of the scene,
I'm getting something out of the vending machine.
Did you notice my jacket?
Yeah, lady.
I have the same time code.
Five minutes, 44 seconds, I wrote,
Angela Wardrobe, what's up?
I know.
What is up with your very odd,
short-sleeved jacket?
What is this item?
It is a short, it's a...
Can it be purchased or was this made for you?
I think someone purchased it
or found it in a warehouse like NBC.
But it is a short-sleeved pinstriped,
kind of like a dress jacket.
And I jokingly called it to Wardrobe,
my Janet Jackson jacket.
Because do you remember, I loved Janet Jackson.
And do you remember Rhythm Nation,
her album Rhythm Nation?
Yeah.
Okay, watch the music video of the song All Right.
She is wearing this pinstriped jacket.
Of course, mine was short-sleeved, hers was like regular.
But we jokingly called this to the Wardrobe department,
my Janet Jackson jacket.
I don't know.
It was so weird.
It was weird.
It was like short-sleeve.
I'm sorry to whoever designed it,
but it's like your short-sleeve blouse
is peeking out underneath your short-sleeve jacket.
It's an odd design.
It's a total mess.
It's a total mess,
but it makes me laugh to look back on it.
It a little bit reminds me of something
that you might see on Project Runway
when they had to make a jacket out of another jacket.
But it had to not...
They had to reimagine the jacket.
Reimagine the jacket.
And they just made it a short-sleeve jacket,
and they were voted off.
Yeah, pretty much.
All right, guys.
So then we have a pretty adorable Dwight talking head
where he says that he wants to be frozen when he dies,
even if they have to do it in pieces,
even if he is decapitated,
he wants to be frozen
because he will wake up stronger than ever,
and he will have been able to use that time
to figure out how he died
and how he could have better defended himself.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's thought it through.
He's thought it through.
But Angela...
I love talking heads.
Angela does not want to participate in this.
She doesn't want to.
No.
No.
So now Michael is on the phone with Jan,
and he really doesn't understand why they have a day
honoring Martin Luther King
when he didn't even work at Dunder Mifflin.
Yeah.
But Ed Truck,
Ed Truck sat at his same desk and has died,
and Jan's like,
okay, listen,
do you want to just give everyone the day off?
And he's like,
you don't get these people.
They wouldn't want that.
No, they don't want to go home.
What they want is a robot statue of Ed Truck.
The eyes light up.
Yeah.
That's what they want.
Well, we had a fan question here from Sierra.
When Michael is on the phone with Jan
and has an article with a picture of himself
and Ed on the desk in front of him,
he slowly drags the corner of an envelope down
to cover Ed's head, you know,
because he's been decapitated.
Was that scripted?
Yes.
That action was scripted.
It was in the script.
And then, of course,
you see the camera made sure to capture it.
So smart.
So smart.
So thought out.
Well, I really thought Dwight's drawing of the robot
with the six foot extension cord to the wall
so it couldn't attack him.
I thought that was fantastic.
And smart.
I wanted to know who drew it,
but we probably don't know, do we?
We don't know.
We had fan questions about that, too, Ann.
And I tried to find out,
but I couldn't get the answer for you.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I think it was rain.
I don't think it was rain.
She drew it in the back just quickly on a notepad.
I'm sure.
But I feel like I can say with 99% certainty
it was not rain.
I feel like rain might have doodled on it during the scene,
but the original drawing was not rain.
Yes.
Okay.
Now we have to go back over to Stanford.
I actually texted Ed Helms.
I said, Ed, you just made me do the snort laugh so hard
because here we are.
Jim and Karen are still trying to find these chips.
They're having a hard time,
but Jim's like, we're not going to quit.
And she's like, I'm not a quitter.
And then Andy's like, what's the game?
What are we playing?
I'm in.
And then they tell him we can't find the chips.
And he's like, did you check the vending machine?
And they're like, oh, no.
Actually, we checked the fax machine.
And you see how pissed off Andy gets at them because he knows.
He knows they're being smart asses.
And he just looks at them so seriously and goes,
did you check your butt?
It made me laugh so loud.
It made me laugh so hard.
I like watched it twice back to back.
So I was like, oh my God.
And then I texted Ed.
I said, Ed, you are so funny in this scene.
I texted him the line and he was like,
we were like trading texts about it, just cracking up.
Well, that line is in the script.
I went and looked.
I had to know.
But I don't know if you noticed in this scene,
seven minutes, 35 seconds.
The smile post-it is gone from Jim's computer.
You've been tracking that post-it, lady.
I've been tracking it.
All right.
And I don't know if you notice.
I mean, he's acting more like Jim now, right?
Like he's got a little thing.
He's dazzling a lady with his charm.
He's getting more comfortable.
Yeah, he's more comfortable.
And he has an adventure within work, right?
That's kind of like, this is a boring job to Jim.
So he always has to find a distraction
to get him through the day.
Jim's the guy who makes work more fun, right?
With his little things like this that he does.
So he's back to his old ways.
Back at the Scranton branch, Michael is just obsessed now.
He just can't stop thinking about Ed Truck.
And he's really starting to internalize it about himself, right?
Like, what if I were gone?
No one cares here.
No one cares.
And he decides that they probably need some grief counseling.
They're in denial.
Yeah.
Yeah, he wants us to know the stages of grief.
And he feels like it's his job to take us through them.
He doesn't know if he can get us all the way to acceptance,
but if he can get us depressed, he will have done his job.
It's such a great line.
It's such a good line.
I have a really great little tidbit right here.
What is it?
Okay, so in the deleted scenes,
Toby is actually a trained grief counselor.
Okay.
And so, you know, Dwight's like, Toby should probably lead us
through this.
He's a trained grief counselor.
And Toby starts to walk them through the steps.
They're in the conference room.
And Michael's like, oh, you're ruining everything.
It's going to take me forever to undo what you've done.
And of course, Toby was being perfectly normal and appropriate.
Right?
Yes.
Michael's like, you're ruining it.
And this whole scene is in the conference room taking place
around the conference table.
Everyone's sitting there.
And Michael's like, that's it.
I'm going to have to fix everything you've ruined, Toby.
Ryan, Dwight, take the conference table out.
We're going to take a five minute break while they reset.
And we're coming back in here.
And I'm going to lead you in grief counseling.
And I about fell out of my chair because in my knowledge,
that is the first time we have ever referenced the dang conference
table.
Oh my gosh.
And now we know who's always moving it.
It's Dwight and Ryan.
Dwight and Ryan.
Where they put it, I don't know.
We don't know.
It was the first time I ever heard Michael say, OK, let's get the
conference table out of here.
Yes.
Acknowledging that the conference table can be removed and replaced.
On a whim.
How do they get it out of the doorway?
I don't know.
They probably have to take it apart.
But Michael's like, we're going to take five to 10 minute break.
And when we get back in here, we're going to get down to it.
And then the next scene is them with the little ball that they're
about to toss around.
But that's a deleted scene that sets it up.
I love that.
I love that.
Well, listen, why don't we take a break?
And then when we come back, we will meet Michael in the conference
room for some of his grief counseling.
Yeah, and maybe.
Sound good?
Maybe Roy will stop by.
Who knows?
He might.
Because Pam might need a little break as well.
All right, we'll be right back.
And we're back.
Here we are.
Angela, what did you do during the break?
I went and got an iced tea, Jenna, and I said hi to my husband.
And I walked up, I guess, behind him kind of quietly and I scared the crap
out of him.
Oh boy.
That's what I did on my break.
And he was like, hey, he was like, why does it get me so tickled?
I don't know why spooking him makes me laugh so hard.
I got a cup of coffee and then I put the sheets from the washer
into the dryer.
And I'm all excited that I'm podcasting and doing the laundry
at the same time because you know I love a good multitasking.
Oh yeah.
Oh, I have laundry going, lady.
I started in the morning.
Oh, it's going.
Okay.
It's also, I find that when I do laundry, I can't podcast in my closet
because you can hear the dryer.
Sure.
So on the days I do laundry, I podcast in my shed.
There you go.
There you go.
Making it work.
Podcasting from home.
I'm in my pajamas.
I never said that at the beginning.
Oh, I noticed.
I didn't say anything, but I noticed.
I did my hair though.
I don't know what that says about me.
I like it.
When my hair is done, I feel good even if I'm still in my pajamas.
There you go.
All right guys, we are back in the conference room and Michael is going
to lead us in some grief exercises.
It involves taking a ball.
And when you have the ball, you can talk about a moment of grief
in your life.
Michael goes first.
Yeah.
Of course.
Michael goes first.
And he talks about Ed Truck.
Angela, when he says his feelings about Ed Truck, it's so good.
He goes on and on.
I asked Sam to pull a clip so that we could all listen to it together.
Oh God.
I'm so happy about this because I wrote in my journal that in this scene,
this particular like moment, we could not get through.
And lady, it's not in the script.
This was, I think, an improvisation by Steve.
Oh my God.
Oh God.
Okay.
Well, there's one line.
I'm not going to say it yet.
Let's listen to it.
There's one line that I wrote in my journal.
We all disintegrated.
Mom.
Oh my God.
Wait.
Hold on.
What is it, baby?
Sunny got a bird.
Oh, okay.
Hold on.
I'll be right back.
Okay.
He got one of the doves.
Yeah.
And what's happening?
Got a bird.
Sunny is their cat.
So here's the thing.
This podcast started with me telling about a squirrel that ate a bird.
And now their cat just got a bird.
I'm telling you, this is the bird funeral podcast.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm so sorry.
I'm back.
What happened?
What happened?
You guys, we got a grocery delivery and Sunny shot out the door.
And I guess caught a bird, right?
This is so insane that we're doing this episode right now.
And Angela, you had a squirrel eating your bird when you were prepping.
I had a squirrel eating a bird.
Now your cat has like attacked a bird.
Okay.
But listen, it's good news.
I have good news.
We caught Sunny.
We wrestled him to the ground.
We got the bird out of his mouth and it's a pretty big bird and he was unharmed.
The bird was unharmed.
You saved the bird.
The bird's okay.
Michael would be so happy.
What's going to happen next week for the initiation?
I don't know.
I don't want to be initiated, Jenna.
No.
I don't want it.
Please.
Don't bring that over here.
I don't want any of that.
Okay.
All right.
Well, that was crazy.
So sorry.
I can't believe this is all happening in grief counseling.
Okay.
Where were we?
All right.
Let's play this clip of Michael talking about his grief of Ed Truck.
I lost Ed Truck.
And it feels like somebody took my heart and dropped it into a bucket of boiling tears.
And at the same time, somebody else is hitting my soul in the crotch with a frozen sledgehammer.
And then a third guy walks in and starts punching me in the grief bone.
And I'm crying and nobody can hear me because I'm terribly, terribly, terribly alone.
Angela, can I guess the line that we couldn't get through?
Yeah.
Is it frozen sledgehammer?
I put every one of us broke when he said that his soul was getting hit in the crotch with
a frozen sledgehammer.
Yes.
Yes.
That's what I wrote in my journal.
I said we could not keep it together.
Okay.
I said that's not in the script.
I don't know if he was handed that rewrite on the day, but it feels like that's a Steve.
That's a Steve improv.
That feels like Steve to me.
Oh, man.
Man, man.
That got us good though.
Oh, man.
That is so good.
Well, then Roy walks in.
There's a problem with Pam's car.
Can she come down to the parking lot and take a look at it?
Oh, yeah.
So there is an extended scene of this in the deleted scenes.
So if you thought it was awkward enough, their conversation by the car, it's extended and
even more awkward.
Jenna, here's my question for you.
How did Roy know that she was stuck in the conference room?
How?
How did he know there was grief counseling?
How?
Oh.
Okay.
I think you're implying that she called Roy and told him about it.
I'm implying.
How did he know?
How did he know?
Okay.
I have a take on it.
I think Michael called Daryl down in the warehouse and said, bring everyone up for some grief
counseling.
And Daryl was like, no.
No.
Well, that, that would explain it.
Yes.
That would explain it.
We had a fan question from Alexa Porter.
Was there ever talk of putting Pam and Roy back together?
Or was it all just a setup to mess with our feelings?
Well, there was talk in the writer's room that maybe Roy could win Pam back.
Remember, David Denman was made a series regular for season three.
Yeah.
So he's going to be making a lot of appearances this season.
I can tell you guys, nothing was decided at this point about what would happen with Jim
and Pam, what would happen with Pam and Roy.
They were feeling it out week to week.
I totally remember that.
I also remember it was constantly said that maybe, maybe in the series of the office,
Jim and Pam would not end up together in the end, but would instead lead one another to
their actual true loves.
There was, it had not been decided right now that Jim and Pam were one another's true loves.
When you just said that, I got angry.
Oh no.
I was like, no, Jim and Pam end up together.
No.
Oh.
Well, I think maybe that's why the writing of their characters felt so authentic because
the writers were figuring out their relationship at the same time that Jim and Pam were.
Yeah.
So we're, as an audience, we feel that like what will happen?
We don't know.
These are two people on journeys trying to find themselves and hopefully that leads them
back to each other.
Exactly.
All right.
So while Pam and Roy are out in the parking lot, I'm sure Pam was really hoping that she's
going to come back to the like conference room and the grief counseling is almost over.
But no, they waited for her because they're a family.
I love that DT.
They waited for her.
Yes.
There's a great scene on the DVD.
It's a deleted scene and Michael is trying to get everyone to loosen up, right?
For the grief counseling, he's like, hey guys, take your jackets off, loosen your ties,
take off your shoes, ladies, let your hair down.
And Angela goes, I don't think Kevin should take off his shoes.
Oh, and Kevin gets really annoyed.
And then he has a talking head that he says, all right, listen, I have hyperhydrosis, okay?
So we find out that he has this disease that makes your feet sweat really, really badly.
So I guess he's been taking his shoes off over and accounting.
I love this little tidbit and I'm sad it didn't make it in.
Well this explains why when Pam walks into the room, Kevin's feet are up on her chair
and his shoes are off.
Yes, people wrote in and asked about that.
It's because in the deleted scene, Michael is getting everyone to loosen up and we find
out that Kevin has, how do you say it?
Hyperhydrosis.
Angela, I love that.
That's a good catch.
That's a good catch, good tip.
Tidbit.
Tidbit.
It's a Kenzie tidbit.
All right, so when Pam does finally get back, they begin again and Dwight is the first one
to share.
Oh, this is one of my favorite things.
And Dwight shares that he was supposed to have a twin, but he absorbed the twin in utero.
All right, we had a fan question from Aira T'Jolly.
Did Rainn Wilson make the whole absorbing twin thing up or was it scripted?
Well first of all, I will tell you, it is not in the script.
I don't know if Rainn made it up, but in the script, Dwight was supposed to say this.
He was supposed to say, in the blizzard of 97, 12 shrewds died in the basement of our
house.
They drank beer cider that had already turned.
But McKinley declared it a national emergency.
Now, my favorite thing about that is that clearly it's not 1997.
It's like 1897, I guess.
But that was originally Dwight's grief share.
So here's the thing.
I reached out to Jen Salata about this, and this is maybe one of my favorite text threads
of all time.
This is what tickled me so much is that Jen Salata, Jenna, she's one of our people.
She's a deep diver.
Yeah.
The minute I asked her, she went on a deep dive for the whole afternoon.
Ready?
So I say, okay, Jen, Dwight's speech about absorbing his twin is not in the script.
Was that an improv?
Did you tell him on the day?
She goes, oh my God.
I don't remember.
Oh my God, I love that speech.
And sadly, it wasn't mine.
I'm going to start texting people.
Please hold.
Oh, I love this so much.
That's happened throughout the day.
She said, I texted Rainn.
Rainn actually thinks it was an alt pitched from Paul.
Jen said, here's a side note.
I had a friend that reabsorbed his twin, but I definitely didn't come up with the strength
of a baby.
She said, I'm going to check with Paul where that part came from.
Please hold.
She texts Paul.
Paul says he thinks it was Justin Spitzer.
Hold one second.
Now texting Justin.
Justin was another one of our writers.
This is what Justin texted Jen back.
I still remember that because it was early season three and I was so nervous about proving
myself.
I guess, yes, I came up with it.
But the thing that really sold it to me was the last line about him having the strength
of a grown man plus a baby.
And that was something that Paul Lieberstein added after.
So I think he deserves a fair amount of credit as well.
So I'm giving that a slow clap into a big clap.
Yes.
Wow.
It was a two-hander that Paul and Justin pitched.
I love that we got to the bottom of that mystery because it is one of my all-time favorite
Dwightisms.
Also, guys, Justin Spitzer is the creator of the show Superstore.
Justin is so talented.
He's so talented.
I love him.
Love him.
Anyway.
I think the only place to go from here is back to our grief circle and we need to hear
from some others.
Okay.
So we're back into the grief counseling scene and Stanley has just refused.
He is not going to participate.
He chunks that ball back at Michael.
Hey.
I heard that.
Yeah, you heard that.
I heard that.
But Pam agrees to participate and she's going to share a story about her family, but it's
clearly just the synopsis for the movie Million Dollar Baby.
Yeah.
I mean, again, Pam is now the gem.
She's the jokester.
Yes.
And then Ryan joins in and he shares a story that is very clearly the Lion King.
I mean, he says the word Mufasa.
I mean, come on.
But then Kevin catches on and he's tickled.
He wants to participate.
He wants to play the game, but he goes too broad, too on the nose and he basically breaks
down weekend at Bernie's and Michael's like, what?
Hold up.
That's a movie.
And he gets really ticked off.
Okay, so there was a lot of curiosity about these movie plots in the conference room.
We got a fan question from Tristan, who wants to know when everyone is in the conference
room for Michael's counseling session, did the cast improvise the movie plots that were
mentioned or were they scripted?
Jenna, to my knowledge, they were all scripted.
That's how I remember it.
Yes.
I looked these up in the shooting draft and Pam's Million Dollar Baby story and Kevin's
weekend at Bernie's story are both in the script, however, Ryan's fake movie story is
different.
Ah.
Yes.
In the script, he talks about Thelma and Louise.
Well, this is what he says.
He says, my mom's sister Thelma died last year.
She was with her friend named Lucy.
A cop was trying to pull them over and I guess the brakes must have not been working because
they ended up driving over a cliff and it was a total shock to everyone.
Okay.
Well, we wanted to get to the bottom of this, so we reached out to the source, the writer
of this episode, Jen Salada, and this is what she had to say.
For the movies in the grief counseling session, I was really excited.
It was really fun to think about.
I went off on script and needed to find a way that everybody would sit there with Michael
Scott and not share their own personal stories of huge loss because it just didn't seem like
they would do that.
So I thought they should share movies, plot lines as if they were their own lives.
And I came up with million dollar baby for Eugenia for Pam and then also for Kevin weekend
at Bernie's.
And for Ryan, I had a different one, I think BJ came up with the Lion King.
I don't quite remember, but I think it was BJ and I love that one.
The one I had, I actually found my first draft of the script.
I had Ryan, I'll read you the line.
It's not as good as the Lion King one, but I have Ryan say, this is almost too horrible
to talk about, but I had a cousin who was a big city lawyer and he was visiting an Amish
town not far from here and he was smothered to death in their grain silo.
And then I had Michael say, ooh, that must have made you really sad.
Did it?
And Ryan says yes.
So I think that was a witness.
So I had Ryan's from witness.
I wish I could remember some of the other ones because I feel like we had other ones
that we pitched on, but those were the ones from my first draft.
And then of course the Lion King Circle of Life was fantastic and Ryan saying it'll take
about an hour and a half to tell it was like such a great line.
That is amazing.
By the way, my college roommate and I used to watch witness and we would say to each
other all the time, be careful out among them English.
Thank you.
That is my movie quote from witness.
But isn't that wild Jenna that Ryan's, Ryan's movie went through three versions.
It was witness.
And then it was, I guess, Thelma and Louise, according to your script, but the Lion King
is what made it in the show.
Yeah.
Clearly they had a lot of alts for these movie plots, but all of them were scripted
guys.
All of them written by our awesome writers.
We did not improvise that stuff.
Love that.
Love that little tidbit, Jen Slotta.
So guys, Michael gets pretty upset that people are not taking this seriously.
You know, he says the guy who used to do his job and sit at his desk has died and no one
cares.
And Toby tries to talk him down and tries to explain that this is just life and that
this morning he saw a bird fly into the window downstairs and die.
Michael freaks out.
Oh my gosh, Toby, Toby, what are you thinking?
He totally attaches to that.
Now Michael's grief for Ed is somehow wrapped into this bird.
It's going to be a whole thing.
Yeah.
He runs downstairs.
He freaks out.
He wants to see if the bird is alive.
I had a fan catch here from Kendra.
At 14 minutes 33 seconds when Michael runs through the front door to get the bird, he
runs past the security desk and the security guard is not Hank.
Oh, good catch.
Yeah, different security guard.
Hank took a personal day, you guys.
I guess so.
Well, Michael attempts to resuscitate the bird in the kitchen.
Angela, you're not pleased.
So Michael is determined to save this bird.
He brings it into the kitchen.
Angela Martin is not pleased.
She's like, no, that shouldn't be in here.
Get it out.
Well, she is not pleased and Angela, she's not wrong.
Thank you.
Thank you, Jenna.
You're welcome.
You're welcome.
We had a fan question from Ellie Friedlander.
She wants to know, was that a real dead bird?
No.
No.
No, Ellie.
It was a fake bird.
I reached out to Phil.
He told me that he found three dead fake bird options and presented them to Jen, Roger,
our director, and Greg.
They chose the one that you see in the show.
And Angela, I have to say, when he texted me back that he presented the three dead birds,
I imagined in my head that they were on a silver tray, because remember, Phil would
always present you your props on a silver tray.
Yes.
Yes.
And I was just imagining it.
And I wrote it back and I said, Phil, were they on a silver tray?
And he said, you know me too well.
These are the moments in our show where I'm like, hey, babe, how was your day?
What'd you do today?
Well, I had to find three fake dead birds.
Yeah.
I scoured.
Or like when Greg goes home and his wife, Susie, is like, hey, hon, how'd it go shooting
today?
He's like, great.
I picked a dead bird.
Yeah.
I picked the yellow one.
I made my dead bird selection.
Yes.
Exactly.
Well, Michael then tells the staff, attention, attention, we are holding a funeral for this
bird at 4 p.m. in the parking lot.
Be there.
It's on.
Jenna, now I think it's time to check back in on Jim and Karen.
Oh, yes.
Have they found the chips?
Where are they?
Where are they in their search for this very hard to find potato chip bag?
That's actually in the vending machine.
That might be in the vending machine.
That is in the vending machine.
That according to a fan catch is B1 in the vending machine.
Yeah.
It's right there waiting for them.
Well, Karen kind of impresses Jim because she decides to call Montreal, the Montreal
factory to see if they have them, and she speaks French.
May we?
May we?
May we?
A lot of people wrote in about this.
Breanna Bullard and many, many others want to know, does Rashida Jones actually know French?
So, I texted Rashida since we're already texting about her breakfast order.
She's probably like, Angela, what is happening?
This is what she said.
She goes, no, at this time, I didn't know French.
I worked really hard on that line.
But a few years later, I ended up going to France to do a French immersion school in
the south of France.
Maybe this scene was the beginning and it got me inspired.
Wow.
That's crazy.
She did not speak French, but now she does.
Yes.
I was like, I want to go to a French immersion class in the south of France.
That sounds amazing.
Same.
Same.
I took French in high school.
You did?
Oh, I have a story about that, actually.
Yeah.
Can I tell this real quickly?
Yeah.
I took French in high school from Sister Landry.
I went to a Catholic school.
Sister Landry was my French teacher.
And I dreamed, I told you guys this before, I dreamed from the time I was a little girl
that I would one day go to Paris.
And then in my 30s that finally happened, of course, at this point, I was now very far
from my French training.
Couldn't really speak French.
But Lee and I, we went to a little farmer's market and I guess in France, you don't touch
the fruit.
Uh-oh.
Okay?
You don't select your own produce.
You don't point to it or you trust the person selling the produce to select the best pieces
for you.
I didn't know this, okay?
Oh my gosh.
I would have been, I pick up things, I thump them, I smell them.
No, lady.
Don't do it.
Uh-oh.
If you go to a farmer's market in France, here's my hot tip for you.
Don't thump the melon.
Do not touch that fruit.
Don't thump the melon.
Don't thump the melon in France, okay?
Okay.
Now, all through this trip, we'd been going to restaurants and we'd been going to tourist
places and I was just fumbling with my French.
I couldn't get anything out.
I could read the menus, but I couldn't order anything.
I was, I thought I was going to really help us, but I couldn't help us.
But here we are.
We're at this little market.
I have done the faux pas, I believe that's French, the faux pas of touching the fruit.
And this woman turns to her coworker and goes off on me.
She in French is calling me like, kind of like a dumb American.
Your piece of trash.
Yeah, basically whatever it was, just these Americans come here and they touch her fruit.
She was like going on, okay, in French.
I was this mixture of just like embarrassed, but also felt like, I'm sorry, how was I supposed
to know that?
I'm, I'm a nice person.
I'm not a bad person.
I'm sorry, I picked up that banana and Angela, this fluent French spilled out of my mouth
at this woman.
And in French, I suddenly had the command to say, I'm so sorry, but in the United States,
we pick our own fruit.
I didn't know about your custom.
I apologize, but you don't need to say nasty things about me.
And the look on her face was like, oh, because she certainly didn't think that the fruit
touching American could speak French or understand French.
And by the way, I didn't know that I had such a command of the language until I was insulted
in a farmer's market in Paris.
And then your superpower came out.
Yes.
You know how like some, some superheroes, their power doesn't come through until they're
in crisis.
That's, I was like a mom lifting a car off her baby.
Yeah, exactly.
So now we're back at Dunder Mifflin and Kelly is crying by the copier in the annex.
Yeah.
She is in tears.
Michael thinks he's finally made a breakthrough until she reveals that she's really crying
about her plans with Ryan.
I have a question about this scene.
Okay.
What is up with this second copier in the annex?
Is it always there?
I have never seen it before.
What is happening?
I think they just rolled it in from the bullpen for the scene.
I feel like they did and they did it because in the background, in the break room Dwight
is in there.
You can see him over Kelly's shoulder trying to shove this bird into an empty soda can.
I feel like that's why they had to put the copier there to combine these two moments
to have a reason for Michael to be back there.
Right.
And for him to see over his shoulder and all of that, exactly that copier did not live
there in that hallway.
They just shoved it there.
Yeah.
I think so.
I feel like I will track this.
It's going to be a soft track, but I am going to look for this copier more.
I think it should be a very soft track because I would be bold enough to say I think it might
be the only time it's in the annex.
I know that's setting myself up for some fan mail of like Angela actually in season eight,
but I'm just saying I don't think that copier visits the annex very often.
Guys, if you're watching another episode and you see that copier right to us, you can
go to our website, OfficeLadies.com and submit questions or comments or write to us at OfficeLadiesAtEarWolf.com.
Okay.
Here we go.
We want to know.
We want to know.
All right, but this leads us into one of my favorite white talking heads where he explains
he's justifying why is he shoving this bird into a can and it's because he grew up on
a farm.
Yeah.
And guys, they reburied his grandfather in an old oil drum.
Okay.
Hold on.
I mean, the same grandfather that was buried in the suit that he wore, like what's happening?
How many times has this guy been brought up out of the ground?
This is one of my favorite things about our show.
Teresa S. also loves it.
She wrote in to say, in Casino Night, Dwight says that his grandfather was buried in the
tuxedo he's wearing.
Yeah.
And in grief counseling, he said his grandfather was reburied in an oil drum.
Yeah.
Reburied?
What?
She wrote reburied.
What happened?
Don't worry behind Dwight's grandfather.
Was he exhumed for some reason?
And did Dwight take the tuxedo off his dead grandfather before reburying him?
And then fold him up?
It sounds like it.
Then he folded him up and tried to shove him in a drum.
Teresa, that's exactly what it sounds like.
This is some of my favorite writing on our show in that moment in Casino Night when Dwight
just says he's wearing a tuxedo, my grandfather was buried in it.
That's it.
We say no more about it.
Three episodes later, he's like when my grandfather was reburied and it's like slowly it's all
coming together, sort of, sort of, not completely, is one of my favorite bits of how our show
is written.
So now we're at reception, right?
And Pam has prepared this really beautiful box for the bird funeral.
I mean, it is amazing, the attention to detail.
She asked Dwight if he would perhaps want to play a song.
She's like, do you have your recorder?
He's like, always, always, always, always.
And you know, Pam has this really sweet talking head where she's like, well, you know what?
I didn't anticipate I'd be throwing a bird funeral today, but you never know, working
here.
That's right.
We had a fan question from Andrew S. Did Jenna make the box for the bird funeral herself
or was that a Phil Shea creation?
Either way, how was it constructed?
Well, guys, I did not make it.
Phil Shea made it.
He said he actually made a few options and presented them again to Jen and Roger and
Greg.
They picked the one that they liked.
And then Phil had to make multiples of it because, you know, it gets set on fire.
Yeah.
So he had to make a whole bunch of those.
I looked it up in the script and it was described in the script.
So here's what Phil had to go off of.
It said, it is a hollowed out tissue box with tissue padding in the center for the bird
to lie on and the outside is decorated in tissue paper and has a tiny little toothpick
cross.
My favorite part are the the handles, the handles made out of the pencils.
So that was a Phil addition.
That was just Phil.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He needed to make sure that tiny bird casket had little bars for his, the pallbearers.
That's right.
The tiny, the tiny pallbearers.
Yes.
They are going to wrap things up in Stamford now.
Guys, Jim found the chips.
He left them on her desk.
He's quite pleased with himself.
Yeah.
I really wanted my mom to record a sting that said, flirty Jim, but we, we couldn't, we
couldn't get it together.
Oh, well these scenes drove people crazy.
I went back and looked at some of the comments from when this air.
Here is what they said.
D temp said, I feel kind of weird about Jim and Karen, but Hartman said, uh, the Karen
thing.
Why, oh, why am I liking it?
But I am.
Whoa.
I remember people freaking out about it.
Well, Keely said, Jim and Karen have great chemistry.
And Mandy said, okay, I'm sorry.
I can't believe there are actually people out there who are okay with Jim hooking up
with Karen.
That's what I remember.
But Kim E said this, hmm, Jim likes to buy chips for all his ladies.
And I'm with you, Kim, as Pam, I'm like, Oh, is this what you do?
You just find all the girls their favorite chips.
Yeah.
That's his game.
Are we saying that right?
Oh, is that you're doing I, I 100% sure we are Sam's giving us an okay.
Sam gave us an okay.
That's his game.
All right.
Should we go to this bird funeral, Angela?
I can't wait.
Please take me there.
Well, we're out in the driveway, really next to the warehouse.
This was a, an actual parking lot that we used and it was right next to the warehouse
and that's where we filmed this.
Michael is very moved by Pam's beautiful coffin.
It starts with Pam saying a few words about the bird, but we, we slowly realized that
Pam is speaking about the bird that she's speaking to Michael about his feelings about
death and loss and about his aloneness.
She talks a lot about how just because the bird was alone, doesn't mean he was unloved,
that he was very loved and respected by the other birds.
And then she sings a song.
I was very surprised by this for Pam.
She really put herself out there.
She sings on the wings of love.
She's accompanied by Dwight on the recorder.
Michael is very moved.
He's holding hands.
He's swaying.
He's tearing up.
We got a lot of questions about this scene.
Richard H. really covers them all.
He says, did Rain already know how to play the recorder?
Did Jenna sing the entire song?
Or did the singing end where the scene was cut?
He also wanted to know, did we rehearse our duet?
Here's what I can tell you.
Yes.
Rain knew how to play the recorder.
Remember he played it in Take Your Daughter to Work Day.
He's actually very good.
But listen to all of the instruments that Rain can play in real life, Angela.
He can play the recorder, piano, clarinet, saxophone, bassoon, guitar, drums, xylophone,
bells, and a little tuba and baritone.
What are you, a one-man band, Rain?
How it is!
How I knew you could play the bassoon because your book, The Bassoon King, is great.
So I knew that, but I didn't know you were walking one-man show.
Suffice it to say, Rain knew his stuff.
And we did rehearse, but just a little bit right before the scene.
Rain and I practiced separately.
I had listened to the song over and over again to memorize the words.
I had to sing the first verse through the chorus.
That's what I had to do over and over again.
I was so nervous.
Well, I thought you did fantastic.
Thank you.
I have a fan question from the scene, Jenna.
Okay.
So Chelsea wrote in and said, was Angela's a man improvised?
A lot of people wrote in about this because it was so quick after Pam has done talking.
People wanted to know if I improvised that.
No, that was scripted.
And folks wanted to know why did Angela do it?
And I said, I think personally, the direction that, you know, they gave me was that Angela
had had enough of this charade, this bird funeral, Pam had gone on and on, enough.
Amen.
I'm done.
And that's...
That's how you finish it.
Yes.
Amen.
Amen.
I'm finished.
Amen.
Stop talking.
Yes, exactly.
Speaking of the script, I have a script catch.
Okay.
So, you know, in the scene, we set the box on fire.
In the shooting draft of the script, we buried the bird.
There was a scene where Michael and Dwight are digging a hole outside and then we all gather
around this hole and it got changed to fire, but I don't know why.
I think maybe Angela, there was really no grass in this area that we shot.
We had no grass.
There was a hedge with maybe like, I don't know, three feet of dirt.
Like, yeah.
There was, I mean, not even, there is a deleted scene where Michael and Dwight are trying
to dig a hole there and then the business on the other side yells at them and they run
away.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Well, there you go.
Well, we had another fan question about this fire then.
Clara Johnson wants to know, did you actually set the bird on fire?
Yes.
Real fire, fake bird.
Kent told me they had to hire a special effects guy to oversee the fire and the extinguishing
and they had to get a special permit to be allowed to set the fire.
And he said we did three takes, three takes of the fire.
And Phil told me though that the special effects guys were worried that the fake dead bird
might give off toxic fumes when it burned.
So we, they actually took it out of the box and just put a wad of toilet paper in there.
Oh, not toilet paper.
I know.
Too soon.
I know.
Too soon, Angela.
Too soon.
And then finally, we had a fan catch from Peter Kay.
He said, I noticed the box was burned in some shredded paper.
Could this be further evidence that Pam does use the shredder?
Oh, look at that.
Nice one, Peter.
It would appear so.
Well, you know, Jen actually left us a really great message about this scene and she was
talking about the fact that we never got to shoot outside.
And when we did, everyone would get really excited and she explains a little bit about
that.
How can you play that?
One thing that I remember from the grief counseling episode is that when I went to the sound mix,
they were showing us the playback of the episode and it was still a little bit unusual when
the characters went outside.
It was still a little bit of a treat.
So we get to this bird funeral scene and our characters are outside and I just remember
hearing kind of an enormous amount of birds and I think that it was because we were outside.
It was because we had a bird funeral.
It was so exciting for the amazing sound people who do a fantastic job to put a lot of bird
noises in because for the longest time when we're inside the office, they're just putting
dot matrix printer sounds and just faxes and old fashioned office noises.
So it must have been such a treat and a field day to be able to go outside and hear birds
and especially on theme with the funeral.
So I remember it was a slight exaggeration, but it sounded a little bit like Alfred Hitchcock,
the birds when I first heard the playback for the bird funeral.
But they quickly made a wonderful adjustment and it was the right amount of outside birds.
I love that.
I love that our sound mixers got so excited.
They put like hundreds of birds and they're like, okay, guys, there's not as many birds
outside.
Let's dial it back.
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, what good insight from Jen this week.
Yes.
Thank you so much, Jen Salata, for sending in those clips and for texting me.
You are amazing.
We so appreciate it.
And thank you, Rashida, for letting me bug you about all kinds of random things yesterday.
And also Phil Shea and Kent Sabornak.
Thank you guys for helping us make this podcast so great.
And thanks so much to Mindy Kaling for letting us take a clip from your book.
Is everyone hanging out without me and other concerns?
It's hilarious.
We love you, Mindy.
So there you have it, guys.
That's the grief counseling episode.
Did we do it?
Are we leaving you depressed?
I hope not.
And hopefully, next week, we won't have any more dead birds to tell you about in our lives.
Stay safe out there, flying friends.
Stay safe out there, everyone.
We love you.
Thank you for listening to Office Ladies.
Office Ladies is produced by Earwolf, Jenna Fisher, and Angela Kinsey.
Our show is executive produced by Cody Fisher.
Our producer is Cassie Jerkin.
Our sound engineer is Sam Kiefer, and our associate producer is Ainsley Bubacow.
Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
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