Office Ladies - Moroccan Christmas
Episode Date: August 11, 2021This week we're breaking down Moroccan Christmas! When Meredith gets too drunk at Phyllis’ Moroccan themed Christmas party and lights her own hair on fire, Michael forces an intervention. Phyllis al...so reveals to the entire office that Angela is having an affair with Dwight. Well, everyone in the office except Andy… The ladies talk about how this was a big prop week for prop master, Phil Shea, Jenna finds something special while cleaning out her desk and Angela shares one of the best Michael Scott alts that didn’t make it into the show. We also hear clips from Stephen Saux on what it was like to test out the fakey Dwight desk used in the cold open, and Jen Celotta shares a very funny Paul Liberstein story. So get ready for a big shot of Michael Scott and enjoy this episode! Check Out Office Ladies Animated on Comedy Central’s Cartuna: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD7nPL1U-R5rmvJo2L49IK-vKu2qB-fvx
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.
I hope you're in a festive mood today because we're talking about Moroccan Christmas. So
get out your Christmas plaid, but put away that nativity scene because Phyllis is going
to throw you the party of a lifetime. She sure is. It's season five, episode 11, written
by Justin Spitzer and directed by Paul Feig. Here is your summary. As you said, Phyllis
throws a Moroccan-themed Christmas party, which receives compliments from the majority
of the group, but some serious contempt from Angela. Oh, she is not happy. Dwight runs
a black market doll trade out of The Office, and Meredith gets wasted and sets herself
on fire. That's a doozy of a sentence. It's quite a work party. Michael decides to hold
an intervention demanding Meredith get help for her alcoholism and then talk about a doozy
of a work party. Phyllis spills the beans about Angela and Dwight in front of everyone.
Everyone. She announces it to the whole bullpen. Except Andy. Oh, Andy. Yeah. Andy and a
sitar. His goodbye as he's leaving broke my heart. We're getting ahead. We're getting
ahead. We're getting ahead. All right. Fast fact number one. This was the third Christmas
themed episode of The Office. Yes, it was. Season five, but only three Christmas episodes.
Why? Well, the first season we didn't have one. And then in season four, it was the
writer's strike. I know. We missed a Christmas party. It has been two years since we had
a Christmas party on The Office. They were always some of my favorite episodes, so I
was excited. Me too. I liked them because they were majority group scenes. Yes. We were
all together all the time. It was like a whole episode of conference room. So lots of bits.
Lots of bits. Lots of laughing. We would just have the best time. We would get loopy. We
would. But in the best way. Fast fact number two. The inspiration for this episode. I was
able to get in touch with writer Justin Spitzer. What Justin have to say? He told me that they
had had these two ideas rolling around for a really long time. The first one was the
idea of a Moroccan Christmas. They just loved the idea that Phyllis had thrown that amazing
goodbye party for Toby and that maybe the success had gone to her head a little bit.
And she's going to go big. Big theme. Yes. They loved that this would piss Angela off.
So this was like one card, right? You know what the card probably said? What? Phyllis
happy Angela pissed. Christmas. Question mark. Why is your character always so angry on Christmas?
She's angry all the time. But it really comes out at the holidays. I tell you. She has levels
of anger. Sometimes she's like suspicious bitch. Sometimes she's happy bitch. Sometimes she's
sad bitch. And then Christmas bitch is a whole different bitch. Oh boy. Buckle in for Christmas
bitch. Okay. So the other card that they had on the wall for a really long time said
Meredith intervention. Okay. So they decided to marry these two ideas. Remember when they
did like Michael has to fire someone on Halloween while we're all dressed up? Yeah. It's the
same thing. Yes. Exactly. Justin said that a holiday party also seemed like a really
good place for Meredith to drink too much and set her hair on fire. Like there could
be this sort of rock bottoming moment. Right. And it's an event. It's like a big event and
everyone's there to witness it. Yes. Fast fact number three. I have a talking head observation
for this episode. Oh, I'm so curious. So as you rewatch this episode, take a note of
the talking heads. Almost all of them are filmed from different angles than we normally
would. I believe there's only one where someone's seated in the traditional chair with the kind
of party through the right. Right. Right. We're all over the office. All over the office.
So this was not just because there was a party happening behind us. Justin said this was
because they wanted to wait until they were in the editing room to place the talking heads
throughout the episode. And they didn't want anything in the background to like in some
way mess up their ability to move these talking heads around. Well, they had probably learned
their lesson from that episode weight loss. Yeah. Where they had to digitally, it's hard
word to say, they had to digitally change Ed's tie and shirt because they kept moving
the talking heads and what was happening behind them didn't match. Yeah. So you'll notice
even Michael's talking heads, he is not seated at his desk. He's standing in front of his
desk and they purposely framed out the window behind him because timing wise, they didn't
know if it would be like still daytime or if it would be evening. So they really tried
to make all the talking heads as totally neutral as possible. Smart. Yeah. And it was kind
of fun after Justin told me that I went back and rewatch the episode and it was totally
true. Yeah. I read the shooting draft and definitely things are moved all around. So
it's good they did it. Yeah. That's all I got. Well, before we get into this episode,
I went digging in my digital clutter. Okay. And I found an email from Paul Feig that on
December 11th, 2008, he emailed the group Jenna and invited us all to a Christmas taco
party to watch the Moroccan Christmas episode at his house. Oh. And he said, I know, I know,
Morocco and tacos make no sense, except they do kind of rhyme and we have a really great
taco cart that we want to use. And we all went over to his house December 11th, 2008
and watched Moroccan Christmas together. I love that you brought that up because Paul
and Laurie Feig used to host so many viewing parties at their house and they were just
the most wonderful hosts and I'll never forget he had that screen that you come down from
the ceiling. So he had like a very normal looking living room. Yeah. Cozy. Like a place
you'd read books. I believe there was like a green leather chair. Oh yeah, there was
like cozy chairs with like a blanket draped over it. So cozy. And then all of a sudden
when it was time to watch the show, the screen would come down out of the ceiling and it
would turn into this amazing viewing experience. I thought these guys are doing it right. They
know what they're doing. Yeah. And they have a great taco cart. That's so cool. Well, there
you go. Just a little something from my digital clutter. And now we should break down this
episode. Well, I think we should take a break first. And now we should take a break. Let's
do it and we'll be back to talk all things Moroccan Christmas.
Well, we are back and wow, is Dwight's desk festive or what? Oh my, this is an epic prank
by Jim. Every single thing on Dwight's desk is wrapped in Christmas wrapping paper, including
his chair. Yeah. When did Jim do this? How long did it take? What the heck? I have so
much to share about this. Oh, go. All right. First of all, Justin Spitzer told me this
was his idea. This was his pitch. He said that he was always talking to his friends
who worked in the corporate world. And he would ask them what sort of pranks go on in
your office. Because I think at a certain point, it started to stress out the writers
that they had to come up with these Jim Dwight pranks. So they were always fishing. Tell
me a prank. I need an office prank. He said that the single most mentioned prank was this
idea of wrapping someone's desk in paper or aluminum foil. So Justin pitched this idea.
We got so much mail from people asking, how did we pull this off? I reached out to Randy
Cordray. Oh, Randy. He shared all the details. Of course he did. And then he probably did
a deep dive for you on something random. He did. Okay. So first of all, he said there
was a note in the script that did not make it into the episode. And it was a Jim talking
head. And here's how it went. Jim says, actually, it took me about a week to recreate the desk
and chair in chicken wire. I had to come in about four hours early and set it all up.
And I think I pulled something in my back dragging Dwight's real desk all the way up
to the roof. All for a three second payoff. Totally worth it. I read that too. And I was
like, why, why do you have to take the desk up to the roof? Why couldn't you just stash
it in the warehouse? I swear I remember us filming a tag of Dwight working up on the
roof. Oh my gosh. I swear we did. I can't confirm it. But I feel like I remember what,
you know, you're walking from your trailer to hair and makeup and you're like, why are
they putting a desk on the roof? I have a hazy memory of this. What else did Randy say?
All right. So Randy also said that Greg Daniels was pretty insistent that the gag desk be
made out of chicken wire because that's what it said in the script. Oh, and he wanted it
exactly like that. Yeah. Because we'd sort of, Jim has this whole speech. He's like,
it needs to reflect what Jim said. But chicken wire is stronger than you think. Oh, yes,
it is. Right. It wouldn't have collapsed. Nope. It wouldn't have Vange. Did they make
one with chicken wire and it didn't work? Yes. Oh my gosh. So Randy said that he and
Paul Feig and our set designer, Michael Gallenberg and our first AD, Kelly Cantley all tried
to talk Greg out of this. They were very skeptical it would work. But Greg really needed to see
it for himself. Okay. So here's what they did. They built four different desks out of
four different materials. Oh my gosh. What were the materials? One of them was chicken
wire. Okay. One was styrofoam. One was balsa wood. What? And one was corrugated cardboard.
And then they meticulously gift wrapped all of them. Oh, oh, can I guess? Can I guess
which one worked the best? Yeah. What do you guys think? I wish we could hear what you
think out there. I think the cardboard. The corrugated cardboard. That's what I would
bet on. All right. At the end, I'll tell you which one it was. Okay. Okay. So they set
up one of the desks. Yeah. And then they asked our stand-in, Stephen Socks, to come in and
do Dwight's motion of walking in, setting the briefcase down and sitting down to see
what would happen. Now, there's four different types of desks and four different types of
chairs. Yes. Wow. And Stephen is going to try each one while all these people watch
him. Oh my gosh. Would you do it work today, hon? Well, I sat on a faking desk made out
of Christmas wrapping. I have to say, I was fascinated by the backstory of this because
as actors, we just showed up. There was a wrapped desk. We did the scene. Yeah. Wow.
Yeah. This was like, look at all the prep that went into this one little bit. Oh my
gosh. Also, I was so fascinated by this idea of being a tester that I reached out to Stephen
Socks to ask him, what was this day like for you? And lady, he sent in an audio clip.
Oh my God. Amazing. We have to hear it. Okay. Play it. I vividly remember this test. I didn't
do a lot of tests like this. So it really stands out. I think we were all excited to
see this cold open, you know, come to be because it read so funny in the script. But I think
we have to remember the pressure that, that you have trying to make something like this
a reality. You know, the whole idea probably seemed kind of easy on paper, but it was really
up to the set designer, Michael Gallenberg and his team to make it a reality. Like I
said, I would do, I would do tests, but they were mainly hair and makeup tests or, you
know, a lot of camera tests, but I don't remember one quite like this. So I walk into
the bullpen and there's a lot of people there. Greg Daniels was there, the director Paul
Feig, Randy Cordray, our first assistant director, Kelly Cantley, of course, Michael Gallenberg
and then Phil Shea and the prop department as well. And what I saw was just like what
you see in the episode, it just looked like a desk wrapped in wrapping paper. But as soon
as I walked in, it was made clear to me that I should not touch the desk, like don't really
go near the desk until we're going to do the test. I mean, specific instructions and it
was told to everybody that to just keep clear of the desk, don't touch this thing. It was
there like their only prototype. And so I kind of imagined underneath the wrapping paper,
like it was some kind of house of cards or something just ready to ready to fall. So
I didn't even want to like breathe on it because I just was thinking in my mind, what
if I knock this thing over and find everybody before we even do the test? I mean, that would
have been like a total nightmare. But then they were ready to do it. And props department
gave me the briefcase, which had something inside of it in order to give it some weight.
And so they said go so I threw the briefcase on the desk sat in the chair and I totally
expected that I would fall like right to the ground. But to be honest, the chair felt kind
of like a like a regular office chair, maybe like an old office chair that kind of semi
reclined and collapsed a little, but it still was fully supporting me and the desk just
kind of bent a little bit. It looked like a saggy like rope bridge or something with
the briefcase on top of it. But obviously there was major disappointment in the room.
I mean, just everyone looked at it with just such disappointment and the air just kind
of like left the room. And being the only one there that didn't really know it was everything
that was going on. I kind of felt like I had messed up or something. So it was very awkward
moment. So I got up off the chair and I remember standing next to Michael Gallenberg and kind
of put my hand to my chin and looking at the props that didn't work and just kind of go
that didn't work. Oh, that's too bad, you know, like, trying to fit in. And so it was very
memorable moment. But then they brought another desk out like a few minutes later, they had
everyone leave so they could reset. And this one is the one that worked. It's the prototype
that ended up making it as the final one. And it just collapsed. I mean, I hit the ground
pretty hard. And it kind of surprised me because of the first one and how it was made. But
it was pretty memorable.
Isn't that such a fascinating like look into behind the scenes of making a show?
Yeah. I mean, we obviously weren't there that day, right? Right. So we had no idea all of
these desks being made and all of these like test runs and Stephen, oh my gosh. So Randy
said that the desk that worked was made out of styrofoam. Oh, dang it. But here's the thing,
it sounds like they only did two tests. They did chicken wire, didn't work, they did styrofoam,
it worked. So they stopped. Yeah. So lady, maybe the corrugated cardboard would have
worked. We don't know. Okay. Okay. You could be right. I could be right. But boy, the styrofoam,
man, it went down.
And then finally, Randy told me when it was time to shoot, they made three desks out of
the styrofoam that they had ready to go. But that rain nailed it on the first take. So
we didn't even need any of the other backups. It was a one taker. It's amazing. Well, Phil
Shea was really busy this episode. He had to make so many props. The desk obviously was
the biggest one. Oh yeah. But we have more to share. Princess unicorn. Princess unicorn,
but there's more. Oh, what else? Oh, you've got a whole thing. I've got some stuff. Oh,
good stuff. All right, let's get into the episode. All that was just the cold open.
I know. Well, the episode starts with you really are getting a view of the bullpen and
how it's decorated. Phyllis is going around and sort of doing last touches, right? Yes.
Where did the budget for this come from? I say she dug into some Bob Vance cash because
this is an over the top party. Oh, that is such a good point, Angela. Well, she has a
talking head that she says the theme for her Christmas party is called Knights in Morocco.
I love a party with a theme. I know. I get really excited. I mean, my 15th birthday,
my theme was hummingbirds and we all painted hummingbirds and I had little pink hummingbirds
like garland hanging in the bushes. It was amazing. I love a theme. Well, Phyllis does
too. And did you notice that Phyllis has on brand new glasses for this episode? No. Yes.
And we talked about it in the DVD commentary and Kate said, and do you remember they were
called her power glasses? What? I know. And because Phyllis is like the head of the PPC,
she's like a boss lady. They wanted her look to reflect that. Oh, I love this detail. Yes.
And Phil Shea brought a bunch of glasses to Phyllis. They picked out this particular pair
and they even put her prescription in them. So Phyllis and her power glasses are going
to take Angela to task. Well, her standoff with Angela starts right away. She marches
over to Angela's desk and she just zeros right in on that nativity scene. Yeah. And she like
just sweeps half of it into the drawer. Baby Jesus went into the drawer. Sure did. Angela's
not happy. I have a background catch at one minute and 50 seconds. Did you see what was
on the dry erase board? It was fuzzy. Okay. Well, I zoomed in on it and this was so fascinating
to me on the calendar. It says December 10th, copier maintenance, which just made me laugh
so hard because the office got new chairs, but that same old copier still there. And
then it said on December 23rd, the warehouse is closed. And at noon on December 24th, Dundramiflin
closes and the party starts at one. So we're having a party on Christmas Eve at one o'clock?
That's what it said on the dry erase board. So I was like, what the heck? Everyone's there
on Christmas Eve. So later in the episode, when Michael is dragging Meredith into a rehab
center, it's Christmas Eve. According to the dry erase board. I don't know if that's
what the writers intended, but that really got me tickled. And I have a bone to pick
with Phyllis. Oh, because Phyllis says that Angela's nativity scene is not on theme. It's
not Knights of Morocco. Right. Well, what about the fact that Michael has on his Christmas
tie that he has worn every single Christmas? Mm hmm. Right. Pam has on a pin on her sweater
of Santa. Oh, Phyllis has a little wreath on her jacket. So I feel like Phyllis is singling
Angela out. I think all that evidence is really good. I also think it's really obvious that
she's singling Angela out. I think the entire party was thrown to piss off Angela. I know,
I know. And then these little details, I guess, are just little jabs, little digs. I mean,
she makes Angela get rid of the Christmas tree. Oh, lady. All right, I have to share
about this because in the episode, it's like three seconds, right? Yeah. This was a huge
scene. This was like multiple location scenes, you guys. It took like a half of a day. What?
Yes. In the script. And we actually did film this and it's in deleted scenes. Angela Martin
goes over to the tree. It's double her size. And she has to drag it through the bullpen.
Lady, I tripped over those pillows on the floor. Uh huh. And the tree fell on my head.
What? I fell to the ground. The tree fell on top of me. Then I had to drag it down the
stairwell. This Christmas tree out the building through the parking lot, all the way to the
street. We filmed all of that. It legitimately was a physical workout. I actually like messed
up my hair. I had like scratches on like my hands from the tree trying to grip it. None
of it's in the episode. It's in the deleted scenes. And what was great is over all of
this action were two talking heads, one Angela and one Phyllis. Can you play those? I do
not mind doing hard labor. Ronald Reagan got his start as a stock boy lugging heavy boxes
10 hours a day. And he went on to become the president of a party planning committee. I
like to call the United States of America and most people call it that. Did you know
that an aunt can carry five times its own weight? All it needs is a strong queen to tell
it what to do. And there's nothing that little creature can't accomplish. Phyllis, fast.
Oh, Phyllis and her power glasses and some serious sass. Yes, that muffled sound in between
was me like falling down the staircase with the Christmas tree. Were you so bummed when
you watched the episode and it was cut out? I was so bummed because I thought it was hilarious.
And that talking head I do about Ronald Reagan, my hair is all messed up. All right, so Phyllshay
has tackled a Styrofoam desk chair, all objects wrapped in Christmas wrapping. He's also
found Phyllis a pair of power glasses. Phyllshay's next project would have been Princess Unicorn.
Yes. Dwight enters with a stack of boxes. And he explains that each year he researches
the most popular toy of the holiday season. He buys as much of it as he can. And then
as parents become more desperate, he sells them at a profit. It's a little bit genius.
We got a lot of mail asking about this Princess Unicorn storyline. Okay. Where to begin?
First of all, this was a collaboration of several writers. Justin said that they had
originally written a different story for Dwight and at the last minute they wanted to change
it. And they had a new writer who had just started on the show that week named Halstead
Sullivan. This was his pitch. Halstead. Amazing. Crushing it in his first week on the job.
We were able to get in touch with Halstead. He confirmed, yes, that he pitched this idea
of Dwight having a side hustle of buying up these holiday toys and selling them at a profit.
Halstead said that he and writer Aaron Scher were sent into a room to figure out what this
toy should be. Aaron said, well, kids love princesses and unicorns. How about a Princess
Unicorn doll?
I love this kind of collaboration. So you have Halstead saying, we need the story of
the toy and he sells the toys. And then Aaron is like, what about a unicorn and a doll collide?
Yes. Then Halstead came up with the catch phrase, my horn can pierce the sky.
Halstead, are you kidding me? Right. That was you. That stuck in our heads forever.
Forever. Do you remember that, Jenna? But we sang it all week. We have to hear Michael
sing it.
My horn can pierce the sky.
And then Jenna, when I listened to the DVD commentary, immediately Kate and I sang it.
What?
My horn can pierce the sky.
Thank you, Halstead. Well, you know, they made a whole commercial for this doll.
I know.
With a little girl and a jingle at the end. It was crazy.
What else did they say about it?
They said actually before settling on this idea, there was an alternate idea called Hank
Grenade. This was a doll that when you threw it, his arms blew off. That was Hank Grenade.
But they settled on Princess Unicorn. So once that was settled, there was a lot of discussion
over what she should look like. Was she a human princess with unicorn features? Was
she more of a horse with a human face? I guess they went around and around. And in the end,
Phil Shea had to make this princess unicorn doll.
Shanti told me that Phil actually used a team of designers and toy makers. Oh my gosh.
And they had to come up with a design that would not infringe on anyone else's design
because I guess toys in general and dolls specifically are very tightly controlled by the manufacturers.
Right.
For their intellectual property rights.
Yeah. It can't look like anything else.
Yes. And they actually had to go through the NBC Universal Legal Team to make sure that
they had met all the requirements of a specifically unique doll toy. That is how we came to have
a princess unicorn.
Amazing.
Yeah.
Wow.
Phil Shea was so busy this episode.
So busy.
Oh my gosh. When we would see him running through the parking lot, this is why.
I don't know how he did it.
I know.
Well, the party's underway now. It's getting going. There's cocktails. Jim and Pam have
this flirty moment with like he's rubbing the lamp for wishes.
Well this scene made me curious and I had also been watching the bloopers and there is this
moment between Ed and John and the bloopers that never made it into the episode. That's
kind of weird where Jim is looking at this coffee mug that Andy made.
Okay.
I was like, what is the thing? What are they? What are Jim and Pam doing?
So I was very curious about these scenes and I went to the script and in the shooting draft,
there is a Jim and Pam side by side talking head where they share that they are in a real
financial bind.
Oh.
Yeah. And they have agreed not to buy each other anything for Christmas but instead will
be taking items from the Dunder Mifflin office to give to each other.
Whoa.
So yeah, there were all these little scenes of you guys like showing each other different
items around the office and then there was a whole scene where you ultimately decided
on something and gave each other gifts.
What did I get?
I don't remember any of this.
Wait, before I tell you what you got, can I just tell you some of the moments in the
side by side talking head that I couldn't believe?
Yes.
All right. Jim shares that money is tight because of the closing fees on the house that
he bought.
Okay.
Pam shares. Get ready. Pam says, my credit's so bad. I'm hoping someone steals my identity.
They couldn't handle my finances worse than me.
Oh no.
Okay.
Oops.
Yeah. And Jim says, it's okay. We've decided not to spend any more.
Any money on presents this year? The rule is the gift has to be something from inside
the office.
Okay.
And Pam says, so in addition to the party, we're going to spend the day shopping. And
if anyone's interested, my social security number is 793-476882.
Isn't that hilarious?
Yes.
What is Pam's running up her credit on? I don't know.
I know.
What is Pam buying? Maybe she charged all of art school. Just put it all on her card.
Maybe she did.
Well, do you want to hear what they gave each other?
Yeah. What did I get?
After a whole party of them looking at items in the office.
Okay.
To, I guess, steal? I don't know. What is their life of crime together?
All right. At the end of the day, Pam hands Jim a gift wrapped in copier paper and he
opens it up and it's a pair of sunglasses that she has made out of paper clips and brown
plastic from a folder.
Wow.
So wait, Phil Shea had to make that too?
Yes.
He had to make sunglasses made out of paper clips and brown plastic. And Jim's like sunglasses
and they even have little pads for my nose. They had little erasers where the nose would
go.
I have to stop you.
Is this in the deleted scenes? Can you screen grab these sunglasses and put them on the
pod?
No, it's not.
Oh.
No.
That's a tragedy.
No, I know because you know they exist somewhere. Pam says it took me hours to make them.
Wow.
But don't use them outside because there's no UV protection.
Okay.
And then Jim hands her a box and she opens it to reveal a beautiful dainty watch. And
she's like, wait, you didn't make this. You bought it. No fair. And Jim says, okay, here's
the thing. Technically I had this in the office. I bought it for you three years ago, but it
was way too big and I chickened out. And Pam says, yeah, it kind of screams I love you.
And Jim's like, do you like it? And she says, I love it. Wait, was that the year you gave
me rocks? Jim says, wishing rocks also romantic.
Oh my gosh, I love this.
So you and John had this whole storyline that was playing out in the background that ended
in the scene and it didn't make it in. Do you want to hear something crazy? While I was
prepping Moroccan Christmas, I was cleaning out my desk at home and I found the teapot
note.
Oh, good Lord. Are you kidding?
I found it.
The actual note.
The note that John gave me at the end.
Oh my gosh.
The envelope says Pam and it's a little Christmas card. It was in with like all of my like stationery
and stuff, right? I'm like going through my stationery and I'm like, what's this? What's
this card that says Pam? I opened it up and I was like, it's the teapot note.
I love that that's what you found.
Is that crazy?
Yeah, it is crazy. But you know what's so perfect is when I cleaned out my desk, if you remember,
yeah, I found, this was like years ago, I found Dwight and Angela's like sex contract punch
card.
Oh boy, our characters had different stories, different journeys.
Okay. All right. So I had to share that because I thought that was a wonderful Jim Pam thing
that didn't get to be in the episode. But now we really need to talk about these drinks
that Michael is making for Meredith.
The first drink Michael makes Meredith, he calls it a one of everything. It's equal
part scotch, absinthe, rum, gin, vermouth, triple sec, and two packs of Splenda.
Now isn't some of this drink a Long Island iced tea minus the Splenda?
I don't know.
Am I wrong? I don't know what's in Long Island iced tea. I just know it's like seven liquors.
Yeah.
Well, yeah. Well, Meredith thinks this is the best thing she's ever had in her life.
Oh yeah.
Then Michael makes Jim a drink with vodka and orange juice. Not a screwdriver guys.
It's called a orange vodka. Yeah. It rolls off the tongue.
It does. There was an alt in the script. Okay.
In the script, Michael makes Jim a drink with Jack Daniels and just regular Coca-Cola.
And he calls it a Coke Daniels.
And Kate shared that in one scene with Steve, they were improvising. Okay. Steve was making
up all these drinks and Steve improvised sangria with peppermint schnapps and Kate improvised,
let's call it sex on the couch. And Steve as Michael was like, ew, but that didn't make
it in.
And then Kate also shared, are you ready for this? He hands her a drink in one take. She
takes a big swig and goes, oh my God, you guys, there's real booze in that. They had
forgotten to empty out one of the bottles because they would empty out the liquor bottles
and put just water or iced tea. And they had missed one. And they gave Kate a drink with
actual booze in it. She was like, guys, that's booze.
Oh no.
I mean, she only took one swig. You know what I mean?
But still.
But still.
What a shocker.
I know.
Oh.
Also during this setup of the party, I want to point out, this episode had a lot of shots
that were just like little moments, right? It really reminded me of some of our early
episodes where we had these, what did we use to call those?
Just these little vignettes in the background.
Yeah.
Those little moments that the B camera would get that really filled in the whole picture.
It really reminds me of the first two seasons.
Same. Well, during this kind of montage of filling out the party and what's going on,
you know, Ed as Andy is playing the sitar.
Yes.
We got a lot of mail about it.
Izzy T, Liam D, and Grant S all wrote in to ask, does Ed Helms really play the sitar?
No. Not before this episode, he didn't.
But he's such a badass that he just picked it right up.
Yeah.
So you guys probably know that Ed plays guitar. He plays banjo. Randy told me that previously
in his career, he had produced a different show where they needed an actor to play a
song on the sitar. And this actor was also a guitar player, but he was told that the
sitar is a very difficult instrument to play. It's very difficult to tune properly. And
that in that instance on that other show, he had to hire a tutor and allow about four
weeks of practice so that this actor could credibly pull off the bit.
So because the script had Ed playing all these different songs with only a couple weeks notice,
he asked Phil Shea to rent a sitar. He went to Ed. He said, I'll get you a tutor.
Yeah.
But Ed said, I'll figure it out. And Randy was like, okay.
Ed's like, I play the banjo. I'm going to flex a little bit.
A little bit.
I got this.
And Ed totally, totally did it.
He just picked it up and played it.
Yes.
I have a little catch where Ed slipped up.
What?
So you guys listening, my family and my close friends, they call me Ange. It's my nickname
and my family. And it's like what my husband calls me and my mom, you know, everyone calls
me Ange. Well, Ed called me Ange, right? In real life.
Yeah.
He never called me Angela. And right when he starts playing the sitar at four minutes,
twenty-one seconds, tell me what you hear.
Hey, Ange, check it out.
There's a place in France where the naked lady is dance.
Oh, wow.
He called me Ange, not Angela. And Angela Martin would have never let Andy call her
Ange.
Anyone call her Ange.
No.
She's using the formal version of her name only.
Only.
For sure.
Only Dwight can call her Monkey.
Everyone else calls her Angela. In that moment, to me, Ed just sort of slipped and just was
like, Hey, Ange.
He was probably like concentrating on his playing.
Yeah.
Right? He was in musician mode.
Yeah. That just warmed my heart when I heard it. I just had to share.
Well, next up is quite a scene. Meredith is dancing up a storm in the conference room
and she sets her hair on fire.
Yes.
Dwight has to rush in and put it out with a fire extinguisher. Oh lady, talk about mail.
People need to know how did they pull off this stunt where her hair catches on fire?
Was it Kate? Was it a stunt double?
We have a lot to share with you because this is one of the biggest stunts I think we ever
did in the bullpen.
For sure.
For sure.
A person was on fire.
Yeah.
All right. Well, I got some of the info from Randy.
And I got info from Kate. So let's break it down.
First of all, we did use a stunt double for Kate. Her name was Marie Fink.
Our stunt coordinator that day was Scott Aliva and he had to like do a bunch of prep for
this. He had to like send a whole plan into NBC Universal Safety Department explaining
how exactly we would do this safely.
We had safety officers on set. We had a special effects crew on set and we had the LA Fire
Department on set.
Kate said there were so many people from the fire department there that they like took
up a whole wall.
I believe it.
Yeah.
What a crazy day of work for them.
Now Paul Feig specifically staged this scene so that Meredith was dancing alone in the
conference room and this was done to make it safer.
Yes.
And they dressed the stunt double Marie in this full fireproof body suit. It's called
like a Nomex and she wore like a head stocking that was flame proof. And then she put on
Kate's wardrobe.
I guess these Nomex suits are what race car drivers wear when they're racing, you know,
in case their cars burst into flames.
Yeah.
Then Kim Ferry had to create a bunch of wigs.
Yes. And Kate shared about these wigs, you guys. Kate said, Angie, they were natural
hair and then they actually burned the wigs with fire. And she said, I had to wear the
stinkiest wig the whole rest of the week because you know when you burn hair, you know the
smell.
Oh, I know it well. I mean, once you've smelled that, it's like burned into your brain.
Yes. So Kate had to wear the stinky wig the rest of the week.
Well, I guess to pull off this stunt, they put this flammable gel all over Marie's body
and her hair. And then she used one of the actual real candles in the conference room
to set her hair on fire.
I guess they did have a stunt double dressed as Dwight. His name was Sean Crowder. But
in the end, it was actually rain. Rain ran in and put out the stunt double with an actual
fire extinguisher.
I know. No pressure rain, right? But Kate said he did it. And then Kate said for continuity,
they had to take Marie out. And Kate stepped back in with the burnt wig, right?
Yeah, the smelly burnt wig.
The smelly burnt wig kind of assumed the same position Marie was in. And then rain had to
spray Kate with the real fire extinguisher. So Kate got hosed as well.
Justin told me that we did it all in one take.
I'm so glad for everyone's sake.
Yeah.
I'm so glad. Also, look at Kate's dancing.
This is like lunging forward and back and forward and back. And I'm like, Kate, were
you sore? My gosh. That's like a physical day.
Randy told me that Kate and Marie got together and planned out the dance moves.
So that Marie could look exactly like Kate and her movements.
Yes.
Which is amazing to me because it looks like completely spontaneous dancing, but they really
planned it so that it would coordinate. So they were doing the same thing.
Yes. And if you watch the episode, it's very rare that only one person is in the conference
room at a party. But that was for everyone's safety, like you said.
Yeah.
So Kate said it was kind of odd to be in there alone for all those takes, like a fishbowl.
But I really related because there's a whole scene coming up where you guys are all together
on the floor and I'm in the kitchen.
I know.
For the whole episode.
I know.
Lady, I think we should take a little break and then we'll come back and make you go to
the kitchen.
Make me go to the kitchen and Michael is going to share with us about a responsibility.
Oh, I can't wait.
It's a deleted scene. I can't wait to share.
So we are back.
Oscar, you have a little bit of granola on your boob.
Oh, thanks for telling me.
We ate a granola bar during the break.
You're eating it off your shirt.
What else would I do? If I pick it off, I have to what, throw it on the floor?
No, put it in the trash.
Well, you would still hungry.
You'd fit in very well with my boys.
Listen, we're friends here.
I've seen them eat things off their clothing too.
Oh my God.
Listen, every once in a while, you're going to lick a piece of granola bar off your shirt.
You know what else I'm going to do sometimes? Sometimes the salad dressing is so good. I
lick the plate.
Okay, I'm here for licking the plate, but you just ate a piece of granola off your
t-shirt. You lifted your shirt up towards you so you could eat that tiny piece of granola.
Because I'm a classy lady.
You are classy. And you know what? You do not waste. And that I respect.
Thank you.
Okay.
As I was saying, Oscar, Jim, Michael and Stanley try to set a date for something. We don't know
what they're talking about. They're trying to agree on a time to do something. Nothing's
working.
We do learn that Michael goes to the dentist every month.
Well, because of his soft teeth.
Every month.
We establish that in dinner party.
I feel like he talks their ear off. I feel like there's like a dental hygienist that
he just talks their ear off.
What do you do for soft teeth? You know what? I'm going to ask Mike Dennis the next time
I'm there. He's a fan of the show. He's also a bread maker. And he gave me his sourdough
discard and it is fantastic sourdough discard.
Wow.
Great dentist.
Okay.
Great baker. I'm going to ask him about soft teeth. Stay tuned.
Baker and a dentist.
Listen, they also can't do it on Groundhog Day because Michael, he celebrates privately.
Some fans asked Justin in an interview once, what is it that Michael's doing? And he said,
I imagine he just watches Groundhog Day all day, the movie.
He watches the movie.
And I also think he watches to see if punks a Tony. Is it punks a Tony?
Phil?
Yeah. I think he watches to see if Phil sees the shadow. I think he watches the whole
broadcast.
It's a big event.
Maybe he goes.
He's busy. That's what we know.
Yeah.
In the end, they decide today is the day and what they're planning is an intervention.
Christmas Eve, office party, intervention.
Listen, if I had to explain what an intervention is, it's like a surprise party for people
who have addictions. And what you do is you make them feel badly about themselves so they
stop.
Michael Scott.
Right there, guys.
Her Michael Scott.
That was the talking head that made it into the show. Here is an alt that got deleted and
it cracked me up. We're going to call this responsibility, guys.
It takes a lot of courage to admit you are right. And talking about my strengths has
always been one of my strengths. And I am right. Meredith needs help. She needs help
like an alcoholic needs a drink. And she's about to get a big shot of Michael Scott.
Straight up on the rocks with ice. No chaser. I call it a responsibility. Shaken with lemon
twist. Okay. Okay. We've played a lot of talking heads that didn't make it. A lot of scenes
that didn't make it in the show. This is the biggest tragedy.
A responsibility. Everything about that was gold. I could listen to it five times.
I know. I was like, I have to play it. This is gold.
That was like on the level of Dwight's whole speech about stealing the ball from Tiffany's
and going to all the countries and all that. Oh my God. It was so good.
I'm going to get a big shot of Michael Scott. Shaken, not stirred. Responsibility.
That's incredible. Well, we're all going to circle up on the floor now. Not Angela, though.
Phyllis has other plans for you. It involves a hair net. Lots of fanning.
Got a fan of some pitas. Got a toaster on both sides. Got a fan napkins.
And off to the kitchen I go. Meanwhile, the rest of us sit on the floor and engage in
a real uncomfortable intervention of Meredith. I don't know how you guys got through the
scene without laughing. I remember two things happening during this week. One, I was bummed
because I was in the kitchen by myself. Yep.
And I had to enter in during the scene. So it's not like I had to be there.
Do you remember this? Because Justin reminded me of this and I had forgotten it, which was
that Paul Feig insisted on shooting the entire intervention scene from top to bottom without
cutting and every take was about eight minutes long.
Yes. So I would be in the kitchen like with a magazine. I actually, on the DVD commentary,
I said I brought a magazine back there eventually because I was back there so long and then
they would cue me and then I would walk in, then I'd have to go back.
So crazy. So crazy.
I remember my legs fell asleep. It's very hard to sit on the floor in a pencil skirt
and pantyhose.
Well, you had to do an odd cross. You had to do that one foot under the other and at
nine minutes, 46 seconds, there's a real good Pam pantyhose catch.
Oh, yeah.
I can see your pantyhose.
I don't doubt it.
You have pantyhose toes.
I remember trying to figure out because, you know, once you pick the way you're sitting,
you have to sit like that. You can't shift and move or change your position.
Because it has to match, you guys. So however you sit, that's it. So Mindy laying on her
stomach like that.
Oh, I was so jealous.
Which I took a picture of. I was jealous at first, but then you know her back started
to ache. It had to because that's like doing a, what is that, the cow? No, it's not a cow.
It's the snake. It's a yoga thing.
Oh, yeah. What's that yoga pose called?
Where you...
We are.
Cobra. Cobra.
Cobra.
I knew it.
I don't know why that was so exciting, but I just recalling any information at my age
just gets me real amped up.
So she had to do a mini cobra all day. You had to sit with the one foot under your butt,
one foot extended.
Yep. I know. And I do remember that we went around and, you know, I was mostly reactions.
I don't think I had any lines in this scene. It was very hard not to laugh. It was very
hard not to laugh when Creed says that he can get a fire permit in a couple hours. It
was pretty amazing.
We talked on the DVD commentary about Creed's outfit and what he's wearing in this scene.
He actually wore something similar to an award show. Do you remember? He wore the long white...
I don't remember this.
This is very much sort of his outfit is something Creed would actually wear. And he looks fantastic.
There is a delicious Andy talking head. I feel like we all knew this guy in college,
the guy that would chug a fifth of Soco.
Uh-huh.
Boot, rally. How many nicknames does he have, by the way? He's puke. He's ace, Andy's buzz.
Did he get straight A's or straight B's? We're not sure.
He got straight B's.
Yeah, but he aced everything.
Yeah.
Well, surprise, surprise, this intervention does not result in Meredith deciding to go
to rehab.
Michael's clearly not qualified to do this. And Toby's going to call it. He's like, you
know what? We're going to stop this.
I do have to point out one of my favorite moments when Kevin offers his way that her
drinking affected him.
He got to go to the movies.
By the way, thank you, he says.
Yeah.
Michael's like, you're not getting it. But you're right. Michael is not trained to do
this. You know, a trained interventionist. This is a job in real life. People trained
for this.
Yeah.
Kate had a whole speech that was in the script as Meredith, where she just addresses the
group and she's like, listen, I'm bored. You're boring. She said to Michael and he
goes, Hey, and she was like, you know what? I drink because I'm bored. Try to be more
interesting.
Oh my God.
And she's like, who else is bored here? And like everyone raises their hand. She like
hijacks the meeting from Michael, right? And then she's like, we all do things to cope.
So I drink when I'm bored. And then she goes around the room. She goes, you all have
coping mechanisms. You eat, you eat, you eat, you shop, you confuse Dwight. And then she's
like,
Who confuses Dwight?
Me.
No, me.
Oh, okay.
And then she like points at Stanley and she's like, you eat. And then Stanley has a talking
head where he's like, I do eat when I'm bored. But I also drink and I drink a lot
more than Meredith.
I just don't do it at work and I keep my clothes on.
Oh my goodness.
Yes, this scene was way bigger. Wow.
Michael is going to take Meredith into his office where they're going to talk for 45
minutes.
45 minutes. And in the meantime, Angela is going to plead with Phyllis. Please can I
stop cutting the pita? Do I really have to wear the hair net?
Have mercy. It's the season of mercy.
Phyllis is no.
No. I have a thing I want to point out at 13 minutes, 35 seconds. Phyllis is telling
Stanley about the Moroccan food they're eating and Angela's eating this cookie. She spits
it out.
Yeah.
We did a lot of takes of this. I'm not sure why.
Okay.
But the cookie started to turn on me because I took a big bite.
Okay.
Mistake.
Okay.
Take a small bite, guys.
Always.
Always. Because by the eighth take, the thought of that cookie makes you want to barf.
Right.
It doesn't matter what it is. It doesn't matter if it's your favorite dessert.
And it started to turn on me. And so I took some peanuts and I stuck them in my hand.
And when they would cut to me eating, I would like just put a bunch of the peanuts in my
mouth and hold the cookie. I was trying to do a fakey eat.
Mmm.
Fakey eat.
Fakey eat. And then I would spit out peanuts instead of the cookie.
Okay.
So what we see on camera, that is chewed up peanuts?
We don't know.
We don't know which take they used.
We don't know which take they used.
Was it early?
Was it late?
I don't know.
These are the things you try to do at work. How do I not eat that cookie?
Well, when Michael leaves his office with Meredith, they're going somewhere. He says,
I'll meet you in the parking lot. And then he asks Toby for the number of that rehabilitation
center. And everyone's like, wow, he did it.
And then, you know, he finishes writing the number down and he throws the pen at Toby's
head.
And hits him in the forehead.
We got a fan question about that.
Well, we have stories about it too.
Kelsey B would like to know, was the pen throwing scripted or improvised? It was scripted. And
Justin said that Steve had a special rubber pen. And I remember it because it was in the
pen cup on Pam's desk. There were real pens and then one fakie pen. And I was sitting
there and I kept like positioning the pen so that Steve could pick up the fakie pen.
This would have been another thing Phil Shea would have had to have gotten for the episode.
Fakie rubber pen so that he could throw it at Toby's head. They inserted that little
thump sound later. We did about four or five takes of it, I guess.
You guys, if you rewatch this, you will notice behind Michael, there are no people. We're
all standing way off to the right.
You want to know why? Because we couldn't stop laughing. So when they would cut to Michael,
after throwing it, we'd be behind him giggling. So they pushed us all to the right and they
had to get our reaction take like a whole beat later when we had gotten our composure.
Paul also couldn't stop laughing.
I know.
Every time that little rubber pen thumped him in the forehead, he would break.
I know. And there is such a fun blooper where Paul decided to prank Steve during the scene.
We have to listen to it.
You know, could you write down the name of that rehabilitation clinic you mentioned?
What did he do? Instead of writing down a fake phone number, he wrote f*** you. So Steve
in the scene glances down and it says f*** you and he started laughing and he couldn't
even throw the pen because he was laughing too hard.
That is so funny. Well, have you know, fake pen lived in the pen cup for weeks after we
shot the scene and people were always coming over trying to grab a pen to use and they
would get fake rubber pen. And I never got rid of it because it just was funny to me.
Yeah.
It was funny to me that people would grab a fake pen.
So now Meredith and Michael are in the car. This is going to start such a fantastic sequence
between Meredith and Michael. Both Steve and Kate just knock it out of the park. They're
driving. Meredith thinks they're going to a bar. She's listing off all these bars and
Kate Flannery said in real life she kept trying to slip her family's bar in there.
Because you know, her family owned a bar in Philadelphia called Flannery's.
Yep.
But it didn't make it in.
But all the other bars she says are local Scranton bars. They're real places.
Yeah. Well, that was part of the reasons why Flannery's wouldn't have checked out, right?
But she also wanted you guys to know that Steve did his own driving. They're not being
pulled.
Yeah. You can kind of tell.
Yeah. He's driving and doing all the dialogue because there were those little lipstick cameras.
And then they had, I think, a truck in front of them with a camera rigged on the back to
get them through the windshield.
Mm-hmm.
When they finally arrive at their destination, it is revealed that they are at Sunrise Rehab.
Meredith gets super pissed.
So pissed. So pissed. Now, Kate told me they had stunt people there for her and Steve.
Should it get too physical that they could have this choreographed thing with the stunt
people?
Mm-hmm.
And her and Steve were like, no, we're going to go for it. Kate was like, Steve, let's
do it. And they did not use the stunt people. Everything you see is actually Kate and Steve
just freaking going for it.
I think I noticed one moment we cut out of it really quickly. When Meredith throws the
trash can down and it looks like Michael trips and falls, I feel like I see Kate start to
check on Steve.
Oh, yeah?
Like maybe like, oh, are you okay? Like just the littlest moment and we cut out of it.
And then they, you know, they have a bigger chase around the parking lot.
Well, Kate said that's fakey trash.
Fakey trash.
That was fakey trash. So whatever Steve fell on wasn't real trash.
So Phil Shea also had to make fakey trash.
Yes.
Oh my gosh, this man's week was insane.
Yes. This scene was scripted at the top where she doesn't want to get out of the car, but
they immediately then just went off.
Yeah.
You know, because Paul Feig just wanted them to really go for it, not worry about the lines.
And that whole sequence where Meredith is saying, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait
a minute.
I love that.
That's not in the script.
I loved it.
It was so real.
I thought Kate did such a great job.
Well, this whole thing ends with Michael dragging Meredith into the rehab center.
And we should tell you the intake nurse was played by our very own first assistant director,
Kelly Cantley.
Yes. She also helps escort them out.
Yeah.
At the end, when Michael discovers that you can't force people to go to rehab.
Yep. And now awkward car ride back.
But you know what Michael's going to do?
Michael's had a realization.
He realizes that, you know, in order to get help, a person has to hit their rock bottom.
So he's going to make it his mission to help Meredith reach her rock bottom.
Oh, my gosh.
And he thinks he can do it because he did it with Jan.
Oh, my gosh.
It's like an amazing line.
They're still going to be quite a bit of drama back at the office.
Oh, yes.
We start with Toby.
Oh, Toby, man.
He thinks he's going to get to be the hero to his little girl.
He is going to score one of the Princess Unicorn Dolls from Dwight for his daughter.
But Dwight has sold them all out.
He just sold his last one to Daryl.
Yes.
All right.
I just unsolicited get this email from Jen Salata.
About this scene?
About this scene and this episode.
I guess the writers like Justin and Halstead and Aaron, they were all texting each other
about this storyline.
And somehow Jen got involved.
This email pops in my inbox yesterday.
She's like, Jenna, we've all been texting about the Princess Unicorn.
Because you asked Justin about it?
Yeah.
Okay.
And she was like, I have a story and I asked Paul if I could share it.
Okay.
And I was like, oh, I'm so intrigued.
She made an audio clip.
Here it is.
Oh, my gosh.
There was a moment that happened behind the scenes of Moroccan Christmas where Paul and
I were working on a script together.
I'm not sure if it was the fifth season finale or what, but we were kind of under the gun.
I remember when we were writing and he had to go down on set and shoot a scene as Toby.
And then when he came back up, we needed to push forward on the script.
And I remember that he was sitting on the couch and he was like, oh, I think I just
screwed up that scene that I shot.
And I was like, I probably didn't.
I'm sure you didn't.
You're being hard on yourself.
He's like, no, no, I really think I screwed it up.
And he's kind of stuck on it and it was very typical of him.
So I was like, tell me what happened.
And he said, well, I was supposed to be upset and sad because I wanted this princess unicorn
doll for my daughter.
And Daryl wanted the doll for his daughter.
And I needed to be really sad.
And so I thought of what Steve might do or what I thought Jenna might do, which is think
of something sad that happened in real life to them and something that triggered these
sad feelings and sad emotions and kind of be in that place and use it for the scene.
And I said, well, it sounds smart.
Like how to go.
And he said, well, I didn't do that.
And I asked him why.
And he said, well, I thought about getting sad, but it didn't seem worth it.
And I remember laughing at that, being like, I'm pretty sure you just made the decision
not to act.
I think that's what just happened in that moment.
But I remember watching that scene later and thinking it was such a perfectly Toby choice.
It was a great scene.
And I feel like when you're Toby and you're going about the world and Michael's always
making you feel put upon and all of this stuff, you can't constantly keep getting sad.
So it ended up being a very, very wonderful choice that I think he made.
But in the moment, I think he pretty much decided he wasn't going to act because he
didn't want to be sad that day.
And I'll never forget that.
I loved it.
Jen was so excited to tell me the story.
She was like, I have to give him grief.
And I guess they talked together and they were laughing about it.
And Paul was like, yeah, you can share.
You can share that it's true.
I don't want to be sad.
I don't want to dig too deep and actually cry in this scene because then I'm going to
be sad all day.
I'm going to be thinking about my whatever precipitated it.
I love that Jen just wanted to give Paul shit on our podcast.
I know.
She was just like, email hits my inbox.
Oh, so funny.
I agree though.
When I watched the scene, like I didn't think anything of it.
I was like, oh, that's perfect.
Yeah.
Oh, so funny.
And I guess she would like give him shiitake about that for years to come.
Gosh.
Speaking of sad.
Did we talk about the saddest scene ever?
Saddest scene ever.
It all starts because Angela is done.
She is done with Phyllis.
Well, Phyllis tells her to go get the tree and bring it back.
I know.
Phyllis and I absolutely loved this episode.
We got to do so much together even more than you even see in the actual episode.
I can't tell you how amazing it felt as Angela Martin to turn to her and say, shut up.
It felt so good.
And I was really proud of the scene.
I thought Phyllis and I really had this perfect chemistry in this moment.
And then she tells everyone and she shames Angela Martin in front of the whole bullpen.
And when she did, I was so in the moment with her, I felt the heat of my skin.
Like my face started to flush.
Yeah.
You can see it.
Everyone is looking at you.
Everyone, you know, and we've talked about whenever you had a scene where the whole bullpen
focused on you, you were already heightened a little bit like your nerves.
And I really just, oh man, I was, as the character, I felt like I couldn't get out of there fast
enough.
And then Andy walks in.
I know.
And the way Ed just, you know, Ed helms the person.
His inherent goodness and sweetheart just carries through the character of Andy.
I know.
Well, here's the thing.
Is Andy like completely annoying?
Sure.
Mm-hmm.
But he's also got this boyish charm.
Yeah.
A boyish enthusiasm, right?
Yes.
For singing this song to you.
Yes.
And in the script, the song he sings is Silent Night.
Oh, yes.
Mm-hmm.
Randy said, the morning of the shoot, they told Ed, he was so scared to say it.
He said, they've changed their mind.
Can you do Deck the Halls?
Ed had to learn a whole new song to play on the sitar.
He had just learned Silent Night.
Yes.
He'd had that thing for a couple of weeks and he'd been fiddling around on it.
And then they were like, can you do Deck the Halls?
Randy told me it took him about a minute and a half to figure it out because he's amazing.
Yeah.
He's a musical genius.
They thought it would be funny, the juxtaposition of this sort of very cringy moment for Andy
to be playing this upbeat song.
And you know, he improvised the Riddited to do at the end.
I know.
So good.
We're all just staring at him.
And Ed played the moment so perfectly.
My heart completely broke for Andy.
I felt so bad for him and I started to cry.
Like actually crying.
Yeah.
I actually cry.
If you look at this, it pushes in on my face and I'm completely tearing up.
Those are those moments as an actor where you have so inhabited your character's story
and the story of the people around you where your body, like you didn't even have to make
yourself cry or think of something sad.
You were just so in the moment that the emotions just flood.
No.
Really, really.
And everyone was playing it so real.
Paul Feig told us to.
Like he said, when we come around with that B camera, and this was similar to his direction
in Office Olympics, he said, I don't want you to comment on it with, you know, no kind
of funny looks or anything.
Like this is like truly a human moment.
And just stand there.
Just be in it.
It was great direction.
And you felt it.
Yeah.
You felt it.
It felt heavy.
It felt really heavy and I felt horrible and I started to cry.
You know, in rewatching it all, I just thought this episode was written and directed and
acted so, so well.
I was really proud of us as a show.
You know what, Angela, this was what Paul Feig could do for us, you know, like he was
really good at directing us to allow these moments to breathe.
And you're so good in this.
Oh, thanks, ladies.
You're so good in this whole episode and this moment at the end, it is more powerful because
it's real.
Yeah.
You really nailed it.
Thanks so much, lady.
Thank you.
And I thought Kate Flannery crushed this episode too.
Same.
And you know, guys, the supporting cast, these moments were fewer and far between for us.
And so when they happened, we just treasured it and it was so fun to rewatch it.
And you guys would get these scripts with no notice and you'd have to just step up to
the plate and suddenly carry an episode.
And you always did it because we had a really great bench on our show.
We had a deep bench, y'all.
We did.
Well, that is Moroccan Christmas.
We did it.
We did it.
We all hope you'll have a little responsibility in your life.
Yeah, and just want to give a few thank yous to Justin Spitzer, Aaron Shore, Halstead
Sullivan, Jen Salata, Randy Cordray, and Stephen Sox.
Remember, you can find Stephen and his wife, Lori, on their podcast if we knew then.
And I know you traded a bunch of messages with Kate as well.
Yes.
Kate Flannery and James Carey because the script, having the shooting draft, was just
amazing for this one.
And before we go, one little tidbit.
We're so excited to finally get to share with you.
Yes.
We're so excited to tell you guys that we have partnered with Comedy Central and Cartooner
Radio to bring you animated clips of our podcast.
Yes.
You know, we're constantly getting mail from people saying they wish they could watch
us on video.
And for many reasons we won't get into now, we do not videotape our podcast, but Cartooner
Radio has taken some of the audio and they have animated it, which in my opinion is even
better than watching a video.
It is, you guys.
They are so creative, Jen and I are now a cartoon.
I love it.
I love it.
And they have picked these funny moments to animate.
It's going to debut on Comedy Central's YouTube.
We'll put it in our socials so you can find it.
We can't wait for you to see it.
It starts tomorrow.
Woo-hoo!
All right, guys.
We will see you next week.
The horn can pierce the sky.
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 Bubakow.
Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
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