Office Ladies - Safety Training
Episode Date: October 14, 2020This week we're breaking down Safety Training. And in lieu of fast facts we have one big Office Ladies fact, it's our ONE YEAR BIRTHDAY! We take a moment to celebrate and the Ladies answer a few gener...al fan questions. Then, we get into the episode with Andy's return, and we dig into the hilarious scene with Darryl, Michael and the baler. Finally, the ladies explain a Netflix old tech alert, Kentapedia (Kent Zbornak) gives us some good info about the watermelons on the roof scene, and yes, Creed did bite into that potato. We briefly mention depression in this episode, and we don't take it lightly. If you, or someone you know is suffering from depression, please reach out for help. National Suicide Prevention Line 800-273-8255 or text TALK to 741741 afsp.org [afsp.org] Follow us on instagram @officeladiespod. If you have questions for an upcoming episode, visit https://officeladies.com/submitaquestion to file your question there, or email us at officeladies@earwolf.com
Transcript
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I'm Jenna Fisher. And I'm Angela Kinsey. We were on The Office together. And we're
best friends. And now we're doing the Ultimate Office rewatch podcast just for you. Each
week we will break down an episode of The Office and give exclusive behind-the-scenes
stories that only two people who were there can tell you. We're The Office, ladies.
Hi, everybody. Hey, you guys. Welcome to safety training. Yeah. It is season three, episode
19, written by BJ Novak and directed by Harold Ramis. Yes. And Jenna, I mean, I'm gonna talk
about this as we go. But on the DVD commentary for this episode, there is BJ, Mindy, and
Harold Ramis. And it was so wonderful to hear him. Yeah. Oh, I'm gonna go listen to that.
I bet that was amazing. It's a great one. It really is. And I'm gonna sprinkle in some
some little nuggets from it. All right, I love it. Let's start with a summary. It is safety
training day in The Office. Michael and Dwight are on a mission to illuminate the dangers
of the workplace. Meanwhile, Andy returns to The Office after his five weeks of anger
management training. And he is determined to make a fresh start with all of the Dunder
Mifflin employees. It is a doozy, Jenna. I have no fast facts today. What? I have no
fast facts. Should I go buy a lottery ticket? Like what's happening in the universe or things
are going to be a big shift? What's going on? First of all, I have a very big thing we
have to acknowledge in lieu of fast facts. Oh, what? Lady, today is the one year birthday
of office ladies. Get out. Yes. Yes, lady. Our very first episode aired one year ago
this week. Oh my God. How I I I'm so bad about putting things in calendars. This is a big
deal. This is our one year birthday. It's our one year birthday. Happy birthday to us
office ladies, boss ladies podcast. Oh my gosh. And you guys, thank you for being part
of our office ladies journey for one whole year. Yes. Oh, wait. Yeah, Sam is tapping
on the glass, Sam. I know why. Yes, I wanted to say congratulations for a year. I got you
guys these about a year ago when it came up on the podcast and have been waiting patiently
for a reason for you guys to open them. So enjoy. So Angela, we should tell people you're
in the studio. Yes. And Sam just handed you a wrapped gift. Yes. I got one at my house.
I'm holding mine. Okay, so we're going to open it together at the same time. Open it
together. Sam, here we go. I cannot believe you bought this a year ago. It is in. What
is it? Well, it's in some Christmas wrapping paper, which I like. I do too. It's got little
dogs and sweaters and things. Angela, congrats on one full year of office ladies. Oh, Sam.
Oh my God. Oh my God. This is so disturbing. No, Sam. Oh my God. Sam. Sam. Where did you
find these? You guys, it's our face as a mask. Amazon. There's now 14 available of each.
Oh my Lord. Because you bought one. Oh my gosh. I guess I have to poke out the eyes.
Yeah. In a very creepy way, you have to poke the eyes out to wear them. Oh, I don't want
to poke my eyes out. Oh, I have to. I just poked my own eyes out. Oh, you did. Okay.
I just poached my own eyes out. It's really creepy. Oh yeah. Are you smiling behind your
mask, Angela? I am smiling, but I know it's fine. You can't tell. Thank you, Sam. Oh
my gosh, Sam. I love it so much. Well, congrats on a year, guys. Wow. Oh, thank you. Oh my
gosh. That was so fun. Well, that, I know it wasn't a fast fact, but that was pretty
great. Yeah. That was like an office lady's big fact. Yeah. Well, I thought that since
it's our birthday in lieu of fast facts, I thought we could just go to our mail bag
and answer some frequently asked questions this week. Oh, I love that. Here is a fan
question from Eve and Maria Barbic. They said, each time there is a conference room meeting,
is everyone given an assigned seat or can you sit where you want? We were always given
an assigned seat. We would walk into the conference room and they would usually have a little
sticky note on each chair with our name on it. Yeah. And we knew that was our spot because
they would plan it out. They would plan the camera blocking and the camera angles and
how they were going to catch all of our reactions according to who had dialogue and who didn't.
Yeah. So they planned all that out before we even walked in the room. Yeah. Sometimes
someone's dialogue would affect someone else and you would need to see their reaction immediately
after the line of dialogue. So they had that all mapped out and sometimes if you were really
big and pregnant, you were in the back row, just going to say. Yes. So we could hide that
big old belly. That's right. We're getting close to that, Ang. To my belly. Yeah. That's
next season. I know. That's going to be crazy for me. I can't wait to hear those stories.
I'm just going to probably drive you guys all crazy because I'm going to be like, and
this one, Isabel was really kicking. I can't wait. I can't wait. We're going to get it
all down on record. What else you got? All right. This question comes from Raisha Patterson.
Can you explain the decision of the audience not hearing the questions posed by the documentary
crew? So like in our talking heads, right? Yeah. She asked, did Greg Daniels make this
decision or was this taken from the BBC version? Well, I mean, I have my thoughts. My thoughts
are usually in a documentary. The camera crew wants to disappear. They want to really capture
people's lives and they try not to like interfere too much. And so I would guess and I think
you probably have the answer that they wanted it that way. They wanted it to really feel
like a documentary. Yeah, I reached out to Greg and you are exactly right. He said they
made the decision because he felt like the audience would be more invested and more connected
to our characters if you didn't hear anyone asking the questions. If your mind wasn't
thinking about this crew of people filming them. Yeah. But he said they did wonder about
this all the time. They wondered about what are the circumstances when they might reveal
someone from the crew. And I remember, at least on set, Angela, I don't know if you
remember this, but there was this big debate about in the final season or ever, if we reveal
who the documentarian is, who's been making this, who should it be? And I remember the
cast saying that it should either be Greg Daniels or Ken Quapas. Do you remember this
conversation? I do. I do. And I remember I wanted that. I wanted to see the camera crew.
But also, Jenna, I don't know what it's like for you when you watch actual documentaries.
I love them. And if I ever hear the voice of like the documentarian like off camera, I'm
instantly fascinated. I'm like, okay, I want to see this person. Yeah, you want to see
a shot of their face, right? You're like, I've heard a voice. Yeah. Well, Greg told
me that there was also some debate that maybe it should be Randall Einhorn or Ricky Gervais.
Oh. That like at the very end, it would be revealed that Ricky Gervais was our documentarian.
I would like to go one step further and say, what if it was David Brent? Oh, what if David
Brent had come from the UK to make a documentary in America like his own? Well, I guess there
was a problem with this idea because Greg told me that there are a few times that you
do hear the voice for the documentarian. And do you know whose voice it is? Ken Quapas.
Dave Rogers. Oh, no way. Right. And when Greg told me that, I couldn't even think of any
times that we heard the voice. Did he loop it in? Like when did he? Yeah. And I don't
know why or when. So we haven't gotten to it, right? Like we haven't heard a documentarian
yet so far. So it must be coming up. We're going to have to track it. Oh, wow. I want
to track that. These are good. These are good questions. I thought so too. All right. Are
you ready for another one? Yeah. All right. This question, we got a lot. This was definitely
a most frequently asked. Okay. We got this question from Julianne K, Luke D, Kate Smith,
Alana Boylan, and two Emmelies. Okay. The first one is Emily Howard. And the second
is my own sister, Emily. You texted me this question. She has been catching up on our
podcast, Angela. And it's so funny because I'll just suddenly get a text where she's
like, oh my God, you told people I threw up in Ellie's bushes? I know. I know. I know.
And I'm like, oh yeah, you're just catching that. Yeah. That happened a while ago. Yeah.
My sister, Janet, listens and so does my stepson, Jack. And remember when we did Laundry
and Betrayal? Yeah. Jack came out of his bedroom with his headphones on and was like, Angela.
I was like, oops, sorry. Our kids don't hear us talk like that. What did Emily ask? Okay.
They all want to know why do we have multiple directors on the show instead of just one?
So he can prep the other one, right? I mean, so I actually called my sister because I was
like, I don't know how to put this in a text. And I explained it like this. I said, you
know, it takes us one week to shoot an episode, but the director works the week prior preparing
it and the week after editing it. So the director's job is three weeks long. So you couldn't have
someone direct every single episode. It would just be impossible. But she was like, well,
I don't know because sometimes I watch these streaming shows and they have the same director
the whole time. And I'm like, yeah, that's because on those streaming shows, a lot of
times they've written, it's a short number of scripts. It's six scripts or eight scripts
and they write them all. And then they kind of shoot them like one big long movie. That's
true. And they do all their prep beforehand and they do all their editing after. And they'll
shoot out of order too. They'll like a movie, they will wrap out locations. So it'll be
like, we're going to shoot every single scene we have at the high school this week. Yeah.
And next week, we're going to shoot every scene at the house and they shoot like a movie.
But on our show, we shot each episode like its own little mini movie. So that's why.
And we also did like 24 instead of six. Exactly. And they would be writing while we were shooting.
So yeah, that's why we have one director per episode and they switch. Yeah. So now Angela,
this one comes to you. This is from Christina Kuzland. Okay. And she said this, Angela,
can you say something in Indonesian on your podcast? Because my daughter Alana is studying
the language in school. She is a big fan of the show and thought it was so cool that the
person who played her favorite office character had grown up in Indonesia. All right, Alani,
how about we say, hi, how are you? I'm fine. Thank you. Okay, Jenna, we'll do it together.
Yes. So how are you is Apakabar. Apakabar, Terima kasih. I love it. There you go. That's
just a little simple phrase, but I mean, I loved growing up in Indonesia. I had such
a wonderful childhood there and I have very fond memories. So thank you for asking that
question. I get really excited if I ever run into anyone that can speak Indonesian. Like
years ago, I was at the mall and there was a couple over by a bunch of shoes and they
were talking about the shoes. And the man said, waduh mahal sakali. And what he was
saying was like, these are really expensive. And I got so excited. And I was like, oh,
Andabajara Baja Indonesia. Like, I was like, you guys speak Indonesian. And they looked
at me like, what? And then we spoke Indonesian. I get, I really geek out. I get really excited.
Angela, you speak three languages because you also speak Spanish.
Un poco. Yo, yo entiendo mas que hablar, si. I feel like I understand it better than
I can speak it. Yeah. But I really admire this about you. I wish that I spoke another
language fluently and I don't. Well, you know, during this time, I've been doing du lingo.
I love du lingo. And I've been language. I've been just brushing up on Spanish because I
feel like I could be close, you know, closer to being fluent in Spanish and Indonesian
is great, but I don't get a lot of chance to use it here. Yeah. Yeah. We'll get a lot
of opportunities to speak it. Well, thank you to Christina and Alani. We really liked
that question. Thanks guys. Terima kasih. So, and you know that we get a lot of mail from
people telling us how much the office and this podcast is helping to get them through
tough times. Yeah. And your letters and emails mean a lot to us. And we thought we would
share a few here today. Yes. So, John Petrie wrote in to tell us just this beautiful email
about how he and his daughter, Kayla, have bonded while listening to Office Ladies and
what that has meant to him. And John, your letter really touched our heart.
Aw. Well, Luke Foote wrote in about his daughter, Sophia, who is having some health issues.
And she's a big fan of the show and we wanted to give her a little shout out. Hi, Sophia.
Hi, Sophia. We just want to say thanks for listening and we're so glad you love the show
and we're sending you some big hugs. Yes. And we also want to say hello to Julia in
Mount Prospect, Illinois. Julia, we hope that you get better soon so you can get home to
your little kiddos. Yeah. And guys, I know that we've said this before, but we really
love doing this podcast each week. It is our absolute pleasure to rewatch this with you.
We love your messages. I just, I feel so grateful to be connected in this way and doing this
show has just been a really special thing for us too.
I mean, yeah, I get emotional to even talk about what this time and doing this with you,
Jenna, and sharing with everyone that's listening in each week and just having a community with
all of you. And we just love you guys. It feeds us as much as it feeds you.
Yeah. I mean, I get a lot of messages, Ang, that people tell us like, oh, I'm listening
to you while I drive to work and I'm an essential worker and it really calms me down before
my job or, you know, I'm listening while I'm home. It's, you know, I'm doing the laundry
and I'm listening to you. And it's funny, Ang, because that's when I listen to our episodes,
you know, when we get ready to do our edit notes, I fold the laundry and listen to us
too. So I'm, I think I know literally what you're talking about. I do the same thing.
Oh, lady, I've listened to us while picking up dog poop.
Oh boy. I don't have my headphones on listening to us just like whatever it is I'm doing.
But I love to hear everyone's story so much. And yeah, it just, it just all of it warms
my heart, you know?
And it is tough times. It is. It is tough times. But we're going to get through it together.
We are. And we thank you guys for helping us get through it.
Well, listen, why don't we take a break? Okay. And then we will come back with some safety
training.
All right.
All right. So we start this episode with Andy coming back into the office. He's been
back and he's new and improved. He's going to go by the name Drew. And he walks up to
Pam. He's got a box full of stuff. Jenna, two things I need to discuss right out of
the gate.
All right.
Number one, at four seconds, we have a new plant at reception.
No, we just had a new plant.
It doesn't matter.
Pam.
Pam throws them out every week, clearly.
What is her problem?
It's even in a new pot. It's a ceramic pot. It's kind of like a rainbow, like trimmed
in like a purple. What's happening?
I don't know, Angela, but I want to say, you know, there's a lot of things that we've been
noticing that then if you deep dive on the internet, you see lots of people have noticed.
I have never once seen this plant issue come up. This is exclusive to you and this podcast.
I know this sounds crazy, but I had this thought that I wanted to screen grab every single plant
at front reception and make collage art out of it.
Yeah. And then frame it and I'll hang it in my office.
Oh, okay. Wait, here's, here's, um, this week's ready.
Oh, it's, uh, this one is in like a rainbow striped pot.
I know.
It's very festive.
I know. You'll never see it again. Say goodbye to it.
All right. What was your other thing?
Well, my other thing is, you know, Andy slash drew his box of stuff. What is wrapped in
tinfoil? It looks like a, is it a plate of food? What is it?
Yes. I saw that as well. And I was like, who brings their lunch in like that? Is that
his lunch?
Yeah. I, I don't know. I was very curious about it.
You know, when Andy has his talking head and he's sort of explaining that he's going to
go by a new name, he's got a new attitude and he's got a new way to deal with the grumpies.
Did you notice how much wall there was in his talking head?
No, I guess there's like, it's all wall. There's almost no window. And then when it cuts to
Dwight's talking head where he's talking about how he has to shun Andy, yeah, in Dwight's
talking head, it's a lot of window and very little wall. It was just something I noticed.
Is it because Dwight has a future at this company, but Andy doesn't maybe Andy hit
a wall? I don't know. I don't know. There's a lot of wall. That's all I'm saying.
Well, I do notice that Andy always, he's like one of these people that has little, little
phrases for everything, like his nifty gifties and the grumpies and a lot of nicknames. Well,
we had a fan question from Don Mackley, okay, who wrote in to say there are so many times
Andy mentions his old nicknames and they're almost always different. How many nicknames
were mentioned over the course of the show? Oh my Lord, that's a good question. I looked
it up in the show Bible and here is what it says. Here they are, ready? Nard Dog, Boner
Champ, King Butt, Ice Man, Puke, Ace, Buzz, those were while he was in college. And then
in this episode, he asked everyone to be called Drew. And in the next episode, he gives himself
the nickname Will Do. So these are just nicknames for Andy, for himself. Just Andy. Right, because
it's not like his friends like Broccoli Rob and all those guys. Yes, that's right. These
are just names that Andy has referred to himself as being Boner. So there you go. Wow.
So that's nine. I counted nine. Nine nicknames. What were nicknames you had growing up? What
about your friends? Just no. They called me Jenna. Oh my gosh. What? Well, let's see,
in college. Ham Bone. Well, that was high school. Ham Bone. I was also called Bones because
I was really skinny. Ham Bone, Bones. I was in college. My roommate's name was also Angela.
So they called me Kinsey. And then that became Kins, Tiny Kins. But I had a perm and I would
wear a ponytail kind of like on top of my head. So a few people started calling me Cush
Ball. Okay. Cush Ball, Ham Bone, Bones, Tiny Kins. A lot of nicknames. You're very Andy
Eskins. I gave myself a nickname when I was on a charity softball team for Children's
Mercy Hospital. Please tell me what it is. The Kinzenator. That was on my jersey. Oh
my God, I'm Andy. What's happening? I don't know. I mean, people called me Fisher. They
called me by my last name, but it was never like, it never felt like an official nickname.
Right. Well, my friend told me once, listen to this. Tell me if this hits you. What? A
friend of mine went and did this very intense, like therapy week at this therapy center.
Great. Right? This is where you're supposed to like dig into any of your childhood traumas.
Oh, really? Unpack all your baggage. Sounds horrible. Right? Super intense. What he told
me was that when you get there, you fill out a form and you are asked, what is the nickname
that your parents called you when you were a child? And that is the name they refer to
you as the entire week. And it's supposed to, I think, try to put you like back into
a space where you'll start unpacking all your baggage. I don't want to go cause I don't want
to fill out any forms. I'm done with forms. Well, we know that about you. I don't want
to fill out your form. I don't want to do your questionnaire. I'm surprised you have
a passport because that was some real intense form filling out. I know. And that I got into
college. So many forms. So many forms. They're not for you. I did it when I had to do it.
I'm done now. I'm done. Yeah. Okay. This intense therapy place that lost you at forms. Yeah.
Too many forms. Pass. Okay. Well, I have a beef with Jim. I think I know what it is.
Andy is really earnestly doing his process that he went through from anger management.
He's trying to turn things around. He tells Jim he's going to go by Drew now. And Jim
goes, no, I'm not going to call you that. And I was like, what a jerk. What a jerk.
Yeah. Why not? What does it cost you to call this guy Drew? He's just messing with him
to mess with him. Yeah. Why are you being an instigator with a person who's struggling
to, you know, turn over a new leaf? Yeah. There is a runner in the deleted scenes of
Andy going through different scenarios with everyone in the office where he's tested.
And he keeps being earnest and trying to get through them. Like he brought in cookies and
they were really crappy and people were talking about how crappy the cookies were. And they're
like, oh, who brought him in? And Andy was like, me, but he didn't get mad. He was just
like working through it. So yeah, I thought Jim was a little bit of a jerk right there.
I agree. Oh, and Jenna, I want to go back to Dwight's talking head speaking of forms
to fill out about your childhood. What would he have written? He was shunned from ages
four to six because he didn't save the excess oil from a tuna can. I mean, he said it's
like slapping someone with silence. Yeesh. Yeah. Well, let's get in to the main plot
of this episode now. Let's do it. Michael has a talking head where he explains that today
is safety training day. And it's going to be led by Toby. He really hopes Toby isn't
going to mess it up. Right. But first, they're all going to go down to the warehouse and
listen to Daryl's presentation about safety in the warehouse. It's going to be zoppity.
It's going to be zoppity. You know, Dwight is like, all right, let's get down to the
warehouse, right? Everyone's like filing down the hallway. There is a deleted scene that
I loved. It's just a quick snippet. But these are the things I loved about our show. Dwight
is saying, everybody, buddy up. Like, why is he saying that? And I'm walking down the
hallway and Meredith is like a step or two behind me. And Dwight's like, everyone, buddy
up. And Angela Martin grabs Meredith's hand and Meredith is like, don't hold my freaking
hand. And it's like three seconds. And I just loved it. I love that. It's so funny. It's
like you're not evacuating from the building. You're just going to the warehouse. I know,
but whatever Dwight is doing, I'm like, I'm on board. Okay, buddy up. Well, when we get
down to the warehouse, these are some of my favorite scenes of all time led by Craig
Robinson. Oh, man, I love it when Craig has the floor. I love it when he's in charge and
Michael has to listen to him. He is just trying to deliver information that is important.
Yes. And he has to deal with Michael. You know, it reminds me very much of watching
my first graders assume classes. Oh, trying to keep people on task. Yes. The teacher is
like, what is three plus two? And everyone's like, I got a new puppy. It's loud outside.
My mom likes wine. And the teacher is like, what is three plus two? This is what it reminds
me of. Darryl trying to talk to all of us about this forklift and this Baylor. Yeah.
You know, Harold Ramis talked about Craig and about how brilliant of an actor he thought
he was and how he felt like Craig was a naturalistic actor. Like it was so natural, this dialogue
coming out of him that you just wholeheartedly believe him. It never seemed scripted, right?
Like everything about his cadence, like all of it, it's so, it is, it's amazing. Yeah.
I was sort of studying that. That's so funny that Harold Ramis said that because I was
studying that was like, how does he make it seem so natural? I mean, Craig is really
brilliant guys. He's super talented. Craig, come be on the podcast. I reached out to him.
We've traded some messages. It's going to happen. We just have to figure out dates.
Let's lock it up, Craig. Let's lock it up. Well, as Darryl is explaining the dangers
of the Baylor, for example, Michael is making a ton of jokes. Andy's trying to suck up
to Dwight and this is when people start making bets, right? Yes. This is the other storyline
of the whole episode. So Darryl is about to say, do you know how many people lose an
arm in a Baylor each year? Kevin and Jim decide to bet on what they think the answer is.
Yes, exactly. It happens around four minutes. I want to share with you that Mindy said something
that really made me laugh in the DVD commentary. She said that in the writer's room, they were
talking about this Baylor and they really saw it as a scary big piece of machinery.
Maybe it had blades or something and when they got it, she said it just looked like
a big telephone booth. Yes. That moved really slowly. Well, I talked to Kent Sabornak about
this Baylor and he said that it was a real working Baylor. Yeah. We had an actual safety
meeting. Remember, Jenna, when we went into the warehouse to shoot, our second AD held
a safety meeting that was like, guys, we have a forklift. We have a Baylor. Do not touch
anything. Yeah, these are real machines. He said that he called the manufacturer Olympic
Wire and Equipment and they donated a Baylor because they got free product placement so
that we got a free Baylor. Well, I want to say that there is this little part at the
end of the Baylor conversation where it's going on and on, right? Yeah. Darrell is like,
so do you understand? And Michael is like, yes, only on the rarest occasion. Darrell is
like, on no occasions, on no occasions. I had to look that up in the script and I will
tell you that was not in the script. I think that was improvised. I feel like I remember
that too, being there and we just let Steve and Craig go back and forth. Just keep going.
Let's go back and forth. It brought me back, Angela. I just loved shooting this episode
and part of it was because, if you notice, we're all in these big group scenes almost
all the time. Yeah. This was an episode of big group scenes and not just that, we also
got to work with Patrice and Craig and Carly. We had all the warehouse folks too. We were
all together all the time. It really is rare. I mean, it happened in the basketball episode,
it happened in this one, some Christmas parties and things like that, but it was rare and
we would all just have a great time. And I liked it too because it was such a simple
idea. It's just safety training day. That's it. And it goes off the rails and we're all
in, like all of us are now on this roller coaster. Can't get any work done. Yeah. Well,
I have to say, before we leave the scene, I absolutely love that Michael cannot remember
Madge's name. He can't. No. He calls her Patch, Pudge. He cannot remember her name. My mom
cannot remember a name that is just slightly different, just slightly different. Here's
an example. When I was in college, my roommate's boyfriend's name was Bart, B-A-R-T Bart. And
the day I met him, my mom was with me and the minute he was like, hi, I'm Bart. I thought,
nope, not going to happen. Nope. It's never going to get that one. What did she call him?
For years. For years, she called him Mart. How's Mart? Mart. I'm like, Mom, it's Bart.
What'd I say? You said Mart. I did? Yes, you did. Wow. Who would name their child Mart?
I don't know. I don't know, but like who would name their kid Patch or Patch or Pudge? You're
so right. By the way, I apologize in advance for our listener named Mart. I would also
like to apologize to anyone named Patch or Pudge. Well, now we're going to go upstairs,
Angela. Toby is going to teach his safety meeting. For whatever reason, Michael has
forced everyone from the warehouse to come to this presentation. Paul Lieberstein knocks
this out of the park. As great as Daryl was in the warehouse, Paul is as Toby in the office.
Yes. His list of things, guys, to be prepared for. Are you ready for them? Toby's office
safety training, carpal tunnel syndrome, poor circulation, computer screen, eye strain,
and you might want to keep a sweater or a cardigan in case it gets drafty. Yeah. Michael
is so frustrated. He can't take it. None of these things are as exciting as getting your
arm cut off in a bailer. He can't take it. He can't take it. At five minutes, 52 seconds,
Ryan says, what about a long sleeve tee? Yeah. Here's a great story about that. According
to BJ, there was a huge joke debate about that line. What about a long sleeve tee? And
at 2 a.m. in the writer's room, they were debating it. Mike Scherr said, no, this is
a ridiculous line. And Greg was all for it. This is so funny that they spent time debating
this line. I know. I know. I love this line. Me too. And it gets called back later when
we're asked to go downstairs. I know. I love it. Well, maybe that's why BJ delivered it.
So Riley is because it got in. He knew the backstory of this debate in the writer's room
over that line. We had a fan question about another line in this little bit. Okay. Sarah
Bell, Dagny Albano and Katie Boyd all asked when Michael's reading the safety booklet
and he says office life causes a sedimentary lifestyle. Was that improv or was that in
the script? That was not in the script. You're kidding. There's a little bit of banter there
between Michael and Toby that looked like it veered a little bit off script. Like they
were having a little fun with it. Oh, I love that. So Michael has had it. He takes over.
He's like, Toby, I'm going to do the safety training. And he wants to show the warehouse
people that working in an office is just as dangerous. And he says, oh, there's seasonal
affective disorder. Like dim light can lead to depression. And the warehouse people, they're
out. They're like, yeah, dim lights, a bitch, you live a little sweet, nerfy life, sitting
on your biscuit, never having to risk it. And Michael is, he's just so bummed out. He really
wanted to prove to these guys that things get just as crazy up in the office.
It's such a weird thing to take a stand on. I know. It's such a, it's such a Michael Scott
thing to become so invested in this. He just wants to be cool, Jenna. He's fascinated by
the warehouse guys. Oh, he really is. And this tracks from previous episodes. And he
especially wants them to think he's cool. Yeah, he wants to win their favor. Yeah. Well,
now Kevin, Jim, Oscar and Karen are all gathered around Pam's desk. And for whatever reason,
they are trying to guess how many jelly beans are in her little dispenser. Yeah, it's now
taken over this whole sort of betting from the warehouse. It's how they're going to pass
their day. Jim wins. Jim thought 50. Karen went with 51. Turns out there were 49. Yeah.
And then at eight minutes, 39 seconds, Kevin says, it's not fair because Jim has spent
countless hours talking to Pam at front reception. I mean, hours and hours. Yeah. Oh, awkward.
I would like you guys to know that I kept Pam's candy dispenser when we wrapped. What?
You're just now telling us this? One year we've been doing this podcast. One year we've
talked about what did you take from set? Yeah. Where is it? I have it. It's in my office.
It's a little plastic. It's so simple. I know. And it has a little like silver scooper. And
it has a little lid you lift up. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Do you keep candy? Yeah. And people never
use the silver scooper. What they would do is they would just open it and shake it into
their hand, which by the way, was just a sanitary and effective. But I always use the silver
scooper because I'm a big fan of tiny cutlery. You're also a big fan of desserts that come
in a very small size. With a very tiny spoon. Yeah. You'd love that. I like eating with
tiny cutlery. Do you follow Tiny Kitchen? Yes, from Taste Made. Yes. Where they make
a teeny tiny meal in a teeny tiny kitchen. Yes. It's mesmerizing. It's mesmerizing.
I did a really fun project with Taste Made with my husband, Josh, and we got to go tour
the Tiny Kitchen. Jenna, are you there? I can't speak. Are you okay? I can't speak.
I thought you froze. I didn't freeze. I can't believe that you got to see the Tiny Kitchen
in person. Oh my God. It's so cool. It's so cool. Is it so tiny? It's so tiny. And the
lady that does it. The little bitty spatula. The little. She like makes the little egg
on the little bay pan. Yes. And, and you know, the oven, they put a little tiny like candle,
a little tea. What do they call tea, tea lights? What are they called? Yeah, like a tea candle.
Tea candle. Tea candle. They, they do, they really do cook things on the stove pot and
they use a little candle. You need to go see it. You'll love it. You guys, it's so cute.
Look up the one where they make a little hamburger. Oh. All right. Where were we? I don't know.
We got completely lost talking about tiny cutlery and tiny kitchens. I know where we
are. Michael has called Pam into her office to ask her opinion on the seriousness of
depression versus the threat of working with a Baylor. Yeah. Yeah. I got very excited about
this conversation, Jenna, because I thought it was a fantastic, very subtle callback to
the convict because Pam says, you know what? The warehouse guys had visuals on their side.
Oh my gosh. Light bulb for Michael. If you could look at his face, he's okay at nine
minutes, 17 seconds. Look at Steve's face as Michael when he's like, yeah, you're so
right. That's all that was missing. That's all that was missing. Yeah. Remember, we
learned in the convict from the deleted scene that hoot, the owl came to his school and
in that moment, he realized if you want people to hear you, you have to have a costume. You
have to have some props. You have to have visual aids. Well, Michael is off and running
now. Now he calls Dwight into his office and he's like, we need ways to illustrate the
imminent threat of depression faced by office workers. And okay, I am pretty sure all of
this was either improv or like given to them on the day because this scene in the script
is about four lines long. But here, when Dwight suggests a quilt, a depression, Michael says
a depression quilt. Michael is like, there's no time to sew one. That is the greatest response.
It's not like, no, that's a bad idea. It's like, yes, if only we had time, that would
be perfect. I think this was a lot of improv because there's also extra in the deleted
scenes. They go on and on. Oh, is it so good? It's fun. It's really fun. And Michael has
Dwight's so worked up like Dwight is so immediately on board. Yes. I love the line when he says
when Michael says, you know what our killer is? And Michael says depression and Dwight
says wolves. Yes. That made me laugh out loud. Oh my gosh. Those two together are so brilliant.
Well now we go to the parking lot where Michael is bouncing on a trampoline. He had Dwight
reach out to the giant big boy toy store. I looked up, there isn't one just so you know.
Oh, okay, that was made up. Well, what I love is the detail in the background of the box
and all the packaging that's in the background. Oh, that's a great detail. Yeah. So this came
in a box and they had to assemble it. He's going to go up on the roof and he's going
to have Dwight call everyone outside. And then he is going to pretend to jump off the
roof as a way of illustrating what can happen if your depression goes unchecked. And it
was a way to visually teach everyone. That's right. And after he jumps off the roof, he's
going to take a few extra bounces just for fun before he walks around the corner to reveal
that he is alive, that he's fine. This is, this is Michael's big plan. This is going
to show everyone what could go wrong. I have a little nugget here from Harold Ramis. I'm
going to share it with you. So they talked about in the commentary that originally the
idea was that everyone went up on the roof to talk Michael out of this. Everyone. Yeah.
And Harold was like, I don't think it really sells how serious, like what he's contemplating.
I think if he's on the roof and he's shouting down to everyone in the parking lot and you
have that whip camera panning from the roof back to him and down and up, you really get
the sense of what a horrible idea this is. Yeah. That was Harold. Harold was like, no
guys, everyone else should be in the parking lot. Only Michael on the roof. I just thought
that was really great. Well, I know that they probably wanted us up on the roof because
technically it would be easier to shoot with sound and camera. It was, it was such a technically
difficult episode. And I remember that. I remember how difficult it was for them to
get angles on all of us and him and the bright sun and the sound kudos to our crew because
it doesn't seem like it was difficult, but it was actually really technically difficult.
Yeah. And to Steve and the guys that were on the roof, just the limited crew up there
with him, they were up on that roof for a really long time. Yeah. Yeah, they were. Well, now
back in the office, the whole betting game is still going. People are placing bets on
how long it's going to take Kelly to explain to Ryan how Netflix works. They're betting
like how many times she's going to say the word awesome and what movie she mentions and
how long it takes. It's, it's heated. Yes. We find out that Kelly talked for two minutes
and 42 seconds. She said the word awesome 12 times and mentioned six romantic comedies
and never had a clue as people were like putting money on the table next to Ryan. Well, we
had a fan question from Elizabeth Myers who says old tech alert. Can you guys explain
this Netflix scene? What is a queue? Oh, what is a queue? You guys. Yes. I didn't even think
of that. Netflix. You remember old Netflix, right, Angela? Yeah, yeah, yeah, you'd put
it in your queue like it was like a list of what you were going to watch because you got
a DVD in the mail. Yeah. It didn't just come up on your TV. So you would have to go to
the Netflix website and pick what DVDs you want them to send to you and you could pick
the order. And then when you were done watching it, you put it in this like prepaid postage
envelope and you sent it back. And whenever they got the one that you sent back, they
would send you the next one in your queue. Yeah, it was like a mail in blockbuster, basically.
It was revolutionary because the idea was you didn't have to drive to the video store
anymore to rent your videos. The problem was though, sometimes you'd be like waiting for
your next thing to come up in your queue. Yeah. So lady, this whole Netflix queue thing,
it reminded me of how my parents got the DVD mail Netflix service. Yeah. For like ever,
for like ever, they would not switch to the streaming one. Why? Why wouldn't they switch?
I don't know, but they did the DVD thing forever. And I texted them about it. I had to know
and their responses were so funny and my mom said I could share them. Okay. So you said,
what did you wait? What did you text them? I texted, Hey guys, how long ago did you switch
from the old Netflix service of getting physical DVDs in the mail to getting the streaming
service? Okay. They texted me back separately. Okay. Okay. My dad texted me back. Don't
remember quite a while. Okay. The end. My mom texted back, Dad's mowing the lawn, but
I think I can help you. Maybe that's why his text was so brief. Yeah, I think so. It made
me laugh. Okay. And then she said a while back, I was having lunch with a friend and
she told me that we could get Netflix, the cable channel for 9.95 a month. We were paying
that just to get two movies a month in the mail. So that's when we signed up and dropped
our other plan. It's funny because I had wanted to get Netflix on cable, but dad kept telling
me it was too expensive. I mean, you know how dad is about money. So we've had Netflix
streaming for I'd say three years now, but dad does not like it when you have to pay
extra for certain movies. I really want to watch the movie Fatima, but you have to pay
for it and he won't do it. But I will once again win this battle. You know how it works.
Oh my gosh. That is so layered. That is so jam packed with information. First of all,
I love that she's like, dad is mowing. Then I love that she's like a few, a while back
I was having lunch because you're like, wait, what? Where are we going? What's happening?
I know. I know. But yes. So I guess three years, only three years ago, my parents were
still getting DVDs in the mail. And I remember because I would ask them, you know, I would
be like how they were in love with Downton Abbey, Downton Abbey. And I'd be like, what
season are you on? And they're like, well, we're waiting for the next season. It hasn't
come yet. Yes, it's right there. Just subscribe. It's right there. Oh my gosh. They're waiting
for their DVD. That is that is amazing. All right. Should we take a break and then come
back and talk about those watermelons on the roof? Yes. And I have some good info from
Kentopedia about the watermelons. Well, I want to hear it. All right, good. We'll be right
back. All right. So we are back Dwight and Michael are on the roof and they are testing
sort of an experiment to see how far Michael has to jump out to land on the trampoline.
And they've got some watermelons and they're giving it a go. So lady, I reached out to
Kentopedia because I had two questions. Okay. Number one, I wanted to know how did Steve
and Rain get up on the roof and who all was up there with them? Did they have to ride
that thing that you and John rode? Yes, they had to use that big scissor lift and everyone
had to wear a safety harness. But here was some something new that Kent added this season.
What Kent hired some stunt guys to rig safety cable up on the roof of the stage so that
if there was ever a time where the crew had to be up there to do lighting, they would
be able to wear a safety harness and clip themselves onto a safety cable. So for this
scene, Steve and Rain and Randall, who was our cinematographer, they all had safety harnesses
underneath their costumes and they were clipped onto the safety cable as well. So that also
probably involved the wardrobe department because she would have had to have made sure
their suits were big enough to go over the safety harness. Yes, I also had a question
about the watermelons. Oh, okay. And I was not alone. Lauren Brightwell, Megan Keele,
Ciara Begley, Phoebe Bono, and Maddie McKee all wanted to know how many watermelons were
used for the trampoline test scene. How many? Kent told me that we purchased 12 watermelons,
but around take 10, Kent said to Harold Ramis, I think we're going to need to CGI the watermelon
thing because none of the watermelons that he was throwing off the roof were coming anywhere
close to hitting the car. Yeah, they talk about it in the commentary that they weren't
getting it until take number 11. Oh, Kent said it was the last watermelon, that it was
take 12. Oh, Harold Ramis said it was take number 11. Oh, well, so guys, it was either
take 11 or 12, I guess by some miracle, it landed on the trampoline and it hit the car
perfectly. And I feel like Steve and Rainne's expression like is real because they were
like, oh my God, we finally did it. Well, do you know what this reminded me of, Angela?
This reminded me of those Dude Perfect guys. Do you know Dude Perfect? No, what's Dude
Perfect? Okay, so this is my son is obsessed with Dude Perfect. Is this like a basketball
like you have to shoot a basketball from a crazy place? Yes, they are these guys, they're
from Texas, and they became famous by doing all of these elaborate trick shots. Yes,
on YouTube. But I mean, they're so much bigger now, they've got like a live tour now and,
you know, yada, yada, but yes, they would have done something like this, they would
have thrown a watermelon off of a building onto a trampoline and tried to hit something
with it. And Dwight and Michael's reaction just 100% reminded me of these Dude Perfect
videos that I've been watching with my son. Yes, I have seen those videos, I didn't know
the guy's name or whatever they go by, but yeah, our kids love that stuff. It also made
me think that maybe we need to collaborate with Dude Perfect on some sort of a frothing
thing. So it's like off the tree, hit the trash can. Yeah, for all things trick shots
with Office Ladies and Dude Perfect. It's a collaboration we've all been waiting for.
And Waffle Ball. How'd you say it just now? You said it in the middle. Waffle Ball. You're
rubbing off on me. I know, I love it. Two things before we leave. The whole watermelon
off the roof moment, Jenna. Okay. Number one, all of these shots up here, when they look
out over to the trampoline, you can see a great view of the impound lot across the street
with all the trains. I noticed it too. Yeah, you get a real slice of where we were, guys.
Those were our neighbors when we filmed at Chandler Valley Studios. Yeah. And one last
thing from this watermelon moment because I just thought it was so sweet. BJ in the commentary
said that this was one of those moments, Jenna. It reminded me of when you talk about being
on the roof, eating that grilled cheese sandwich on that warm, beautiful night, right? It was
like that for BJ. He said, I had this moment where I was like, wait a second. I'm on a
roof with Steve Carell and Rainn Wilson and Harold Ramis. We're throwing watermelons and
I'm getting paid. Yes. I thought that was so sweet. That's what made me think of the
Dude Perfect thing because I was like, these are like a bunch of dudes up on a roof throwing
watermelons down, just having a great time, but oh, they're at work. Yeah. Like that was
their job that day. I mean, how fun. So fun. Well, I have some more news about the scene
before we move on. Okay. The car that they hit was a rental. It was a Chrysler 300 picture
car. Guess how much money it cost them to do this gag? Oh my gosh, I don't know how
much. They dented the roof and they broke the electric moon roof of the car. From that
one watermelon? Yeah, it cost $6,500 to fix it. Dang. Yeah. All right, should we move
back inside? Yes, because I texted Creed Bratton about this next scene. The bedding is continuing
on. Everyone is watching Creed eat his apple. Creed doesn't know they're all standing behind
him. He sets the apple down. Jim walks by puts a potato where the apple was. Will Creed
notice he's now eating a potato and not an apple? Well, we got mail about this, Angela.
Bianca H, Kayla O, Cassidy Price, Deanna Horn, and Merilee S all asked, did Creed really
take a bite out of a potato? Yeah, I texted him. This is what he said. He wrote, I definitely
bit right into that potato and it wasn't half bad. Oh, so there you go. There you go. Well,
Angela, it makes sense to me because in French, the word for apple is pomme and the word for
potato is pomme de terre, which means apple of the earth or apple of the ground. I'm sorry,
what is your logic? It makes sense to you that Creed would eat a potato and not know
it wasn't an apple because it's the French word is pomme de terre. Yeah, okay. Potato
in Indonesian is kintang. What's apple? Apple is apel. Oh, well, the French have related
the apple and the potato in their language. Okay. And so, perhaps, perhaps they, I don't
know, they're onto something. Perhaps Creed would do well in France. Yeah, I guess that's
right. But as long as he doesn't try to pick them up himself at a market. And thump them.
Before we leave the whole Creed betting scene, at 12 minutes 38 seconds, you can see Angela
sitting at her desk watching everyone and judging. Oh, she's not participating, guys.
She's not going to gamble. She's not going to bet on things. No. I remember I had a
whole conversation with Harold about it, like, where would Angela be in the bullpen?
Would she be watching, you know, and she's reluctantly glancing over to see what the
hubbub is about, but she will not participate. Well, Angela is a little bit of a busy body
in the sense that she likes to know the goings on. But that doesn't mean she's participating.
No, she needs to know just enough to judge you, but not enough to be judged.
Correct. Well, now we get to a scene that is really fun. Dwight has to enlist Andy's
help in getting a bouncy castle, which means he has to momentarily unshun him, which leads
to a great shun, unshun bit. It's actually unshun, reshun. That's what he says, unshun,
reshun. And on the commentary, they talked about this, this little bit and they said
that Jean and Lee came up with the whole shun thing and that rain is who physicalized it.
Rain doing that hand thing up and down was just rain playing around. I loved that. I
know it really sold it. It really did. This like weird, like fake window thing that he
was doing. I know. I know. So childish. Okay. So now we go back up on the roof. They have
this bouncy house castle. They're, you know, this is going to be so much better than the
trampoline. But then Dwight's like, do you want to test it? And Michael's like, no, no,
these tests are going horrible. I won't do it if I keep, if we keep doing these tests.
Yes. And he asked Dwight to kind of psych him up, right? And so rain starts doing this
amazing musical like thing. It's like the thing that he does when he's pumping himself
up in the stairwell before a big sales call or before a big interview. It's the Dwight
Eric guitar. Yes. Oh, it's so good. I watched it like three times. Yeah. I loved at the
end when he started to like get his like two things with his mouth. It was kind of gross
when he was like, yeah. Well, I noticed something Angela. It was very windy in this scene. Did
you notice that? Yeah, I did. And I, their ties were like just whipping all around. Did
you see that? Yeah. Well, I decided to pause at 14 minutes 30 seconds and read the label
on Steve's tie. Oh, you're crazy. And I love it. What'd you find? It looks like it was
a tie made by Gianfranco Ruffini, who was an Italian clothing designer. Okay. And the
reason I became sort of obsessed with this was because I recently had a conversation
with Carrie Bennett, our wardrobe designer. Yeah. And she told me about how when she was
designing the show, she wanted every man in the office to have a very specific tie story.
She wrote a tie story for every man. And she told me that this was because,
you know, when you're designing a show where there's a bunch of men working in an office,
it's really hard to differentiate them. It's just a bunch of people in suits and ties.
So she told me that when she was doing the original design for the show, she got really
worried that all the men were going to look alike because they were all just wearing suits or shirts
and ties, right? So by doing this tie story, this was her answer. Her tie story for Michael Scott
was that Michael buys all of his suits at JC Penney and they come with a matching tie. So he
buys all his clothing as a full kit. And this tie is part of a suit kit. I looked it up.
And I think this is like Michael's designer. This is Michael's stuff.
That's his go-to guy at JC Penney's. Oh, I'm sorry. Jacques Penay is my Aunt Brenda used to say.
Oh, is that how she says JC Penney? Yeah, she'd be like, are we going to go to Tarjay and then
Jacques Penay? I love that. I love that. Well, I don't think you can get these guys' suits anymore
because when I was trying to find them online, the only place I could find them was Etsy and eBay,
people reselling them if you want a Michael Scott tie. Incidentally, something I thought was
interesting, the tie maker's son is named Remo Rafini and he's a billionaire.
What's Remo doing? How do you get to be a billionaire? He is also a fashion designer
and he is the owner of this huge fashion company in Italy. In Italy. There you go. There you go.
All because they were filming on a windy day. I went down that rabbit hole. I love that. I love
that. I love that all the men have their tie story. You certainly see that. I feel like with Andy
because he's so New England preppy. I feel like his suit looks very different from the other
fellas. Yeah. Okay. Well, we can discuss more tie stories as they become relevant in future
episodes. I hope we do. I'm going to hold you to that, you and Carrie. Carrie should send in some
audio clips. Oh, yes. I'll have her do that. Okay. Or maybe we should have her on for a deep dive
because she has fascinating stories. Oh, I would love that. I would love it. Okay. Well, now Dwight
burst into the office, right? He tells everyone, come outside, come outside. Michael is suffering
from depression and you need to come out here. Everyone begins to ask him, are we going to
need a coat? He's like, no, the weather, it's a gorgeous day out. Come on, come on.
And then he has a line at 15, 15 minutes, one second that I absolutely love because he's like,
Dwight, he's being Dwight, come on, come on. And then he answers Stanley and he goes,
no, no, it really is. It's, it's very nice. That was so rain. It was so rain. It was so good.
I loved it too. I loved it. So now everyone gets up and they go outside to see what's happening
with Michael. Yeah. And we had a fan question from Caitlin Moribito and Brinkley Hope who said,
when the office workers go down to watch Michael demonstrate depression,
some people are in the elevator and other people are coming down the stairs,
but they arrive at the same time. So I guess like they noticed it doesn't matter if you took the
stairs of the elevator. And they said, we imagine this is because they all couldn't fit in the elevator
at the same time, especially because it's not a real elevator. But the question is,
how would they decide who was on the elevator and who was coming down the stairs? And which did we
prefer waiting in the elevator or being crammed in the stairwell for the start of the scene?
I always liked the stairwell because that elevator is small and it always made me feel a
little claustrophobic. Same. I would always, if given the choice, I would vote stairs. But with
the stairs, you would have to go up quite a bit and come down. So you did have to go up and down,
up because you'd have to tuck around behind the stair, you know, behind the corner.
So now we're in the parking lot and everyone has gathered. Michael is up on the roof.
And this is when Michael and Dwight kind of start their show. Oh, yeah, they have it very
rehearsed. Before we get into that, Jenna, I want you to know that Harold said that there was so much
from all of this parking lot that they had to cut, that he had a longer version that he just loved
that really got everyone's reactions to what was happening. And he said in the DVD commentary, he
was like, I hope that original longer cut that we had that you guys will all get to see it someday.
And is it in the deleted scenes? No, I think there's even stuff. There's some in the deleted
scenes, but I think there's more that didn't even make the deleted scenes. Wow. I know, I know.
Well, we had a fan question from Tess Shornick. Okay. This is what she wrote.
After 53 hours of labor and an emergency C section that included general anesthesia,
I woke up holding my first born daughter. And the first thing I said was Dwight,
you ignorant slut. Come on. She said this was because I woke up to hearing my husband tell
the nurse about how she should watch the office. So I have to know where did that line come from?
Yes. Oh my gosh, I love this line. This line for you guys rewatching is at 15 minutes, 37 seconds.
Well, this was based on a skit from Saturday Night Live with Dan Ackroyd and Jane Curtin.
They would do this parody of the 60 minutes point counterpoint. And Jane Curtin played a liberal,
and Dan Ackroyd played a conservative. And what the way it would go is like Jane Curtin,
she would present her side first. And then Dan Ackroyd would lead off with Jane,
you ignorant slut. And then he would give his counterpoint and Jane Curtin would say,
Dan, you pompous ass. And this was this bit. So this is Michael once again,
stealing from Saturday Night Live for his little show. And also Saturday Night Live in a time when
Harold Ramis knew all those folks, you have to wonder, right? Right. I love that. I love that.
I've seen that phrase on so many things. I've seen it on throw pillows, on socks, keychains,
baseball hats. Yeah. It's a classic. So Michael and Dwight, yes, they're doing sort of this
performance, you know, they've got it, clearly they have rehearsed this. And everyone starts
talking in the parking lot, like, is this real? Is it not real? It probably definitely is not real.
And they start taking bets on it. Kevin gets everyone going.
Yeah, Kevin says, if someone gives you 10,000 to one odds on anything, you take it.
And if John Mellon Camp ever wins an Oscar, Kevin's going to be a very rich dude.
You go Kev. You go Kev. Well, my favorite part of this, Angela, is when Michael realizes that
the warehouse guys aren't there. Those are the ones he wants to impress the most.
He doesn't care about doing this for his co-workers upstairs. The whole point of this,
and he gets so frustrated with Dwight, is that the warehouse guys see that he's on the roof.
Yes. So he gets Dwight to bring all the warehouse folks out and they start the whole
thing over again. And this is when you realize it is 100% scripted. He says, Dwight, you ignorant
slut again. Yeah, Dwight does his air quotes with his fingers again. Yes, exactly.
And Jim has this great talking head where he's like, the first performance was a little rough,
but, you know, they hit their stride and he can't wait to bring his parents tomorrow for the matinee.
Yeah, it's just been great. Then we see Creed coming out of the bushes. He's zipping up his pants.
Like, I guess he's just gone pee, which is so on brand for Creed that he just went over to the
bushes to take a whiz with his co-workers right there. Anyway, he says, guys, what's up with the
bouncy castle? And they're like, what? They all run over. And this is the moment where Jim and
Pam are like, Oh my God. Oh my God. He's, it's part of this bit. He's going to do it. Well,
lady, I remember shooting this scene because it is not in the script that Creed comes around the
corner zipping up his pants. And we came up with that on the day. We thought it would be really
funny that Creed was taking a leak. And that's how he discovered bushes. And that's how he
discovers it. Because it was like, well, why is Creed around the corner? And we're like,
in the moment you realize like, how, oh wait, how do we justify that Creed went behind the bushes?
And that I, I, we thought that was so funny. We thought that was so Creed. So I loved that.
And then I also loved that Pam tells Michael that he has to come down because she has a present for
him. And he never doesn't believe her.
Well, you know, Jenna, I found it interesting because when I was watching this again, all I could
think of is where's Karen? Like Jim and Pam are sort of together in this moment. They're figuring
out what Michael's up to and sort of brainstorming how to help him. And where is Karen? Right?
Well, you are not the only person who was curious about that, Angela. We got mail on that. Oh, yeah?
Kara Bailey, Rachel Ross, Maggie June, Sarah Hamilton, and Megan Womble all asked, where is
Karen? Yeah, why is Jim only standing with Pam and talking with Pam? And then we don't see Karen
again until the end of the episode when she's on the other side of Jim standing behind him.
Yeah. I went to the script, Ange, and there is a whole plot for Karen that is not in this episode.
You know how Karen earlier in the episode, she has that line where she says, wow, I do not know
the people in this office like I thought I did. Yeah, because she's losing all the bets. She's
betting wrong. And she has a talking head where she's like, I am like, I'm getting wiped clean
here on these bets. I don't know everyone. Yes. So they have this whole plot for her where she's
down in the parking lot and she's on a mission to get to know people better. So she's starting
conversations with different people. She's got a little side conversation with Oscar. So I think
that's why she's not standing by Jim. But those scenes are not in the deleted scenes, right?
They are not. I watched the deleted scenes and that Karen runner is not in it. Well, one thing
I did find that I thought was really fascinating and I loved this. I'll share it with you guys.
And it's about the Jim Pam parking lot sort of story. In the DVD commentary, BJ said he talked
to Greg and Greg was talking to him about Jim and Pam in this scene. And he said, I sort of see them
as a couple that had been together for a long time and they'd had a child together. And that child
and that child is Michael. And, you know, they're no longer together. They've moved on. But like
oftentimes divorced couples who have kids when there's a crisis with their child, they work together
to help their child. And they sort of have this shorthand with one another when it comes to their
child. And Karen would not have known any of that history or Michael the way they know Michael.
And so it made sense that Jim and Pam would be working together to try to make sure that Michael
doesn't do something really stupid. And if you think about it in that context, it makes perfect
sense. And also the fact that Pam is like, I have a present for you. That's very parent mode, right?
Come inside. I've got a treat for you. Stop doing what you're doing.
I love hearing what BJ's thought process was when he was writing these scenes, because something I
really appreciated about them was that Pam and Jim were not laughing about this. No. This was not a
joke to them. They when they realized what Michael was doing, they come together very seriously to
help him. This was also was not flirty. This was not a flirty moment, but instead really highlighted
their bond. Yeah. And just the fact that instantly the two of them knew what Michael was up to.
And, and it's like everything else didn't matter. It didn't matter that they had hurt feelings over
Roy, over Karen, over everything that has happened between the two of them. None of that mattered.
All that mattered was getting Michael off the roof safely. And that's what happens. That's what
that's what happens in real life. You put everything aside for your child and you work together.
And, and I loved that little piece of backstory between Greg and BJ.
Me too. Well, it's ultimately kind of Darryl that gets Michael to come down. I mean,
Darryl has this great line where he's like, no one is braver than you. You have to wake up every
day and be you, Michael. It's so brave. I couldn't do it. I couldn't do it. I mean, like, it's like
the dig that Michael doesn't understand. And he just takes it so earnestly like, thank you.
And Darryl's like, you brave heart. And Michael's like, I brave heart. Yeah. And that's what got
him off the roof. Darryl, Darryl believing in him, got him off the roof. And the episode ends with
Michael having a talking head where he says, you know, sometimes you have to do crazy things to
show the danger in an office, but he saved a life today. And it was his own. Yeah. And you
know, he asked, like, is he a hero? Is he a hero? He can't really say, but yes. Well, and then we
have this tag, which I love. It's Stanley. He walks out to the parking lot and it was his car
that they bashed up. Like Stanley needs an excuse to hate Michael more. Oh my gosh.
Exactly. Now, I do have to point out, Angela, that this watermelon all over the car was clearly
visible through all of the scenes while Michael was on the roof. And we had a lot of people write
it and say, how did Stanley not notice this? And I can only say because what was happening on the
roof was so compelling that we were all just looking up the whole time. And maybe that's why
we didn't see this watermelon. Well, I wonder if that's why the deleted scene, which it's not even
on the DVDs, but there was a scene where Mindy saw a busted up watermelon and like she thought it
was a corpse and she freaked out. Oh, there's all these deleted scenes, guys, from this episode,
many that aren't even on the DVD. Speaking of deleted scenes, before we wrap up this episode,
Jenna, we did get some fan questions about a scene I was in that was deleted. Courtney Klein,
Alice Chan, and Maria Malick said, Angela keys Andy's car. Why does she do it? Is it because
she despises him that much for getting Dwight temporarily fired? How many takes did it require
and did they need to fix the car each time? So yes, this is in the deleted scenes on the DVD.
Listen, my character holds a grudge and Andy messed with Dwight. Angela is not going to forget it.
She doesn't care if he's been to anger management. He's on her list now, lady. He's on her list.
So in the way we did this scene, it was really great. Phil Shea gave me like a key chain set of
keys. But the way I held it, there was this one sort of piece that stuck out and it was basically
a wax stick. And when I walk around and I do that whole line, I'm really doing that. But I'm
basically drawing that line on with this sort of special wax stick. And it looks like I'm keying
the car, but I'm literally just drawing a line around it. Whoa. Yeah. I would have never imagined.
Isn't that cool? Yeah. And then they would just erase it. Then they would just wipe it off.
Oh my gosh. That's so cool. Yeah. And it obviously, you know, it's a spy shot. It wasn't close up. So
it was really easy to sort of cheat that and sell it. Wow. I know. Well, guys, that was safety
training. Yes. And you know, not to be Debbie Downer here, but I just know how scary being that
depressed can be. And I know this episode, we talk a little bit about depression, but it is real.
And it can really take hold of you. And I just would want anyone listening out there to know
that you're not alone and that you're loved. And my nephew suffered from depression and
we lost him to it. And I'm so sorry. I didn't anticipate I'd get this emotional. But I just
want you to know you're not alone and that people love you and that you are valued. And if you
are suffering from depression, there are places that you can call if you feel like you cannot talk
about it with your family or friends. And guys, we have the phone number for the American Foundation
of Suicide Prevention. And we want to take a minute and give that to you, Angela. Yes. It's 1-800-273-8255.
Or you can text TALK to 741-741. And that's the American Foundation of Suicide Prevention. And
you know, this happened a few years ago in my family. And what I wouldn't give to be able to talk
to my nephew and tell him how much we love him. And anyway, I didn't mean... This was a hard
episode for you to watch. It was. It was a hard episode. It was. Even though there are so many
wonderful things in this episode, just wonderful, funny, hilarious moments. It was a little difficult
for me. And I just wanted you guys to all know that you're loved. All right, guys. We'll see you
next week. Okay. Love you guys. Love you. Thank you for listening to Office Ladies. Office Ladies
is produced by Irwin, Jenna Fisher, and Angela Kinsey. Our producer is Cody Fisher. Our sound
engineer is Sam Kiefer. And our associate producer is Ainsley Bubelko. Our theme song is
Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton. For ad-free versions of Office Ladies, go to StitcherPremium.com.
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