Office Ladies - Local Ad
Episode Date: February 17, 2021This week we’re breaking down Local Ad. Director Jason Reitman sends in clips about his experience directing this great episode. The ladies talk about Michael getting the entire office to shoot thei...r own Dunder Mifflin commercial, as Dwight deals with his breakup with Angela by retreating further into his Second (Second) Life. Jenna does a deep dive on earworms, the ladies make crossover connections that all seem to lead to the TV show, Monk, and Angela shares why she had to be superimposed onto the rooftop scene. So if you don’t hate being titillated, break me off a piece of that Fancy Feast and enjoy this ep!
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. Welcome
to Office Ladies, everyone. Hello. Hi. Good morning or good afternoon. Or maybe good evening.
We don't know when you listen. No. So we're going to cover all of it. What if I was like,
actually, we do? What? We are here today to talk about local ad, season four, episode
nine, which I'm going to declare a hidden gem. Whenever you say I'm going to declare,
you know where my brain goes. I can't help it. Bankruptcy? Yes. For the rest of my life,
I'm just going to walk this earth and someone's going to be like, I declare and I'm going
to think bankruptcy. Yeah. You can't help it. It's like that's what she said. We can't
help it. That's what she said. I don't know. It doesn't work. It is a gem. Let's hear
about it, Jenna. It was written by BJ Novak and directed by Jason Reitman. Here is a summary.
When the Scranton branch is asked to participate in a Dunder Mifflin television ad, Michael
seizes his chance to exhibit his creativity and enlists the help and talents of his employees.
I mean, has Michael ever had a more exciting day at work? No. I can't imagine the giddiness
that he had, how he woke up to his bacon on his George Foreman grill by his bed. He ate
it real fast, nudged Jan because shoes passed out and went to work. He is on fire today.
Also in this episode, Dwight explores the online world of second life as a means of
escaping his real life pain about his breakup with Angela. And Andy will not stop asking
Dwight's advice in his pursuit of Angela. It's just torturing poor Dwight. It is. Have
you ever had a crush where your friend was maybe liking the same guy but was doing better
or something? And they'd be like, hey, he said this, what should I say back? And you're
just like, oh, it's the worst. It is poor, poor Dwight.
Well, let's get into some fast facts. Fast fact number one, like I said, this episode
is directed by Jason Reitman. Jason Reitman, Golden Globe nominated for his movie, Thank
You for Smoking. He also won the Independent Spirit Award for best screenplay for that
and Academy Award nominated director of Juno, among many other things. I mean, amazing.
Yeah. Now when he came to direct the office, he had finished Juno, but it had not come
out yet. So all of those accolades were in his future. But one of the stars of Juno was
Rainn Wilson. Yes. A little connection. And Jenna, I'm not let you do your fast facts,
but this whole episode for me is about crossover connections with people. Oh, local ad colon
crossover connections. Local ad colon hidden Jim slash crossover connections. There it
is. Hashtag. That's what she said. That's what she said. Jenna, I have been emailing
with Jason over these last few months because Oscar and Brian and I were part of Jason's
remake of the Princess Bride for Quibi. It was so good. It was so fun. And we all shot
it, you know, separately, like at our homes. And then Jason added together all the dialogue.
I played Vasini, Oscar played Inigo and Brian played Fessick. It was so much fun. So we
were trading emails and I was like, Hey, by the way, local ad is coming up. We just send
in some audio clips and he was so generous. These are so great. I'm excited for you guys
to hear him. Of course, the first thing we asked him was how he came to direct on the
office. And here is what he had to say. Like any human being who was alive at the time,
I was an enormous fan of the office. I decided it was the greatest thing on television. It
was this collection of the greatest talent actors and writers who were making a generation
defining comedy, which was somehow sweet, but always subversive. And the storytelling
was great. You know, feature directors that I really admired had already come and directed
the show like Harold Ramis. I think I had already directed Rain in Juneau. And I had
these little connections to other people on the show. I feel like I knew a fair amount
of the cast and some writers on the show already. I don't even know why. But either my agent
reached out and said, Hey, do you want to direct any television? And I think my response
was, I would be up for directing the office. And Rain made it even sound like a better
opportunity by saying, look, the worst you can do when you direct the office is get
a B plus and the best you can do is an A. All right. I mean, I always used to tell
people that directing the office was like someone asking you, do you want to drive
my Lamborghini? And say, okay, it's just a, it was a show. And clearly, particularly
when I came in, because I came in, in season four, it's so clearly knew exactly who it
was and how it was made that as a director, really you are simply the first audience and
you have the opportunity to maybe, you know, point a couple of people in the right direction.
But otherwise, as a director on the office, it's a learning experience and a joyful one.
How about a hidden gem of an audio clip, Jason and crossover connections? Yes. It's all there.
I love what he said about directing the office was like, if your friend said, Hey, do you
want to drive my Lamborghini? Like so nice. We also asked Jason if he had any first impressions
of, you know, being on the set and being with all of us. I remember getting there and I
was just blown away by the directing process that the camera operators were meant to be
performers themselves. And unlike anything I'd ever directed in the past, I was given
a floor plan and asked to draw out the performance of the camera operators, which direction they
would go and which direction they would look because the idea was that within a single
take, you should be able to cover every camera angle that can be used in the editing of a
scene. So this was a unique challenge as a director and kind of a thrilling one where
you knew that there was eight shots. You wanted to get off a wide, a couple mediums closeups
and you want to be able to pan into reactions. And that somehow you had two cameras, you
had two operators and they were going to need to catch all these things without catching
each other. And they would duck under desks as one would hand by the other. It was like
doing Sudoku. It was like this fun problem to solve. And at the same time, a thrill to
watch the actual operators who knew how to do it. I remember the set was freezing cold,
which was Steve Carell's request, if I remember right, this whole cold, this comedy thing.
I love that. I love cold. So that was fine by me.
Okay. Here's what I have to say about that audio clip. The two things that he mentions
are one just incredible, masterful choreography of the camera work and that it was freezing
cold. That should tell you how cold our set was.
I mean, I have pictures of people that weren't in scenes like hair and makeup and full on
parkas with hoods up and gloves. But I am really glad that Jason described the sort
of dance that our cameraman did. I mean, we've talked about it a little bit, but I thought
he was very eloquent in how he described it. Cause it was a really just fascinating, beautiful
thing to watch. If you weren't in the scene and you could watch those guys and I was like
always so impressed.
And I imagine especially weird to see the first time walking onto our set and seeing
all that they did to get the shot.
Yeah. One of the things I remember about Jason is him breaking and laughing when we did talking
heads. I just remember him cracking up cause I had one in this and there were also some
in the deleted scenes that didn't make it in. So he must have had a whole day of talking
heads and he talked about it in the DVD commentary that one of the things he wasn't really prepared
for as a director on this show is how the director is part of the cast because the director
sits in the conference room when you do talking heads and we talk directly to the director.
Yes. As part of the mockumentary and he said he kept laughing and that is my memory too.
Yes. You're so right. We'll talk about it when we get to it, but Pam has a talking head
that we could not get through.
Well we're really grateful that Jason sent in these clips and we have even more. We'll
sprinkle them throughout the episode.
Yes.
Next up is VastFact number two, which is all about second life.
Oh, Jenna, let me tell you, when I rewatched this and saw the second life storyline, I
was like, oh, I know my lady, Jenna Fisher, is going to do a deep dive on this because
you love these kind of games. You play these kind of games.
Well, I played The Sims, which is very different from second life. Oh, by the way, second life
is real and it still exists today. And like Dwight says in the episode, it's not a game.
Sims is a game where you have a character and you have to eat food and go to the bathroom
and have a job and try to build a mansion and things like that.
This is what I remember, Jenna. I remember you built a whole world. You are working
on your world. Isn't that like a second life?
A little bit. You know, I stopped playing Sims when I had built myself a little house
and I had a little cat that was just like my real cat, Andy. And in the game, I was
petting my fake cat and I looked over at my real cat who was like, and I thought, yeah,
I need to get out of this game and pet my real cat.
Oh, man.
So second life, it predated Twitter and Instagram and social media. And it was almost like a
virtual online chat room. You created an avatar of yourself and then you could go in and interact
with other people's avatars.
Like Reddit, like if I animated myself and then I could go in a Reddit chat room.
Yes, very similar. But you can build things. You could build a little hotel and run it
and then other avatars could come to your hotel.
Oh, that's kind of fun.
You can go to a concert. There were college classes, press conferences that you could
attend as your avatar. And you could even buy land, shop for clothes and gadgets, visit
with friends. It was this online world. It was created by Linden Lab and it was just
like a social experience. It wasn't a game. You didn't win anything, but you could earn
money in the game that you would then spend on these different experiences.
I get it. I could see where that would be really fun. It kind of reminds me a little
bit of this movie we just watched with the kids called Ready Player One. You sort of
design your avatar and you get to go explore and interact with other people.
I've not seen that movie, but that sounds on point.
You should see it.
Okay.
I think you would like it.
Okay.
I'll watch the first 20 minutes of it.
Yeah. Tell me about the towel next to the coffee pot.
You got it.
Is there a charming random detail I can hone in on in the first 20 minutes of the film?
I'm sure you'll find it.
So much shade.
Okay, go on.
It's good you're still not bitter about it though.
We had a fan question about Second Life from Winston F., Olivia Lovell, Gianna Williams
and John Lescombe. They just said, can you please tell us everything about using Second
and Second Life on the Office? It seems like such a big undertaking to program a whole
massive multiplayer online game for a single episode. Who came up with it? How did you
do it?
Well, you know who I had to reach out to.
Kent-a-kenta-kantapedia.
Kentapedia. Kent reached out to the developers of Second Life, Clear Ink and Linden Labs
and we entered into a license agreement with them. They ended up creating all of the avatars
and animation for us. Kent had to send pictures of John and Rain over to those guys and they
drew out little avatars of them based on Jason and Greg's direction and that's how they
made it.
It's so cool. And Kent is so awesome. We go to Kent every week.
I know. Thanks Kent.
We got a letter, Angela, from SynSkyberg and listen to this. I worked at Second Life when
this episode came out and we were so excited. I was the head of customer service at the
time and I got all our team together virtually to watch the episode. Second Life was and
is a crazy place and so much really nuts stuff happened in there. This was a big highlight
for all of us.
I bet Syn has some good stories.
No. I didn't want to open up that Pandora's box because I thought, oh no, I don't want
to get anyone in trouble.
But how cool.
I am now curious. That is so cool.
Are you ready for Fast Facts number three?
Yeah.
I'm calling this one Kit Kat Fun Facts.
Oh, did you do a deep dive on Kit Kats?
Lady, of course I did.
As you know, in this episode, the character of Andy cannot remember the end of the famous
jingle, give me a break, give me a break, break me off a piece of that Kit Kat Bar.
Yeah.
So I thought you all might like to know that the Kit Kat Bar was brought to market in 1930
by Round Tree of York in the United Kingdom.
It was advertised as the best companion to a cup of tea.
Round Tree of York, maker of chocolate, seventh of its name, best companion, cup of tea.
I don't know.
I'm sorry.
I just make everything a Game of Thrones title.
Even though I never finished Game of Thrones like John Wick, I love your Game of Thrones
names that you make, Angela.
Thank you.
I feel seen somewhat.
The jingle that Andy can't remember debuted in the United States in 1986, and it is still
the jingle today.
The words are by Ken Shouldman, and the music was written by Michael A. Levine.
Versions of the original have been covered by Carrie Underwood, Sean Colvin, and countless
actors who have been seen in the commercials.
But here's where it gets interesting.
Okay.
This song, the Kit Kat jingle, was cited in a study by a researcher at the University
of Cincinnati who declared it one of the top 10 earworms.
An earworm is a bit of a melody or bit of a song that becomes stuck in your head.
Oh, yes.
The researcher's name is James Calaris, and he studied this phenomenon.
Why do bits of songs get stuck in our heads?
He said that it happens to almost everyone at some point in their life, but he found
that it did happen more to women and musicians.
Hmm.
Huh.
I have had, by Mennon, stuck in my head for years.
Oh, okay.
That was not on his list, but do you know what was on his list of warmest songs?
Let's hear it.
The Chili's Jingle Baby Back Ribs.
Oh, yes.
Which has also been featured on The Office.
The other songs that made the top 10 were, We Will Rock You.
Do Let the Dogs Out, The Mission Impossible Theme Song, Woop There It Is, The Lion Sleeps
Tonight, It's a Small World After All, and YMCA.
Those are the warmest songs.
The warmest songs.
Well, I guess by Mennon isn't really a song.
No, but it's a bit of melody.
Yes.
So you don't get the whole song trapped in your head.
You just get some little bit of the melody stuck in your head.
Yeah.
There you go.
Well, I feel like everybody, you could probably walk down the street and stick a microphone
in someone's face and say, give me a break, and they'd immediately go into it.
Yeah.
Everyone knows that.
That's all I got, lady.
I thought those were wonderful, fast facts.
I'm excited to get into this episode, and I've got some stuff coming up.
Well, I hope it's a ton of hidden gems and crossover connections.
I just want to remind you that's the theme of this episode.
Thank you for the reminder.
Let's take a break and come back with some more hidden gems and local ad.
All right.
So this episode starts with a conference room scene.
Michael is getting the gang to brainstorm ideas for their upcoming commercial.
He's super excited.
Right at the top.
Phyllis shouts out, dancing baby.
Jenna, you know what she's talking about, right?
There were those commercials with dancing babies in them, right?
It was this phenomenon.
Okay.
Here's my little mini deep dive, guys.
It's referred to as the Uka Chaka Baby.
It was a 3D rendered animation of a baby dancing.
It became a media phenomenon.
It was one of the very first viral videos in the 90s.
It was this dancing baby animation.
It went all over these popular web forums, websites.
It got emailed to people, demo videos, commercials.
Eventually, it ended up in mainstream television.
It was featured on CBS CNN.
And then what I remember it from is it ended up being part of these fantasy kind of things
that Allie McBeal would have on her show.
Oh, yes.
Right?
Yes, the dancing baby on Allie McBeal.
I remember that.
So this was one of the very first viral videos.
And I went back and watched it.
It's so creepy.
It's so creepy.
I have to put it in our stories.
It is just the creepiest thing.
America, what did we love about it?
Sometimes you look back and you're like, why did we go so crazy over that thing?
I think because we'd never seen anything like it.
This was like sort of the beginning of what memes and gifs or gifs, what do you call those?
This was the beginning of that.
This was this 3D animated baby dancing awkwardly to this song.
And people were like, oh my God.
Lady, also at the very beginning of this episode, we had a fan catch from Linda Kay,
Sadie Kay, and Jackie Hewitt in the background of Michael's talking head.
Angela, you are way out of character.
What is going on there?
It's at 16 seconds, everybody, 16 seconds.
I know.
I have it.
I took a screen grab of it.
I am literally laughing and then I just start chatting away.
You see my mouth going?
I am so out of character.
I clearly didn't realize I was in the shot.
Because they would have Steve do talking heads right outside the conference room.
And we were in the background, but it was like a little blurry, you know?
Yeah.
And I didn't realize.
But I looked and it's Rain, Brian, me, you, and Ed.
And I guess I'm telling a story.
You are holding court.
You are seated with your legs crossed and we're all kind of standing around you.
And you are clearly telling a very fun story.
I know.
I caught it too.
It was amazing.
And also, it sets up in this scene, the great runner of Andy not being able to remember
the end of the Kit Kat jingle, and Jim immediately says, don't help him, so no one helps him.
I know.
That is the worst.
I know.
It also sets up that Pam has volunteered to make a logo for Michael's commercial.
She's going to design a logo.
She's very excited.
Well, she says she's taking an animation class.
I love that.
I know.
I was like, go Pam.
The ad guys arrive, Michael runs out of the conference room and he is immediately going
to start pitching them his ideas.
He says he wants this commercial to be like MTV on crack.
He goes around.
He introduces them to everyone in the office.
There's even more in the deleted scenes.
He literally goes up to like every single person and does like a horrible introduction
of all of them.
The way only Michael can.
If you want to see some more awkward, cringy Michael introductions, go to the deleted scenes.
These two ad guys were played by Kyle Bornheimer and Tim Kang.
You probably recognize these guys.
Kyle has been on a ton of stuff.
He was on Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
He's done a bunch of commercials.
Tim is the same way.
He went on to be a regular on the mentalist and the reboot of Magnum PI.
Yes.
Are you ready for some crossover connection?
Play them on me.
Tim, who plays Tim, ready for this?
His daughter and my daughter were on the same soccer team in 2019, the Falcons.
I was the team parent.
My ex-husband Warren was the coach.
We make it work, y'all.
We make it work.
And the Falcons made it to the finals in our AYSO division.
We went on to play in the regional playoffs, you guys.
And then we advanced to the area playoffs.
The girls came in third and they were the runner-up team to go to state.
Lady, I will never forget your messages to me during this time of Isabelle's soccer
team going so far.
It was the never-ending year of soccer.
It was.
I would text you and I would say, what are you up to?
And you're like, lady, we are still in this soccer tournament.
Yes.
But it was so exciting.
I remember how excited those girls were.
And Tim is one of the other parents of another girl.
I love that.
Yes.
So Tim and I have sat on the sidelines together and cheered our girls on.
Well, I have a connection to Kyle.
It's not as exciting as that.
But we were both in the movie Blades of Glory.
He played the rink PA announcer.
And so I guess in a way, we also both sat in stands and cheered on a sporting event
of ice skating, though fictional.
Yes.
Well, I have another crossover connection for you, Angela.
I think I know this one.
This one's really weird, and it's going to be a runner through this whole episode.
Like every guest star in this episode, local ad has also had a guest appearance on Monk.
It's so wild, isn't it?
What is going on?
Kyle played uniform cop in Mr. Monk and the Kid, and Tim played Mr. Breneman in Mr. Monk
is up all night.
I know.
It's so wild to me.
We have more crossover connections coming up, but there's your first two.
Now we get into this episode, and it opens with Dwight playing Second Life.
And Jenna, at three minutes, 39 seconds, is it just me or does Dwight fly like mother
in Raised by Wolves?
I don't know Raised by Wolves.
I know.
I knew you would know it.
This sounds very similar to Game of Thrones.
Okay, Raised by Wolves is nothing like Game of Thrones.
It is just the weirdest show on HBO Max.
Here's the overview of Raised by Wolves.
Two androids are tasked with raising human children on a mysterious planet as the human
colony threatens to be torn apart by religious differences.
The androids learn that controlling the beliefs of humans is treacherous and a difficult task.
Also the androids mother is able to have babies.
It's very bizarre, Jenna.
It's so bizarre.
It is not a surprise to me that I'm watching Last Tango and Halifax instead of Raised by
Wolves.
Now listen, Last Tango and Halifax is right up my alley.
You know I love any kind of like BBC programming, but I also love me some weird sci-fi.
Okay, I'm going to show you.
This is how Dwight flies in Simple Life, and this is how mother flies.
I see it.
They both go upright with their arms out.
It's very creepy.
I know.
Anyone else that watched Raised by Wolves, go to 3 minutes 39 seconds.
Watch how Dwight does his lift off, and it will remind you of mother.
Angela will also put that on the pod.
I'm going to put it in our stories.
I looked up Dwight's profile on Second Life.
You did?
I did.
It's still there.
Here's what he has down as his interests.
School cars, pop culture, and sci-fi buff, in parentheses, Harry Potter, The Lord of
the Rings, Star Wars, 24, Alias Smallville, The Apprentice, Lost and Battlestar Galactica.
His talents are listed as Avid Cornhusk Dollmaker, Beat Sculptor, and Not Tying Champion.
He had to list a goal for his Second Life, and he wrote, to calculate the exchange between
Shrewt Bucks and Lyndon Dollars.
Lyndon Dollars are the currency in Second Life.
Okay.
There you have it.
When he's not flying like mother, he is trying to calculate the exchange between Shrewt Bucks
and Lyndon Dollars.
I love that.
Up next, Michael is going to pitch his big idea to the ad guys.
I want you guys to know a deleted scene would have come before this between Jim and Michael
that is so delicious and fun.
Actually Michael wants to practice pitch to Jim.
He brings Jim in the office, right?
He has Jim sit behind his desk so he can practice pitch, and he says, this is his pitch to Jim.
We start on a blank piece of paper.
We widen to reveal ancient Rome.
Jim's like, can't do that.
Michael's like, okay, we widen to reveal a spaceship blasting out of a woman's womb.
What?
Then they do this very funny role play where Jim's like, get out of my office.
His like becomes a whole thing.
But for real, the pitch Michael settles on is this one, and I thought we had to hear
it.
Sam, can you play it?
Little girl in a field, hole in a flower.
We zoom back to find that she's in the desert, and the field is an oasis.
Zoom back further.
The desert is a sandbox in the world's largest resort hotel.
Zoom back further, the hotel is actually the playground of the world's largest prison.
But we zoom back further.
Okay.
I can tell that your time is valuable.
Oh, well, I love what he says when the guy is like, listen, I can tell your time is valuable.
And Michael's like, well, actually, I don't get paid by the hour anymore.
I get paid by the year.
So basically, I can waste as much time as I want.
Not a problem.
Yes.
I love that this is the pitch that he led with and knowing that he had other ideas, but
this is what he went with.
The ad guys are great.
They're so real in how they react to Michael.
They say, listen, we made something for the Nashville branch.
Why don't we show that to you?
And it'll give you an idea of what we can do.
So he plays this commercial, and then they explain the only part of the commercial they're
allowed to alter is the last five seconds.
Yeah.
And Michael's like, what?
And at the end, he goes, aren't you know, you could clap, you know, make it your own.
Yeah.
This is where you can really get creative.
You can be inside.
You can be outside.
We had a fan question, Aaron, Jassa, Harry Driscoll, Molly Coats, and many others.
They wanted to know who directed this commercial that plays in the middle of the episode.
Was it Jason Reitman?
Yes.
It was Jason Reitman.
I texted with BJ about this commercial, and he told me that Jason Reitman had directed
real commercials.
Before this, and he remembers that it was so cool because Jason laid out this big circular
track on the floor and had the camera going around in circles, and BJ was like, I had
never seen anything like that before.
It was so cool.
Well we asked Jason about filming this fake commercial, and here's what he had to say.
The episode local ad contained two commercials inside it, and I had been a commercial director.
I was a bad commercial director, I should say.
You know, the majority of the commercials that I directed were ones that if you saw,
you would revoke my director-skilled card, you would just say you're not allowed to
direct again.
I would name clients, but that would be rude.
But you know, typical fast food and beer, and just not good work.
I was not Spike Jonze.
But I learned that format.
There's certain things that you may not know how to do authentically, but you know how
to satirize.
I know that I could never direct a David Fincher film, but I love him so much as a filmmaker
that I could probably direct a satire of a David Fincher film.
And so I don't know how to direct a great commercial, but I think I know how to direct
the satire of a good commercial.
And that was the kind of, the great thing about doing the Dunder Mifflin ad was I felt
my commercial brain trying to do the best, worst version of what Dunder Mifflin would
hand Michael Scott, which was this kind of cutesy commercial.
It starred Jeff Whitsky, who is an actor I've worked with since I was a kid.
He literally was in my first short film and has been in everything I've ever made since.
And he was the star of it and that was great.
I love that Jason just uses his friend Jeff in everything.
I just think that's wonderful.
Jenna, I want you to be in everything I do from here on out.
Great.
I love it.
Okay.
Well, we have some crossover connections with Jeff.
Are you ready?
He was also in Mindy and Brenda, the TV short written by Mindy Kaling and Brenda Whithers.
Oh.
Yeah.
He played the sales clerk.
You know, lady, guess what?
He also did a guest spot on Monk.
He played human cannonball and Mr. Monk goes to the circus.
That one really got me.
I might need to look that one up.
Human cannonball.
Very curious.
You might need to see what the human cannonball looks like.
Yes.
So not only did Jason hire Jeff again, he also hired a friend that he had worked with
before to compose that music.
That's sort of like, I don't know, it's like salsa music that's playing in the background.
He was composed by the same composer that did all the music for Juno, Matteo Messina.
I love that.
Now things are going to get awkward.
Andy pulls Dwight aside to get advice on how to get to first base with Angela.
He says they've been necking a lot, but that means that they are literally rubbing their
necks together.
There's no kissing involved.
Why don't we have any footage of that?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Angela, we had a fan question from Amy Noki.
She's dying to know what is your backstory for Angela and Andy and what is with the necking?
Do you think this was standard for Angela or is it because she can't stomach Andy and
she's just trying to get back at Dwight?
I love this question.
I thought that Angela went out with Andy as sort of a revenge date.
She was very mad at Dwight.
She really thought she was done with Dwight.
She was super, super angry with him.
As she started dating Andy, I think it became very clear to her that really Dwight had her
heart, but she was too prideful to admit that.
She tried to date Andy, but it was a chore.
I think the necking thing is just something she was doing to put him off.
How can I let him touch me, but not really touch me?
I think her heart wasn't in it from the beginning.
Yeah.
I was thinking about it.
You know, Angela can be very fussy and very structured, but we saw her going at it in
Jim's little toy playhouse thing, an email surveillance, so when she's into someone,
it's not like she puts people through these weird paces of like, okay, first we just rub
our necks together.
I think this was exclusive to Andy.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And maybe the senator too.
Perhaps.
I really think Dwight was the love of her life.
It just took them a while to get there.
Poor Dwight.
He's having to listen to all this and he tries to put Andy off.
He says, I don't think we should talk about this.
People might overhear us, but then Andy just takes that to mean that they should come up
with code names.
Yeah.
Dwight's like, okay, well, Angela can stay the same, but let's change Andy to Dwight.
Hmm.
Okay.
Yeah.
And Andy's like, that's not really, that's not how this works.
Lady, this really reminded me of how you and I tried to come up with code names when
we would have conversations and we were afraid other people could overhear us.
Yeah.
And our code names were about this good.
They were so obvious.
It would be like a person's initials.
So obvious.
I know.
We're not going to be spies, Jenna.
We're not going to be spies, but we're going to be mom detectives solving small crimes.
I would love to be a mom detective with you when the pandemic is over.
Mom detectives solving the small crimes no one cares about in your neighborhood.
It's a hit.
Who graffitied the construction cone at the intersection?
Exactly.
We'll find out.
We'll tell you, we're on it.
So coming up, we have a scene between Ryan and Michael that is so funny to me.
And Michael calls him, you know, to gripe, first of all, he calls him Rye.
And then Ryan is like, don't call me about small problems.
What have I told you about that?
Yeah.
And he says, well, you don't like it when I call you about big problems either.
So what do you want from me?
What do you want?
So Jason said on the DVD commentary that they shot this in real time.
Now, Jenna, do you remember they had built a little office that was Ryan's office at
corporate, right?
Yeah.
And they had BJ, you know, on the other side of the soundstage in this little room with
a camera with him.
And then they had a camera with Steve in his office as Michael.
And that's the room Jason sat in.
And they shot it simultaneously.
And I think it really works because the chemistry is happening in real time.
I always loved when we did that because it meant that you could improvise a little and
the other person could react to you and you would get it on both cameras.
Yes.
And BJ said something I thought was so delightful because it's one of my favorite lines in this
whole episode.
BJ said he wrote the line, I can't cook and I'm starting a restaurant.
And the restaurant he says he's going to start is Mike's Cereal Shack.
It's going to have every cereal you can get in the store.
Yeah.
I want you to know I did a little bit of a deep dive on Mike's Cereal Shack.
I had to know.
Has anyone opened a cereal shack?
The answer is no, but a woman named Catherine has designed the most adorable vintage poster
for Mike's Cereal Shack.
She has a company on Etsy called Cat Bone Design.
It's so, so cute.
I'm going to put a picture of it in the pod.
And then her profile really got me, Ange.
Her profile says I'm a stay at home mom with a passion for creating colorful and happy homes.
The design keeps me balanced and brings me joy.
And being a designer means I can share that joy with others.
Jenna shared it with me.
It is adorable.
We're going to put it in our stories, you guys, so you can look at the rest of her art.
There's one more thing I want to say about this scene before we move on.
Ryan's assistant.
Yes.
She pokes her head in the door at the beginning and she says, Eddie Murphy is on the line
for you.
Yes.
Well, Ryan's assistant was played by Virginia Newcombe.
And I'll have you know she has not been on an episode of Monk.
I know.
I looked to see if she was on Monk too.
But she has been on The Walking Dead.
Oh, so no crossover connection, but perhaps you recognize her from The Walking Dead.
So Michael says, you know what?
Ad guys go away.
I'm going to do this on my own.
He's going to stake his whole reputation on it.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
He calls David Wallace.
Yeah.
And he says, listen, I'm going to make it.
If you don't like it, fine.
I'll bring those guys back and I'll pay for it on my own dime.
I need to do this.
Well, he leads off the whole call with, I don't know who talks to their boss like this.
I would never talk to a boss like this.
He's like, hey, yeah, Ryan's being a little bitch again.
And Ryan goes, I'm on the call, Michael.
And he's like, hey, bro.
Like so awkward.
I just love Ryan's matter of factness.
He is never rattled by Michael being Michael and he's so direct and honest with Michael.
He is to Michael what Daryl is to Kelly.
Yes.
Just the straight truth.
And I feel like neither one of them knows how to handle that.
Not at all.
This scene with BJ as Ryan just being very direct reminded me the most of who BJ is in
real life.
It's true.
And he's very fair, but he'll break it down for you.
He'll be like, I don't think you should do that.
And here's why.
You know?
And it's what I love about him.
Me too.
Everybody needs that friend who doesn't blow smoke up your ass, frankly.
You need that person that you can call and you know which friends are which friends.
You know the friends you call when you want them to agree with you.
And then you need that friend that you can call to get the straight truth.
Right.
And BJ is that friend.
You can call him, but you have to be prepared to hear the real answer.
Not what you want to hear, but what you need to hear.
Yes.
It's like having the friend that tells you the piece of broccoli is in your teeth.
Yes.
You need that friend.
Yes.
I have a little bit of a fan catch from this phone call scene coming in from Ohm Patel
and Mina Hoyt.
When David Wallace and Michael are on the call, the camera keeps swishing down to the
phone.
At first, the time on the phone shows that it is 9.38.
But at the end of the call, the clock shows 9.22.
That's a good catch.
I want you to know that the date on the clock says October 3rd, 2007.
That is when we shot this episode.
I think that clock is the real time they were shooting this episode.
They shot it in the morning around 9 a.m. on October 3rd, 2007.
I'm positive of that.
So Michael's about to gather everyone in the conference room, but maybe we should take
a break and then we'll come back and get into his big ideas for his big commercial.
They have a huge shoot ahead of them, all hands on deck.
I know.
Sue Grafton.
Sue Grafton.
We'll be back.
Okay.
Okay, we are back and everyone is in the conference room.
Michael is giving a big pep talk about how everyone is creative.
Don't let anyone tell you that you're not creative.
And this leads into a series of talking heads.
And I want you guys to know there are even more in the deleted scenes.
Pretty much every single person had a talking head in this episode, but not all of them
made it in.
So now Michael starts delegating jobs to people in preparation for this big commercial shoot.
Yes.
He says, Kelly, makeup, Oscar, costume design, guys, go to 10 minutes, four seconds.
Oscar shoots a look directly to camera, right down the barrel.
That is so great.
When Michael says costume design, look at that moment.
And then he says, Phyllis, get a celebrity.
Yes.
When we move out into the bullpen, this is when Phyllis learns that Sue Grafton, the
mystery novelist, is at the Steamtown Mall doing a book signing.
And Michael says, go, Phyllis, go.
You go get her.
You convince her to be in our commercial and don't take no for an answer.
He says, yeah, this will be a big coop.
Big coop.
This is when Andy is going to try to butter up Angel a little bit by asking if Sue Grafton
is attractive.
To which Creed says, oh, yeah, she's super hot.
And Andy says, maybe Angela should just pretend to be Sue Grafton in the commercial since
Angela is also super hot.
Yeah.
Angela's like, that's not going to happen.
It's not going to happen because as you reveal in your talking head, you find the mystery
genre disgusting and you hate being titillated.
Angela, we had a fan question from Chloe M. She would like to know how many takes did
it take for you to get out the line?
I hate being titillated without laughing.
Chloe, I think they used the only one.
I think I only did one where I didn't laugh.
We were cracking up.
Angela Martin is just wired so tight.
I laughed at just saying the mystery genre was disgusting.
Disgusting.
Disgusting.
I love every time Angela has very, very strong feelings on random subjects such as this.
I do too.
Well, you know, I had an alternate talking head that didn't make it in.
I guess they were deciding between which one.
I definitely think they picked the best one, but I want to share with you what the alternate
talking head is.
It's in the deleted scenes.
In this deleted talking head, Angela Martin says, this is not my first commercial.
When I was in high school, I played a six-year-old in an electronic store ad and it was humiliating.
I mean, how small was I in high school that I could be passed for a six-year-old?
I love it.
And who made her do this?
Did she have a stage mom?
Did Angela Martin have a stage mom?
I don't know.
You did the pageant.
Right.
I did pageants.
And now I did commercials.
What was her childhood?
We had a fan question from Jay Tickle.
Can y'all talk about any commercials you've been in?
Oh, Jay.
I was in so many.
That's how I like supported myself.
I was an operator at 1-800-Dennis and I did commercials.
When I moved to Los Angeles, my one connection that I had was that my roommate had a commercial
agent.
And I was convinced that all I had to do was give this commercial agent my headshot and
this person would also become my commercial agent.
That did not happen.
It took me about two years to find a commercial agent and then I never booked a single commercial
in a speaking role.
Ever in my whole career as an actress, I have never been in a commercial.
I've been in the background of many commercials.
I did a lot of background work and then finally, about a year ago, I was approached by Smirnoff
Vodka to be in a commercial with Ted Danson.
I flipped out.
My mom was so excited.
She said, Jenna, you're finally going to be in a commercial 20 years later.
Finally booked a commercial.
Jenna, I loved that commercial you did with Ted Danson.
I thought it was so stinking cute.
I did a ton of commercials.
I did a Buick spot.
Oh, I did a Lay's Lestra.
Remember the potato chips?
Yeah.
Did you get anal leakage?
No.
But that was on the bag.
It said it caused anal leakage, but I ate those chips all day, guys, and I was totes
fun.
Well, there you go.
That's the best commercial ever.
I did a Nordstrom's commercial.
I actually found my old sizzle reel.
You guys, when you're out here as a commercial actor, you would put all your commercials on
one video to send out to people like a visual resume, and I found it, Jenna.
That's amazing.
I might have to put it in Office Ladies.
We should put our early commercials in there.
All I have is me blurry in the background of a telephone commercial, the Jurassic Park
ride.
I'll put my Lay's Lestra spot, and you put your Jurassic Park ride.
We'll put it in the stories.
I don't even know if I can find it anymore.
I'll look for it.
I think they took it down off YouTube.
That's too bad.
Those would be too cute ones that we could put in.
I have another fan question, Angela, from Ashley Snell, who would like to know, has
Sue Grafton ever held a book signing at the Steamtown Mall?
Ashley, I looked it up, and from what I could find, no.
She is a real author.
She is a New York Times best-selling author, actually.
She is best known for writing a series of mystery novels starring a character named
Kinsey Milhoney.
Kinsey.
Milhoney.
Kinsey.
And it's spelled exactly like my last name, it's K-I-N-S-E-Y.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah.
I couldn't believe it.
It's the Alphabet Mystery Series.
Kinsey Milhoney was a former police officer turned private investigator.
Hmm.
Jenna, should I play Kinsey Milhoney?
You should definitely look into this.
I have a little bit of extra trivia.
This is not the first time that there is a Sue Grafton reference on the office.
Back on The Fire, which was also written by BJ Novak, Michael confuses Stanley Kaplan,
who is the founder of a company that makes test prep materials with Sue Grafton.
Now, I texted BJ about this because I was thinking, does BJ have a connection to Sue
Grafton?
BJ's father was a famous writer.
I thought maybe his family knew Sue Grafton, but BJ said no, he just thought it was a really
funny reference.
There you go.
All right, we have got to talk about this fantastic jingle that Daryl has written for
the commercial.
Yes.
Back by the break room, we have Daryl on keyboard, surrounded by Andy, Kevin, Creed,
and Kelly, all singing this song that's meant to be in Michael's commercial.
Michael comes up, he doesn't care for it.
He was really hoping they were going to write a rap.
Yeah.
Daryl's like, what's a rap?
And Michael's like, oh, Daryl, I'm going to make you a mix.
And Daryl's like, yeah, I am.
Looking forward.
Yeah.
We had a fan question from Kaylee Adkins, Winston F., Rob Holland, Alyssa Patterson,
and Matthew Krule, and many others who wanted to know who wrote this jingle.
Ooh, we have some good trivia about that, don't we?
Yes.
The jingle in this scene was written by BJ Novak's brother, Jesse Novak, who is a professional
composer.
He's also done compositions for Bojack Horseman and the Mindy Project.
He wrote this jingle.
How fun is that?
They kept it in the family.
It's so great.
Well, Jenna, now Jim overhears Andy telling Dwight he has an update for him for Operation
Fallen Angel.
And Jim is worried about Dwight and goes over to Pam, you know, going to share with her
about his second life like, dude.
Yes.
Jim has created his own second life avatar because he's worried about Dwight.
Yes.
And he shows Pam, look at how bad it is.
I'm going to take you into second life.
Dwight has created second second life so that he can disconnect even more from reality.
And this is when we find out a lot of things about Jim.
About Jim.
About Philly Jim.
Yes.
Jim's avatar has a guitar slung on his back.
Remember, the only indication we've ever seen of Jim and guitar is that lone guitar in
his room during email surveillance, but we never see him play guitar.
Clearly, Jim wishes he had learned to play that guitar.
It's part of his second life avatar.
Yeah, I guess it just sits in the corner of his room and is collecting dust.
And even Pam is like, what?
I didn't know you played guitar.
Yeah.
We had a lot of fan questions about this, Angela.
Maria Sosa, Keanna Raeber, Autumn Baker, Natalie H, and Delissa Alonis, who said, we find out
that Jim's second life avatar is a sports writer in Philly.
Was his avatar's job the inspiration for Jim's season nine job?
Was this planned?
I mean, no.
Right, Jenna?
Is it just by chance?
Here's what I think.
I think this moment happened in this episode and it went into the show Bible, this little
bit of business, right?
And then later, when it came time to write season nine, you know, that's when I got my
copy of the show Bible and so did John.
That's right, because you guys were producers and now I remember you were part of like pitching
like story ideas and stuff.
Yes, and John pitched the idea that Jim would go off to Philly and have this sports job.
So I didn't check with him, but I have to imagine that maybe I'm speculating.
There was that little moment in the show Bible and he ran with it, but that was his pitch.
It was not connected in this moment when we shot it, but that's how I think it might have
happened.
Yeah, I think the seed had been planted for Philly Jim.
Philly Jim.
And here's something crazy.
You'll get to it, but I'll bring it up here.
When he does move to Philly, there's an electric guitar in his apartment.
I don't know if he ever learns to play the guitar, but Philly Jim and his guitar, they
do show up again.
I mean, it was all connected, you guys.
I'm convinced.
Now at 12 minutes, 52 seconds, you guys, Darrell and his team are continuing to rehearse.
They've got a new theme song because, you know, Michael gave them notes, right?
So now they've written a new song and guess who wrote this version?
Tell us, Ange.
Craig Robinson.
Yes.
And of course we knew that Craig was an amazing musician.
Oh yeah, Craig is fantastic.
He liked tours and everything.
He's great.
In the DVD commentary, they shared that there was a heated debate in the writer's room
about which jingle they should use and they ultimately were like, wait, the room was divided.
They loved them both, so they found a way to have them both in the episode, which I
thought was great.
So fun.
Yeah, BJ told me it was cool because it set up this idea that Michael was really obsessive
and he kept making them write new versions of the song.
There's a line from this scene that I love from Michael.
He says, I hate it.
I don't hate it.
I just don't like it at all.
It's terrible.
I love that line so much.
One other thing I want to share with you that Craig talks about on the commentary is that
he only had an hour to rehearse with those guys and he said they got it right away, right
away it just fell into place.
Except for maybe one moment, we had a fan catch.
Rachel and Jeremy wrote in to say at 13 minutes, 15 seconds, Ed starts to sing at the wrong
time and then he almost breaks, it's the best.
Lady, let's move to the parking lot.
Michael is really losing his patience with people.
Yeah.
It was, you know, this is a pivotal scene.
If they don't get it, the whole thing will fall apart.
Yeah.
Andy is dressed in some sort of running gear.
They don't get very far because Phyllis comes back from the mall.
She is sobbing.
She is so gutted.
She is gutted.
She got kicked out of the mall in front of her friends.
All of her friends, I guess, love Sue Grafton.
They were all there for autographs.
If Phyllis just wouldn't take no for an answer because Michael told her, don't take no for
an answer, get Sue Grafton here and she kept bugging her and they kicked her out.
At the very end of the scene, there is a great little tag where Kevin offers Phyllis a piece
of tape in lieu of a tissue.
We got some mail about it, Angela from Winston F and Delina Delano.
They wanted to know if this bit was improvised or scripted.
I texted Brian about it.
Because I don't have the scripts for season four.
I'm going to guess it was improvised.
That seems very much like something Brian would improvise.
You are correct.
He told me that originally the scene had ended with the camera just lingering on Phyllis crying
and he was actually placed a little further in the background with Kate.
They were still kind of working on the little running scene.
But he had the idea at the end to walk up and offer her a piece of tape as a tissue.
Well they loved it.
So the next time they did the scene, they actually pulled him a little bit more into
the foreground and they gave Steve the line, someone give her a tissue.
And then he tore off the piece of tape and that became the button of the scene.
It's so great.
It's perfect.
That's such a great example of how our improvisations would work into a scene.
We would do them and then if they liked them, they would say, okay, well let's draw you
into this in a way that that creates a fun button or creates a fun moment.
I also want to point out, I think I can see Phyllis about to break.
She looks like she is literally about to laugh.
I don't know how to say this without it sounding weird, but I love every time the character
of Phyllis is crying.
Like why?
Why is it so funny?
She's just so good at playing those like emotional beats and I just love her.
I love it too.
I really love it.
Jenna Pam is working so hard at her desk, 14 minutes, 49 seconds.
This Dunder Mifflin logo, she is just really putting her heart and soul into it.
I admire her.
I think this is the key to success.
It doesn't matter how big or small the project, if you're getting paid or not getting paid,
when you're a struggling artist, you have to give every project your all.
She has to treat this as if it's going in a Martin Scorsese film and she is, and I
think she's right on.
Yes.
And so much so that she doesn't go home.
Jim's like, are you coming?
And she's like, no, I'm going to stay.
I have a question.
Is this a little hint that they're living together?
Interesting.
I never thought they were living together, but I think they're in that phase of their
relationship where they're staying over at each other's places a lot.
Like they might as well be living together, but I don't think they are yet.
Okay.
Well, poor Jim has to ride home now with Meredith.
He does.
And then Pam, we reveal, has slept in the office overnight.
And then the next morning opens with Pam waking up to a phone call from Jim.
He got her breakfast.
He got her breakfast.
And in the commentary, they said there was a big debate in the writer's room about does
he bring her orange juice or coffee?
I don't remember seeing either on the desk.
There's a cup of orange juice and what looks like some kind of breakfast, maybe sandwich.
Yeah.
I'm guessing it's from McDonald's because Jim says that create the hash browns.
Yes.
But they felt like orange juice was just a sweeter token than coffee.
That's what they decided.
But no detail went unturned, you guys.
This is the point that there was a whole conversation about should there be orange juice or coffee.
That's how much thought was put into all of these moments.
Well, Pam does not regularly drink coffee.
She drinks tea, so I think orange juice was the right choice.
Pam explains in a talking head that she worked until 2.45 a.m. and then she had to decide
between spending the night with Michael and Dwight in the office or risk driving home
and falling asleep at the wheel and dying in a fiery car wreck.
She passed out on her keyboard trying to decide.
So this was the talking head with Jason that I could not get through.
I could not get through that last line.
I passed out on my keyboard trying to decide because there's this little pause and in that
pause, the anticipation of that last line would make us laugh.
This is something you guys should all know.
I have found over the years, and I think, Jenna, you'll agree with me, it's the pauses
in comedy that get you almost more than the line.
When Steve would pause before saying something ridiculous as Michael, it was that three-second
pause that would have us all on the floor.
It was like this collective moment where we all knew what was coming and we couldn't
bear it.
A hundred percent.
I have a catch.
Okay.
In an upcoming episode, it is going to be revealed that Pam wears glasses.
Remember because she's going to have to wear her spare pair to work.
Right.
Does that mean that Pam just slept in her contacts?
Can you do that?
I don't wear contacts, but I think you're not supposed to do that.
I think that's a big no-no.
I think it dries your eyeballs out or something.
I mean, also like just Pam keep a toothbrush and toothpaste in her desk, I thought the
same thing.
And finally, before we move on from this little moment, what has Dwight done to the couch?
He turned it on its side and then he has taken all the cushions off and he is sleeping
under the cushions.
It's so odd.
I think he got cold and he was trying to make a cushion blanket.
I guess.
It's very strange.
I feel like he's done it before.
He has a system for that couch.
What we know now, Angela, is probably that Dwight, Pam, and Michael all have really bad
breath because I can't imagine any of them had toothbrushes.
No.
Maybe Michael, though, I feel like maybe Michael keeps one in his cabinet.
So he's got fresh breath, but I mean.
My guess is Michael has a whole change of clothes in that cabinet and he's got some
boxer shorts, pair of socks.
Yeah.
He's prepared.
When we move into the break room, because Andy has some news for Dwight.
No.
Operation Fallen Angel turned a corner.
I guess while they were doing their form of necking, he's kissing her ear lobe and
she says O-D.
Dwight's face lights up.
Lights up.
Andy thinks that this is because of his name, Andy, but we all know the truth.
Andy, what a stretch.
Why would she single out one letter of your name?
O-A.
O-N.
O-D.
O-Y.
Yeah.
But Dwight then has this very fun moment where he is rejoicing with Andy over Angela
calling out O-D.
There's hope, Dwight.
I love the next scene.
Michael sends the commercial to corporate.
He's like, they'll probably watch it right away.
I know I would.
Yeah.
And he's like, I'm not going to call him.
I'm not going to bug him.
And then he calls up 10 seconds later.
I know it's perfect.
We've all been there.
Yeah.
We've all sent somebody something we've written, something you've worked on, and then you just
wait and wait.
And then you do that thing in your head where you're like, oh my gosh, what if my email was
down?
Yeah.
What if they never got it?
Oh, I should call them.
I should text them and just nudge them.
Yeah.
10 days later, and this was a big deal, this kind of time jump we hadn't done in the show
before.
It's very strange.
We had that little bit of an unwritten rule that the ideal episode happened over one day.
Yeah.
We didn't always keep to it, but for the most part, our episodes happened in one day.
So this says 10 days later.
It didn't bump me, Jenna.
No.
I was fine with it.
And Michael is saying, well, welcome to the world premiere of the corporate crap fest.
Yeah.
They did not pick his commercial.
They did not.
The whole gang has gathered at Poor Richard's Pub to watch the corporate crap fest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They watch it.
They're delighted.
They are in the last five seconds.
It's the same commercial as the Nashua branch, but this time it ends with everyone at Dunder
Mifflin Scranton waving.
On the roof.
On the roof.
I guess that was Michael's big creative contribution is we'll wave from the roof.
Yeah.
We won't be in the parking lot.
We're going to go on the rooftop.
Jenna, do you remember I wasn't there that day?
No.
I know.
Mindy and I both were not there that day.
We had to be superimposed in.
We never went up on the roof.
We just did a wave.
They sort of cheated it in the parking lot.
And then they did a little fancy editing and put us in the shot.
That is crazy because I did look specifically to see if everyone was in there and you're
there.
But if you look closely and I screen grabbed it, Mindy and I are kind of awkwardly off to
the side.
Do you see the gap?
That is crazy.
That's like that crazy thing they do when someone has to play their own twin.
Exactly.
Well, you can see it at 18 minutes, 10 seconds.
And I know why I couldn't be there that day.
I can't remember why Mindy couldn't be there.
But I had one of my first OBGYN appointments because I was pregnant.
Lady, I was wondering if you were going to share that in this episode because I just
want you to know I can see, I'm getting goosebumps, I can see your glow in this whole episode.
Yes.
I clocked it the minute I put this episode on.
I was like, oh my gosh, this is the episode where Angela was pregnant.
Yes.
And I had this appointment and I guess I couldn't move it and, you know, Kent was really sweet.
He was like, oh, it's fine, Angela.
Well, don't worry about it.
Go to your appointment.
Yeah.
There's a present in it.
Well, I'll never forget, Angela, because you told me you were pregnant in my trailer
at work.
Yes.
This is one of my favorite moments of our whole friendship.
We were in Genesis trailer having lunch as we often did and you were telling me a whole
story.
I think it was about your cat.
Is that about your cat?
Lady, I remember I was done with lunch.
You were still eating and I was doing these little five pound weights, little bicep curls.
Yes.
You were telling me a whole story while lifting weights.
You were very passionate.
I'll never forget it because I go on and on and on and on.
I'm pumping my arms and then I get finished and you say, well, I have some news.
I'm pregnant and I just dropped the weights and I screamed and our AD came over to the
trailer because I think they thought someone had had an accident.
There was this huge thud followed by a scream.
And then you said to me, Ang, why didn't you interrupt me?
I'm just rambling on about nothing and you're sitting on this big piece of information.
Why did you let me go on and on?
And I said, well, I wanted to hear your story.
My God.
So funny.
I was just so happy for you.
I knew how much you wanted to be a mother and I could just, I'm tearing up right now
thinking about it because you are such a good mother.
You are a born nurturer and I was just so happy for you.
I knew how much you wanted that, but yes, when I watched this episode, I knew right
away.
Oh, this is the one and I didn't know if you were going to share it or not.
So I waited.
Yes.
I was never up on the roof, never, never in the whole series.
Wow.
I know.
Your old hat at being up on the roof.
Oh man.
So Jim does a very sweet thing.
He asked the bartender if he will play their commercial, the one that they all made together.
He hands them the disc and Michael is so moved by this.
Yeah.
Well, you know, the bartender slash waiter guy was played by Drew Powell.
You guys might recognize him from Gotham.
He's a regular on Gotham.
He also played Eddie Murdock from the Monk episode, Mr. Monk Can't See a Thing.
And here's my crossover connection with Drew.
Drew and I played husband and wife in a lifetime movie called Terror in the Woods.
Oh, I remember this.
Yes.
We filmed it in Atlanta and so we hung out and spent some time together.
And when I got back to LA, we realized our kids were at the same elementary school.
You're kidding me.
No.
Our sons went to elementary school together and then I started seeing him at morning assembly
meetings and all kinds of stuff.
That's so crazy.
I know.
What a small world.
So everybody watches Michael's version of the commercial and it's so charming.
Jason reacts really well to it and there was a decision to be made as to whether or not
when we watch Michael's commercial, we were going to be kind of embarrassed and like,
oh, Michael, or if we were all going to love it.
And Jason talked about this.
It was really important to him that they pick the sweeter ending.
Here's what he had to say.
There was an opportunity for a tender ending and I got the sense that the writing staff
of the office was hesitant to do too many of those, that there's this kind of traditional
television episode where it's funny throughout, it has opportunity for satire.
And then towards the end, you have some sort of tender denouement and that they didn't
want to be doing this every time.
But I really wanted that for this spot.
I really wanted the episode to end in a bar where the cast is watching the commercial
together and they bond over it.
And there's something really lovely about people who come together to make something
that was really important to me because that's an idea I know really well, like anyone who's
ever done a high school play or made a high school video or done anything creative knows
what it feels like when outsiders come together to make something.
And no matter how it turns out, the collective process of creating something is just wonderful
and bonds you and erases fights because you can't help it, but come together and make
something.
And that's what the end of that episode felt like.
I remember everyone just standing in the bar watching the episode and we aired the
episode.
You know, we played back the actual thing.
It was just so lovely.
And I remember seeing a cut of the episode for the first time and again, watching an
edit of the episode was much like directing it.
These guys knew what they were doing.
You know, I don't think I had any notes.
I just kind of watched an office episode that I happened to have a directing credit on and
has a slightly emotional ending and I'm really proud and I'm really grateful that the writing
staff was up for that at the end of the day because it makes me cherish the episode even
more.
I love it too.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, I couldn't imagine it any other way.
I mean, this was such a big collective project that everyone came together for.
I feel like everyone in the office would have had some kind of personal interest in it and
I'm so glad we were happy and reacted that way.
I have a confession.
What?
The very beginning of the commercial, it starts with a woman's hand taking a piece of paper
off of the copier.
That is supposed to be me.
That's supposed to be Pam, but I wasn't there that day.
I don't know why.
I was not pregnant, everybody, for whatever reason.
They put Pam's watch and Pam's sweater on someone else.
I don't know.
I kind of feel like it was one of our AEDs or one of our PAs, so that is not my hand
at the top.
I did not know that.
I am not in this either.
One of the things Jason said in the commentary about it that I loved is that he said filming
this really reminded him of home movies he would make with his dad.
His dad is Ivan Reitman, an amazing director.
Jason said when he was a kid, he had a little handheld camera, and he would make these videos
like the paper airplane like that, all of that with his dad, and it really reminded him
of that.
That's, in fact, how they shot.
They shot with just a little handheld.
It's funny you mentioned the paper airplane because we had a fan question from Grant Pickle,
who said, how did you get the shot of the paper airplane?
Well, guys, they just taped it to the front of this little handheld camera, and Jason
talked about the inspiration behind that shot.
Sam, will you play that clip?
There was a shot that really became popular in the 90s, and you saw it in Sam Raimi films
and John Woo films.
I associate it with Evil Dead 2 and Army of Darkness, but also would have been popular
in literally any John Woo film where you follow a bullet, where it looks like the camera is
riding on the back of a bullet or an arrow or something like that.
I could have just imagined Michael Scott seeing any one of these films, Mission Impossible
2, or Broken Arrow, or I don't know if Michael Scott watches the old Hong Kong films.
But maybe he just saw Van Damme and Hard Target and was like, we need to do a camera attached
to the paper airplane shot.
And again, this is my favorite kind of thing.
It would be kind of great to make an entire movie that way.
I love how much thought went into this commercial.
It's so perfect.
Yeah.
And at the end of this episode with a little tag, it's Andy's talking head.
He's still trying to figure out the end of the Kit Kat jingle.
He cannot figure it out.
And he struggles with it throughout the whole episode.
Jenna, I wrote down every single guess that Andy made.
Ed also mentions in the commentary that he must have improvised like 20 of these.
And he didn't know until he watched the episode which ones made it in.
Here's all of the wrong guesses Andy makes throughout this episode.
Break me off a piece of that apple sauce, Chrysler car, football cream, lumber tar, Snickers
bar, Grey Poupon, Claude Van Damme, Hair for Men, Poison Gas, Nutra Suite, and finally
Fancy Feast.
And he's convinced.
That's it.
I did it.
Nailed it.
It's a cat food.
Break me off a piece of that Fancy Feast.
So good.
Before we go, we have a final message from Jason.
You know, my daughter, Josie, is 14 and she was a baby when I directed The Office.
And to this day, she has only seen one movie I've directed.
In fact, up until recently, she hadn't seen any film I'd ever directed and the only thing
she had ever seen that I had directed was The Office, of which she is a super fan.
And that made her overwhelmingly proud of me and made me very grateful that I had directed
The Office.
Because it put me in such high esteem of my child.
But just to say thank you, it really is a privilege to be part of the history of that
show.
Every once in a while, it'll pop up in a way.
Certainly when I'm doing interviews, it's one of the questions that always comes up.
What was it like to direct The Office?
Because it's kind of like, you know, there's only so many people who have walked on the
moon and there's only so many people who have directed The Office and I get to be one of
those people.
I've directed two episodes, in fact, and it's something that I carry really proudly.
Because you know, I didn't create that thing, I just got to be a guest.
You know, there's this presumption that you need to be angry to do comedy and being at
The Office proves that concept wrong because it was a group of some of the loveliest and
funniest human beings I've ever met.
So sweet.
So sweet.
And Josie, we're so glad we helped make your dad cool.
Yeah!
There you go.
Guys, thank you so much again for sending in your questions and Jason, thanks for sending
in all those clips.
And we will be here next week talking about Branch Wars.
It's another hidden gem.
I think we're going to have a few hidden gems in a row.
I'm predicting.
See you next week, everybody.
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 Bubacow.
Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
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