Office Ladies - Interview with Mike Schur
Episode Date: January 26, 2022This week Jenna and Angela interview Mike Schur! Mike Schur wrote on the first four seasons of “The Office” and played Dwight’s mysterious cousin, Mose Schrute. Mike also worked on “Saturday N...ight Live” and created shows like “Parks and Recreation”, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”, “The Good Place” and “Rutherford Falls”. Angela talks with Mike about a scene where she slapped him so hard he spun, Jenna and Mike talk about the difference between acting on a TV show vs a movie, and of course, Mike talks about his love/hate relationship with playing the character of Mose. So take a trip down memory lane and enjoy the moments of a stringy beard man who works on America’s favorite beet farm. Check out Mike Schur’s Book, “How to Be Perfect: The Correct Answer to Every Moral Question”: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-to-Be-Perfect/Michael-Schur/9781982159313 Follow Mike on Twitter: @KenTremendous
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, everyone. Hi, you guys. We are really excited about this week's episode. It's
kind of special. It really is. We got to interview Mike Scherr. You guys know he played Moe's
on the show. He was also one of our original writers. We got to interview him. And it was
awesome. It was delicious. We loved it. We re-listened to it and were like, this needs
to be a whole episode. Yeah. We had just had so much to talk with him about. But first,
we're still going to give you fast facts. Always fast facts, guys. You know. Always
fast facts. Oh my gosh. And I feel like you're going to be like in your 80s and you're going
to be like sitting in a corner mumbling like fast facts, fast facts, fast facts. And they'll
be like, what's grandma talking about? Oh, she used to do this thing called fast facts.
Well, these are Mike Scherr fast facts. Fast fact number one, Mike was on the writing
staff from season one through season four. He wrote 10 episodes. And here's what they
were. The Alliance, Office Olympics, Christmas party, Valentine's Day. That was one of our
hidden gems in our re-listen. Branch closing, traveling salesman, the return, the negotiation,
the job. That's the one where Jim comes in and asks Pam on a date at the end. I know.
And Dunder Mifflin Infinity. You know, Mike told me the negotiation was his favorite Angela
Martin episode. Oh, really? She's like getting titillated by hearing people recount the Jim
and Roy like scuffle. Oh, yes. Yes. Yeah. He said that was his favorite episode to write
for my character. I felt like he just liked writing for your character a lot. Your character
always had great moments in his episodes. They did. I loved it when Mike was assigned
an episode. Well, Mike also wrote the accountants webisodes with Paul Lieberstein. He played
Mose in 13 episodes of the show starting in season two. He talks a lot about playing
Mose in our interview. It's very fun. It is. His love-hate relationship with Mose. Well,
here is fast fact number two. I'm going to talk to you about shows he's created. I think
you guys know the show that he started on SNL. He was there for six seasons. During his time
on SNL, he produced the Weekend Update. Oh, yeah. Yeah. From 2001. That's a big deal.
That's prestigious position. Yes. He did it from 2001 to 2004. He, of course, was a writer
on the office until 2008. He then went on to co-create Parks and Rec, Brooklyn Nine-Nine,
and he created The Good Place and Rutherford Falls with our very own Ed Helms. Wow. Yeah.
His resume is full of other shows that he's also produced on and written for. I have to
give a shout out to one, Jenna, because I love this show. Did you know that he co-produced
the comeback with Lisa Kudrow? He wrote two episodes, and I loved that show. I loved it.
I found that out about him in the first season of The Office, and I was enamored with him.
To me, that was superstar status that he wrote that just amazing satire. It makes me want
to go back and re-watch it. I had forgotten that he worked on it, and when I was looking
up his credits, I was like, oh, I want to re-watch the comeback.
Well, fast fact number three, Mike Scher wrote a book. It's called How to Be Perfect, The
Correct Answer to Every Moral Question. Here is how he described it to us in an email.
He said, it's a book about how hard it is to be a good person and how we can use ethics
and moral philosophy to try not to screw up all the time, but in a funny way, not like
in a homework way. The basic idea was to explain all the stuff I learned for the good place
without giving everyone a headache. You guys, when we did this interview with Mike, our
copies of his book had not arrived yet, but we have them now, and this is a truly special
book. I started reading it, and I can't stop. I'm like binging a book.
Same. I love it. I couldn't put it down. I was reading it last night. This morning,
I was like, I want to read more. Like, I woke up thinking about it. Do you know what I mean?
So, Mike is such an amazing writer. We already know that, but he takes this conversation
of morality and he makes it funny and interesting and relatable. For example, there's a chapter
titled, and by the way, all the chapter titles are hilarious, but here's one that cracked
me up. There's a chapter titled, Do I Have to Return My Shopping Cart to the Shopping
Cart Rack Thingy? It's All the Way Over There. Yes. And then basically what he does is he
answers that question, and the answer is based on all of these ancient philosophers and,
you know, ethics and morality and your moral compass. Yes. So, listen, I think we should
take a break, and when we come back, you get to listen to Mike, sure. And we get to find
out so much about Moe's. It's a treat, we promise. Mike, sure. Welcome to Office Ladies.
Woohoo! I'm so excited to be here. I'm a huge fan of you as people, first of all, first
and foremost. Second of all, you as actors. And then third of all, you as podcasters.
This has been such a delight to watch you do this thing to celebrate this show that we
all made together. I'm so happy to be here. It's a real honor.
Oh, Mike, thank you so much. We love you. We're so thrilled to have you here, and I know the
fans are going to enjoy just hearing your voice. Jen and I both listened to you quite
a bit before this, and we both found you really pleasing to listen to.
Really? Yeah, we like your voice quite a lot. We like your voice.
You listened to me in what context? Other podcasts, Mike.
Our views, podcasts. We do our research here on Office Ladies.
Yeah. It's very nice of you to say because I've always found my own voice to be slightly
annoying, which I think maybe most people do. It's the phenomenon of hearing your voice
played back to you. This is how old we are. It's like on an answering machine message
or something. If you were, you'd be like, oh, is that what I sound like? I always feel
like I sound a little annoying and nasally, but I'm glad to hear you say that.
Well, I felt that way about myself too, and I sort of brushed it off like, oh, that's
just everybody feels that way about their own voice. But then we recently re-watched
an episode where Michael is trying to get Jim to say something bad about Pam, and he
gets Jim to admit that Pam's voice is rather shrill sometimes, and I thought, oh, I guess
maybe in the writer's room, when forced to come up with something annoying about me,
we settled on my shrill voice. So thank you so much.
Which writer hated your voice? I don't know.
I'm very pleased to say that I think I was gone by the time that was written, so I do
not have to answer that crime. It wasn't you. Well played.
No. It wasn't you. Well, listen, we always like
to ask people when they come on the podcast, how did they get their job on the office?
And we know that you did double duty. You were a writer, but then you were also a performer.
But let's start with how did you get your job as a writer on the show?
So I was writing at Saturday Night Live from 1998 to 2004. My then girlfriend, now wife
of 16 years, had moved out to LA permanently in like 2002, and we were dating long distance.
And in like 2003, it was like, all right, if this is ever going to really work, either
she had to move back to New York, or I had to leave and move to LA, and it made more
sense for me to move to LA because there are more jobs there.
So I gave my like years notice to Lauren Michaels, and so I was leaving at the end of the year
and got an agent for the first time in my life because I never needed one. And I was
like, all right, I'm moving. And the first thing he told me was, you know, this guy,
Greg Daniels is adapting the British office for American television. And I responded.
What a terrible idea. It's just a disaster. You shouldn't do this. No one should do this
because I was a huge fan of the British show. This is such a classic story, right? I was
a huge fan of the British show. I thought it was absolutely brilliant. I didn't think
there was any way you would ever work in America. But it was like, well, you know, beggars can't
be choosers. Like, I have to get a job out there. So I came to LA some time in, I don't
even remember like, or like winter, I think, like February on an off week at SNL. And I
had a bunch of meetings and one of them was with Greg. So most of the meetings I had with
producers were pretty standard, hour long chats. You know, hey, here's our here's our pilot,
watch the pilot and let's talk about the show. And I dutifully tried to, you know, say nice
things about whatever they were working on. And then I met with Greg and my meeting with
Greg was two hours long, more than two hours long. And it was so different from every other
meeting. It was, um, it was like intense and in depth and fascinating. In the middle of
the meeting, he said, I'm very sorry, but my back is acting up. Would you mind if I
lied down? And I said, no. And so he lay on the floor on his back in front of me while
I sat on his couch. So I think to an outside observer, it would look very much like we
were in like Freudian analysis where I was just therapist and he was like free associating.
But he just asked the most incisive questions, the most penetrating questions about the nature
of storytelling and about the British show and why it worked and what he had to do to
make it work here. And I left the meeting and I texted on my like Motorola razor. I texted
my agent and I said, um, I don't know if that guy's going to offer me a job. But if he does
I'm going to take it because I think he's going to teach me how to write. And, um, my
agent, uh, sends me that text like every four years. Back to me. He sends it back to me
and says like, you were right. You were right. You're right. Um, so, so Greg offered me the
job. Um, and I happily took it and I thought this is obviously not going to work. Uh, it's
a, it is a, um, it is a fool's errand to try to adapt this show for an American audience.
But he's going to teach me how to write. And that's exactly what happened. And that first
season, you know, the only full-time writers really were me, Mindy and BJ because, um,
Lester Lewis, the late Lester Lewis and Paul Eberstein and Larry Wilmore were consultants
and Mindy and BJ and I had never written anything. We didn't have any idea what we were doing
and Greg basically taught a class. He taught a, uh, like the true professor he is, he taught
a class on how to write and, um, and it changed all of our lives forever. So that's my office
origin story.
Wow. That is so good. Mike, I remember you guys, um, that first season, there were so
few of you and, um, how close you all became because of that.
Yeah. It was a tiny little, Greg used to call it, uh, a strike force. He was like, this
is an elite strike force, which I think was just him trying to boost our confidence because
we had no idea what we were doing. Um, but it was really, you know, it was, it was a
very, very small group of people who were working really, really hard on a very small
number of episodes. So we only had, we only wrote five scripts. Like, um, you know, we
each wrote, we, we actually wrote, uh, we wrote six to make five. I'm not sure if you
remember this, but we wrote, or even if you even knew this, Greg, one of the only things
that Greg was able to squeeze out of NBC in that first year was he let us write one more
script than we would shoot. And so we wrote one extra episode, um, that I think he wrote.
And then we just, we picked the best five out of the six that we had written and threw
the other one away. And I wish I could remember what that other one was. There is a, there
is a lost season one.
Oh, that'd be a good question for Greg.
Yeah. There's a lost season one office episode script out there somewhere that we just never,
uh, that we never produced. Um, so it was, and it was like, you know, it was really intense
work and it was a combination of, of like story breaking, but also just like a master
class in how to create television and what makes a good story. There were times when,
I've told this story before, but there were times when Greg was talking, we would be pitching
and I had a notebook where I would like just jot down ideas and there would be moments
when Greg would say, um, well, let's talk about what, let's just pause for a second
and talk about like what makes a good story. And then he would start kind of like going
through the list of things that he felt were crucial to good TV stories. And I would realize
like, oh, he's in lecture mode is the way I thought of it was lecture mode, which was
a good thing. It sounds like a bad thing, but it was a good thing. And I would turn
the page and I would start taking notes like I was in college and I would just like write
down as if he were an actual professor and I had a test coming up and I would start just
writing down and I still have those notes and I still go back and look at them every
once in a while to like remember, to refresh my memory about what he told us all about
storytelling. It was that intense and that sort of foundational and meaningful to all
of us.
Oh man.
Wow.
I do remember those early days about what a small collective we were. Even our table
reads, do you remember? We would just pull up chairs on the stage where we were filming.
We would just all grab like a desk chair and sit in a circle and read the script. And I
loved that.
Yeah.
It was really intimate.
There were so many cool things about that first season, including that the place where
we worked was on this weird soundstage in the middle of Culver City or something. And
so Hollywood soundstages are often these big, gigantic empty rooms where you put sets and
then attached to them usually or above them are a suite of offices where the writers and
the production staff works. But that suite of offices became the actual set. The set
that we built was modeled on the crappy offices where the writers were working and right down
to the layout. Greg was in what would be Michael's office and there was a reception desk right
outside it that became Pam's reception desk. And so we would do these drills. Greg would
have us do these drills where he would go like, okay, take a half an hour and go sit
at Pam's desk or go sit in Michael's office or what will be Michael's office or go sit
where Jim sits and just get a sense of what is your eye line to Pam.
So he would put Mindy at Pam's reception desk and he would put BJ at Jim's desk. And he
would say, just sit there and absorb the vibe of imagine that you're in love with that person
and that you have to angle your chair in such a way so that you can catch a glimpse of her
out of the corner of your eye or whatever. And it was fascinating. It was really interesting.
And I remember at one point he had me go into work in Michael's office or what the office
that would be the model for Michael's office. And I remember hating it because it was like
I was in this I was far away from everything and all this and I would see people talking
through the windows and I'd be like, what are they talking about? And I had the urge
to like go out and like do what Michael did all the time, which was like, Hey, what's
going on? You know, like, and it was like he was just so he knew so much about what
he wanted out of the show that he would he would practice not just the skill of writing
the characters, but the the skill of like embodying them or emotionally connecting to
them. And it was just that's what I mean when I say it was professorial. It was it wasn't
just like, all right, what's episode two? What's the act break? What's the first act
break for the for the season finale? It was really like, we had to embody the characters
and understand them emotionally and and and socially in a way that I think led to great
episodes, you know,
Well, it's so interesting because when all the actors got there, then they did that to
us too. They made us sit at our desks and just sit there and feel it. We've talked about
that before. And so I love that that started all the way back with you guys writing the
episodes.
Yeah, June of June of 2004, like they're right from the from the jump. There were things
like that that we did that weren't that weren't the typical things that you would do with
the writing staff. Another thing he did all the time, which I thought was so smart, which
I still do on shows that I work on now, is we would come into work one day and he would
go he would have he would put all the characters names on a board and he would pick two of
them at random. And he would give them to he would say me and Larry Wilmore like, go
come up with five story ideas for Oscar and Kelly. And then and then you, Mindy and Paul
like, go come up with five story ideas for, you know, Jim and Stanley. And it for an hour,
we would just pitch. Okay, well, what the hell could a story be with Oscar and Kelly?
But it led to some really cool stuff. And like some of those some of the little the
B stories and the C stories of that came that were in the first couple of seasons were just
brainstorming, like random pairings of people, he he understood fundamentally that one of
the great advantages that the show had over other shows is that we had 20 people, we had
like most shows have whatever, six main characters or something. And so pretty quickly, you get
tired of a story with involving these two people or these three people. And he was like,
that's not what this is going to be. This is going to be a the whole point of the shows
to observe like an anthropologist observe the comings and goings of a large number of
people and in the same office environment. So like, go work on random pairings and like
sometimes really fun stuff would come out of it, you know, like, he just so thoroughly
understood what what made the show special and what the potential was for how good it
could be that he had all of these machinations and he was moving always moving pieces around
the chessboard with the writers in those for in those early days, you know.
Yeah, I remember telling my dad I was trying to describe this group of people and the show
to my dad who was not at all in entertainment, you know, he's a drilling engineer. But sometimes
we could talk sports. And I said, dad, here's the deal. We have a deep bench. And it's like
a basketball term like our team is so good. There's so many layers to this team. And and
then when he came and, you know, Greg invited them to sit at a table read at lunch. My dad
was like, I get it. I get it now. Yeah, I get it. Like there were laughs, I think coming
from him and all these places, you know. Yeah. Well, I was going to say that in season nine,
John and I were invited to be producers on the show to kind of help carve out Jim and Pam's
final season. And we got to come into their writers room, mostly as observers. And Greg was
running the show that season. And he was still doing those exercises. And it was fascinating.
Except in this case, it was more like homework. I remember the day started and Greg said,
okay, get out your homework. And the homework had been that everyone had to come up with
five ideas for I can't remember what it was, but it was like for a Dwight and Stanley cold open,
go. And and then you would just sit and listen. And then when there was an idea that peaked his
interest, he would say, oh, oh, okay, you two go off, flesh that out. And then two people would
leave the room. And then we would keep listening to the homework. And I, I remember thinking, oh,
my gosh, I would be so terrified to present my five ideas. Because sometimes it was just crickets,
like you could just hear the ideas just die in the room. I mean, what an intense and vulnerable
thing to pitch your creative ideas in front of like a room of people who are all judging whether
or not you should follow that thread. Yes, one of his greatest strengths is that he is unafraid,
I would say, of failure. And I think I believe that that comes, I'm guessing that that comes
partially from working at Saturday Night Live, because what you just described of like pitching
ideas and and having them bomb, right, that is the essence of working at SNL, except your failures
at SNL are public, like you write sketches, and there's a read through with the entire cast of
the of the show and Lauren and all the producers around a giant table. And the audience is 100
and or 150 people who work on the show. And by the way, a very famous person who's hosting the
show, like, you know, Drake is reading your sketch or whatever. And you there are moments at SNL
where, you know, your sketches are 12 pages long or whatever. And your sketch starts and you get
to page two and like the joke of the sketch is sprung and no one laughs. And in your head, you're
like, there's 10 more pages. Like we have to sit here for 10 more pages as no one finds my premise
funny. And so for the first, I don't know what Greg's experience was, I've never really talked
to him about his time there. But for the first like six months, you, it's, you fall into a deep
depression. Like it's just like, it's so embarrassing to fail that way publicly. And then
the week goes by and the show happens. And then it's like, all right, it's Monday again, do it
again. And you like do it again, and you fail again, and you fail, and you fail, and you fail,
and eventually, at some point, hopefully, you kind of figure it out. And you write a sketch and it
gets some laughs. And you're like, okay, it's not the end of the world, like I'm still here. And then
you get a little better and a little better. And that, like, that theory is, it's pretty brutal
on your ego. But when you've already had it driven out of your ego from working at SNL,
like five, five Stanley cold opens, I can, who cares? Yeah, exactly. So I that and his theory
is really like, this is a numbers game, like the way to get to the best ideas is you have to create
a thousand ideas in order to find the two that are good. And he took that approach with everything.
He took that approach when he was hiring writers, he took that approach when he was casting people.
I mean, how long did the casting process go on? For for the show, endlessly long, endlessly,
endlessly long. And that's just his, he's just the most thorough person when it comes to that he
doesn't settle for anything he, he demands that you walk down. I mean, when we're, when we're,
when we were breaking stories, like, we would get five sixth of the way down the line toward
breaking a story. And we'd get to a point where he would realize it didn't work and even go like,
man, this doesn't work, throw it away, start over. And it's really exhausting, but also the show
lasted for 10 years. And it was really good. So. And here we are still talking about it.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. 17 years later. Well, now I think we have to ask you, Mike.
Yeah, we do. How did you come to play Mo's? Yeah. Something we understand you hated.
You hated being Mo's, but we love Mo's. Let me, let me, let me be just delineate here,
importantly. I love the fact that I played Mo's. I hated actually doing it because
for two reasons. So, so here's the story. The story was in the, in the, Greg always had it as
part of Dwight Schrute's backstory that he, he himself was not Amish or, or Mennonite or anything
like that, but he was sort of Amish adjacent that he had relatives. He was a Germanic, he was of
Germanic descent living in Pennsylvania that is, that's, that alone is sort of Amish adjacent.
So Greg always had it in the back of his head that there was a sort of cousin, a Schrute cousin
farming community that was, that was either Amish or something in the Amish family. So
so there in, in 2004, there was a reality show called Amish in the City. Yes. Yes. I saw that.
Yes. It was a terrible, terrible program. It was so hard to watch. It was so awful. And I,
my wife and I watched it and I was sort of trying to express how cringy it was to the
writer's room one day. The premise of the show was they took a bunch of idiot club kids from LA
who were on spring break and they were like, you guys are going to come stay in this awesome house
in the Hollywood Hills and they were psyched and they were like, we're going to get so drunk and
party and whatever. What they didn't know that also invited to stay in the house were a bunch of
young Amish folks on Rum Springer who had been released for their year of exploration and they
were going to live together and hot and then, you know, hot mess ensues, hot, hot, hot mess ensues.
Right. So one of the characters on the show who was Amish was named Moes and Moes was this delightful,
kind-hearted, fragile egg who would tried his best to become friends with the idiot club kids
from LA and among other ways that he tried this where he fashioned his own wooden toys,
like little, like a little wooden airplane or a little wooden car and like present, like
he made them himself. He made them himself and he presented them to his new friends and they were
just like, what the hell is this? Right. And so I was like relating this story to the room about
how like awful this show was and Greg pointed at me with his giant finger. I remember it so clearly
and said, you're going to play Moes. You're Dwight's cousin. You're going to be your Moes.
And I was like, ha, ha, ha. And he was like, no, I'm serious. We're going to do this. You're
going to play Moes. And I thought it was a joke for a couple of reasons. First, because I thought it
was a joke. Second, because all of the other writers, as you may know, got to play essentially like
versions of themselves or significant characters in the show, like Mindy was in the show all the
time and Paul was in the show all the time and BJ was in the show all the time. And Greg was
essentially saying, you are a joke. I'm going to turn you into a joke. And then so the first time
that we did it, it was in a photo. It was when Raine just says, I have a cousin. I run a beat
farm with my cousin Moes. It was in an episode I wrote. It was the one where Michael buys a condo.
Yes. And it was just a photo. And I was like, great. I'll put on a fake beard. And actually,
I don't even think I had the beard for the photo, but I'll dress up in these wool clothes and we'll
take a photo and that'll be the end of it. But then the writers, my so-called friends,
got very excited about me playing Moes and started writing me into episodes all the time.
And it was the episode BJ wrote where the initiation where Dwight was trying to initiate Ryan
into some kind of salesman fraternity by bringing him to his farm. And they wrote Moes into the
show. And so Greg insisted for this episode that I have a real beard. He didn't believe that a fake
beard, according to him, would look real. And I was like, listen, I don't grow facial hair very
easily. It's going to take me a long time. He's like, well, you better get started. It was basically
just hazing. That's all it was. So I grew a real beard for months and months and months. And in
that time, this show was nominated for an Emmy. And Greg and I and some of the other producers
went around and had a bunch of like fancy Hollywood events that we went to. And in every one of those
photos, I have the disgusting, wiry Moes beard. And then so that episode was supposed to be the
first one we shot that in season three. But then there was a I can't remember why there was some
kind of production issue or script issue or something. And it got delayed like two or three
more months. And I realized like, I remember like this sweating panic of like, I was counting down
the days until I could shave. And I was like, Oh, no, now I can't shave now and then grow the
beard back in time. So I had to keep it like another three months. And then by the time we
finally shot it, it was like mid September in deep in the valley on that Disney Ranch Valley
location where we shot Reigns, Dwight's Farm. It was the day we shot that first episode,
the high that day was 105. And I was wearing long johns and wool pants and a wool shirt and
suspenders and these old work boots that were incredibly uncomfortable. And I had to run around
and and pretend to wrestle Ryan and like, I was just like, I was like a ghost, like I was just
like running through I was like a horror movie ghost running through the background of scenes.
It took an entire day. I had to get up at 430 in the morning to get to Disney Ranch by 530.
And I was like, Well, at least I'll never have to do that again. And then the writers,
my so called friends, wrote me into like a hundred more episodes. So I I'm I'm very honored and
happy to have played a small silly role in the in the history of the show on screen. But the
actual act of doing it was always 105. They always I was always shirtless on a seesaw or running
alongside a car like a dog. Or in in probably the scariest moment of my life, being slapped,
like, like being punched in the face, essentially, by Angela Kinsey, you know,
that was one of the most terrifying moments of my life. Do you remember that? Yes,
yes, I was going to talk to you about it because Angela and Moes had so many actual scenes together.
And a lot of them are in the deleted scenes. I'm watching the DVDs. Some made it in. But,
you know, a few really cracked me up. And but I have to talk to you about that one. First,
I want to say there was a deleted scene in the surplus where I'm at Shroop Farms with Andy.
We're wedding planning Dwight is our wedding planner. We're trying to discuss a butter sculpture
and Andy's signing all these papers and you're coming in the kitchen. And I his at you.
Like a cat. And then you run away. And we kept breaking at this because it was so absurd. So
there's that that moment. Like, what? What is Angela and Moes? What is their relationship?
But then the episode he's talking about, I want to look because I wrote it. It's the finale.
It's the series finale. No, that's when you kidnapped me. Oh, right, right, right. There,
no. Okay, the episode was free family portrait. And Angela is chasing who she thinks is Dwight
and Dwight's car. But it's Moes dressed as Dwight because she wants to find out if Dwight's found
out about her baby, right? Right, right. And one of the things I remember, which is crazy in hindsight,
Mike, is that you and I did our own stunt driving where we had to screech into a cul-de-sac and pull
side by side, like really fast turn on a dime. And then I fly out of the car because they didn't
want to waste any time, lose all that footage. And I run up and I swing open the door and it's
Moes and not Dwight. And you won't tell me where Dwight is. And they wanted me to slap the shit
out of you. Right. So what happened was we were like, okay, you and I just were like,
so let's just like walk through how this happens. And you were kind of like, okay, so I'll come over
here and then I'll get out here and you'll stand against the car and then I'll slap you. And you
like just sort of moved your hand. I did a fakey. You did a fakey. And I was like, okay, yeah,
this seems okay. So we do the first take, we screech up, we do a good job of doing our own stunts,
by the way. Yeah. You pull me out, you're like, where's Dwight? Where's Dwight? I'm like, I don't
know or something or something. And then you slap me, but you slapped me for real. You hit me so hard,
I spun around like a top and like hit the roof of the car and was like, my ears were ringing. And
I remember like, I was like, oh, I can't hear what she's saying to me because my ear is ringing so
loudly. I'm so sorry. You know, Matt Sohn told me, he was like, Angela, you're gonna have to really
hit him because we're pretty wide. It'll be, you won't be able to do the fakey. Yes. And I also
remember this is not your fault. None of this is your fault. I feel so bad I felt like that. No, because I remember saying,
no, really hit me, because I'm six feet tall. You are not six feet tall. I am five one. Right.
And I was like, no, I've, I hate it when there's like a fake slap on TV. I'm sure this will be
fine. Just, just really hit me. It'll be fine. I remember telling you that, like just really hit
me. It'll be fine. It'll be fine. I had no idea that you were a mixed martial arts
professional and you hit me so hard. I really like lost my, I did not know where I was. I didn't
know what was happening. I, my eyes went blank and my hearing dropped out and I had no idea what was
happening. It was wonderful. I'm so, it, it, and that's the take they used, thankfully, because
afterwards also, I remember afterwards, you were like, oh my God, I'm so sorry. And I was like,
no, no, no, I just didn't understand how strong you were. Oh my gosh. Muggers beware. Okay.
Angela, Kinsey. I do remember, I felt so bad. And I remember saying, I was trying to like think,
why, why, why was that so hard? Maybe it was the momentum because I'm running. I was like,
trying to like think about, I don't know where the ninja came from, Mike.
I think that slapping is just like a more shocking thing than youth. I've never been slapped in my
life. I'm proud to say. And so I, I think I just greatly underestimated the force of the blow that
was about to, about to hit my face. But this is, this is all part of this larger conversation of
why it wasn't fun to play Moe's. It's because not only was it always a site gag, but also like
the, sometimes the writers would write actual lines for me. And then in the edit, it would
always be like, yeah, it's funny if we don't hear from Moe's, right? So it would cut all the lines.
And then it was like, what is the most humiliating way that we can use him? And it was like being
slapped be like in an outhouse with his pants around his ankles while the door is slamming
closed. Like it was just, it was Greg's and the writer's way of just like enjoying tormenting me.
So now when I look back, I'm, it's, I'm so happy that I did it. But at every time I had to like
leave the writer's room, a place where I knew what I was doing and go be a performer where I did
not know what I was doing. I was always a little bit like, this is a, this is torture. I always
felt like it was a little bit of torture. Mike, do you get recognized for being Moe's very often?
There are certainly times when I am recognized for that. Yes. I mean, I'm older, I'm, I'm 17 years
older and my hair is a lot grayer. And so people don't, uh, don't recognize me as often as you
would think they would given how popular the show still is. I will say that like my son went to a
basketball camp a couple of summers ago and, uh, I went to pick him up from the camp and, uh,
my son had just watched the show. I think he was 10 or 11 and he had just watched the whole show
and he was very excited to tell people that I wrote for it and that I played Moe's. And, um,
so I went to pick him up from the camp and one of his counselors, I walked over to where the kids
were and one of his counselors saw me coming and he just broke into this huge smile and was like,
hey, and I was like, all right, this guy knows that I was Moe's and like, you know, he's gonna
tell when people recognize me. I did also, when the pandemic first hit, uh, I, I did a fundraiser
for, uh, LA Regional Food Bank, which is a charity I really like. The LA Regional Food Bank gives
out food to a lot of people in LA County. And I said, like, all right, I'm going to try to raise
money for LA Regional Food Bank. Um, the, and I'll match donations up to, I can't remember what it was
some $25,000 or something. And it, and like very quickly, uh, donations started pouring in.
And then like a true moron, I said, if we raise $50,000 by the end of the day, uh, I will shave
my head. And that, um, and it was a joke, but like that caused donations to really pour in.
And to the point where like, it was like within an hour, we were at like $50,000. And so then I
was like, Oh, I see, I see the game. The game is humiliation, right? Like if I just, if I offer
humiliation, like we'll raise more money. So then I put it up as a poll and said, would you rather
have me shave my head or grow the mosebeard and grow the mosebeard one in a landslide. So I had, so
over the, in the early, in like May, May, June, July of 2020, I spent like, again, like three months
growing the beard out and then shave my mustache. So I just had the beard and neck beard. And around
that time I got recognized, even with masks, I got recognized like every, everywhere I went. Like
that was a big, that was like a big mose moment. Cause it was right when the pandemic hit, everybody
was streaming the show, like the popularity of the show really surged. And then also I was walking
around with the beers. So that was a, there was, that was a real high, high frequency mose sighting,
I would say. Oh my gosh. Okay. Okay. We've, we've talked a lot about the crazy things you had to
do as mose that were sort of torturous. Was there any moment being mose that you had fun? Was there
a scene? Was there one moment that you really enjoyed? It was always fun. Like it, like even
when I was being tortured, it was always fun. Cause I, I really like, I revere actors in a, in a very
sort of, um, childlike way. I, I, I don't, I fundamentally don't understand how actors
do what you do. Uh, I, I find it to be the most difficult of all of the performing arts by far.
It's so much harder than writing. I think it's harder than directing. And I, I really, um,
that was really hammered home to me, even when I was doing this ridiculous sight gag,
and had to say a few words here and there. I was always like, God, I, I'm so much worse at this
than I am in my head. Uh, which is why I'm a writer. Cause it's like what a writer is, right?
I know, I know what it should be. I just don't know how to actually do it myself. So I, there were
times when, for example, do you remember the episode where, um, of course you do the episode
where, where Jim and Pam are excited because Shrewd Farms has become a B and B and they go and
check in. It's the one where I run along the side of the car, like a dog at the beginning, right?
Yes. I want to mention quickly, Mike, for anybody, um, John Krasinski was not driving slow.
I was, I was in the car and I, I remember that it was a hundred degrees that day because that's
the day that John thought it would be really funny to prank me and put the car heater seat
on, uh, because we weren't allowed to have the air conditioner for sound. And I was like, so hot,
but then you were running next to the car. So I thought, well, I can't complain about being hot
because I mean, look at Mike out there, like running his heart is, and John was like going
fast. I mean, I, I don't know how you did it. I don't know how you did that.
That was the hardest, that was the hardest acting I've ever done. And all I was doing
is running because I was in those wool clothes and I was wearing those work boots and John was
driving like 15 to 20 miles an hour on that dirt road and I had to keep up. And I, but also I had
to run up to the window, disappear behind the car and then run fast to catch up to the other side
of the window. Exactly. And also you weren't allowed to use your arms. Your arms were like,
so there was like a lack of momentum that you could create because you were only using your
bottom half. I want to read to you what Dunderpedia, the fan website, how they explain Moe's running.
They say, Moe's proceeds to run away in his usual running with his arms swinging no higher than his
waist style. I don't know where that came from. I like one of the early, one of the early Moe's
appearances, it was like, you know, Moe's runs into the, I think it was in the, in the initiation,
like Moe's runs into the room. And I don't know why, but I just did that really awkward run.
That's not how I run when I'm running. I hope not. I just did that for some reason and then it just
became the thing that I, that Moe's does. But what Jenna's saying is true though, because
after I ran and caught up to the car, I then had to run past the car. I just speed past it
and run like a hundred yards all the way over to where the farmhouse was. And I knew I wasn't on
camera anymore because obviously the camera's, what's interesting is not, is not, excuse me,
what's interesting is not Moe's running anymore. What's interesting is Jim and Pam reacting to
this weird dog person that just ran alongside their car, but they made me run all the way,
like a hundred yards every single time. And we did like 11 takes of that. And I, I've never been
more sore in my life than I was the day after that because I didn't know that I was going to have to
run a hundred, I was going to run a dozen hundred yard sprints. You were like an Olympic contender.
You like outran a car. Yeah. It was the, it's the most athletic I've ever been. I would say,
it's the most, the highest level of athletic achievement of my life. Well, we have it on camera.
It's for all time. Forever, forever documented. There's proof. There's proof that I used to be
a good runner. But I'm sorry because you were going to say something about that episode that you
enjoyed. So there was a scene that I don't even know if it made it into the episode. I don't think
it did, but there was a scene where Jim and Pam, in that episode at night Pam hears Dwight kind of
moaning and said, because Angela has broken up with him, I think. And, and then in the morning
Dwight's gone. And the, in Jim and Pam come down and are, are being, Moses serving them breakfast.
Bacon, tons of bacon. Nothing but bacon. And there was, it was actually, it was the closest
I ever came to having a scene because I, there were like, it was like a page of dialogue where I
was serving you and you were at, you were saying like, I think Jenna, you say like,
Moses, do you know where Dwight is? Or do you know where is she? Is he sad about Angela or
something? And we actually had an exchange where I like had to memorize lines and like,
know what my cues were. And I remember thinking like, I'm not, this isn't, what I'm doing is not,
per se, good. But I'm enjoying the process of learning what it's like to be an actor and to
actually try to like, be like, be aware of the camera, be, be, be present in the scene, like,
listen to what you're saying and respond with the lines that were written for me.
And it was weirdly kind of thrilling. And I was like, this is never going to make it in.
Like I, I had worked at the show long enough to know that we didn't have time for this weird,
dumb, Moses, Jim, Pam scene. But, but I really did have fun doing it because it felt like,
I think it gave me a greater appreciation just for like, what, how hard it is to do that,
how hard it is to just be in a scene, have lines that you have to have memorized and know how to
say them properly. And in an interesting way, while there are cameras on you, while there's people
in the room, it's just a very difficult skill. I think that the, the world of television and
movies would be better if every writer were forced to act sometimes. And if every actor
were forced to direct, and if every director were forced to write, like if we all switched
positions every once in a while, just to remind ourselves like the other skills that are involved
in making TV art, each of them is so hard. It's so specific and so hard. So I really did like
that. I liked, I liked acting in those scenes just as a way to like remind me of how difficult a
skill it is. Now I have a question. Yeah. Because of your experience with Mose and knowing everything
that would go into some of the physical comedy bits that you were asked to do, as a writer,
does it ever get in your head when you come up with a really great gag? Do you think to yourself,
oh no, I'm going to have to put this actor through this horrible thing? And like,
does it ever like affect your writing? It really does. And, and I have found myself talking to
actors a lot and saying like, we have this idea for this silly thing. Are you cool with this?
They always say yes. Like actors are incredibly adaptable people by and large. They're always happy
to, or in my experience, I've been always happy to say like, oh yeah, that sounds fun. The one,
one time I didn't do this and I wish I had, although it was fine. Nothing bad happened. But
we wrote it. There was a scene in the show, The Good Place, that I created where William Jackson
Harper played a character who was sort of a, he was a, he's sort of a tortured soul. He wants to be
sort of morally perfect. And he believes that such a thing is possible. And there's an episode
where he's sort of going through a, an existential crisis. And he's just sort of walking around
lost in a daze. And he like, he goes into, he's like walking around and some sprinklers go off
and they just soak him and he just kind of stands there and just gets soaked by the sprinklers.
And then he just kind of like takes his shirt off and just kind of keeps walking. And then you cut
to him and he's in a grocery store shopping shirtless. And then, excuse me. And then like a
woman comes over and is like, sir, you have to wear a shirt in here. And he just grabs like a
shirt off a rack and just puts it on and smiles and keeps walking. And it turns out that William
Jackson Harper is like cut. Like he's, he's like a very like physically fit person, which I did not
know. Like that, I had never seen him with his shirt off before he shot that scene. But him
taking his shirt off caused the internet to like explode because it was like, oh my God, the like,
the dorky philosophy professor guy is also jacked. And, and I mean, it was, it was only good for him.
Like I, it was like that everybody was happy with the result. But I was like, oh my God,
I never asked him if it was okay that I wrote this thing where he takes his shirt off. Like I should,
I should ask actors that more. Like I should say, are you okay with this? And I think if there were,
it's a, it's a gendered thing in a way it shouldn't be, right? Like if it obviously if there had, if
it had been a woman, I would never in a billion years have written any scene where a woman
disrobes in any way without clearing it with her first. There would have been a million discussions
and meetings and whatever. And it didn't occur to me that a man might also be uncomfortable with
that. And so I remember thinking like, I'm so happy that it was okay, that he was okay with it,
that whatever. But I also, again, like in this weirdly comes from playing Moe's and all the
ridiculous I had to pick up cow patties and throw to the brain Wilson and do all sorts of like
humiliating things. No one ever asked me if I was okay with any of it. And, and it, it, I do think
that it's those conversations should happen more often, even when you don't think there will be
any problem with this. I think there should be generally more communication between writers
and directors and actors to just say like, Hey, just want to make sure you're cool with this. If
you're not, it's totally okay, we can write something else. So anyway, I don't know if that
answers your question or not. But well, it's really interesting because as an actor, I feel like this
comes up a lot in television, because you agree to play a character, but you don't know what is
going to be written about your character beyond the pilot episode. Yeah. And so there could be
years and years and years of stories, and they are a surprise to the actor every week. And so
with a movie, well, I can see the movie script. If there's like three weird sex scenes or like
a weird scene that makes me uncomfortable, I can just say, Oh, I, this isn't the part for me.
Right. Right. The whole story. Yeah, I know everything that's being asked of me when I accept
that movie role. But when you accept a television role, you don't know what's going to be asked of
you. And I've always thought that that communication, you know, this, this came up on our show later
when they came up with the really funny idea that Pam would have a male lactation consultant
who would be massaging her breasts in front of Jim, and that Pam and the lactation consultant
would find this very clinical and that Jim was trying to also find it clinical trying to be cool.
Yeah. But was also like, this handsome man is massaging my wife's breasts right now. And,
and I remember they came up to me and said, we think this is really funny.
But we imagine that it would be weird for you to have a total stranger that you met that day,
come and handle your breasts. And the joke only works if they're actually touching your breasts.
So what if your fiance Lee played the role and then it's someone who's already massaging your breasts,
massaging your breasts. And I was like, well, he does massage them. So that is true. And so it was
great. So then it was just weird for John. Yeah, then it was just weird for everyone else.
Because we were super comfortable. Well, I think that's that's first of all good for them for
obviously bringing that up. But also like that, there is an enormous leap of faith that you're
taking as an actor when you start onto a TV show, right? You're really like you're using a very
small amount of data, which is usually like a pilot script, and maybe a meeting with the
show creator or the show runner, and you're extrapolating over potentially 10 years and 200
episodes of like, am I putting my faith and trust in this person? And is it going to be rewarded?
Or are there going to be constant battles and fights about creative directions and
and things that they asked me to do that? And the and that this is part of why being an actor,
I think, is so difficult. This you only your only advocate is yourself. Like you don't have,
you know, you maybe have an agent or a manager who can have your back in those moments. But
it's like this idea of like the quote, difficult actor and quote, like, I think that is a
a horrible misnomer that has come from now 80 years of actors being getting a new script every
week and not having any idea what's in it. And those ideas coming from people who maybe haven't
run a bunch of things by them. And just being like, Oh, man, now I got to do this this week. And
the range of how it can make an actor feel uncomfortable is enormous. It can be anything
from like, a strange man has to massage parts of your body that you might not want that person to
massage all the way to just creative decisions about the character, the choices the character
makes things that the character does that you don't agree with. Like, it's just really hard.
It's a it's a very difficult thing. And the chance for it to go sideways is enormous. So
the more communication there is between writers and actors, the better to bring this full circle.
That's another thing that I remember thinking I could attribute to SNL a little bit with Greg,
because Greg worked there. At SNL, like everybody does everything, writers act and actors write
and it's very like community theater kind of feeling. And there's no division between
actors and writers really at all, like it's all one big hodgepodge. And that was Greg's whole
theory was like, let's let's break down these artificial barriers between the writers and the
actors. That's why he wanted Mindy and BJ and Paul to act in the show. It's why he want it's why he
gave the this season two finale where Jim and Pam where Jim tells Pam that he likes or is in love
with her and that they kiss for the first time. Steve wrote that he gave that to Steve like that's
traditionally the kind of thing that like he would write or like the co EP trusted writer would
write that script. But Greg saw the big picture and he understood fundamentally that the more there
was that we he broke down the divisions between writers and actors the healthier the organism
of the show would be and he was totally right. So true. I mean, Jenna and I have talked about
that a lot on this podcast, other shows that we have done since the office. I did a guest star on
a show and the writer's room was in New York and we filmed in LA. And I thought, wow, they never
meet the writers, they never interact with them at all. And it's just been such an interesting
and wonderful perspective to look back at how fortunate we were to have that sort of creative
collaboration as our biggest job in our life. I've bounced up to writers on sets at other jobs.
Thinking that the way we had it on the office was normal and they seem terrified to speak to me.
They are terrified that I am talking to them. They are afraid to say anything. I'll be like,
hey, what's up? What do you think next week? What do you think is going to be like, how's this story
going to play out? And they're like, I don't want to speak to you. The first time I did a multi-cam
after the office because I'd never done a multi-cam, all the writers were like huddled in a corner.
You know, like we're filming. It's like filming a one act play and they're all in the corner
because I knew this joke wasn't working and I had like a few ideas. So I went up to the huddle
and I was like, hey guys, I got like a two or three pitches and they were like, what? It was like a record scratch.
Yeah, I know. And again, Greg's ethos was Greg's ethos in a nutshell is best idea wins and he doesn't
care whether the best idea comes from a writer, an actor, a director, an accountant, a random person
on the street who happens to walk by at the right moment and has a good pitch. It was just,
why would we not take the best idea? And so that fostered that sense of like, everybody give us all
your ideas. Like let's put all of the ideas into a pot and pick the best one. And that is very
frequently sadly not how it works on other shows. And it's a shame because, you know, there were
times when we would be battling about something in the edit bay about an episode and that he
would have two alts and he would say, which one do you like? And all of the writers would choose
version A and he would go like, and then he would call in like the accounting department. Yeah.
And he'd be like, which one do you like? The real accountant. The actual accountant. Yeah.
Yeah. Not you and Oscar. Yeah, not me and Brian and Oscar. And he would go, which one do you like?
And they would say, we like B. And he's like, yeah, I think B is better. And it drove us crazy
sometimes. But he was like, you're not the audience. You're professional comedy writers.
Like, of course, you're going to like this weird offbeat thing that we did. You know what the
best example of this is? So Jim's proposal to Pam at the at the gas station, right? So three versions,
I don't know if you remember this, Jenna, we had three versions. One of them was the car pulls over,
the camera is across the street and is shooting super long lens. And all you hear is traffic
whizzing by in the foreground. And you can't hear they're not miked in this in this version.
The sound was off. So you saw Jim walk up and you saw Pam and the ha ha. And then all of a sudden
they're talking, you don't know what they're saying. Jim gets down on one knee, Pam reacts.
And they and then they hug and they kiss and it's over. And second version was or the final
version was like very traditionally shot, like you were right with them in the gas station,
sort of looking in a classic TV coverage. And you could still hear traffic whizzing by in the
background, but you couldn't really see it. And the cameras are right up close. And then there
was a sort of intermediate version where you were a little bit further away, but you could hear
what they were saying. And he screened all three of them. And the the one that was where the camera
was super far away. And you couldn't hear a word gave me like the greatest goose bump feeling of
my life. Like I was like, that's so beautiful. It's so perfect for the show. It reminded me of
the scene in the British office where Tim takes off his mic and goes in and talks to Don. That was
the sort of model of it where and you don't hear what they're saying. And then he comes back out
and grabs the mic and says, she said no, by the way, and and it's terrible and sad. And I was
like, well, that's that's a home run. That's like the most beautiful. It's so perfect. It's the most
beautiful thing ever. And he was like, Yeah, we're not using that version. That was like, why? And
he was like, because this is a moment that fans of the show have been waiting for for five, six
years, whatever it was. And it's not it's just fundamentally not fair to deny them the ability
to hear Jim say, will you marry me? It's just mean it's like it and and this might be the most
sort of like, beautiful, artistic, you know, like highfalutin version. But if if what what are we
doing if we're denying fans the ability to hear Jim say, will you marry me and hear Pam say,
yes, that's just cruel. And I always fought him on all of those decisions. And he was always right.
It's just like at the end of the day, I was like, of course, of course, you need to hear will you
marry me? Yes, like, oh, that that's such a foundational moment in the history of the show.
And so he had that he had that thing of like, let's develop and explore every possible idea.
Let's walk down every path. Let's pull every name out of the hat. And at the end of the day,
we will choose the one that is the best for the show, not the one that's loved the most by the
people who work on the show or the writers who write things or any anything else, just what is
what is the best thing for the show. And that's why the show over the course of its decade long
run had such an integrity to it, I think it's because it was always the decisions were always
made in terms of what's best for the show, not not what a bunch of like jaded writers thought
would be the coolest thing or something like that. Do you want to ask Mike about the Christmas lights?
Oh, yeah, I do. This is such a hard pivot. But we, okay, so in the first Christmas episode,
which, oh my God, I just love that episode so much, I can watch it like every year. It's almost
like, you know, what do you like to watch at the holidays? Oh, that, you know, Christmas
vacation, which every chase, I like to watch the very first Christmas episode Yankee swap.
I have had a Yankee swap party for years inspired by that episode. I love everything about it.
So there was this moment that we heard was inspired by your real life where when they
put up the Christmas tree, the, the tiny, tiny Christmas lights and Angela's so mad at Phyllis,
she's so pissed off. And we heard that was like actually based on something in your life where
there was, is that true? And were there other moments like that, like things that were in
your life that made it into the show? Totally true. My first Christmas in LA,
my, my then fiance, now wife JJ and I got our first tree as cohabitants. And we were so excited.
We both love Christmas. We love like decorating the tree. We love everything. And we bought the
tree and we took it home. We put it up and we played Christmas music. And we had bought these
my in my house growing up, you always did only white lights. I don't know why that was that
was like what our family preferred. And JJ had been like, I like the big colored ones. They're
so like cheery and happy. And I, for some reason, won the argument. I don't know why, but I was
like, trust me, it looks great. It looks great. And so I went and bought those little tiny white
lights. And I very carefully strung them around the tree and everything. And then we, we like,
we're playing Christmas music and it was like a big countdown. And I turned them on and you
absolutely could not see any of them. They just say it was the saddest, the least, the least,
it was the opposite of the Rockefeller center Christmas tree lighting. And, and I was immediately
humiliated and my wife was just laughing at me so hard, like just what a complete failure this was.
And I immediately went out and went to the drugstore and bought big, big colored lights and
came home and we strung them up. And so I, but I remember that, that feeling and like that episode
is so much about like expectation versus reality. And so I was like, Oh, that would be a good,
like little metaphor for what's about to happen to Michael Scott when he gets the Phyllis's oven
met. So I just, I put it in as like Greg was so into, and the show was so into those tiny,
tiny, tiny observable moments of real life. And, and so I thought, well, that makes perfect sense.
And my favorite thing about that is after they turn the lights on and Michael goes,
not great. There's a quick pan to Angela who just looks angrier than she has ever looked
in her entire life. I know. That episode gave me a full headache because I was just always so
angry. Scowling, just scowling everybody. Yeah. I mean, there, that, so much of what happened
in those first, in that, especially in the first season and a half, you know, seasons one and two,
so much of that stuff was real observation, like about people's lives, like all of the gifts in
that, that I invented for the, this, this was another great writing lesson that came from
that episode. So in my original version, the person who had Angela, maybe no, Oscar had Creed,
who had Toby, right, right. So Toby in the original version had a talking head where he was like,
I don't know a lot about Angela. I know that she's religious. So I bought her this book and the book
was one of those sort of religious adjacent self-help books, you know, like sort of like
leading, leading a spiritual life or something. It's one of those kind of hokey books. And Greg
was like, I don't think that he should give her that book because we already know that Angela
has that tendency or leans in that direction. And so you're not, the audience isn't getting
any new information. And I was like, all right, well, like, what could it be? And then someone,
I might have been Greg, pitched that thing of a poster of babies who are dressed like adults.
Yeah. And we, nobody could understand why, but it was the perfect thing. It was just,
that's a perfect thing that it was like, you're learning more about Angela, right? You got a
new piece of information about her character. And, but it's still very much in keeping with
what we already know about her. And then that, and then that poster became like basis of like
four other stories over the course. Oh yeah. It became a huge source of contention between
Angela and Oscar because she hung it by her desk. And Oscar had to wear it as a, as a shirt. Yeah.
Well, Angela in real life really likes animals who are dressed in costumes of other animals.
I mean, it's very similar. It's very similar to liking babies dressed as adults, I think.
I mean, animals dressed as any, anything really. Like if, if on Halloween you dress your dog as a
hot dog, I'm going to be like, oh my gosh, your dog's a hot dog. So we have two dogs and this
year they were ketchup and mustard. Oh, I love it. Oh, I would love to see a picture of that.
That lights up Angela's life. It really does. So wait, animals dressed like other animals,
you mean like, like a, like a dog dressed like a cow or like, oh yeah, or like a teddy bear that's,
but has like a bunny hat. Yeah, I know why. Mike, thank you so much for coming on Office Ladies
today. This was such a treat. We want to tell people that you wrote a book. Yes. And the book
is called How to Be Perfect. It comes out on January 25th. Tell us about it. So this book came out
of the show The Good Place that I created, which was about, if you haven't seen it, it's very hard
to explain it in one sentence, but it's essentially a, I pitched it as a show about like what it means
to be a good person. And for the show, I read a lot of ethics and philosophy by a lot of very
old, boring people. And I thought, I had this thought while I was researching it, which was
that these people have such good ideas for how to be better people. Like, as all of these ethical
theories in this moral philosophy is like, it's like a how-to guide for like living a good life
and being a good person on earth, but they're writing a so tortured and boring that no one
wants to read it. So maybe I could write a version where I sort of try to explain as best as I can
what their theories are, but in a way that doesn't give you a tension headache and make you sleepy.
So that's what it is. It's sort of a summary of a lot of different theories in moral philosophy.
The way that the book is sort of organized is like, I pose a bunch of boring questions or mundane
questions that face us every day. Like, if my friend bought an ugly shirt and says, what do you think
of my shirt? Is it okay to lie to her? Or can you, or can you, or do you have to tell the truth?
And so it's questions like that, that are just things that come up in everyday life. And then I
try to explain what like different moral philosophers and ethicists would say about those
questions. So that's the idea. And it's on sale January. It's on sale now. You can buy it now
from any online bookstore that you prefer. And also all of the proceeds are going to charity.
So you can buy it and know that you're doing something good in the world by having money go to charity.
Oh, I love that. Just by buying the book, I am being a good person. That's right.
That's the idea. Yeah. So you're really setting me up to succeed. I know. I like it. I like it too.
You know, right away that you've made the world a slightly better place just by buying the book.
It's that easy. It's that easy to be a good person. I love it. Well, this is what Mindy
Kaling had to say about your book. She said, as someone who worries that a deep dive into
morality will ruin my fun and problematic life, I was certain this book wouldn't be for me.
Boy was I wrong. It's so brilliant and funny and warmly written.
You don't realize you're becoming a better person just by reading it.
Yes. It was very nice of her to blurb the book. Her blurb is actually the one that made the cover,
which I don't think I've told you yet. Cover blurb. Oh, cover blurb. I found it online.
That's fancy blurb right there. Well, I'm so excited to read it. Yes. I have ordered my copy
and Angela has two and we're going to get them. And Mike, thank you because I, well, I'm a huge
fan of your Twitter as well. I feel like you're very, very good at taking complex ideas or thoughts
and making them really digestible and entertaining. You're also very good at breaking down baseball
statistics. Yes. I have found, I go to your Twitter if there's a big game on because I'm like,
oh, well, I know that Mike is going to explain this to me because I don't know what all the hullabaloo
is about. It's very kind of you to say. I often wonder who in the world is still reading my Twitter
because it is either in ridiculous arcane sports data or just screaming about something that a
politician said. And it's like the Venn diagram for the two groups of people that want both of
those things has to be tiny. So I'm glad to know that you two are still in the Venn diagram overlap
of people who read my Twitter. I am. I don't understand your sports analysis. Not always,
no. But I find it just sort of fascinating to watch your brain work. Yes. And we love data.
Jenna and I have discovered one of the things we have in common is we love tracking things. We get
very excited. Just you name it. We track it on the show. Like I became obsessed about every plant
that was at front reception and I would document how every week there was a new plant. And that's
something that I find fascinating about baseball is there's so many different stats. I don't understand
them, but I will go to your Twitter when there's a big game and people are talking about stats.
Yes. Pitches. You really break down the pitches. Yeah. Well, part of what some people love about
baseball and what some people hate about it is the amount of data that you can analyze. I love it
because I'm the same way I get nerdy about numbers and stats and stuff. But again, when I go to my
Twitter account and post 11 consecutive tweets about whether a certain pitch was a ball or a
strike, I do have the thought of like, who is this for? Who is reading this right now and enjoying
it? But that's the joy of Twitter's. You don't ever have to know if you don't want to know. You
can just send it out in the university and who cares? Well, we have one final wrap up question
for you. We always ask everyone who was on the show or worked on the show if they took anything
from the set. Okay. Unlike probably many of the people that you've interviewed, I left in the
middle. Right. I was around for the first four seasons and then the beginning of season five,
and then Greg and I started developing parks and recreation together. I worked out of the office
offices. I was still around, but slowly over the course of season five, I receded into the
background. So I didn't know, I think sort of intellectually understand that I was leaving,
leaving. And so I didn't really think to grab anything specific from the set because it was
like they were still being used. Right. We're still making the show. So I really didn't take
anything. I have a couple of things that I do treasure that are related to the show. One of
which was when I left, Lee Eisenberg and Jean Stupnitzky went to Phil Shea, property master
Phil Shea, and got his contact for who made the Dwight bobblehead that Angela had given to Dwight
as a present. And they had a Mike bobblehead made as like, it was sort of like a parting gift. And
so I still have the Mike bobblehead. The only problem is I used to wear, I wear contacts now
every day, but back then I wore glasses pretty often because we would often work until like,
you know, one in the morning. And my contacts would dry out and the bobble, the Mike bobblehead
had had actual glasses on. And at some point, I think when we moved, the glasses broke off,
which is a bummer. And I've often thought about trying to repair them. So I wouldn't put them
back on. So I have a Mike bobblehead and I do have somewhere and I don't even know where
there was a moment at which the everyone realized that the world's best boss mug would be a thing
that was going to matter for the run of the show. And Phil ordered like 24 of them, just as in case
they broke or in case we needed more of them or whatever. And I asked him if I could have one
and he gave me one. So I have a world's best boss mug, not one that was ever used. It's not
a famous one. It's not the one from the opening credits or anything. But I do have a world's
best boss mug that is technically speaking from the set, I guess. If you want to stretch the
definition of from the set. And you know, what else you have is you have your binder with all
your notes. That is amazing to me. I have that. I have a lot of notebooks that I still look at
from those early days. Yeah. And I'm sure there's a couple other things here and there somewhere.
Someone, I think after the finale, Wardrobe asked me if I wanted to keep any of the most clothes.
And I believe what I said was please burn them in a fire.
Oh my gosh, Mike, this was so fun. Thank you so much. Thank you for having me. It's so nice
to see you too. I'm so pleased that you are the official voice of the show. It seems very fitting
to me that the world is seeing the show through your eyes. Oh, that's very kind of you to say.
We're loving it. That was amazing. I love talking to Mike. I could talk to him forever.
Me too. And he said to us, you guys, he was like, if you ever have any questions for me about anything
for the office or other things, let me know. And I was like, Jenna, how often can we text him?
Exactly. Exactly. Yes, Mike, get ready for an email flurry.
You love the word flurry. It's cute. It's a flurry. I mean, instead of
Jenna's blowing up your phone, she flurries up your phone. I'm going to flurry it.
Well, you guys, Mike's book is called How to Be Perfect, the correct answer to
every moral question. It is out now. And Mike really is giving away 100% of everything he's
making on his book to five different charities. And the book is awesome. Well, that's our show
this week, guys. Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Office Ladies. Next week,
we have the promotion. Yeah, Jim gets a little mini office in the office. He gets a glass box.
He does. In the middle of the bullpen. It's strange and interesting. And we'll tell you all about it.
See you next week.
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 Kiefer. And our associate
producer is Ainsley Bubicoe. Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
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