Office Ladies - The Target
Episode Date: March 13, 2024This week we’re breaking down “The Target”. Angela asks Dwight to find her a hitman to take out Oscar for having an affair with the Senator. Meanwhile, some of the Dunder Mifflin employees make ...an impressive tower out of customer complaint cards. Chris Gethard who played Trevor sends in clips about his experience, along with director of this episode, Brent Forrester. Jenna breaks down how the card tower was constructed and Angela reveals in deleted scenes a holiday that was never celebrated on “The Office”. Please enjoy this episode, and remember, you’re not stupid, jazz is stupid! Check out Office Ladies Merch at Podswag: https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladies Office Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestionFollow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPod
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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, ladies. Hello, everyone.
Happy Wednesday.
I am very excited because I absolutely love this episode.
I love it so much.
I kind of do.
I'm so excited to talk about it.
This had remnants of the duel for me.
I remember loving the duel.
Yeah.
It's great.
I can't wait to, you know how much I loved
all these scenes with Oscar.
Let's get to it.
We are talking about The Target, season nine, episode eight, written by Graham Wagner and
directed by Brent Forrester. Here is your summary. Oscar isn't sure if Angela knows about his affair
with a senator, but in reality, oh boy does she know. And she has enlisted Dwight's help to exact her revenge.
Jim is going to go to great lengths to be granted permission to work part-time and
Scranton. And Pete's meaningless office task ends up being a fun project that unites his co-workers.
Can I just say that Pete is the new Jim?
I literally wrote down in the breakdown
that I am in love with Pete.
But just how he got everyone to do this activity,
it's Office Olympics.
Yes.
It's Jim and Office Olympics.
Yes.
All right, Fast Facts number one,
Chris Gethard is our special guest star playing Trevor.
He's so funny.
I have so many stories.
We got so much mail.
Fan question from Lindsay H in Tempe, Arizona,
who said, I just wanted to show appreciation
for the genius that is the character Trevor
played by the awesome comedian Chris Gethart.
He did such a great job in bodying the sort of dazed
weirdo that was Trevor and was so funny
in spite of only appearing in two episodes.
And then Wendy B. from Bethesda, Maryland said,
I got such a kick out of Chris Gethard as Trevor.
He was strange and hilarious.
How did he wind up being cast?
Well, Lindsay and Wendy, thanks for writing in.
Yes, Chris is so amazing and very unique.
And, Angela, you got to work with him. Yes. You, Chris is so amazing and very unique.
And Angela, you got to work with him.
Yes.
You said it was so fun.
And you also reached out to him
and he sent us in some audio clips.
I did.
He was so great.
You know when you write someone
and they respond back right away
and are like, yes, I'm in.
Yes.
That was Chris.
Well, of course, the first thing we asked was,
how did you get your role on The Office?
And here's what he had to say.
Hi, everybody, my name's Chris Gethard,
and I was really lucky to play a character
named Trevor on The Office.
Just for a couple episodes,
but sometimes I think people think I was on it
more than I was based on the amount
that they talked to me about it.
But it was a really lucky experience
and I think about it a lot.
And I feel so lucky to be here talking about it today.
How did I get my role on the office?
I've never totally been sure.
I auditioned, I know that much.
I've always been East Coast based.
I grew up in New Jersey and came up
at the Upright Citizens Brigade in New York.
I remember that I filmed my audition for the office at the Manhattan Neighborhood Network,
which is the public access studio in New York City.
It's kind of legendarily weird, all the stuff that comes out of there.
I did a talk show there for many years.
I know I was on
Allison Jones radar to some degree. I was actually in an improv group in New York with Bobby Moynihan and Zach Woods Zach Woods obviously played Gabe on the office and
You can imagine being with those guys at UCB at the time. There was just a lot of eyes on us
So mostly I just auditioned and got lucky and I've always kind of wondered who
of eyes on us so mostly I just auditioned and got lucky and I've always kind of wondered who
championed me over there if it was Allison or one of the writers just because I knew a lot of people from my time in comedy. This answer is very rambly but when you ask an actor how they got a
role the answer always sort of comes down to I don't know but it's some combination of
UCB and having some hype from my public access show,
having done a couple other things at that point in time,
but mostly just auditioned and sent in a tape and then felt really lucky that they went with me.
Chris, we love a rambly.
Ramble as much as you want.
You know what I love about that story is that we were still,
oh Sam, you are so kind.
Does he bring you a tissue?
He's bringing me tissue.
Use your sleep.
I was using my sleeve to wipe my nose and I don't, all of a sudden it started running.
I don't know.
It's the weather.
It is.
It's the weird cold, the cold LA.
It's very, what would you call it?
We had frost this morning.
Yeah, it's a weird cold snap that happens in the LA winter
and it happens suddenly and then my nose just runs.
Okay, thank you everyone.
What I was gonna say was,
I love the part of that story that makes it so obvious
that we were still going to New York to find actors.
Like at this point, nine years in,
I feel like Allison Jones could have just been
phoning it in.
Not Alice in Jones.
No.
No.
She's like, I still wanna know who are the hottest people
in comedy and improv.
I don't care what city they're living in.
I need to see them.
Yeah.
That's it right there.
I think mystery solved.
It's Alice in Jones.
It's Alice in Jones.
Just doing her job so well.
And then Chris showing up.
Oh, well, of course.
But, you know, half of getting parts as an actor
is the access, the opportunity.
Getting your foot in the door.
Yeah, you have to be ready,
but it's my old acting teacher used to say,
success is opportunity meets readiness.
You can get all the auditions in the world,
but if you're not ready for them,
you're not gonna go anywhere.
Similarly, you can be the greatest actor
in your living room, but if you have no opportunities,
again, opportunity meets readiness.
I think that's good for just life,
because imagine if you're going in for a job interview,
it's the same thing, you can have all the skillset,
but if you can't get in the room,
I wanna be in the room where it happens. The room where it happens if we go back to Hamilton always always
You know Angela you said that when you emailed Chris he responded right away, and he was so nice and so receptive
I have to share with people that Chris told us that the reason he was so happy to send an audio clips was because you were so
Nice to him on set
and he never forgot it.
He actually shared that you were so nice
that he was kind of confused at first
because he only knew you as Angela Martin.
Here is how he described it.
I was on season nine
and like everybody else in America,
I had watched the first eight.
So you do forget, like people are humans,
they're well-rounded humans, so I will say anytime Angela
would ever ask me to do anything, I would of course say yes,
because she was so kind on set, but it is funny
because the character of Angela is not always nice,
so I walked into it with some trepidation
and then I had to remind myself, oh right,
these people are just really good at what they do.
Like I'm acting with Angela and Rain,
that is different than quote Angela and Dwight.
And it was that funny thing to walk onto a set
and I'd been on enough sets before
that I should not have fallen for that,
but just tells you how much the characters of the office
seeped into our consciousness in a way just tells you how much the characters of the office
seeped into our consciousness in a way that was very real and organic and genuine
and where people bought it.
Cause even I, someone in comedy was like,
oh right, these people are nice.
They're not the characters.
So I remember being so acutely aware
that we were shooting inside a minivan
and you two knew each other so well,
and neither of you knew me.
So to be in a social environment where,
not just while shooting, but in between takes,
we're all just sitting in the minivan together,
and you guys have like, you know,
a decade of intimate knowledge
of how each other's lives work,
of things to chitchat about in small talk,
and then I'm also just some guy.
I remember that being very funny to me
and leading to some giggling.
Oh my gosh, I love all of that.
I know.
I mean, Chris was so lovely,
and I just remember him falling right into step right away.
And I also remember that Rain right into step right away.
And I also remember that Rain was so enamored with him.
Rain was so tickled by him.
Everything he said, Rain would just get the giggles.
And it was really fun.
It was a fun day.
Aw, I love that.
I'm sure you're gonna have more stories
as we break down the episode.
Oh, I do.
All right, Fast Fact number two, I'm calling it,
the reviews are in. Oh, your Fast Fact has two, I'm calling it, the reviews are in.
Oh, your Fast Fact has a title.
I titled it.
Okay.
We said we loved this episode.
The reviewers agreed.
It was a hit.
But there was one thing in particular that was cited in every single review, and Angela
Kinsey, it was you.
Oh, come on.
Your performance. in every single review, and Angela Kinsey, it was you. Oh, come on.
Your performance. And by the way, I love your performance in this episode so much. Oh my
god, so much, Angela. And so it made me very excited to read all these reviews about your
performance and here they are. Eric Adams, he was the new reviewer at AV Club, gave this episode
an A minus and said it was your plot line
with Oscar that was a season highlight, that's a quote, and he complimented you in particular
for your commitment to character.
Thank you.
That's not all.
The paced writer called it your best performance of the year.
Wow.
Mm-hmm.
Michael Tetter praised the writers for giving your character a chance to shine.
And this was also rated the fifth best episode of the season according to fans on Office
Telly.
And again, the comments cited you.
You an Oscar, but you lady.
Star of the episode.
I don't even know what to say.
That makes me, that just warms my heart.
You know, when you're part of a show like The Office
and there's such a deep cast of amazing people,
when you're a supporting actor,
you just have to be patient
and hope that someday you get your turn.
And Kate Flannery and I used to talk a lot about that.
You know, she would say,
and we're not the meat, we're the seasoning,
but the seasoning has their day.
Mm-hmm.
And I was so, so delighted by the storyline
and I have such fond memories of getting to do it.
Well, lady, if you thought I was finished,
I'm not, there's more of this fast fact.
Oh, okay.
Mm-hmm.
In addition to reaching out to Chris Gethard,
we also reached out to the director of this episode,
Brent Forester.
And I have an audio clip from Brent just for you. Oh!
Jenna, you mentioned that when you rewatched this episode, you were struck by how grounded
the performances of the actors are. And I actually believe that the actors saved this episode because
the premise is potentially so crazy, especially for a show like The Office, which is famous for
having the most realistic tone of any show in the history of network TV.
How do we get away with an episode in which one of the characters is threatening to assassinate
the other character in The Office?
Well the answer is the performances of the actors.
Somehow Rain, Oscar, and especially Angela managed to find some kind of emotional reality
in the performances that ends up redeeming this zany premise so that at the end, after
all this frenetic activity when Angela says to Oscar, you were supposed to be my friend,
there's a feeling of real emotional tenderness there within this crazy setting.
I don't know how they did it,
and I wish you would ask Angela how she pulled this off.
I think that's a really good analysis of why this episode works. Angela, how'd you pull it off?
Oh, gosh, that's such a big question. Well, Brent, thank you so much. You're always so generous and kind. Really, Angela Martin was a real person to me.
She was.
So I had to think about her life
and how she tried so hard to have this persona
and image of the senator's wife
and what that meant to her.
That status meant so much to her.
And when Oscar has this affair,
someone who she trusts, who she has set next to
for years and years and years,
that threatens everything about who she thought she was,
this image that she puts out to the world.
It was all shattered.
And she probably went to a pretty dark place.
And Angela's dark place was, I'm gonna mess you up.
But I never thought that she wanted Oscar
to be seriously injured.
I think she just wanted to scare him
and let him know how pissed off she was.
That was sort of how I approached it.
She was just hurt.
She was really hurt.
I mean, I think everything you just said
is so emotional and real and grounded and relatable.
And that is why this premise doesn't get zany
because you grounded it in all that realness.
You know, it was really hard though,
because I wanted to jump in and be silly,
but I couldn't like, we'll get to it,
but the scene in the van with the receipts, oh my gosh.
Oh yeah.
But I had to play it as honest as I could.
Yeah.
Even though there was a little bit of Zany happening
around her, she was still very hurt and angry.
Those were real emotions, So I had to play
them real.
I just loved it so much.
Thanks, lady. Thanks, everybody.
All right. Moving on to Fast Facts number three. Angela, last week you had a mailbag moment,
which I loved. And I thought I might like to have a mailbag moment this week.
Okay.
So this will be a mailbag moment with Jenna.
This is a post that I was made aware of that was on the Office Ladies Facebook fan page.
It's from a poster named Chris C.
And it was posted after we broke down the episode Welcome Party.
That's the one where Andy and Aaron are driving back from Florida together and they decide to stop it.
Jessica's parents' cabin. Yes. What was like a bachelorette party. Yes. Okay, here is what Chris
posted after that episode. I had a good laugh at this week's podcast regarding the penis cake and
gummy straws. Remember we had that big conversation? Yes. Chris said, I have a ladies group and each month one of us hosts a night for just us
ladies and some drinks.
Somewhere along the way, I picked up a penis cake pan as a gag one night.
But we've made quite the use of this pan.
Now, along with the night of hosting, you are also hosting whoever's birthday it is
that month and you have to make a cake out of the penis pan.
I figured I'd share a few of our creations over the years.
Are there pictures?
There's pictures, lady, and they're amazing.
So what these ladies have to do is you have to make a cake using the penis pan, but it's
not a penis.
Right.
So it's like, I don't know, what is it?
A spaceship?
Here they are.
A flying saucer?
She posted a bunch of pictures.
Oh my gosh.
Oh, one is balloons?
Mm-hmm, like a little basket?
One looks like, is that a, I have to put my glasses on.
I think it's like a wizard with a tall hat.
Oh yeah.
Okay.
Oh, flowers.
Yes, so the, you know, the testicles are like a flower pot.
Uh-huh.
And then the top, they decorated to look like flowers.
What is that one?
No, not that the testicles aren't the flower pot.
The tip of the penis is the flower pot.
Oh yes, I'm so sorry.
And then the testicles are the flowers.
Yes.
But what is this?
Is this a spaceship?
You know what?
That one got me.
It really looks like a penis.
Is it a lighthouse?
Is it a spaceship?
Oh, no, you're right.
It's a lighthouse.
That's what the jelly beans are.
I'm gonna put these in stories.
I mean, I was hoping you would.
Uh-huh.
This one is very funny, right?
It's a monster.
It's a one-eyed monster.
Oh, and then there's corn on the cob.
And there is an actual spaceship as well.
Yes, and then a fruit medley.
Mm-hmm, okay.
I was so tickled by this.
It was the cutest idea to me.
How fun.
I love that these ladies do this.
I was so happy that someone made me aware of this post.
Thank you, Chris, for cheering.
And I hope you don't mind though,
we've now talked about it on the podcast
and we'll be posting your penis cake photos
that are not penises.
Oh my gosh.
Well, on that note, I think we take a break
and when we come back, Oscar is very anxious.
He's waiting for Angela to show up to work.
We are back and the first thing we see is an Oscar talking head. He says,
yesterday Angela may or may not have figured out that I'm having an affair with her husband.
So I just have to wait and see. When she comes in, if she's cold and awkward and cruel to me,
then great. It's business as usual. This is such a great opening to an episode.
Like you don't need to have ever watched
this show before and I'm hooked. Yeah, talk about starting in the middle. There's no back story
explanation. Well, Angela's gonna arrive and I think Oscar should have known right away
when she asked him about the thermostat. This is such a friendly small talk, I think.
What do you think?
Well, except it's a half complaint.
Okay, okay.
She's a little annoyed.
And so I do think that when Angela talks about something
that's not work, it's probably a complaint
or like she's irritated about something.
Slightly irritated or very irritated.
Yes.
Probably is her small talk.
Well, Oscar is so relieved.
Oh my gosh, she's so relieved.
And talk about the reviews are in Oscar Nunez's performance.
When Angela says, can I talk to you?
The look on his face.
He's so good.
Oh, he's so good.
Oscar is very good in this episode.
The two of you are such a good team.
I would like to point out in the background of the scene
that Kate Flannery is making some major solitaire moves.
She's moving things around, things are shuffling, whole decks.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, she was crushing it that day.
Well, now Oscar's gonna have a talking head
and he's thrilled.
Yeah.
Angela doesn't know.
It's great.
However, then we see over his shoulder in the
background, Angela just glaring at him, gripping some scissors. Oh yeah. This is how it read in
the shooting draft. The camera finds Angela over Oscar's shoulder glaring at him with murderous intent.
You did it. I remember doing this a few times and they were like Angela even meaner glare more glare meaner.
I'm like, I don't know.
I'm giving it all I got here.
Also, you might have caught that Stanley is not at his desk during Oscar's talking head, which is very rare.
Stanley is almost always out of dash.
Well, I have a little call sheet tidbit for you that will explain why.
Please.
We filmed the scene on the first day of filming
on Monday, October 22nd, 2012,
and the only people called to set that day were me,
Oscar, Rain and Chris Gethard.
Oh.
We stacked all of our scenes together on that one day,
and so the rest of the cast had the day off.
Nice. Yes.
And in case you were wondering,
the high that day was 71 degrees.
Oh, pleasant.
There's your weather report.
One other little thing on the call sheets this week
is in the top right corner,
there was a little pumpkin with a countdown to Halloween.
Hmm.
So cute. So cute. Those are my call sheet tidbits, but I also have
a big reveal from the shooting draft. A big reveal? Yes. What is it? Okay. Do you remember
the holiday that we have always said was missing on the office? Thanksgiving? Yes, lady. There
was a whole Thanksgiving cold open. Oh, because we were shooting this in late October, but it would have aired around Thanksgiving?
Yes! And we actually filmed a Thanksgiving cold open that didn't make it.
A lot of it is in deleted scenes, but I wanted to read you how it started in the shooting draft.
Interior conference room. Darryl and Toby are leading a meeting.
A stack of assorted canned foods is presented on a table.
Toby says, thank you all for participating
in this year's Thanksgiving canned food drive.
I remember this.
The staff.
It's so funny.
And then it says, the staff all applauds itself.
We're very pleased with what we've donated.
But then Darrell starts looking at what all the people
brought in to donate.
It is so funny, he starts calling people out.
He's like Phyllis, you brought in water chestnuts.
Meredith also water chestnuts.
Creed brought in a can of garbanzo beans dated 1990.
Someone else brought in racquetballs
and Daryl is getting so annoyed.
Then he holds up a can and says,
I don't even know what this is.
And Kevin says, it's brown.
And Darrell's like, what?
Kevin then has a talking head where he says,
I eat brown every week.
Hot brown, ice brown, scrambled brown.
And then he holds up a can that has a little pig on it.
And in Russian, it says dog food.
Yes, I so remember this.
And then Toby gets upset.
He says, you know what?
I have a solution for your poor participation
in this canned food drive.
Instead of going home early today,
we'll be having a little Thanksgiving feast of our own,
made with your canned food.
And Kevin at first was like, yes.
And then when Toby says with your canned food,
Kevin goes, you son of a bitch.
Then there's a whole montage of the Dunder Mifflin crew
making this Thanksgiving lunch out of these lame can
contributions.
And here's how the scene ends.
I want you to hear it.
Happy Thanksgiving.
And remember, you did this to yourselves.
I think everybody learned a valuable lesson.
And if I had a Thanksgiving meal with other people for the first time in years,
well, good for me.
Toby!
So we did have a Thanksgiving episode. This would have been it.
Wow. Our only nod to Thanksgiving and it got cut out.
That's right.
Well, I think there was just too much good stuff in this episode.
Yeah.
That we just didn't have room for a cold open. We start right with the plot.
Yep. But there's a bunch in deleted scenes, so if you have the DVDs, you can go watch them.
Well, now Pam and Jim are going to arrive to the office, and Pam is wearing her painting clothes,
because she's going to finally start on the mural in the warehouse. Meredith has such
sidebar sass. She goes Queen of the Primer this one. Yeah she asked Pam, you sure you
don't want to put another coat of primer on it? Queen of the Primer. We had a fan
question from Colleen S. in Chicago who said, do you have any stories behind Pam's painting clothes?
The outfit was auctioned off after the series ended and I ended up winning it.
Jenna, if you would like to have it back,
I would be more than happy to send it to you.
Colleen, I have to tell you something.
I have one too. There were multiples.
All of our outfits, we had more than one.
We had doubles in case we spilled something on it or something happened.
So I have one of the sweatshirts and you must have the other one.
So I have one of the Pratt sweatshirts with all the paint on it.
And this was just the idea of Alicia Raycraft, our costume designer.
She came and she said, what do you think Pam's painting clothes are?
And she had this idea and I loved this callback
to her time at Pratt.
I just absolutely loved it.
So creative.
It also looks like a very cozy sweatshirt.
Oh, I loved this outfit.
I bet.
No pantyhose.
You got to wear jeans.
Jeans.
I can't believe you wore pantyhose for nine years.
I know.
Four times.
I didn't wear them one day.
Every time you say it, it hurts me.
Every time.
I just shoved him aside and no one said anything.
I don't know, I'm a rule follower.
You are.
Jim and Pam are now gonna have a joint talking head
and Jim explains that he has to ask David Wallace
if he can start working part time
because his sports marketing team really needs him.
He also shares in his absence,
they named the company, Athlete.
While he wasn't there, he was like,
I could have prevented that if I had been there.
Yeah.
I guess Jim doesn't like the name.
I like Athlete.
I don't, I think it's terrible.
Oh really?
I was like-
It's like so, it's so well chosen that it's a bad name.
It's hard to say athlete.
I don't like it.
Athlete.
It sounds like athlete's foot to me.
I don't know, but then it's elite.
I don't get it.
I don't like the play on words.
We had a fan question from Chaley Dee
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who said,
were there any other ideas for the name of the company?
There must have been so many.
I asked Brent, he said, there were so many names I asked Brent, he said there were so many names.
He said writers love riffing on dumb names.
And here are a few.
Winnovate.
Okay.
Champlify.
That's funny.
And gosh, I don't even know how to say this one.
Jock-a-tagon.
What? Can I see it?
Yeah, I think it's like octagon, but it's jock-a-tagon.
Like a jockstrap? I don't know. I think like jock like athlete. Oh, like an athlete. Jock-a-tagon.
There's no V in it, lady. It's jock-a-tagon. Oh, jock-a-tagon. Yeah. Did I say von every time?
That last time you did. Yeah, I did the last time. Jock-a-tagon, like octagon. Yeah. I like Champlify.
That to me would have hit the joke harder than athlete,
but maybe it's too ridiculous.
Well, athlete is a better name than Champlify.
Yeah.
But Champlify is very funny to say.
It is.
Lady, I have a tangent that just popped into my head.
It is in no way related to this episode.
In fact, it's related to an episode of The Crown.
Oh, I'm taking, I don't, are you kidding?
The Crown, I don't mind.
I'm taking off my glasses.
I'm getting my cup of tea.
Let's hear it.
Okay.
This is totally unplanned.
Okay.
It's not in my document.
I know it's not.
Okay.
The other night, Lee and I were watching The Crown, the latest season, the final season.
Yeah.
And I'm on the episode where Prince William
has gone to college and he goes out to a party one night
and they do beer bongs.
Yeah.
Have you ever done a beer bong?
Cause I haven't.
And as I was watching it, I was like, who wants to do that?
It looks awful.
It looks like torture.
No, I've never done it.
The closest I've come to that is in college I played on a co-ed softball
team and at second base, they had a pony keg.
And if you made it to second base, you could do a keg stand.
What's a keg stand?
You do a handstand.
Oh, this is worse.
This is getting worse.
On top of a keg and then there's a little hose and they put beer.
You have to drink upside down?
Yeah, I did a keg stand anyway.
I've done that.
But it just, basically it just goes all over your face and you know, you're just like,
this is stupid.
But I was in college.
I have not done, what's it called?
A beer pong?
A beer pong.
Oh, a beer pong.
Beer pong?
Bong.
Why would I think it was beer pong?
Well there's a game called beer pong. Oh. Where you try to get a ping pong ball into bong. Bong. Why would I think it was beer pong? Well, there's a game called beer pong.
Oh, where you try to get a ping pong ball into a thing of beer and then you have to chug it.
I did that, but on a TV show and they were like, Angela, we want you to toss this ping pong ball into the cup of beer.
And they're like, we'll roll a few because you probably won't get it, you know, right away.
I got it on the first take.
Was it real beer?
Was it like a reality thing?
No, it was fakey.
Oh, it was for a scripted show.
It was the show I did with Kate Walsh, bad judge.
Okay.
But I made the ping pong in the red solo cup
on my first try.
I think I could be good at it.
So wait, when you play beer pong,
you throw the ball and you're trying to get it in the cup
so that you can chug it?
No, the other person has to chug it?
I think it's the other person.
Right, because if I were playing that,
I would just always miss
because I would never want to chug the beer.
So I fake played beer pong, but never played it in real life.
I have done a keg stand playing softball,
but I've never done a beer bong.
It looks difficult.
When I was a freshman in college,
like the first two weeks of school,
me and some of the other gals on my floor at my dorm,
we got invited to a frat party.
Oh gosh.
I went to it for less than an hour
and never went to another one again.
I was like, I don't get it.
This is not for me.
I am confused by all of the activities.
None of them seem fun.
I am very anxious at this event.
And then later when I was an upperclassman,
like there was a group of guys in the theater department
who had a theater fraternity.
And I was like, maybe that's my jam.
I know all these guys, I'm doing plays with these guys.
Yeah.
And you didn't have to be in the theater department
to be in that fraternity, but it was sort of like you were.
I went to that one and I was like,
I don't know what's happened to all of these people
who I adore while we're doing theater,
but now I can't, it's a culture that I,
Yeah. I just, I don't, it's a culture that I,
I don't know what's happening here, but I didn't, so I'm watching the crown,
and I'm watching the beer bonging.
Okay.
And I was like, I've never done,
there's nothing from the time I was born in my DNA
that could get myself to do this activity.
Yeah, no.
And it's very popular popular and many people do it
and I guess are enjoying it and having fun, but I can't.
I don't get it, I don't like.
I got it.
I've never done a beerbong.
I've had no desire.
I've seen people do them around me.
My college didn't have sorority and fraternity houses.
So a lot of that like kind of big frat party thing
wasn't part of my college,
but I do notice that like, if I do have a story,
it's around like a sport.
It's like softball or football game,
but I don't like chugging stuff.
I don't like speeding up the getting drunk process, right?
Like I don't, I haven't gone out
for the purpose of getting drunk super fast.? Like I don't, I haven't gone out for the purpose
of getting drunk super fast.
I probably shouldn't have told you
I brought shots for us today.
Shots, shots, shots, shots, shots.
No.
Okay.
Sorry for that tangent.
It just popped into my head.
I doubled down on your tangent.
I could have just said, no, I've never done one.
We'd be done with this conversation.
Well, let me tell you what I would love to do
as an activity at a party is build a giant card wall.
I would too.
I would love that.
That's my jam.
They're really hard to do.
I've tried to do it with the deck of cards before.
I know.
And they're real slick.
You need an old deck.
What?
What? What?
What?
I don't know, lady.
I don't know that just the...
It's just the...
Just like the earnestness and authority
with which you have given us this tip
on how to build a successful card tower.
You need an old deck.
They can't be shiny or slick.
I noted that Pete used these complaint cards
and I looked at them and they are like the rougher card stock.
They're not the slick paper. I'm just saying.
More successful tower.
That's right.
Well, let's tell you why Pete is going to start a tower.
He's not starting it yet, but he has a talking head where he says he's been
tasked with entering customer complaints into a computer.
And then after that, he has to fill out a comment card.
He asked Andy, why do I have to do this?
They're already in the computer.
And Andy said, chillax.
And then went on a big boat ride.
Yes.
So he's decided that he's gonna use the cards.
He's gonna give them purpose
and he's gonna build a paper tower.
Yeah.
He says, don't give me a pointless office chore
because I will build a little paper house.
Fight the power.
I love him.
I do too.
Angela now approaches Dwight.
Oh, sabotage in the break room.
Sabotage in the break room.
She says, meet me at the old place in five minutes.
I need you.
And then she goes down to their warehouse spot and she opens up that door and he is completely nudy.
He is naked.
With his leg up and his bits dangling.
Oh yeah, she says, Dwight, please put your clothes back on.
It's not that kind of meeting.
And then she says, I need someone who can operate
outside of the law.
And Dwight says, nope, you lost those privileges.
If I'm not in your panties, I don't go vigilantes.
You've got to know.
Some writer pitched that, and when it made it in,
it was just like so tickled.
Yes, we should have asked Brent about that.
That's a really funny line.
It is.
Angela then confesses to Dwight that her marriage
is in danger, she doesn't know who she can trust.
Dwight says, you know, I know just the guy, the former cop who was kicked off the force.
And then he says, I'm going to SMS text him to set up a meeting.
Gets back to him right away.
No problem.
He's free anytime.
Yeah.
Well, now Jim is on the phone with David Wallace.
He's doing this phone call at his desk because Jim doesn't know how to make phone calls more private.
No, he doesn't.
He learned that.
No, he's not going to have a private conversation.
And Jim is like, listen, it'll just be a couple days a week that I would be in Philly.
I'd be in Scranton the other days and what do you think?
And David Wallace is kind of like, I don't know, Jim.
It kind of seems like
what if something goes down
and needs someone there in person to deal with it?
Yeah.
So Jim lies.
In the moment, he says,
oh, Phyllis and Stanley offered to cover for me.
And David's like, oh, well, if that's the case, okay.
I will point out, I think David Wallace
might be the most lax boss ever.
Yeah.
Andy's off on a boat, no problem.
Yeah.
Jim's like, I want to only be part time but pay me the same.
He's like, okay.
Yeah.
We should all work for David Wallace.
No kidding.
We had a fan question from Emily J. in Ohio who said,
is Pam not a salesman at all anymore?
Why does Jim need Phyllis and Stanley to cover?
Can't Pam cover?
Emily made a good point.
I think I'm trying to remember back
when Pam became the office administrator.
I think she was still gonna keep her couple of clients
that she had.
She still does a little sales, right?
Oh, I thought she was done.
I thought she created a new position
and she was no longer part of the sales team. That's how I saw it.
I couldn't remember. But let's say like, sure, she does still do a little bit of sales. I think the question is, do you want Pam covering for you? She was the worst salesperson.
I'm not sure David Wallace is going to let Jim go to Philly a couple days a week if the backup is Pam.
I don't know, I'm just saying,
you know, no offense to Pam, but like,
this is the-
Sales are not her thing.
Sales were not her thing.
We don't have to all be good at everything all the time.
No, we don't.
It's okay, Pam.
Yeah, we love you.
Well, now we go back to the break room.
Stanley and Phyllis are there and Jim comes in
and really wants them to help him.
He says, hey, we're friends, right? And Stanley's like, we're not friends.
Yeah, Stanley's like, if we were friends, when's my birthday, Jim? And Jim is like,
when's my birthday? And Stanley says, I have no idea because we're not friends.
You know, every single person wrote in about this to remind us that in season eight episode ten, Jim says
he got Stanley tickets to a comedy show for his birthday.
So Jim knows Stanley's birthday.
Or he's certainly celebrated it before.
He must have a general idea of what it is.
Well Jim is going to offer to take them to lunch to discuss it further and now they're
in.
They're up for free lunch.
They're interested.
Yeah. Yeah. further, and now they're in. They're up for free lunch. They're interested, yes. Outside Dwight and Angela are walking down the sidewalk
when Dwight shoves Angela into a van
and we meet Trevor.
Call sheet tidbit, this was the very first scene
filmed on the very first day of filming,
so Chris as the guest star was first up.
Wow, right?
Trevor says, is it safe to talk?
Dwight says, well, this documentary crew
has been following our every move for the past nine years,
but I don't see him, so I think we're good.
Angela's gonna ask Trevor, what are your credentials?
And this line made me laugh so hard.
I broke when he said it the first time.
With super seriousness, Trevor says,
I started following people around to get exercise. Turns out I'm damn good at it.
I lost it.
Yes. Next question, they would like to know if he has a gun. And he's like, do I have a gun?
And he pulls out a receipt. He says, read the receipt. And Angela's has a gun and he's like, do I have a gun? Check this out.
He pulls out a receipt. He says, read the receipt. And Angela's
like, what? You don't carry it with you? And he's like, it's
expensive. Someone could steal it. And then Dwight says, you
have no idea how many guns Trevor's had stolen. And Trevor's
like, yeah, now I keep it in a safe and then shows them the
receipt of the safe.
This is something I have to share with you guys.
This receipts bit went on for so long.
Were there more receipts? Chris started improvising.
You saw how many papers he's holding in his hands?
Yes.
He just started improvising all the different things he has receipts for.
Oh my God.
I was crying.
I was laughing. I was laughing.
I was so hoping that I would find them
in the bloopers or something.
I know they're out there somewhere,
but oh my gosh, we did a lot of takes
and each time he had more receipts for things.
Well, you know, one of the things he shared with us
was that when he runs into people who recognize him, they always say, check your receipts.
Yes.
And he's always like, wait, what?
Oh, oh.
Yes, check your receipts is his safe bandit or don't throw garbage at me.
Exactly.
That's what perfect strangers say to him as he's walking through an airport.
Well now we're going to go to the warehouse as Pam prepares to start painting.
She's up on this big, what do you call that thing, like a scaffolding?
Yeah, it's like a scaffolding.
Yeah.
And she's put a grid up in pencil and she's looking at her sketches.
She's getting prepared.
She's going to start this.
Yeah.
She says, you know what?
If I mess up, I can just cover it with a shrub.
Yeah.
This talking head of Pam's was actually longer by one sentence and it cracked me up.
Here's how it read in the shooting draft.
I guess if I make a mistake, I can just cover it up with a shrub or something.
But I always think less of paintings that are full of shrubs.
I'm only allowing myself one shrub.
And then here's the line that she would have said,
two shrubs and a guy with a big umbrella, tops.
Nice.
I thought it was so cute.
From down below, Hida is watching,
and Pam is just like, go back to work.
It's like she feels this pressure
that he's just watching and watching.
He says he'd prefer to wait.
Well, guess what?
There was a lot more of Pam and Hida,
and talk about the pairing. I need more of.
It is so funny. There's a bunch of deleted scenes. First of all, do you know what the
warehouse workers call Pam? It's in deleted scenes. I want you to hear it.
It's a lot of pressure. People work in this warehouse every day and I don't want them
to look up and say, boy, that Pat really screwed up this one.
A lot of the people who work in the warehousing, my name is Pat.
I thought that was so funny. So funny. They all think your name is Pat. And then Hideo has a talking head. He has some insights on Pat. So many things. More sc and painting. Japanese government. Chinese Navy. What is Pat afraid of? Pat afraid of... Pat!
Pat's afraid of Pat.
Pat is afraid of Pat!
Listen, that's what stops most of us most of the time.
Yeah. It's just the fear, the fear of failure,
the fear of things not turning out the way you hoped.
Pat is afraid of Pat.
You know, when I gave myself permission
to do things imperfectly, my career started to take off.
It's not a weird thing.
It was like, I found that, by the way, artist's way.
Artist's way.
Can I do it imperfectly?
Yeah.
Can I finish it?
And it might be crap?
That's a thing.
The first thing you write the first time you do the scene, it's gonna be crap.
You know what I mean?
It's like, you're not Rembrandt with the first painting.
Right.
You have to have a bunch of crap first.
So make the crap.
Do the crap.
Do the crap.
Write the crappy novel or short story or whatever,
you'll revise it 50 times and then it'll be great.
That's right.
I even look at these scenes, you know,
this episode as we break it down.
And I just remember how many times
we would have to do things to get it right.
Oh yeah.
That's the kind of cool magic of film and television
is that someone watches the final performance.
Yeah.
They take, they- You don't know how long it took to get there. That's right. And someone watches the final performance. Yeah. They take-
You don't know how long it took to get there.
That's right.
And they use the best take.
Exactly.
Back in the van, Dwight tells Trevor that he'll be paid half now and half upon completion
of the job.
Obviously, off the books.
Nice.
No taxes.
Yeah.
Angela hands him an envelope with all the pertinent information.
But what's the job?
Murder.
Murder!
Yeah, this is even too much for Dwight, right?
Yeah, mm-hmm.
He pulls Angela aside, they're on the sidewalk.
He says, you cannot have someone murdered.
And she explains to him that the target
is sleeping with her husband.
And he says, I'm so sorry, but this is just crazy.
You can't do this.
Trevor's up for it. Trevor's like, I think I can do it. It's so crazy. I know. I know.
Dwight says, listen, there are different ways to get revenge, like defecating in a paper bag.
Trevor quickly says, I've been on the receiving end of that a few times and it's devastating.
I've been on the receiving end of that a few times and it's devastating.
That's another line that made me laugh.
What they decide on is that Trevor is going to damage Oscars kneecaps. Yeah, a kneecapping.
Yeah, hit him in the kneecaps.
It's going to happen at 4 p.m.
No turning back once Trevor leaves.
That's right.
Fan question from Jenna F. in Los Angeles.
Angela, Chris talked about being in the van
all together with you guys shooting these scenes.
Can you please share about doing these?
These were so great.
I mean, how did you get through these?
Almost everything he said made me laugh
because he said it was such earnestness.
This character Trevor is such like a funny guy. but there was one moment that really got me
and it's actually in deleted scenes.
I'm not going to play it, Jenna, because it's more of a sight gag.
Oh, okay.
But I have to share it in stories.
I have to.
So, there's this very serious moment in the van and Angela Martin says to Trevor, what
do you do if you get caught?
And then he says, I slipped through people's fingers.
And then Dwight tries to grab him and he does this hand move and Dwight's like,
I can't get him.
I can't get him.
And then totally improvised, Rain's like, you go, you try Angela.
So then I just start trying to grab him and Chris's Trevor just keeps doing these
moves and then I'm like, I can't get them.
And Chris's Trevor just keeps doing these moves and then I'm like, ah, can't get him.
Anyway, we ended up cracking up at how ridiculous
me and Rain trying to grab Chris
and him doing these ridiculous hand moves.
And he's like, slips through your fingers, can't get me.
It was just such silly physical gags,
but we just lost it.
Oh my gosh, I wish that was in the episode.
That sounds so funny.
Imagine Angela trying, we were like tussling.
Like I'm trying to grab him and he's like swatting at me.
But we're seated in a van.
I mean, amazing.
Amazing.
It was such a fun day.
Well, there was another thing that Chris shared with us
that I found so relatable and so charming.
This was about just a memory he had of being
on the office.
Here's what he said.
Another thing I remember is that the office got me glasses to my actual prescription.
And I think in my entire career of acting, that's the only time that a set has gone above
and beyond like that.
It's really, really thoughtful to do. I get a lot of parts as guys in glasses, like weird guys in glasses. And sometimes
they make me wear my own glasses. And then a lot of times they want you to wear like
slightly weirder glasses. And that just means I'm blind. It means on a lot of sets. Like
honestly, anytime you've ever seen me acting if I'm wearing glasses that aren't mine I'm just blind except the office. The office contacted me ahead of time and
got my prescription and had a few sets of glasses made with my prescription so I'm wearing
these big goofy glasses in the show and they got my actual prescription and I can tell you
that's above and beyond and extraordinarily thoughtful because I don't
When someone calls cut and there's a million moving parts and you're just a guest star
And you have to be like can somebody find the PA who took my glasses because you literally can't walk ten feet without
banging into something or like knocking into a piece of equipment without it like
You do feel like really stranded out there on a set
So the fact that the office got my prescription
and made those glasses real was shocking
and really cool and thoughtful and nice.
Well, Angela, we know who that is.
We know who did that.
Phil.
That's Phil.
Yeah.
And I'm gonna get choked up.
I know.
Because, you know, we lost Phil last year.
He passed away.
And yet as we do this rewatch, I just continue
to think of him.
Yeah. Yeah, me too.
And with this story and with the card tower, that was Phil.
Yeah.
You know, and
the sandwich with the pipe in it, it's coming up.
That's Phil.
But you know, Ange, when I was on Splitting Up Together,
they wanted my character to sometimes wear glasses,
but not my glasses.
And originally, they just gave me some glasses with glass in them.
And every time we would finish a scene, I would have to be like, do you know who has
my real glasses?
Do we know where my real glasses are?
And I ended up losing my real glasses several times.
Because I would take
them off and put them down on a shelf on set and then put my fake glasses on. And so in the second
season they had my quote unquote show glasses made with my prescription and it changed everything
because then I could read my script in between scenes. And so when Chris told this story, I did also think of that like, yes, yes,
Chris, I have been there too. I know what that feels like.
But how to his point, lovely that they did it for a guest star.
I know.
That was your show.
I know.
You were a series regular and you did have glasses.
Till season two.
Yeah.
It was just one of those things where it was like, hey, we just realized we could put my prescription in these glasses.
Everyone's like, oh, yeah. realized we could put my prescription in these glasses. Everyone's like, oh yeah.
Oh yeah. Now you can see.
But you know, Phil being Phil, he thought of it.
Thought of it right away.
Yep.
Should we go to crazy lunch with Jim and Stanley and Phyllis?
Oh my gosh, this is hilarious.
Talk about at the top of their game, Leslie and Phyllis in this scene.
First of all, Stanley is in no rush to talk,
and he just wants to order surf and turf
with an extra side of surf.
They're gonna really run up this bill.
Phyllis wants to know how much wine they have
in the whole restaurant.
No, kind of wine. How much?
Yes. Well, location alert,
we shot this at Delmonico's on Ventura Boulevard.
I think this is the same place that Michael ordered his Gabagool.
Oh. same restaurant.
And the waiter was played by guest star Noah Blake.
And I think what this scene tells us is that Jim has an uphill battle here.
Yeah, it's going to be a long lunch.
It is.
Oscar now brings Angela a cookie, and she calls him an angel.
All right, come on, Oscar.
Fine, I get it that maybe her
complaining about the thermostat didn't tip you off, but Angela just called you
an angel. Come on. Yes, I think normally if you handed Angela a cookie that large,
yeah, she would comment on it, right? Yeah, she'd be like, thank you, why is it so big?
Or she'd say, why are you giving me a cookie?
You never give me a cookie.
I don't want this.
Exactly.
When did they start making cookies like this?
I don't like it.
It has nuts.
There'd be something.
Something.
There'd be something.
But she calls him an angel and as he walks away,
she crushes the cookies into her hands.
Which Dwight notices.
Yes, he's putting all the pieces together
because up until this point,
he didn't know who this person was
that Trevor had to take out.
Well, Angela, we got a fan question.
People wanna know how many cookies did you have to smash?
Do you remember?
I don't remember, but it was,
I think we did more than one take,
so it was probably three or so.
I'm sure Phil had a whole basket of them standing by.
Exactly.
And the one thing they wanted is for me to crush it
and for it to just kind of fall off my hands into the trash.
That was all scripted.
And that was, I would say, of all the scenes
that I had to do for this episode.
That was the hardest one for me to ground in reality. Crumbling the cookie with this.
Yes.
Yeah.
Because I just thought Angela wouldn't want to get her hands messy.
Like she'd be like,
Oh yeah.
She'd be like, I'm very annoyed at you.
In fact, I'm incredibly pissed off at you,
but I'm not going to get this crap all over my hands.
I guess that tells you how incredibly pissed she was.
How she was willing to dirty her hands.
Yeah, she's super pissed.
Well, now we're in the stairwell and-
The secret stairwell.
The secret stairwell.
The secret stairwell.
Where Jim could have taken any of his-
Nope, Jim's not gonna go there.
But Oscar is.
Yeah, and he's on the phone.
He's assuring the senator that they are A-okay.
Yeah, Angela doesn't know a thing.
Dwight, of course, is lurking and has overheard the whole thing.
He now knows. Dun dun dun. Dun dun dun.
Well, lady, I think we should take a break. And when we come back, I have some tower stats for
you. Oh, I love tower stats. I don't even know what a tower stat is, but I'm so excited.
All right, we are back and Pam is going to walk into the annex and see everybody building
this giant tower.
And there's all this camaraderie and you can tell she's
kind of like, I think she's maybe looking for a reason
to not have to work on her painting right now.
I think she's procrastinating.
She is.
But she's also very interested in this group activity
that looks like a lot of fun.
The tower is getting taller and taller
and Kevin wants to put two cards at the tippity top and everyone's like Kevin be careful be careful and you can guess what happens.
He knocks the whole thing down but they vow to start over.
They're gonna go again yeah well we got a lot of fan questions about this tower Alison M from Shelby North Carolina said please explain how the tower of complaint cards was made.
said, please explain how the Tower of Complaint cards was made. How did you get the tower to stay put?
How was it reconstructed between takes?
And Jessica N from Rochester, New York said,
do you know if there were any structures
that were possibly glued together for some of the scenes?
Or were they all legit card structures
that just didn't make it through some of the takes?
They had to have been glued together.
They were. Yeah. This had to have been glued together. They were.
Yeah.
This was such an elaborate prop actually.
Kudos again to Phil Shea.
Steve Burgess said that we had about six different versions
of the tower in various stages.
And then when I was talking with Brent,
he reminded me that they built it in layers.
So there would be like the bottom layer that was all glued together.
And then we could add like another layer that was all glued together.
I do remember that, that they would carry them in on almost like this, I don't know,
like a tray, like a big flat piece of plywood they would carry in a layer at a time.
Yes. And Steve Burgess actually sent me a bunch of pictures of us posing around the
towers. So you can put those in stories, Angela. But Brent said there was one exception, you know,
the scene when Kevin has to knock the tower down. That was a real Tower of Cards. And it took a very
long time to build. We filmed that in two parts. Brent said we did six takes of the scene right up until
the moment when Kevin knocks the tower down. Then we did one take of him knocking the tower down.
And then we did six takes of the second half of the scene when the cards were all
splayed out. So he only had to knock the tower down once, but this was really important because you didn't know
where the cards were gonna go when they fell.
So it was kind of like an impossible continuity thing
to try to recreate the cards falling.
So that's why once they fell, we just left them
where they were and we did the end of the scene six times.
Shout out to Brian Baumgartner because this is yet another time
where he has to get it basically in one take.
He had to spill that whole pot of chili and then one little area and then now he has to knock down this tower of cards and not mess it up.
Yeah.
You know, like what if he hit the middle by accident or, you know.
Yes, if it hadn't fallen correctly, we would have had to wait for them to build the whole thing again in order to get the fall right.
And then of course the subsequent takes afterwards.
Way to go, Brian.
Way to go, Brian.
I would like to share that someone is really noticing how sweet Pete is.
Yeah.
When Kevin knocks it all down and everyone's upset at him Pete says you know what?
He made a mistake and isn't that what that whole tower is about anyway?
And he gives Kevin a fist bump and he says let's get back to work
Aaron is all smiles and there was a deleted talking head
Where Aaron talks about Pete and I want you to hear it
Pete really sticks up for the underdog and in my book
That's the best dog to stick up for the underdog and in my book that's the best
dog to stick up for. The little dog that's underneath all the other dogs,
way at the bottom. So yeah, good guy this Pete. I like this guy. Oh my gosh, I love
that definition of underdog. I love the idea that there's a pile of dogs and
there's a little guy. Tiny one underneath all one underneath all of them. At the bottom.
Gotta get them out of there.
You know, another thing that Pete says is, come on,
who in here hasn't gotten a complaint or made a mistake?
And Pam raises her hand.
She's never had a complaint against her.
Not ever?
With all the pranks she's done with Jim over the years?
Dwight hasn't filed a complaint.
Well, I think it's customer complaint. Oh, yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. Okay. Yes. I'm sure there's
been files of Dwight complaints. Oh, yeah, you're right. So now the tower has been rebuilt
and it is almost up to the ceiling. Yeah. And they've run out of cards. There's no more complaints.
They just need one more complaint to make it to the ceiling.
So Pam is going to volunteer to get a complaint.
Meredith doesn't buy it. She says, you know what, Pam?
She wouldn't fart on a butterfly.
And then Jenna, the way you as Pam said the line,
I can't even relate to that impulse.
It was so funny the way you said it.
Well, one thing I remember from this particular scene was that the first time
we had that what was going to be the tallest tower, Greg said it wasn't tall enough.
What?
Yeah, he said, I want the top card to touch the ceiling. He's like, that's when they know they've
done it.
I have to say, I agree with that. That feels like, okay, we've literally reached the ceiling.
Yes.
Well, Pam is definitely part of the camaraderie now
because everyone is chanting, Pam, Pam, Pam, Pam.
Except maybe someone in the warehouse
would be chanting, Pat, Pat, Pat.
Very true.
Well, back at Jim's lunch, Phyllis is,
what would you call it?
She's looking at her hands.
She's seeing the passage of time.
I thought Phyllis was so brilliant in this scene.
She says, you know what?
I don't know where the years went.
Cause sometimes when I look at my hands,
I don't even recognize them.
And she goes, who's hands are these?
And then she kind of folds them into her body.
And she's like, they're not my hands.
I don't know.
And Jim's like, oh gosh, I'm not getting anywhere.
Phyllis is so drunk.
You know what this scene made me think of?
I remember, I think I must have been in like my mid 40s.
One morning I looked down at my hands
and I got like immediately emotional because my
hands looked just like my mother's hands.
And I thought one day she's not going to be here anymore, but she's always going to be
in my hands.
I'm going to see her and I do see her when I look at my hands even now.
It's so special to me. Yeah. Yeah.
I started looking more and more like my mother
as I get older, even in my face and everything like that.
Growing up, I thought I didn't really look like
either of my parents.
So when Phyllis was giving this big speech
about whose hands are these, I remember the day
I felt like I went from having my hands to,
oh my gosh, I have my mother's hands.
Yeah.
Yeah. No, I have my mother's hands. Yeah, yeah.
No, I get that too.
My dad's index fingers turned in and so do mine.
Yours do.
Yeah.
I never noticed that about you.
Yeah, and he's-
I see it.
He's no longer here, but I think about that
when I look at my hands.
Sorry, that was okay.
This like, sorry everyone,
we went real deep there for a second.
We did, sorry.
These are more of the things I think you think about
as you age.
You do, you do.
Passage of time, like Phyllis is talking about.
Phyllis is having a moment like that.
She is.
Which is not helping Jim as he's trying to just get her to cover for him when he goes
out of town.
No, because how do you segue from that?
Right?
Could you imagine us having the conversation we just had about our hands and then Cassie
had to walk in here and be like, so listen, are y'all going to be able to cover for?
Can you wrap it up?
Right?
Just bring up business.
Yeah. Yeah, it's very difficult position he is in.
Well, if you thought that was the worst it was going to be for Jim, it's not because
in a later scene, Phyllis starts poking a fellow patron with a knife because she wants
him to help her pry that ginormous decorative bottle that it looks like it's been super
glued down to the banister.
But she wants to drink it.
That reminded me of those bottles of wine they would put on the tables at the SAG awards.
Right, the one that Matt Damon took.
We got a fan question from Becca G in Morganfield, Kentucky, who said,
The scene that makes me laugh the hardest and it only gets funnier every time, is when Jim Stanley and Phyllis go to lunch, every time Phyllis goes for that decorative wine,
I cry from laughing so hard, those three were phenomenal in that scene.
So good.
So Brent told us that this shoot at the restaurant went so smoothly and so quickly that they got
ahead of schedule
and they had time to write an extra scene on the spot
and shoot it.
And it was a scene where Stanley drags Jim into the kitchen
and makes him pay the cook to create a custom dessert
for the table.
It's in deleted scenes.
Part of it is in deleted scenes.
He just starts taking like plates of dessert off.
He's in the kitchen in the back
where they're plating things
and Stanley just starts grabbing them.
Brent said the scene was so funny,
but unfortunately there was no room for it in the final cut.
But I love that they were on set
and they were like,
we gotta write something right now for these three.
This is going so well.
Back at Dundra Mifflin,
Dwight has called Angela out to the parking lot and he tells her,
I know who your target is, it's Oscar.
Yeah. Well, she pretends like she doesn't know what Dwight is talking about, but he says,
your nostrils are flaring and they tell another story.
Yeah, you're lying because of your nostrils. He says, your naughty nostrils.
Well, of course, I had to look up facial signs
of lying.
Is flaring nostrils one of them?
No.
Oh!
No, Dwight is not right. Unless somewhere else on the internet, there's something to prove
me wrong.
No, I think Dwight is right, but it's just a particular tell of Angela's, not in general.
The most common tells of facial lying are
pursed lips, blushing, blinking, darting eyes,
avoiding eye contact, face touching, covering your mouth,
head shaking, and sweating.
I knew that touching your face is a sign of lying.
How?
I remember that from my poker days.
Oh.
Many of the things you mentioned are also poker tells
for when someone is bluffing.
Oh.
Like flushing of the cheeks, but also like touching of the face.
Interesting.
Well, flared nostrils isn't on the list.
I really liked Dwight in the scene,
because he reminds Angela that the first person
to break her marriage vows is her.
It was the two of them.
That's right.
And she goes, well, you might be right, but it's too late.
He's here.
The plan is in motion.
Yeah, they look over.
There's Trevor's van and it's empty.
Trevor is on the move.
Dwight is now panicked.
He's got to find Oscar.
So he rushes into the office. Dwight is now panicked. He's got to find Oscar. So he rushes into the office,
he grabs him, he's making up an excuse to get him down to the warehouse. Meanwhile,
just as they get out of there, Trevor enters with a sub sandwich, like a big sandwich,
and he has a metal pipe in it. You can clearly see the metal pipe. It's so funny. He announces
that he has a sandwich for Oscar Martinez,
and Kevin says, I am Oscar Martinez.
And then Angela comes in and goes, no, no, no.
And tells Kevin there are donuts.
So Kevin will get out of the way.
Well, we asked Chris if he ever got recognized
for being on the office, and he has a very funny story.
And he referenced this sandwich delivery moment specifically.
As far as if I get recognized as Trevor from the office,
holy, it's nonstop to the point where I've said,
and again, to Angela, Jenna, I say it to you as well.
Like I've kept in touch with Rain to a degree and I'm like man
I don't know how I
Don't know how you like
Go out for dinner or go to the airport because I was on two episodes of this damn show and I got stopped all the time
And it's been so many years. It's been I think over a decade at this point and to be clear
I had an HBO special, stand-up special.
I had a show called The Chris Gether Show.
I've been on other things, Parks and Rec.
I've been on Conan a bunch of times as myself,
where they're saying my name.
I've been on Inside AB Schumer.
Like, I don't wanna list a million credits,
but I've had a good career as a character actor.
Nothing gets recognized more than just, hey, weren't you the guy with the pipe?
Weren't you the guy, the sandwich delivery guy?
I get that all the time still.
I would say if I get recognized, there's an 85% chance it's for the office.
No joke, just last weekend, did stand up in San Francisco in Portland and my bag got
pulled by TSA.
And this is not an exaggeration at all.
The TSA agent, he didn't say anything to me at first, but he patted down my chest and
then my actual ass and testicles.
He touched my testicles with his hands, popped up and went, you're good to go.
I love you on the office.
That is not an exaggeration.
Like a TSA agent fondled my testicles and then told me he really liked me as Trevor
on the office.
So it is hugely flattering to be part of something so meaningful that such a small part struck
a chord with people.
It's awesome.
It's an honor. I also sit here and I go, for
those of you who were series regulars every episode for 10 years, God bless you all because
I've had my nuts touched by a TSA agent who immediately then brought up the office. So
I can't imagine what you all go through on a regular basis. Chris, I absolutely love that story.
I mean, we both have so many versions of that story.
It does happen all the time,
but you just can't help but laugh.
I mean, my goodness.
It's also the timing of when it happens.
Like this guy just frisked you.
Yes, exactly.
And was like, by the way. Yes, and also because you guy just frisked you. And then was like, by the way.
Yes. And also because you've been frisked, right? And you think you have anonymity while the frisking is happening? Yes. And then as you're leaving the frisk, you realize, oh, yes. Okay. That's just
one example. Just one day. Of hundreds. There are truly so many examples, just like Chris's.
Yes, there are.
We have so many, but you know,
obviously we're so appreciative that people love the show,
but sometimes the timing.
Sometimes the timing could be better.
Maybe mention it before the Frisk.
I think you want it after the Frisk.
I do think if you're gonna say something,
do it after a Frisk.
I think.
Yeah, okay.
Right?
Yeah, maybe so.
I think so.
Well, now Dwight and Oscar are in the warehouse
and Dwight tells him what was going on,
that they were gonna break his kneecaps.
And he says, of all the gorgeous men
in the Scranton Wilkesbury area,
why did you have to choose the father of Angela's child?
Come on!
Dwight is still trying to just get Oscar out of there.
He rushes them out of the warehouse into the alleyway,
and guess what?
Trevor is right there, and he is determined for once
follow-through with something.
So the three of them end up kind of scuffling,
struggling over this pipe.
Dwight and Oscar are trying to get it away from Trevor.
Trevor's trying to complete the job for which he was hired.
Oscar prevails! He gets the pipe!
I asked Steve Burgess if we had a fight coordinator or a stunt coordinator for this fight, and he said no.
No! They just let the three of them sort it out.
Yeah.
Well, I asked Chris about this scene, and here's what he had to say.
As far as the fight scene, I remember the day moving pretty quickly.
I remember being pretty intimidated even though obviously everyone on set was so nice.
But I felt like things could get wild.
But it all went well.
I remember being slightly different each time because we were kind of really wrestling
around.
I think I like that.
I like the idea of if we're going to do something physical and we're not supposed
to be trained fighters, like we might as well go for it and see where our bodies go
because that'll be natural.
I also got the sense that rain was probably into that Oscar, I think, was probably
the one who was the most reserved about, wait, what's exactly going to happen?
And I think rain and I who rain and I have remained, you know, not super tight,
but we touch base every couple of years just to see how the other one's doing and cross paths.
And I do get the sense he and I both probably have a similar sense of, well, if we're doing some
scene that's supposed to be some crazy unplanned wrestling match, the easiest way to do it is just
let's start wrestling. So that was pretty fun.
Chris, I would confirm that that would be Reigns' take on that.
100%. Yes. I also asked Chris if any of his improvs made it into the episode, because you know,
he was so funny. And yes, we got everything scripted and it was so well written. But there were these
great moments of improvisation from him.
And here's what he had to say.
I do remember improvising a line in the fight with Oscar.
If I remember right, I run away and while I run away, I'm shouting something along
the lines of I have masculinity issues.
And that line was improvised.
I remember being psyched that they used that.
That is so fun.
Chris also had talked about just how amazing the writing was.
Yeah.
And he said like one of the reasons he was so tickled
to get an improv line in was because he knew it was gonna
have to really be good in order to make it,
because all the scripted stuff was so good.
Yeah.
Well, we got a fan question about this scene
from Carly P. and Cesar Illinois.
And Carly said this,
when Dwight, Oscar and Trevor are fighting over the pipe,
there are people passing by in the background, on the street.
Were these just actual passerby's or were they staged
to walk past at this point? Because they do not look concerned about three grown men rolling
on the ground fighting over a lead pipe. Carly, I did not notice this at first. I went back
and I rewatched the scene and I see this couple walk by. I think they're just two people who
walked out of the street. Carly, I went back and looked as well. They are 100% just two people walking down the street.
I think the other thing that's going on here is that we had been filming this show for nine years
at this location and there were other businesses right next to us. And at this point, they just
knew, oh, it's that TV show. So I think when they saw three men like t this point, they just knew, oh, it's that TV show.
So I think when they saw three men like tussling,
they were like, oh, they're doing,
they're filming something, I don't know.
That is exactly what I thought as well.
Well, now it's Pam's turn to try to get a complaint, right?
Yep.
Erin and Nellie and Creed are really encouraging her
to fail, they say you gotta think like a scumbag.
Creed shows her, but then just looks off into space.
It's like this, Pam calls a client
and does your mama's so fat joke and hangs up on them.
Yeah.
Aaron's phone immediately rings
and she takes the message and guess what?
They lost a client.
Woohoo!
Everyone's like woohoo, but then they're like,
oh wait, crap, we lost a client. Everyone's like, woohoo! But then they're like, oh, wait, crap, we lost a client.
We just wanted a complaint.
A complaint.
Jenna, you're so good in this scene.
I thought you just were great.
And you know what?
Brent thought so too.
Here's what he had to say.
The Tower of Complaints subplot is one of those big group
stories that becomes so useful to the writers
in the later seasons of The Office
when we have 14 characters in the show
and we have to give them all something to do.
So this one takes up eight characters
and that's really useful to the writers.
What was so fun about this episode
was how funny Jenna was in it.
So often Pam's character is the emotional heart
of the story and her relationship with
Jim is the romantic subplot that is driving so much of the series, but it is so delightful
when Jenna gets to be funny and the writers took a lot of pleasure in figuring out how
to make this proper character funny by forcing her to fail.
And you'll notice that in the final prank phone call that she makes to lose
a client, the laugh doesn't come on the yo mama joke. It comes on Pam having to
over explain the yo mama joke because she's never had to deliver an insult like
this before. It's a classic example of the laugh coming not on the cleverness of
the joke itself but on the performance of the actor.
And Jenna just nails it.
Lady, my favorite thing about Brent sending an audio clips
is that they always include like high praise for you and I.
I know Brent.
And they make me feel so good about myself.
Brent, thank you so much.
But one of the other things I really appreciate
about Brent's perspective on episodes
is he always takes it back to what moves the story,
what makes the joke happen.
I can just hear what a great teacher he is.
Cause he's so right.
The thing that's funny about it, isn't the yo mama joke.
It's Pam getting so flustered and trying so earnestly to really be off-putting?
Yes.
Speaking of, Brent is a teacher.
He teaches comedy writing classes.
Yes.
And you can sign up for his classes at BrentForster.com.
And you know, I'll put it in stories.
Yes, she will.
Well, this storyline ends with everybody back in the Annex,
and they put Pam's complaint
on the top of the tower and it's almost brushing the ceiling tiles and everyone cheers.
Yeah, Pam saved the day.
Yes, what we learned a little more information about how her insult was truly terrible because
I guess this woman had recently passed away and had struggled with obesity her whole life.
The client's mother had just recently passed away,
which is why it wasn't just a complaint card.
It was, you don't get our business anymore.
Yes, and Pam wants you to know,
I did not know any of that information.
I am so very sorry.
Of course not.
But everyone's happy.
They built a tower.
That's what they did that day.
So simple, so simple.
And lovely.
We also got a fan question about this scene
from Roy L. L. in Boise, Idaho,
who said, I have been waiting for years to submit this.
It always makes me so happy
when we can like answer a question for someone
that has been like years in this making years waiting for the episode. Yeah, same
All right, here's the question when Creed is congratulating Pam for her first customer complaint. Why is he in gray sweatpants?
I also noticed he has his business shirt tucked into his sweatpants. This is such a funny detail
Well, Royale, I noticed this too and I was curious, so I went to the shooting draft and
I found the answer. It was actually explained at the very top of the episode and here's
how the script read.
Jim and Pam walk in for the day. Pam is wearing painting clothes, a paint-flexed sweatshirt
and jeans. Dwight says, well, it finally happened, Pam stopped caring. Creed says,
welcome aboard, Pam. And in the stage direction, it says, Creed is wearing sweat
pants and crocs. Oh, wow, that's great. And then Pam says, these are my painting
clothes. Isn't it funny how you trim out one line? Yeah. And now for this whole
episode, we have the mystery of why is Creed wearing sweatpants?
I bet Creed was so happy to be wearing sweatpants
and crocs all week.
He was probably like, we should make this a week thing.
A clean thing.
Back in the alleyway, the guys have stopped tussling
and Angela now has suddenly appeared behind Oscar.
Yeah.
And he's gonna yell at her.
He's gonna be like, I cannot believe you hired someone to beat me with a pipe.
And he says, look, what I did was wrong
and I have to live with that every day,
but your husband is gay.
And he was gay when you married him.
And Angela's like, no.
And Oscar says, Angela, until you face that,
you're gonna be confused and angry for all the wrong reasons.
But if you wanna blame me for the whole thing, go ahead. I won't stop you. Hit me. You have my blessing. Hit me." And Angela's
like, okay, she grabs the pipe.
I know, but you won't let go of it.
And she says, are you going to let go of it because part of the blame is definitely on
you. And then Oscar says, Angela, it's a lead-freaking pipe. And then Angela just kicks him.
How did that work, Angela?
Did you just fake kick him?
Did he have a pad?
I kicked him and he had a pad on his shin.
Like a shin guard.
He had a shin guard, but I really kicked him.
Okay, because it looked like a real kick.
It was.
Okay.
And then Angela very emotionally says,
you were supposed to be my friend.
Yeah.
And then later, Angela is crying on a bench outside
and Dwight joins her.
And she says, I just feel so stupid.
I sit next to him every day.
So lady, this is a line that's quoted to me a lot.
This is one of those lines and rain gets it too.
You're not stupid, Jazz is stupid.
And then I say, Jazz is stupid. I mean, just play the right notes.
It's such a funny thing to say.
And then Dwight says, I know, you're going to be okay, monkey. And then the last
couplet of dialogue was completely improvised.
About Trevor?
I say, I don't like your friend Trevor. And then Rain says, I don't like him either. And yet I really like him.
Oh my gosh, I can't believe that was improvised.
Yep. And it made it in. And I was so tickled when I saw it.
Because, you know, with me crying and Dwight puts his arm around me, they left the camera there for a bit.
Yeah.
And so I just said, I don't like your friend Trevor.
Such a funny thing to say.
And then Dwight has such a great response.
His great response is perfection.
We got a fan question from Jennifer C.
in Colorado Springs, Colorado, who said,
this is something I've wondered for years.
Does Mike sure hate jazz?
Oh.
I know he didn't write this episode,
but this theme pops up in a lot of his projects.
And then Jennifer cites all these projects,
The Good Place, Season 1, Episode 9.
Someone says, ugh, I hate jazz.
It's like we get it.
Wrap it up Elton John.
In Parks and Recreation, season five episode 12, someone says,
you'd really want to get to know the guy, right?
You'd want to know his personality, his favorite season of friends,
whether he hates jazz.
Hopefully he does.
There is a theme here.
Yes.
And then jazz is stupid.
Just play the right notes.
Jennifer said, these are just three examples, but there are so many more.
Please explain.
So one of my favorite things with our podcast
is to reach out to people.
Please tell me you texted Mike, sure about this.
I did.
What did he say?
He wrote back, ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
You can tell Jennifer, I don't hate jazz.
I didn't even write all of those jokes.
But comedy writers like to pick on jazz because like most art forms, it has a certain group
of adherents who like to lecture you on why it's so amazing and so cool and so special.
Mike said kind of like the Ryan Gosling character in La La Land where he explains
jazz to John Legend. Mike said comedy writers in general have a disdain for anything that
causes people to wax poetic or why you just don't get something. And he said jazz is one
of those things.
What a perfect answer.
I know.
I love that.
Well, I love that Jennifer Keaton on on this joke about jazz. Yeah keeps popping up
You know, we also got quite a few people who wrote in and said wait
So Angela likes babies who play jazz for posters, but not actual jazz. Yes
I saw those I think it's not so much about babies playing jazz that Angela liked about the poster,
but just the fact that they were dressed up in like a little fedora and they had instruments.
It's like when you dress up your pets.
I think Angela likes babies dressed as like adult things.
Yes.
So like a favorite Halloween costume for Angela would be like a baby dressed like an old man.
Or a baby dressed like an old man.
Or a baby dressed like an old-timey pilot.
Yes.
Or a race car driver.
That's right.
Yeah.
Kind of like how you like animals dressed as other animals.
Yes.
Right.
Like, I love nothing more than a bunny rabbit dressed as a bear stuffed animal.
Right.
This is such a weird thing that I like that.
What is that about?
I don't know.
I don't know, we like what we like.
We like what we like.
Well, Jim is finally pulling into the parking lot now
with Stanley and Phyllis.
They're asleep in the back seat.
They've eaten everything, they've drank everything.
And Jim is just gonna kind of tuck him in.
He's taking his coat, putting it over,
fill us like a blanket and she says,
of course we're gonna cover for you, Jimmy.
We love you guys.
So sweet.
So sweet and she calls him Jimmy, which I love.
And then we're gonna go to the warehouse and guess what?
There is paint on the wall.
It's happening and I have to tell you,
there was a very sweet deleted scene
between Pam and the senator that happened here.
So in the shooting draft, there was a scene
where the senator shows up to the bullpen with coffee.
I guess he's just stopped by, right?
No one's in the bullpen except for Daryl
and he says, hey, where is everyone?
And Daryl says, I think Angela's in the warehouse. And the senator goes, okay, well, if you see Oscar, will you tell Oscar that I stopped
by with coffee for Angela? And Darrell gets this look like what? And Darrell's like, or I could just
tell Angela herself. And the senator goes, oh, yeah, I guess that would work too.
And Daryl has this look of like, what was that about?
And then the next scene is the senator walking
into the warehouse and he sees Pam
and they have this exchange.
And I really loved it because I feel like Pam
has locked into something about herself.
Hello Pam.
Senator.
I thought you were the office manager. No, I'm an artist. And I work in an office.
How about that?
I love that!
She just owns it. She does. I'm an artist.
I also do this other thing, but that's where my heart is.
Yeah.
You know, we had a fan question from Bethany N in Australia
who said,
Who actually painted the mural?
Well, Bethany, all the paint that you see on the wall
in this
episode was me. I painted it. Later, it was not me at all. But I actually got to put paint up on
the wall for this one. Well, this episode is going to end with a tag Dwight and Angela are meeting with Toby. Yeah, for some reason, Toby is who Dwight goes to for any kind of
like questions about relationships or sex. He goes to Toby. Yes, in the episode, Sexual
Harassment Dwight sits down with Toby. Yeah. Remember, and he's asking about a woman's body.
A woman's pleasure areas.
Yes.
Yes, so for whatever reason, this is the go-to, Toby.
Toby.
And he's always very kind and thoughtful.
Yes.
Well, Dwight and Angela have a lot of questions for Toby
about basically Oscar and the senator
and how things are going down.
Right.
Brent shared with us something about this scene.
He said that it was Paul Lieberstein's idea
that we speak in a whisper to make it seem
that much more serious and ridiculous.
That was a good choice.
Well guys, there you have it.
The target.
Gosh, I loved this episode. I absolutely loved doing these scenes with Oscar.
You know, the show had a lot of love triangles
and this was one of my favorites.
Well, a big thank you to Brent Forrester and Steve Burgess
for sending us all your behind the scenes info.
And a big thank you to Chris Gethard
for sharing with us about his time playing Trevor.
Oh my gosh, what an amazing character.
And Chris has so many great things he's working on.
You can hear him on his podcast, Beautiful Anonymous.
He also wrote a book, Dad at Peace.
And Chris is the creative mind behind Wellness Together's
newest program, Laughing Together.
Chris says they're very excited to announce their efforts
to expand advocacy, awareness, and access to mental health for students.
And you can learn all about it on their website, laughingtogether.org.
I'll share all of that in our stories.
And of course, thank you to all of you for sending in your questions.
I'm so glad we could answer so many of them that have been bugging you all for years in
this episode.
We hope you have a great rest of your day and a great week, and we'll see you next week.
See you then!
Thank you for listening to Office Ladies.
Office Ladies is produced by Earwolf, Jenna Fisher and Angela Kinsey.
Our senior producer is Cassie Jerkins.
Our in-studio engineer is Sam Kiefer.
Our editing and mixing engineer is Jordan Duffy and our associate producer is Ainsley
Bubbicoe. Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.