Office Ladies - Casual Friday with Brian Baumgartner
Episode Date: December 8, 2021This week we’re breaking down “Casual Friday”, and the ladies talk with the actor behind the famous chili cold open, Brain Baumgartner! Brian, who played Kevin Malone, shares how he got his role... and what it was like to play this oddball accountant. Afterwards the ladies discuss this episode; Michael is back as the Dunder Mifflin manager of the Scranton branch and he reinstates Casual Friday. He also seems to be giving preferential treatment to Pam and Ryan causing resentment among some of the other employees. Kate Flannery sends in a clip about her famous wardrobe malfunction, Angela shares a deleted scene where Creed reveals what he calls the breakroom, and Jenna does an amazing deep dive on invisible ink. The trick to a great episode is to undercook the onions. Check out Brian Baumgartner’s new book “Welcome to Dunder Mifflin: The Ultimate Oral History of the Office”: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/welcome-to-dunder-mifflin-brian-baumgartnerben-silverman?variant=33080663080994 Take a writing class with Brent Forrester: https://www.brentforrester.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 everybody. Hello. Are you in your comfy pants? Do you have on a t-shirt and
maybe some flip-flops? Why are you saying these things? You can see me. I'm talking to
you guys out there. Oh, because it's casual Friday. Because it's casual Friday. Oh
yeah. Why didn't I dress more casually today? I don't know. You look real
spiffy. Well, I know why. Because we have a special guest. We do. Let's start by
saying that Casual Friday is season 5 episode 26. Sang. It was written by
Anthony Farrell and directed by Brent Forrester. Little tidbit. What is it?
Editor was Claire Scanlon. And our DP was Matt Stone. Hey, I like this team. I do too.
And it was the first time this team had worked together on an episode. Wow. Yeah.
They did a good job. They did. Here's your summary. It is casual Friday at
Dunder Mifflin. Finally. It has been reinstated. Michael is back. He's the
manager. It's casual Friday again. But some of the employees are taking a few
too many liberties with their outfit choices. Like Angel is not happy. Angel
doesn't need to see a grown man's feet. Probably ever. I'm surprised that we
didn't see bare feet on Kevin as well. Well, yeah. But here's the thing. The
sales team is resentful that Pam and Ryan came on as new salespeople and that
they get to keep the clients that they stole from everybody else while they
were working at Michael Scott Paper Company. I mean, that's just awkward. Yeah.
So there's a bit of a rivalry that's gonna happen on this episode today. Mm-hmm.
But first, there's a pretty big thing that kicks off this episode. This is an
epic cold open. It's the chili spill cold open. Oh my gosh. Kevin's recipe, the
pride he takes in it. He tries to make it up the stairs. He does. And what
happens? Oh boy. Oh boy. Well, we felt like this was the perfect opportunity to
speak to the man behind the chili, Brian Baumgartner. That's right. Brian is our
fast fact one, two, and three today. Yes. We can't wait to talk to him. All right.
Here he is. Brian Baumgartner. Hello. What is happening? I'm so happy to be with
you guys. Why don't you buddy, you have a plant. I love that you have a plant. I was
told that brings humanity and warmth. Oh, what is the award that's over your
shoulder? You know what? No one has ever asked that in all of the Zooms I've been
doing for a year and a half. Truly, it always made me laugh. I don't have my
college diploma, but I'll read. I have Penn Foster College, a certificate of
completion, which I always thought was a good joke for Kevin Malone in a
county. That is awesome. A certificate of completion. Maybe all diplomas say that,
but I thought, oh, it's they're they're doing a little funny joke. Like it's not
really a degree in accounting. He took a weekend course. He has a piece of paper
for participating. Well, listen, we are here to talk about the office with you
and obviously about this amazing cold open. But Brian, we always ask our guests,
how did you get your job on the office? I was walking down Hollywood Boulevard. No.
Oh, I like the start of that. No, I feel like my story is always seems like a
humble brag or something. But my truth is I I moved to Los Angeles and I
considered it my job to just watch television. And so I started watching
television shows because I was like, well, if I get an audition on this show,
don't I need to know what's the style? What's the form? How are how do the
characters generally behave? So I started watching television and I watched this
show called The Office, the British version of The Office. And I started
working with a manager and I called him and I said, if there is a show that is
that is going to be on television because they announced they were doing a
pilot, I was like, this is the show for me. And I had an agent at the time and
the agent who I called and said the same thing to said, well, they're looking for
unknown people, but not like you unknown, not like totally unknown. But my manager
called and called and called Alson Jones and I went in and I met with Phyllis
and I read and then she passed me on to Alson Jones and I read with her and I
got an appointment for the role of Stanley and I knew that was not the part
for me. I knew that the part for me was in the British version, his name was
Keith and I was like that I get that comedy. So I went in to this big call
and I read the role of Stanley as though I were Kevin. Oh, wow. So smart, Brian.
Well, or it could have been like, what is this? But right, so I went, I was there at
the same time Oscar Nunez was there and Leslie David Baker were there. I can't
remember who else, but I know that they were there and so I did it. They said,
thank you and I left and thought, well, that was a failed experiment and Alson
Jones ran down the hall. She said, hey, you know, they actually want to look at
this other character and I in my head, I went big go and went in, read that and
and that's that's how it happened. But you never said, Alson, I think I'd be a
better fit for Kevin. Would you give me a shot at it? You just took this risk of
reading Stanley like Kevin. Yes, because, oh, because again, I was totally
unknown, right? Yeah. I didn't have, I didn't have the experience, I mean now, of
course, that's what I would do. But yeah, no, I didn't. I didn't, I was, you know,
happy to have an opportunity. You know, I had just moved to Los Angeles a few
months before that. Yeah, I knew that. I knew that because the first day on set
when we got to know each other just briefly chatting, Oscar and I were sort
of commiserating about how many years we'd been out here plugging away and
we're like, what about you, Brian? And he was like, I've lived here like eight
weeks. We're like, what? I've been here two months. We're like, holy crap. Well,
the thing is like standing out to me are the number of people who came in for a
role other than the one they wound up in. Angela, you first came in for Pam, but
then also Ed originally auditioned for Michael Scott. John was brought in to
play Dwight. Yeah. And Rain auditioned for Michael Scott as well. I know, that's
crazy. A lot of people. Yeah. I feel like on the set, you and John Krasinski were
pretty good buds. Yeah, you guys became good pals. And the four of us, I would say
you and John, me and Angela, we could often be found in John Krasinski's
trailer during lunchtime. You guys had some heated Madden football matches. I
mean, for years. Now I hear people talking about, you know, what a family we
were and the and the crew and the cast and all of that, by the way, is true. But
then undoubtedly someone will mention like lunch. And at lunch, you know, you
would sit with this birth. I didn't sit with anyone. John Krasinski and I
played Madden football in his trailer. Essentially every single. That's right.
It was weird. We could hear you guys. If we walked past the trailer at
lunch, you could literally hear like, Oh, come on. Sometimes you would let rain
play. Mm hmm. But it seemed like grudgingly. You'd be like, Oh, I guess we
have to let someone else play. But it was the two of you. And I would like to
know, are you willing to go on record and say who was better? Because I have a
memory of who was better. Who do you think was better? Mm hmm.
I on it. Well, if I say that we were even, that sounds like I'm hedging. But I
do, we kind of, we both had teams that if we were allowed on that day to play
those teams, the other person couldn't beat us. Mine weird. I wasn't a fan was
the Chargers. And so this is so great. They called it the Gates play. Listen,
if you ever play old Madden and Antonio Gates in the scene, it's a touchdown
every time. So yeah, there's a pro tip for you old Madden players. Yeah. That's
what I would say. He would get mad when he lost. I will say he would get way
more mad than I. Oh yeah. And then grumpy. Grumpy. Because I was gonna say, Brian,
I think you were the better player. My memory from the lunches where I watched
you guys play was you winning. And then John getting pissed. That's your
that's what you held on to. Well, I remember you guys doing the Dunder
Mifflin Fantasy Football League, which is still going strong. I have been told
this week's standings are that this week's standings are that John is in
fourth, Rain is in fifth and Brian, you are in ninth. So here's the thing. I
played Rain this week. And by the way, when you all hear this, it'll be that
stands will be different. Spoiler alert. I lost to Rain this week by a point.
And it flipped everything. So yeah, I'm I'm in I'm in trouble. But I I think
I'm four and four. Rain is I think five and three. So like it literally
flipped everything. I was going through our fan mail, Brian, and a
frequently asked question was about your voice, because you very much do not
sound like Kevin in real life. And people were curious, how did you develop
this voice for the character of Kevin?
Well, look, I okay, so going back. And my manager and I who I'm still with
now all these years later, we still have this joke. So the casting notice
about Kevin was the following. And I know it's true because I've said it
so many times. The only thing remarkable about Kevin is that he is
remarkably unremarkable. And so our joke is always like my manager saying to
Alison Jones and everyone, you've got to meet this guy. He is so unremarkable.
He is just the most unremarkable. So that's really where it started, which
again, really came from the character of Keith in the British version. I was
like a theater actor, right? Like for me, the construction of character,
that's what I feel like I did, right? So I wasn't really an improv guy. It
was for me about about the character. And so for me, it's not like putting on
a voice. But it's really about the body, the way the body moves. I know
this is what many people are turning off. Right now, you should see. I'm on
the edge of my seat. You are speaking to her theater nerd heart. Yes, I'm
hearing you. You're bought you created your character in your body and that
body in my body informed your voice. So it came from the whole body. It
didn't start just in your throat. Correct. And the way and the way of
speaking sort of becomes sort of a manifestation of that, right? But for
Kevin, my idea was two things. One is that he's not aware of his size. So
hence me like bumping into it. There's no that that was one thing. And the
second thing was that if you imagine my torso, right, he didn't rotate his
hips side to side. So if he needed to look in one direction, right, his whole
body then would have to turn like shuffle step to go in in that direction. But
let me be clear. There was a progression to the to the development of the
character to write. And so I get asked sometimes like your voice kind of
changed from, you know, season one and and and through the show. And so my
justification was in season one, Kevin was very, very nervous and scared of the
cameras. And so when the cameras were around, he retreated into his shell
like a turtle. And then as he became more comfortable or became even
friendly with some of the crew, more of his true personality came out. Oh, I
like that. I like that too. I think that's very good. Well, listen, should we
talk about this famous chili cold open? I mean, Brian, we have got to I brought
my Kevin's chili mug. I am here for it. So I brought chili for lunch today. Did
you really? I did. If you can believe it. That's how on brand we are today. So
so many people wrote in about this cold open, Brian, it is so beloved as you
know, but it is also only 36 seconds long. I clocked it. And here is how it is
described on Dunderpedia, which I thought was kind of amazing. It says the
cold open with Kevin's chili has become one of the iconic moments of the show.
It takes a low status character, offers him a high status moment, and then
mercilessly takes it away. People relate to the moment of private embarrassment
and the desperation of trying to rescue something that cannot be saved. The
scene teeters between comedy and heartbreak in 36 seconds. Yeah, you
know, people come up to me all the time. That's the moment that that more often
than not is is referred to. And there are now for me two types of people. There
are some people who are like, Oh my God, that is so hilarious. I love it. And
then there are people who say like, I can't watch it. It breaks my heart. I
feel so bad for Kevin. Now, I think in truth, it's somewhere in the middle.
Like I think that I think that there's both. I think, you know, there's some
physical comedy, but I think with a heartbreaking moment. I never knew. I
mean, never could have imagined that that one moment that was shot alone with
nobody else around would would become what it has today.
Well, we got a fan mail flurry of emails. I daresay blizzard.
This is by the way, this is a genoterminology. She has a few.
I've claimed some phrases.
You have, we both have, but the fan mail flurry slash blizzard fan mail flurry.
What can you tell us about shooting this? Because it is just a voiceover with
your action of carrying this big pot of beloved chili up some stairs. You're
bringing it into the office. It's we're told this is an annual event. You've
brought in your chili and then it spills everywhere and you try desperately to
clean it up. How did you do it?
I'm tremendously proud of this now that the actual main portion was was one
take the spill. That's what we heard one take the spill was one take. So they
had done obviously some prep, right? Cause this was going to be a mess. There
was no question. This was going to be a mess. And we'd rehearsed it, how it was
going to go. Obviously it was all about the moment of spill having that look and
feel as realistic as possible, right? And that it happened in the, you know, we
didn't have marks on the show, but it happened in generally the correct
place for the cameras to be able to pick that up, right? So Phil Shea came to
me like kind of like a secret like back channel meeting. And he says, um, all
right, so just so you know, we only have three pieces of carpet. So we can't, we
can't do any more than that. And the carpet in case there was an accident was
from the front door around, let's call it Pam's reception desk, all the way to
the Dwight and Jim clump. I mean, it was a huge piece of the carpet that
replicated the carpet that existed there and that they laid down and tacked in
and made it appear as though that was the carpet. And they said they had three
pieces of it and that was it. So we needed to go. So what I have said to
many people is that that was all planned for. Cleaning me wasn't really, that
wasn't really, no one had any idea what would happen. Cause I was stained like I
was your hands were like orange. And I remember probably my last public shower,
but there were like, it felt like 14 people in the shower with me, like
peeling off clothes and handing me towels to get it out of my eyes and hair
and everything. Um, but yes, it was the actual spilling of it was, was one.
And did it smell? Cause Phil Shea said they just used a gazillion cans of
actual chili. I mean, it was that is spicy chili. Did you like put your head
on the pillow that night and still smell chili?
I can tell you, he smelled at dinner.
Yeah, that's what I was about to say.
So Angela and Oscar and I did regular dinners where it was like, okay,
let's, let's dress up a little, like, let's look like real people, uh, take
off our Dunder Mifflin clothes and let's go to a nice dinner.
This particular night we had, and it was planned for months ahead when we were
going to Mastros in Beverly Hills. Very nice.
Steakhouse, very fancy.
We did not mess around with these accountant dinners. Yeah.
No, we did not mess around.
And, and so of course, cause I was, that was the night we were filming this.
So everybody else got to leave early that they were, you know, Angela got
to curl her hair or whatever. And so I, so I show up with free time.
If I get to go some more fancy, I'm curling my damn hair.
Brian knows. That's Texas for you.
That's the thing. I, so I show up and know Oscar is the one, cause I think
you and I are a little more, I don't want to hurt Oscar's feelings to be
always listening, but there's always a seafood tower. Oscar orders it every
time it is obnoxious. It takes up the whole people. A huge lobs, like crap,
like seafood and like oysters. Oysters.
Oh yeah. The whole, he gets the whole, he's like, yeah, we should do the tower.
It comes like, and it's, it's like, like steam or smoke is coming off of it
cause there's so much dry ice and fanfare. Yes. Yes. This is true.
So I said, this is a hundred percent true. So I sit down and my hands, I
couldn't not smell chili. So now here's an appetizing.
Your fingernails were orange, Brian, cause you were, you were, you had gotten
it a little bit off your hands, but my memory was your hands were still
tinted this weird color, but your fingernails, forget it. They were orange.
Done. Done. So imagine that going into a crab leg with, and then you
bring it to your mouth and there's just, you're smelling really bad canned
chili. Let's just put it that way. Yeah. It was, it was, it, I, it was probably,
there was, there was probably some tint for, for a couple of days, but the
smell for sure, at least 24 hours.
Well, I have another question about the cold open. Is it true that the choice
to try to clean up the chili with various paperwork was an improvisation
in the moment where you're grabbing stuff? I mean, that's amazing.
I love the desperation. The folders. Once I was on the ground, I got to
play a little, right? And so I just sort of started trying other things.
And look, there are a lot of fans who have fallen in love with Kevin to
watching the show. And I attribute that to everyone's innate desire to, to win
one. Yes. And how difficult it is to, to find those little successes.
Brent Forrester also said that he thinks they have about eight minutes of
footage of you on the ground in the chili. Eight minutes. Think about that,
you guys. Eight minutes is a long time to be rolling around in some chili.
It was a lot. I know that I tried a variety of slips, which people thought
was, was funny. I remember trying, I remember trying that, but you have to
remember again, it, I remember standing by a monitor as like clothes were
beginning to be taken off me to watch it. Right. And again,
Oh yeah. Cause you could do that. You could like rewind the tape and watch it
back and decide, did we have it or not? Correct. They didn't use that
capability on a daily basis, but on a major scene where you needed to, you
know, there was going to be a huge reset. Yeah. And so I remember even, you
know, watching it and me feeling good about it, but me feeling good about it
doesn't really matter. Right. And I remember going into the showers, not
knowing if, you know, cause right, like Laverne and Debbie are great hair and
makeup people, like they're all standing by ready to try to totally reset me
to go again. And, you know, they had obviously multiple outs, you know,
you know, of the same outfit, et cetera. So yeah, I remember that moment about
like, please, please, I think we have it. I think we're good.
All right, Brian, we also ask everyone this question. What did you take from the
set when you left?
Well, I took a few things, right? So I took, I took the diploma, Kevin's
or certificate of completion. So my first ever joke in the show when Kevin is
described by Michael Scott, he says something like he's not a great
accountant, but a pretty good entertainer. And they cut to a b-roll shot with me
with me with my giant pencil, which sat on my desk then for all the years,
which most people don't know is a piggy bank. It's, it's still empty, but I took
that and I took my nameplate and I, you had a nameplate all these years. I didn't
realize you had a nameplate. I had a nameplate. I didn't have a nameplate.
Well, here's the thing that's crazy. Does it say Kevin Malone? And here's the
crazy thing, right? My desk was in a club. You couldn't even see it.
No, it faced me. Like, why would I need it faced to remind you your name?
Because it's not announced. You know, usually you have a nameplate, like if you
have an office and someone walks in, they can see immediately what your name,
like if you go into a bank, it's like, oh, this is Susie Marshall. Hi, Susie.
No, it was a nameplate that faced me for 10 years. It makes no sense.
Behind a piece of glass.
Behind it. Yes, what I'm saying is you would have to sit in my lap to see the nameplate.
This is why we didn't know we had one.
It makes no, no, I know. There was no thing. So yeah, I took the nameplate. I took the,
the, the pencil and I, I took the jar of them.
Oh, yes. I love that. This has been so awesome. It's been so wonderful to talk to you, Brian.
Yeah. Thank you for letting us interview you. You make your living interviewing people and
now you have a book out. Tell us about your book.
Welcome to Dunder Mifflin. The, the, I mean, we're out in time for the holidays.
This is prime holiday shopping moment, everyone. Listen up.
This is, this is stocking stuff or material.
Brian, I've seen the book. You're not getting that book into a stocking.
Well, it's thick. That's what she said. There you go.
It's a thick gift. It is. With two C's. All right. Okay. Okay. So tell us about it.
Welcome to Dunder Mifflin. It is, you know, gosh, now a couple of years.
I have been working on constructing a full oral history of the office and, and, and what happened,
and specifically for me, it was about a question, right? And the question was very simply,
we were, we were a big show when we were on, right? We were, we were the number one scripted
show on NBC for most of the time that we were on the air. But what has happened since, as you all
know, the success, the huge success of your podcast, that, that the show is so much bigger now than it
ever was. And my question was, why now seven, eight years since we've filmed a scene, why is this
show now the undisputed champion of, of viewers in, in, in the world? Why are more people watching
this show than any other show? And so for me, it was about going back to look at what happened.
What, what, why did this happen? Was it about the construction of the cast? Was it about
the aesthetic that was chosen originally by, by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant and through
Greg Daniels and Ken Quapas. So it's, it's really sort of a, a macro version of, of what happened.
So I'm super excited and proud of the book and, and, and can't wait.
And is that like an overview? Is it like a collection of interviews, like from your podcast,
The Oral History of the Office? It's a little bit of everything yet really goes back and, and traces
my journey of, of me attempting to answer this question. So it goes into, into today as well
and the legacy of the show. And, but I went back to Scranton, like a real journalist, went back
to Scranton and met with a lot of our old friends from there to talk about how, you know,
the show was influenced directly from them and, and how the show has really changed that town.
So it's a, it's a, it's a comprehensive look, but I think, I think, I think fans will really enjoy it.
I think that's fantastic. I'll make sure you get a copy.
Well, thank you. Signed, I hope. Do I get a signed copy? Yeah. You're not saying yes.
Yes. Okay. Brian, you have another announcement. Well, listen, I have a podcast, The Office
Deep Dive. And next year, January 4th, coming up, I'm going to be extending and transitioning
to a new podcast off the beat with Brian Baumgartner coming in January. So I've loved talking to all
the folks on the office, right? Having lengthy discussions, but really talking about the moments
in between the moments that is mostly covered by other press. So starting next year, I'm going to
be talking to your other favorite stars from TV, like Modern Family, Cheers, Seinfeld, Fresh Prince
of Bel Air, whoever. And we're going to be focusing on, on important moment in these
stars lives that, that happened off the beat. I had a French director who told me,
which is really applicable to the office, by the way, you can steal this,
that comedy, real comedy happens off the beat. And so for me, the moments that I want to talk
to people about are the moments that happened in between the important moments, the things that
lead to those big moments that everyone else is covering. So I'm super excited to be expanding
from the office. Obviously, we'll keep checking in with the office, but talking to people from,
from your other favorite television shows. That is fantastic, Brian. We can't wait to hear it.
It's going to be great. Thank you so much. I appreciate it.
All right, bombers, we love you so much. Thank you again, Brian, for this generous interview.
Thanks for coming on Office Ladies. Thank you so much for having me. Congratulations to everything
that you guys are doing. I'm so, so happy and proud of you both. And I love you so, so much.
Love you, B. It's going to make me cry. I know. We love you, Brian.
Well, I loved our interview with Brian. I loved every second. It just made me miss us all hanging
out. Now, listen, in our interview with Brian, we talked a lot about his chili cold open. But if
you can believe it, there are a few more things that we can share about it. So first of all,
it was written by Aaron Scherr. And it was originally supposed to be the cold open for
his script, Michael Scott Paper Company. But it ended up getting cut and moved to casual Friday.
And there was a lot that our crew had to do to pull off this chili stunt.
Yes. Our first assistant director, Rusty Mahmoud, shared in an interview, and I found this so
interesting, Jenna. He said when he would read a script that had a cold open that was very prop
intensive, it was immediately stressful for him. Oh, no. So while everyone else is laughing, he
could appreciate, right, the humor, but he also saw the hard work that was going to go behind it.
Sure. He said his thought process in particular for this moment was, how do we drop a huge vat
of chili without destroying our office? So they had a prop meeting. They had to discuss how big
the vat was, where it was going to fall, all of that stuff that Brian talked about.
Yeah. Randy added that on a practical note, they deliberately made this the very last
scene of the week. So they could have time to clean it up before Monday, basically.
Right. Because they didn't know how bad it was going to be.
Oh my gosh. So even though they had done all these rehearsals, their concern was that
it's a vat of chili falling. It could hit at some weird angle and splatter across the wall,
all over everything. Yeah. And I mean, just like think about the medicine ball that was never
supposed to pop unless you hit it on the seam and the right space. And sure enough, that happened.
It exploded. So they had to be prepared for everything. Randy also mentioned that the
part where Kevin's just carrying the vat of chili up the stairs, they could not afford
for a spill to happen. On the staircase. Yes. Oh gosh. So for that, they filled the pot with
some sandbags because they did still want it to feel heavy. Right. And Brian, as you know,
classically trained doctor. Yes. He has said numerous times that he didn't want to fake
carrying something heavy. He wanted to feel carrying something heavy. Yes. And then another
little cheat they did was with the actual pot of chili. They thought they could make a fake bottom
on that vat so that like the bottom third was filled with foam and then there would be a fake
bottom to the pot. So it wouldn't be as much chili falling out. That would help avert a disaster.
Yeah. Also, Rusty said that if they filled the whole thing with chili, it probably would have
weighed over 50 pounds. So they needed something that Brian could carry through the door. And in
the end, Rusty shared that it took about an hour to clean everything up and replace that carpet.
One last thing I would like to share about this chili cold open is some of the dialogue that was
part of Kevin's voiceover that didn't make it in. Oh, this is in the shooting draft. And I guess it
would have bought him more time to do different things. Sure. Right. But they trimmed it down.
Here are two things Kevin would have said. Spiciness is to chili, what makeup is to a woman.
I don't need a lot. I've got a sexy pot of chili. Okay. Okay. And now for the next one.
Parsley is a tricky little beast, but it will tolerate some shade. Hmm. I don't know. It's
just funny to me. And you know, the writer Anthony said they had so much fun coming up with spices
and ingredients for Kevin to say. Oh, yeah. I'm sure that was a fun writer's room pitch.
Well, now I think we can get into this episode, which has a great opening that was so fun to shoot.
Pam and Ryan come in with this big circle thing with a question mark on it. Wait, wait, wait. Hold
up. Before they even come in, you have got to go to one minute, one seconds. There is no plant at
reception. Well, of course not. No plant. We know who's responsible for those plants and it's Pam.
I know, but Aaron hasn't brought anything in. I just couldn't believe it. It didn't even feel
like front reception to me. Oh, that means a lot. You're welcome. Also, can we please note Pam's
khaki pants and taupe, kids? Is it taupe, beige? Really? Mm-hmm. They're not white? Nope. Scandalous.
Very scandalous. As you were saying, they're holding this piece of paper with a big question
mark on it. Who's behind it? Who is it? Who is it? Who is it? Who is it? Well, it's someone trying to
bust through. It takes him several tries. I was cracking up at you and BJ, not Ryan and Pam,
but I could see you and BJ when he was trying. There was real resistance. You guys were really
like having to hold it steady. Well, people wanted to know, was it like scripted that he would have
a hard time breaking through this paper or is that just what happened? Yes, it was scripted.
Director Brent Forrester actually shared that this idea was based on something that I
guess the writers had seen on YouTube of a high school cheerleading squad trying to bust
through a paper banner, but they wouldn't rip and they end up in a pile or something. There's so
many. There's so many. This clearly is the thing that happens. I have kind of witnessed this a
little bit. Like live? Live, yes. And then sometimes what happens is the team is running
behind the cheerleaders. Oh, no. I know. And then you hit that resistance and that, yeah.
Phil Shea made six of those circles for Steve to bust through. He used butcher paper, which is
heavier than regular paper, so it would actually be kind of tough. What was the circle, like a hula
hoop or something? Yeah. We only had to do the scene twice though. So there's four extra circles
sitting backstage that day. Of course, Michael is going to announce conference room five minutes.
Oh, he's been in the office for 40 seconds and he's already calling the conference room.
Conference room five minutes. In this conference room, he really invites the employees to say
whatever is on their mind. He wants an apology desperately. And this starts from my character
at just a delightful storyline, which is every single person in the office loves Casual Friday,
but Angela Martin hates it. That tracks for me. And finds it inappropriate. It is also in this
meeting where Michael is going to let everyone know that Pam and Ryan are staying on in sales
and they get to keep the clients. And people are not happy about that. One of my favorite
lines of the episode is when Andy says, I call foul, sir. Well, Michael says people can file
their complaints into the trash can. The complaint department. Jenna, did you notice in this scene
that Pam is completely covered by her purple sweater and Phyllis is only in the plaid shirt?
That was intentional because they don't want to mess up the reveal.
Yes. And it's a bit of a cheat because you have to imagine that just because the audience hasn't
seen Pam and Phyllis standing in their identical outfits, surely Pam and Phyllis have seen one
another as they went into the conference room. Exactly. They've been there for most of the
morning. But that brings us to the kitchen where Pam and Phyllis discover that they are in fact
wearing the exact same outfit that they both liked on the mannequin at the mall. Pam says they
got it at Boss Cove's at the Steamtown Mall. So, you know, I had to know. Is it a real store?
Is Boss Cove's a real store? And is it at the Steamtown Mall? Well, let me tell you,
Boss Cove's is a real store and there is one at the Steamtown Mall. And I had to know a little
bit about what the store is because they're very east coast. I'd never heard of it, right?
Either. On the Boss Cove's website, it says it is a family-owned department store for over 100
years. And it is, in fact, America's largest family-owned department store. Oh! Yes, Jenna,
are you ready for this? A little bit of background info on Boss Cove's. And this is on their website.
At only 18 years old, Solomon Boss Cove left his family in Russia, immigrated to the United States
in 1914. He settled in Reading, Pennsylvania. With a pack on his back and a few dollars he had,
he began peddling household goods to the farm families in the surrounding area.
Like a door-to-door salesman? That's right. And he got a reputation of being very fair and very
honest. The business grew, his reputation grew. He was able to buy dry goods and provide merchandise.
And the first Boss Cove's department store was established. And it's still going strong today.
Okay. Lady, hear me out. Next time we're in Scranton, we go to Boss Cove's at the
Steamtown Mall and we buy matching outfits. Done! And then we go bowl and go to poor Richards.
I mean, we have a lot of places to go. We got a lot of places to go.
Well, we got a lot of mail about these matching outfits. So many questions on how they were chosen.
And also, if I felt at all that this outfit was a little out of character for Pam, well,
I reached out to Alicia, our wardrobe designer for this episode. And she shared with me that this
storyline was a very late addition to the script. She had very little time to figure out what this
matching outfit will be. She said she normally would have made something from scratch because
that's her. I mean, this woman is amazing at building clothing. Yeah. But because of time,
she had to find existing pieces. So Alicia started by going to the stores where she would buy Phyllis's
wardrobe. And she was really concerned about Phyllis feeling comfortable in this outfit.
She shared that she had color palettes for all of our characters. And she looked at the color
palettes for Pam and Phyllis. And she saw that we had a few overlapping colors. And our overlapping
colors were mauve, mint, cocoa brown, navy and purple. I would dare say that purple was an
overlapping color for the majority of the office. I think Alicia likes purple. Well, I had a purple
breakdown of a whole scene. I think when we have Alicia on the podcast, we're going to ask her,
what's your favorite color? Let's see if she says purple. I think she's going to say purple.
So she said the first item she found was the plaid shirt. And she thought that was a good place to
start. She said also our characters both tended to layer our clothes. And she thought though that
there needed to be something that wasn't too Phyllis or too Pam about it. So she thought the
little sweater shrug was another good crossover item. So that was her first choice of outfit.
And then she bought it in both of our sizes. And then she found two other outfits that she
thought might work. Well, this is all happening at 9 p.m. as the mall is closing the night before
we had to shoot this. Oh my gosh. That's how little time she had. She's like sprinting through the
mall. Yes. So the next morning Phyllis came in for her fitting. And Alicia said the plaid shirt
was the clear winner. I came in for my fitting. I thought it was really cute. They altered the top
a little bit for me. You might notice that my version is a little more fitted in the chest.
I will say looking back, this is not a fashionable outfit. It is not. Here's the thing. The plaid
shirt is fine. It's the sweater. I don't know what you call that thing. It's not a shrug. She called
it a shrug. Well, guess what? Just listen to the word shrug. Is that something you want to wear?
Listen, back then those shrugs were a thing. They were. You can look it up. And capri pants were
a thing. Oh yeah. So I think maybe this outfit has just not held up great over time, really.
But at the same time, Pam has never been a real fashion forward gal. She saw something
on a mannequin. She tried it. I do like looking back, trying to imagine how did Jim handle this
back at the house when she's like, what do you think? Jim is like, it's great. It's different.
How did what? Have you had that moment with your husband? Jim wore a knit tie for years.
He also bought his parents' house that had a clown mounted to the wall, a clown painting.
I don't know that Jim has his finger on the pulse of fashion. I guess you're right.
I think he probably thinks Pam looks cute in everything.
Yeah. Lee has tried that for me when I'm like, okay, what do you think this outfit?
He'll say, I think you look beautiful in everything. I'll say, well, obviously,
I'm not getting this outfit because if I looked good, you'd just tell me I looked good.
He'd be like, no, I'm telling you, I think you're beautiful in everything. I think you're beautiful.
I love you. And I'm like, okay, okay, take a picture of me. I'm going to send it to Angela.
I need a real opinion. This is true. I get whenever Jim has to buy an outfit for anything,
for years. This is like over a decade now, I get a little photo shoot spread texted to me.
Yes.
And you ask my thoughts. What would you say if I sent you this outfit?
I would say skip the purple shruggy thing. Keep the shirt, khaki pants are fine.
You know, given when this episode aired. Okay. They're enough.
Well, Phyllis has a ton of sass in this episode. Oh my gosh, she tells Pam that she looks like a trout.
She says, close your mouth, sweetie. You look like a trout. This is an epic insult. I am telling you,
that is like amazing. Could you imagine saying to someone, you look like a trout?
No, I think it's like, you know how in your mind, you have like a fantasy argument
with someone who you've always wanted to tell off, but maybe you're like me and you're not
confrontational. This is fantasy moment. Close your mouth, sweetie. You look like a trout.
This is going to take us to a scene where Angela is complaining to Toby,
because Oscar has worn sandals and you can see his feet. Jenna, this scene was so much fun to do.
I had so much fun yelling at Toby. And as I exit, I say, excuse me, oh, you're so educated,
aren't you, Toby? So trained to deal with the hysterical woman. I had an improvisation that
made it in. I yelled, I don't want to look at his feet. That was improv. Very good. Thank you.
But you guys, let's think about this for a second. Do you really want to look at men's feet at work
or on an airplane? You guys that wear flip flops on airplanes. I get it. Maybe it's your vacation.
You're going somewhere tropical. I don't know. When I see feet on a plane, it's weird. Do you
take your shoes off on a plane? If you have on shoes and socks, will you take off your shoes
if you have a long flight? I mean, it has to be a pretty long flight. I'm always cold,
so I don't take my shoes off. You know what I bring? What? Slippers? Bring little like slipper
socks. And so I'll take off my shoes and put on slipper socks. Just, I don't know. Just because
I think it's rude to just be in like sock feet on a plane too. Yeah. It's a small space. You
don't wear your slipper socks into the bathroom though. You put your shoes back on. Yes. Oh,
yes. Gross. I'm certain men are pissing all over the bath. Oh my God. I wipe that sucker down.
I wipe it. I do like a cleaning before I go to the bathroom. For sure. Anyway, I'm just saying,
is Angela- Oh, and just for the record, I do wash my hands when I exit an airplane washroom.
Oh, thank God. I feel like I have to tell people now. Thank God. Every time, even if I just pee.
Listen, we all know that Angela is the office bitch, but I think, I think, you know, maybe
maybe open toad sandals for men on casual Friday. Maybe I would agree with her. I didn't disagree
with her. There you go. Well, this leads Toby to have this talking head where he reveals that he
was in the seminary for a year. And there's a photo of him that we've never seen before.
No. Randy shared that that was like a green screen photo. They took a picture at the church
where Phyllis got married and then they superimposed Paul onto that picture for that seminary photo.
But he says that he dropped out to have sex with a woman named Kathy. He followed her to Scranton,
got a job in HR, but now they're divorced. Now, this is very much at odds with that deleted
scene that you told us about from local ad where he says he worked in advertising for three years
before joining Dunder Mifflin. I know. But that was deleted. So we decided if something
was deleted, it didn't really happen in the world of the office. That's how we're saying it. Yes.
I want you guys to know in the background of this talking head over Toby's shoulder,
I saw Leslie eating. What? If you watch it, go to five minutes, one second. I mean, Leslie had
to be in the background for so long during all of these talking heads. He was such a trooper.
I think he just got hungry. So Stanley's having a snack at his desk. It works.
So next up, we're going to start to see a little bit of how Michael might be giving
preferential treatment to Pam and Ryan. Well, he goes and gets Ryan a soda. And then Jenna,
what does he get, Pam? He gives Pam a Fiji water. I am telling you, they were sponsoring the show.
How are they not sponsoring the show? How many episodes now is this? This is the third Fiji
water bottle spotting. Once again, the label is facing away from camera, a deliberate move
by Steve Carell as he sets it down. I asked Randy about it. Did you? Were we getting some
secret Fiji dough? No. He says he has no idea why these Fiji waters are showing up on set.
He said he was going to investigate it. But he said we did not have a deal with Fiji that he
knows about. However, he did say this, which I thought was really interesting. He said anytime
he ever is line producing something that takes place on a boat, they always use Fiji water
because they don't roll. It doesn't roll. Yeah. Well, I feel like for me, this Fiji water
on the set of the office is like that Starbucks coffee. Remember in Game of Thrones? Yes. How
there was the Starbucks coffee? I do remember. I'm like obsessed with like, what's up with this Fiji
water? Dwight is going to notice this special treatment that Michael is giving them. It's
time for him to pass out a secret memo with Invisible Ink. Yes. Where did he get the Invisible
Ink? You might like to know. He says it's urine. Yeah. I'm guessing his urine. Yes. He's very
frustrated because people don't know how to reveal the Invisible Urine message. Right. They're not
savvy to the Invisible Ink thing. Well, this got me wondering. Oh no. I googled, can you use urine
as Invisible Ink? Oh my God. Really and truly at the end of this podcast, I want to print our
search history and put it in a frame. Please do. Well, I'll have you know that, yes, urine
can be used as Invisible Ink and I discovered the most fascinating story of people using urine
as Invisible Ink and I'm going to share it with you now. Oh, okay. I'm reclining and getting my
cup of tea. I'm settling in. All right. During World War II, there were a group of Polish prisoners
who were taken to a Nazi death camp and they used their urine as Invisible Ink to write letters
detailing the horrific experiences that were going on at the camp. They were a group of young
Polish girls and women who had been part of the Polish underground resistance to the Nazi regime
and they were captured. They were imprisoned and this group were called the Rabbits of Ravensbrook
because, and this is horrible, they were subjected to extreme medical experiments
like rabbits. That's why they got this nickname. However, they were allowed to write letters to
their families back home once a month, but the letters were heavily censored. One of these
women remembered that when she was a child, her and her brother had read the series of books
where people were writing messages in Invisible Ink. So they used their urine to write these secret
messages and due to a reaction with the paper, the urine loses its color and becomes invisible,
but then if you heat it up, it reveals what was written. And in her first letter to her brother,
she wrote about these books that they read as kids and he figured out the code and knew how to
reveal the hidden messages. So they came up with this code with their families, which was if the
hidden messages were revealed, the families would send back a letter with a little piece of blue
string. And that's how they knew if their messages were being received. So eventually,
the contents of these letters and the horrific details of the camp were broadcast on the radio
and the camp was liberated by the Red Army and the four women who wrote the letters all survived.
Their letters were used as evidence to prosecute the guards. Wow. And 77 years later,
these letters can still be read because 27 of them are still readable and on display in a museum
in Lublin. Oh my gosh. That is an amazing story. Amazing. I was completely riveted.
I couldn't believe it. I couldn't believe it. Yeah, I'm just sort of speechless at the gravity
of that story and how it's amazing. I think we should take a break. Yes. And when we come back,
we find out yet a new detail of Toby. What is Toby? Toby is like this onion. We're just
peeling layers back about him. We're back and there is the snippet of a scene. It's just a tiny moment
where Toby is trying to get Oscar to take his socks and he says they're clean. He was going to
wear them to volleyball practice. Who the heck is Toby? Who is this person? Was he in a weekly
volleyball game? Like he plays adult volleyball? All right. We got some fan mail that had a few
theories on this. One of them being that it's going to be revealed in company picnic that
Pam likes volleyball. Oh, is he trying to get good at volleyball to impress Pam? That is what
people were saying. That is so cute. That this volleyball game is coming up and maybe he wants
to have something in common with Pam. Oh, I love that. Well, Dwight's secret message is not received.
So he is going to just tell everybody who is a salesperson who isn't Pam or Ryan, go down to
the warehouse. I love the scene in the warehouse. I thought it was such a great ensemble scene.
It reminded me of how when Michael has to lead a conference room scene and everyone keeps getting
him off track, it was much longer than what you see in the actual episode. And I really wanted
you guys to hear the rest of the scene. Thank you all for coming. Now, please, everyone take a candle.
We don't have time for candles. They think we're all in the bathroom. Skip the candles.
Let's cut to the chase. How annoying is this, huh? Do you mean what's going on today or this
meeting? No, obviously what's happening at the meeting is not annoying. Only certain people
in it are annoying. Can I take one of these candles home? Gentlemen, it's time to put our balls in the
guillotine, as they say. Who has ever said that? Regional expression. I'm talking about going to
Michael and telling him that we are ready to quit. Oh, boy, I don't know. Yeah, Dwight, what if he
calls our block? Then we are gone because if we do nothing, then we fail and failure is not an option.
Well, hold on now. Let's think this through. If we do nothing, at least we'll have our jobs.
If we do nothing, we fail and failure is not an option. Well, to be clear, it is an option.
Not in my book. My book, the cover is failure is not an option. It is an option. Not in my book.
Literally. What book? Did you write it?
I could have watched that all day. Oh, that's when they would just let us keep talking and
character. Yes. It's sort of like a long form improv exercise. Yes. Well, while all this is
happening in the warehouse, Pam, Ryan and Michael are like best friends. They're up in Michael's
office and they are giggling over this photo collage Michael has made. I mean, Ryan and
Pam hated each other at Michael Scott Paper Company and now they're just like, it's like
they, they're old war buddies or something. I loved it. I loved this dynamic. We had a
fan question from Adrian M on the memory board that Michael makes, when were the photos taken?
Was it done while you were filming the Michael Scott Paper Company episodes?
Yes, Adrian, they were. We knew ahead of time that we were going to need these photos because
Randy Cordray, he would get the scripts early so that he could anticipate sight gags and props
and locations and all these things that go into planning an episode. So he knew that for this
episode we would need these pictures. So while we were filming broke, we took all these pictures
for the collage. A storyline is about to start that I loved so much Jenna and it is Jim and Creed.
I loved it so much. I loved how like Creed is being so normal that it's makes you more suspicious
of him. I loved just whenever Jim and Creed were in scenes together and as you know,
John Krasinski was always just like completely disintegrating into laughter.
Well, John loved doing scenes with Creed. So I called Creed because I was like,
Creed, you have this hilarious storyline with Jim in this episode and I sort of reminded him of it.
I had the shooting draft and we went through it together, Jenna.
I know. And one of the things that cracked us up, it was a line that Creed loved and it didn't
make it in. I want to share it with you. So the scene starts that Creed is in the corner
and in the shooting draft, Jim gets a soda and Creed says, you're going to be happy with that.
And Jim says, hi. And then Creed says, I come here to take a break. And Jim says,
yeah, here's the line that got cut. Creed says, the restroom. That's what I call it.
Creed calls the break room, the restroom. And then the rest is scripted.
Let's talk about this storyline because eventually Creed is going to suggest that
they play a game. Yes. And that game is going to be chess. And not only that, Creed is a very
good chess player. Yeah. Well, I texted with John Krasinski about this because I wanted to know,
is John a good chess player? Because I knew you were reaching out to Creed. So I was like,
I'll get John's side of this. John said he knows how to play chess, but very poorly.
Well, this is what Creed said. Creed said, yes, I can play chess. I'm not an aficionado,
but I have basic skills. And he said he's actually looking forward to playing chess
with his granddaughters. Oh, he wants to share it with them. Oh, you know what? Lee's dad plays
chess with my son. And it warms my heart every time I look over and see them playing chess.
It's like his thing he does with his grandpa. Yeah. And then what's so fantastic is this chess
runner ends with Jim's talking head that says, I'm just hiding out until all this stuff blows over
with Creed playing chess at work. He's winning. I feel like I'm describing a dream I had.
Yeah, exactly. So listen, when the gang comes back from down in the warehouse, Michael, Pam,
and Ryan are like, where have you been? And they claim that they've been at lunch. And we're like,
it's very early in the morning. What all did you have for lunch? Because they're trying to trap
them. Andy very quickly shares this. I had a salmon salad with water, no ice. I was going to get a
soda, but the waiter talked me out of it. Her name was Flo. She had black hair. And immediately,
this is like the art of lying. Okay, like he thinks by sharing a ton of details,
right, that that's going to make them seem normal. But let me tell you, whenever someone
gives me an answer like this, I'm like, suspect. Yeah, you want to have the detail, but you don't
just lay it all out at the top in one big blob. No. Michael, Pam, and Ryan are like, oh, well,
if you guys, you know, went out to lunch, then I guess we can eat what's in the fridge here.
Yes. And then the three of us go in the fridge and we start eating everybody's lunches.
Please watch this in the bloopers, you guys. Well, I remember it.
Steve took a huge bite out of a cold salmon fillet. You're shoveling potato salad in your
mouth. It was an egg salad lady. Oh my God. And people asked, was it really egg salad? It was
like it was making us laugh. You laugh so hard with a mouthful of egg salad that like,
there was like egg salad spittle. It was so gross. Oh my God. I remember it like it was yesterday.
Well, we got a fan catch from Nikki S. about all this food. She says, when Michael is taking the
sales staff's lunches out of the fridge, he takes a green wrapped sandwich and it's from a gas station
chain called Sheets. They are known for their food commonly called MTO, which stands for made to order.
So I looked it up and there is this string of gas stations called Sheets in the area
and they make made to order food. Here's their commercial. I am starving.
I'll stop at Sheets. I can't get good food at a gas station. Really? You couldn't have just agreed.
See, so in this moment they've turned into donkeys. You know what that does to you and me.
I'm sorry. Yep. It makes an ass of you and me.
See? Don't assume you can't get fresh made to order food at a gas station. Sheets,
be over love. Yeah. Ding dong ding dong ding. So here's what is that ad?
What is happening in that ad? It's two people driving in a car and they want some food and as
soon as he assumes that you can't get made to order food at a gas station, they turn into asses
and they start he-hawing. But here's the thing that got me that I was thinking. Do you remember
in the injury when Michael wants some yams? Yeah. Ryan says you can't get yams at a gas station?
Yeah. I just wondered does Sheets sell yams? Can I get a yam on my sandwich? I looked at their menus.
It seems like each location sometimes has slightly different items. I could not find one that had
yams. So I guess Ryan is still right. But Sheets, I think you should consider, I don't know, for all
the office fans out there. If you started selling yams at your gas station, it might be a hit. Maybe
it's a holiday item. Yeah, it's a holiday item. I have a question for Sheets. Is that bread for real?
Because that bread was like the size of a Buick. I don't know. It's seriously that bread was the
size of Steve's head. Here's an interesting tidbit that Brent shared in the DVD commentary.
This entire third act was written in a breakout pod of writers of Mindy, BJ, Gene and Lee,
in about 12 hours. Wow. Entire third act. I remember Brent sharing with us and Alicia supports this,
that this whole script came down to the wire. That like, this is the end of the season,
they're backed up, they're running out of time. We're on fumes. We are. Randy noted that this
whole episode takes place just at Dunder Mifflin and that the production had requested that because
they were getting ready for our big 100th episode season finale company Picnic. They were prepping
and he said, we just couldn't afford to be going on location. We needed an episode that happened
right on our set. So maybe that contributed too to some of these rewrites at the end.
I also want to give a shout out to our unsung hero a little bit, Phil Shea, who every week
had to do so much. If you go to deleted scenes, there's a scene where Jim is welcoming Pam to
the despot of Jim and Dwight and Pam now and he gives her this little island and on the island
it's Jim and Pam and Dwight. Okay. Okay. It's like a little figurine. Why do I not have this item?
You should own this item. In the script, it was supposed to be Jim, Pam, and Dwight and deleted
scenes. It's sort of like a makeshift of that. But I guess Phil Shea spent tons of time getting
this thing made. Of course. And it didn't even make it in. Yeah. Well, now we're coming up to a
scene that is very famous as well, perhaps as famous as our chilly cold open. For sure. I mean,
I've seen people do this scene as a Halloween costume. So many people. It's the scene where Toby
has to confront Meredith about her casual outfit, saying that it's a bit revealing. So when she
tugs on her skirt, it flashes her top when she pulls it back up, then it flashes the bottom.
It's a lot. It has two standout famous lines that are quoted quite a bit to Kate Flannery.
Meredith, your boob is out. And dammit, Meredith, where are your panties?
Well, when we talked to Brent Forrester about this episode, he told us this. He said, when he
joined the writing staff of the office in season three, he noticed that the writers were sometimes
having a hard time writing for the character of Meredith, who he personally loved. And he said,
everyone knew Kate Flannery was really funny, but they just hadn't cracked the code of this
character. Brent shared that one day he was at lunch and he happened to be sitting next to Kate.
And so he just asked her, Kate, what makes you funny? And apparently Kate said something to the
effect of Brent, I'm the daughter of an old Irish bar owner. My comfort zone is loud and filthy.
So he went back to the writers and he told them this and he said it revolutionized the writing
for Meredith. He got credited with cracking the code. And he was like, all I did was just ask
the actress. He said it was actually a good lesson. Like, go ask the actress. Like, what are you
really good at? What do you like to do? Right. What's your thing? And then the writer's room
can lean into that. And you mentioned this to Kate, right? I did. I was talking to Kate on the phone
this week. And I said, Kate, we are coming up on casual Friday. Also, you guys, when we're
recording this, Halloween has just happened. Kate is constantly tagged in photos of people
dressed as Meredith in this purple dress. Yes. With sort of a pixelated boob. Yes. You know.
I've seen them. Yeah. So I asked Kate about this scene. And here's what she had to share.
Hey, Office Lady podcast fans. I have to tell you, when we did the table read,
I knew exactly how well this was going to pull. It was so well written. The scene where Toby
tells Meredith to pull up her dress. It was just brilliantly written and kind of like jumping out
of an airplane whenever I'm topless or more. Yeah. Because you just got to do it. You can't even
judge it. You just got to go. And luckily, Paul is a great, he's a great partner in a scene because
he plays it very small and real. So it reminds me to keep it small and real. And not always easy for
me. But yeah, it's so much fun. And there was talk of a merkin at one point. A merkin is a wig
for down there. Yeah. Luckily, the pixelation at NBC. And also credit must be given to Alicia for
creating this amazing dress that was so easy to hike up or hike down and have a problem. So yeah,
great wardrobe malfunction dress from a great wardrobe designer, Alicia. So thank you for that.
And it's one of the few things I wish I'd kept and I did not. I do have a longer version.
Someday I'll wear it in public. Yeah, but well, I'll to save the date, you guys hold your breath.
Okay, here we go. Thank you. Have a great day. And I hope it's casual day.
Okay. Did you notice that her dress was also purple? I did notice that. I talked to Alicia
about this dress. It was actually a bubble skirt. Yeah, it was not actually meant to be a dress.
It's meant to be worn at the waist. Yeah. I love that Kate brought up the merkin.
That is like a word I forgot I even knew. Same. Oh my gosh, a merkin is like the fake.
It's fake hair down there. Fake hair down there. Oh my gosh. You know, Kate and I went on to talk
on the phone about this. And she shared with me that doing these nude scenes, they were definitely
not in her comfort zone, you know? And every time she did them, she had to really step out of her
comfort zone, but she would just go for it. She told me she was like, Angie, I never really got
used to doing these. You know, I've had to do scenes in movies where I'm wearing very little
or a love scene or whatever. And it always feels awkward to me too. Yeah. Well, I also asked Kate,
what was she wearing underneath this purple dress? Oh, we got a lot of fan questions about that.
What was it? She said she was wearing a flesh toned mole skin. Yeah. You know, I used to use
that when I did ballet to wrap my toes. Yeah. You know, guys, it's like that sort of like a fuzzy felt
thing that sticks to your skin. Exactly. In fact, they've made it for blisters, but they use it to
cover your boob area. And then the other thing she was wearing was a thong. Well, we spoke to
Randy Cordray about this a little bit, and he said that he did insist on a close set. And what that
means is that normally when you're doing scenes, those scenes are broadcast backstage for the
hair and makeup people to observe, to make sure everything's okay, different crew members,
anyone backstage can sort of see on a live feed what is happening on the set. Those get shut off
when you ever have a scene like this. No monitors backstage. And then similarly, no guests are
allowed on those days, and no photography, of course, and only the people who need to be in
the scene or on the set are allowed on the set. That's right. If you're not part of the scene,
you're not there. Exactly. The next scene made me laugh because Ryan is building a complaint,
but it's Dwight's former client. Dwight has had this client for 10 years who's never had a complaint,
and now this client wants to leave. Did you catch the client's name? No. They say it over and over.
I don't know why it just tickled me because I never noticed it before. Because you and I are
truly rewatching this. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Mr. Bart. Mr. Bart. Mr. Bart. They're very sad about losing
Mr. Bart, but it builds to this crescendo where Phyllis ends up tearfully saying to Michael,
you know, Michael, you thought you were attacking corporate, but we were the ones who got hurt.
You should be apologizing to us. And she says, Michael, you always said we were a family,
and then you went after us. Well, they talked in the DVD commentary about this moment,
that it was a very pivotal story moment because it had to flip Michael. Yes. So they needed Phyllis
to really perform in this moment. It all came down to her. And on the commentary, there was a
little bit of a debate between Brent and Mindy. Mindy was like, was Phyllis being calculating?
Right. Was she manipulating Michael? Right. And then Claire Scanlon, who was also in the DVD
commentary, was like, no, I think she was being sincere. I read it as sincere. I think she played
it sincere. I thought Phyllis performed it as sincere. The thing that surprised me about this
whole scene was that Ryan even had a client. I know. That's so true. I don't know. I guess I
thought maybe, maybe he has one. He has one, but that one's leaving. But I think big props to Phyllis
because I think she really delivered in that moment. And you see how Michael reevaluates everything
because he does see this office as his family. Dwight's going to write another
letter in Invisible Ink and fan catch from Carla Jay who says, oh my gosh, can we please talk about
how Dwight is using Ryan's cup from Kelly's America's Cut Talent Party to paint the secret
urine messages onto the memos. I noticed that as well. I thought it was very funny. Clearly,
Dwight has peed in that cup. Listen, in the end, Michael is going to apologize
to the sales force and he's going to agree to give them their clients back. But this means
he's going to have to fire, reassign one of his Michael Scott paper company employees.
Yeah, he can only keep one of them on as a salesperson and he's going to have to decide if
it's Pam or Ryan. Jim is going to try to help Michael by telling him maybe he should make a
list of pros and cons about each person. That doesn't go very far because Michael tries to get Jim
to say some cons about Pam. And I guess what they settle on is that I have a shrill voice.
Sometimes when those moments wind up in a script, I'm like, hmm, does someone in the
writer's room find my voice awful? Oh, 100%. Only sometimes they said, only sometimes her voice
is shrill. I guarantee you, someone was like, well, what could we say? I don't know. Maybe
her voice gets grating. Right? Yeah. Sorry, all you podcast listeners. I had an audition one time
for a national campaign for bananas. Go on. Yeah. You had to eat a banana in the audition.
And I didn't get the part. The casting director, as I was delivering my lines, she said,
I'm sorry, I'm going to stop you. Can you lower your register? And I said, oh, okay.
So I have to take a bite of the banana and then say the line, whatever the line is, these bananas
are great, whatever it was, I can't remember. But so I went, I guess I was going like, these bananas
are great or something. And so then I took a bite of the banana and you guys take a bite of banana
and then try to say a line. Then I'm like, these bananas are great. I didn't get it. But for the
rest of my career, I thought, oh my gosh, is my voice shrill and grating? And I asked my agent
when I didn't get it. I was like, was it because she wanted me to lower my register? Did she say
something about my register? And my agent said, no, she actually said, they thought the way you
ate the banana was awkward. Oh my gosh. How do actors make it? How do you come back from that?
I don't know. How does that not give you a complex? I don't know. In two areas, your voice
and your banana eating. I know. That was always such a tricky thing. You'd go to an audition and
then you wouldn't get it and you would just want to know anything. You would say, was there any
feedback? Any feedback, desperate for feedback. Oh my gosh. So you could do it better next time,
so you could learn. And then you find out you sound like a banshee and you eat a banana like a
f***ing idiot. Exactly. And then when are you going to use that information? What's your next
banana eating role that you can apply that to? I will never eat a banana on camera. Let me tell you.
All right. Can we talk about this scene where everyone is ganging up on Toby
about casual Friday because it's delightful? All right. When you guys watch it, when Toby says
it's canceled, everyone is like boo in Angela, full smile jumping up and down. So happy.
But Dwight starts to take over this meeting and he says that you could still have casual Friday,
but he's going to give a few rules like earth tones only. And did you hear this one at 18 minutes,
13 seconds? Women are forbidden to wear pants. Who has Dwight been talking to? An executive
at NBC perhaps. I wonder where that one came from. I'll tell you what's going to happen, boys. Once
they start wearing pants, they're going to want things like, you know, equal rights. I don't know.
Which by the way, I'm sorry, soapbox moment. Can you believe that there is still not a ratified
equal rights amendment? That in our constitution, the fabric of our nation, women are still not
seen as equal legally. What the F is that? Now, the states have finally, there's enough that
have ratified this amendment, but I guess they did it a little bit too late. They missed the deadline
because it took like how many years over 20, 25 years, 30 years. So anyway, I guess they're trying
to fix that loophole and say that we should ratify this amendment already. I say about time and women
can wear whatever they want on the bottom and we can show our panty lines and we could have
pockets and we can have equal rights under the law. Thank you. Call your representatives.
Ask for all of them. They'll be confused by the pockets and panty lines, but just doesn't matter.
Okay, clearly we're going to Washington. Could you imagine me in Washington testifying
before Congress? I would love it. I would love it. I would want you to wear the biggest baggiest
pants. I would have pockets from my waist down to my ebbing ankles. When one of the old men
that's on Congress asked you a question, I would want you to stand up in your pants and say one
second and you pull a full laptop out of one of your pockets. And you know what, here's the thing.
In the back, they fit really tight so you can see my panty line and it's going to be the
harshest panty line you've ever seen. Your target laundry day undies. A hundred percent.
And then I'm going to say ratify that amendment already. And then when it's ratified, you're
going to say, see, you gave us pants and we took over your fear about us in pants. It came true.
That's right. All right. All right. Michael is going to call Pam into his office
and we are going to find out who got the sales job. Was it Pam? Was it Ryan? Michael,
he's got to prank you first. This man loves a fake fire and a fake hire. He loves it.
What is that about him? He tells Pam he's really sorry, but he gave Ryan the sales job.
Yeah. And Pam is disappointed. And then he starts to giggle.
Yeah. He's joking. And she's like, Michael. Yeah. He offered Ryan his temp job back
and Pam is going to get this sales position. She's so happy about it. She is. As she's leaving
the office, Michael says, send Aaron in. Oh no. So you know he's about to do some prank on Aaron.
Aaron, I want you guys to know that that is where the scene ended. In the shooting draft,
he says, send Aaron in. There's no more dialogue. Oh yes. Brent told us this.
Brent said that this scene coming up was Ellie Kemper's first one-on-one scene with Steve Carell.
But it wasn't even supposed to happen. It was all improv. That is amazing. So basically,
they just let the cameras keep rolling. He says, send Aaron in. Aaron walks in and then Steve and
Aaron do this little improvised scene. And they loved it and it made it into the episode.
That is amazing. That closes out casual Friday. I loved this episode. I loved this podcast.
I loved, loved this episode so much too. And we have some shout outs and some thank yous.
We really do. Thank you, Brian Baumgartner, for being our guest. Everyone, remember to
check out his book, Welcome to Dunder Mifflin and his new podcast coming out next year.
Off the beat. We need to thank Randy Cordray, Alicia Raycraft, Kate Flannery,
Creed Bratton, John Krasinski. Thank you for letting us hit you up all the time for your
scoop on these episodes. Seriously, God bless you guys because as we share a lot with you all
listening, we text these guys and call them all the time. I know. I'm like, hey, John, how's it
going? Weird question. Are you a good chess player? Yeah. Hey, Credo, how's it going? Listen,
I left some limes on your porch. Also, can you play chess? I know. Pete, there must be like,
what is happening? And finally, thank you to Brent Forrester, our long time writer on the
office who also directed this episode. Guys, you know, Brent teaches comedy writing classes
that anyone can take and you can find him and those classes over at BrentForrester.com.
We highly recommend. If you have a creative idea that you want to turn into a comedy show,
this is a good place to start. Yes. And check out Kate and Creed. You guys,
they both have some wonderful shows coming up. You can find them on Instagram at the
Real Kate Plannery and at Creed Bratton. And we will see you next week. Bye. 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 Jerkins,
our sound engineer is Sam Kieffer, and our associate producer is Ainsley Bubaco. Our theme
song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton. For ad-free versions of Office Ladies,
go to StitcherPremium.com. For a free one month trial at Stitcher Premium, use code Office.