If you can believe it, NBC has posted another deleted scene from The Merger. This time Meredith is the star.
Link: Deleted Scene Number 7
If you can believe it, NBC has posted another deleted scene from The Merger. This time Meredith is the star.
Link: Deleted Scene Number 7
Over the Thanksgiving break, I picked up one of the new Nintendo Wii’s to play with. In case you haven’t heard of this console yet, it is the new console from Nintendo. It is pretty fun. The game that comes with it is called “Wii Sports and it let’s you interact with the game. For instance, if you are playing tennis, you actually swing the controller as if it was your racquet. It’s actually good exercise.
Another thing you do on the Wii is create a “Mii.” The purpose is to create one that looks like yourself and then when you play some games, the character will look like you. It’s actually quite fun to do this. We’ve been making my family members and they kind of just hang out with each other. (For instance, when I play the Wii Bowling, my virtual wife is sitting in the chairs behind me cheering me on while I bowl.)
Well, someone recreated the “Mii Channel” online so you can try to build a mii of yourself. The creator isn’t exactly like the one on the Wii. For instance, the hair and eye colors are quite limited in this online creator. But, you can still get pretty close and it is kind of fun to play with.
What does this have to do with The Office? Well, I did my best to create some of the characters from The Office and I invite you to create some more. You can create them on the site, take a screenshot, and then send it to me. You can send it and I’ll post them as they come in, but I’ll only keep the best one of each character so they may change in the next couple days. If yours is the one that is posted when the episode ends, LITO will gift you this week’s episode of The Office on iTunes. You can create anyone listed in the character profiles. Sound fun?
(Update: All done with the contest, but enjoy the Mii’s.)
OK, these first five are my contribution. I look forward to seeing yours.
Michael (from Michael)

Jim (from Dana)

Pam (from Sasha)

Pam 2 (from Heidi)

Dwight

Karen

Kevin (from Adam)

Meredith (from Ali)

Toby (from Adam)

Kelly (from Greg)

Tony The Chip Guy (from Elizabeth)

Angela (from Erica)

Creed (from Alan)

Cousin Mose (from billypilgrim)

Ryan (from Alan)

Roy (from Lauren)

Jan (from shesnotasecret)

Darryl (from Paul)

Stanley (from numbatlove)

Oscar (from Jane)

Phyllis (from Erica)

Josh (from Caryn)

Bob Vance, Vance Refrigeration (from Henry)

Andy (from shesnotasecret)

Mr Tate The Security Guard (from Sarah)

Todd Packer (from Corey)

Ed Truck (from Paul)

Hannah (from Meredith)
Martin (from Meredith)
Carol (from Corey)

Brenda (from Corey)

Billy (from Paul)

Katy (from Janie)

Wow, nearly two weeks later, NBC has put up a new deleted scene for The Merger.
I’m glad to see that they are following the old pattern to allow me to link straight to the deleted scene. However, I wish they’d change those darn commercials every once and a while.
You can see Michael and his magic trick here.
(Thanks for the tip Adam)
Well, I’ve made no secret that I’m a fan of Karen in the show. I think she brings some fresh personality and would be good for Jim. (At least for the next little while.)
A couple days ago on LJ, one of the members found Rashida Jones on the list of the “50 Most Beautiful People” in 2002. (pictured above) Now it just makes sense that she should be with Jim, one of People’s Sexiest Men Alive.
That article also points out that she was in the music video for “Be Gentle With Me.” That’s a cool song, with a cool video, and she did a good job. I’m sure there are other musical projects that she’s been involved in considering her dad is Quincy Jones. (Yes, that Quincy Jones)
Well, you can check out the song here and you can watch the video below.
I saw a mention of this in a comment earlier, but LITO reader Phil send us th link to the story titled “They gave at ‘The Office’ — twice.” It talks about The Office writers and how many of them are also characters in the show. Of course, all of us LITO-ites know this, but it’s fun to read anyway.
LATimes.com requires registration to read their articles. You can read it here, or read it below.
IF NBC’s comedy “The Office” feels like nothing else on television, it may be because the actors and writers are so often on the same page. In fact, they’re frequently the same people.
Everybody’s heard of performers who squirrel themselves away in their on-set trailers and pound out the odd script that winds up on the air, typically as a token of favor from the producers. But “The Office” is something else entirely, the rare scripted TV show in which the line between writing and performing is, by design, almost nonexistent. It’s an improv-style approach that could yield some important lessons for those puzzled by the identity crisis and creative drift that generally seem to be afflicting the art of small-screen comedy these days.
A workplace mockumentary set in the Scranton, Pa., branch of fictional paper company Dunder-Mifflin Inc., “The Office” has had some of its most acclaimed episodes written by regular or recurring cast members, some of whom are barely out of college.
Mindy Kaling, who plays the show’s “Indian Valley Girl” Kelly Kapoor, drew on her cultural heritage to write a script earlier this season that had the Dunder-Mifflin crew awkwardly celebrating the Hindu holiday Diwali. Another “Office” twentysomething, B.J. Novak, who plays the laconic young temp Ryan, is a stand-up comic with a Harvard education and writing credits on five episodes. Veteran comedy writer Paul Lieberstein became a performer entirely by accident, developing the bit part of the soft-spoken human-resources manager Toby into a wry portrait of a passive-aggressive player in corporate politics.
Even series star Steve Carell, who plays the endlessly embarrassing boss Michael Scott, has pitched in, writing last season’s finale episode.
Executive producer Greg Daniels, formerly a writer-producer on “The Simpsons” and “King of the Hill,” said the double duty is intentional. He has clauses inserted in the writers’ contracts to cover whatever acting chores may arise. Kaling remembers Daniels mulling over a bit character in one script before suddenly turning to staff writer Gene Stupnitsky and asking, “Have you ever acted before?”
This seat-of-the-pants method serves a creative purpose. “Partly I was just imitating things I loved, like ‘Monty Python’ or ‘Fawlty Towers,’ where the writers and performers are the same people,” Daniels said.
Moreover, because “The Office” is supposed to be a documentary about mid- and low-level corporate grunts, it makes sense for the performances to lack a bit of polish and not to be too fussy.
“The concept of the show is that it’s an ordinary workplace where the people are funny but not particularly glamorous,” Daniels said. If their posture, gestures and speech seem “a little awkward,” all the better.
Daniels is also in some respects following the path of the original BBC version of “The Office,” which co-creator and star Ricky Gervais wrote with his creative partner Stephen Merchant.
The approach garners no complaints from NBC, which has watched ratings for “The Office” climb after a very slow start in March 2005. “It’s definitely unique and advantageous to have so many artists serve in dual roles on one show,” NBC Universal Television Studio President Angela Bromstad wrote in an e-mail. “Clearly, they inhabit these roles fully and completely.”
The 11-member writing staff of NBC’s “Office” gathers for the typical “writers’ room” bull sessions, in which Daniels solicits ideas and assigns scripts to individual writers. Although the basic structure of every episode is mapped out in advance, Daniels leaves plenty of room for improvisation within each scene.
“The actors I hired, I tried to have them all have improvisational backgrounds,” he said. “Improv is a good tool to make it seem more natural.”
At this point, anything that can shake up comedy’s creative formulas is probably a good thing. One of the complaints about sitcoms in general is that the traditional “multi-camera” method, as well as dividing the script into “acts” that depend heavily on a setup-joke-setup-joke pattern, has grown threadbare. But simply making “single-camera” comedies that look more like movies hasn’t necessarily helped either. In addition to interesting characters, new ways of telling stories may help capture the attention of increasingly fickle viewers.
In the case of “The Office,” now-familiar roles such as Kelly’s and Toby’s were originally meant to be bit parts. But the dual roles aren’t always easy on the cast. Lieberstein admits that he still feels a lot more comfortable writing. The internal reaction to early episodes, however, guaranteed him more air time as Toby.
“Kevin Reilly, who’s the president of NBC, was watching dailies and said, ‘He’s funny. More of him.’ And that got around,” said Lieberstein, sounding not entirely thrilled by the development.
People may lament that writing is a solitary pursuit, but Lieberstein has discovered a near-existential loneliness when it comes to acting. “The parts of it that have been hard are finding out what an incredible black hole acting can be. You’re out there and nobody talks to you, and you have no idea how you’re doing.” When he watches himself in dailies, “everything I see, I want to cut in the editing room.”
He also feels intimidated by his more experienced colleagues, including Carell and Rainn Wilson, who plays the nerdy crank Dwight, and John Krasinski, as the ambivalent regular guy Jim (Krasinski hasn’t written — yet — but Wilson writes NBC’s “Schrute-Space” blog in character as Dwight). “I still feel out of my element as an actor,” Lieberstein said. “I feel like I can play Toby well, but Toby has a very small wheelhouse.”
Kaling too confesses she’d rather write than act. But her personality and background have helped develop Kelly into a popular supporting character and the sometime love interest of a reluctant Ryan. Her quirks have quickly been injected into Kelly’s persona. That includes “the online shopping, the talking really fast and the elements of boy craziness too, unfortunately,” she said.
Last year, she and her friend Vali Chandrasekaran, who writes for NBC’s “My Name Is Earl,” held a Diwali party for the casts of both shows. That led directly to this season’s “Diwali” episode, which ended with Michael singing a Hindu tribute to the tune of Adam Sandler’s “The Chanukah Song.” “The network was so excited,” she said. “They were like, ‘What the hell is this holiday? I’ve never heard of it.’ ”
Kaling said she understands what Daniels is after, even if his temptation to cast from the ranks of the writing staff has sometimes led to suspicion of “sheer laziness” on his part.
Then she checked herself in mid-interview, recalling the political expediencies of workplace hierarchy that are satirized so expertly on “The Office.”
“Oh, God, now I’m on record as saying my boss is lazy,” she said. “I meant lazy in the best possible way.”
Now that Thanksgiving is over, we may as well start talking about the Christmas Episode of The Office. Here is the plot:
In a special one-hour holiday episode directed by Harold Ramis, strife on the party planning committee results in two competing Christmas parties, while Michael is dumped for the holidays. Michael (Golden Globe Winner Steve Carell) sends out an inappropriate photoshopped Christmas card and gets his heart broken for the holidays by girlfriend Carol (guest star Nancy Walls). Andy (guest star Ed Helms) takes Michael out drinking, with Dwight (Rainn Wilson) and Jim (John Krasinski), while tensions on the party planning committee between Angela (Angela Kinsey), Pam (Jenna Fischer) and Karen (guest star Rashida Jones) cause rival parties to form. B.J. Novak, Melora Hardin, David Denman, Leslie David Baker, Brian Baumgartner, Kate Flannery, Angela Kinsey, Oscar Nuñez, Phyllis Smith, Paul Lieberstein and Mindy Kaling also star.
Is it just me or will it be great to see Michael and Andy drinking at the same time?
Thanksgiving was wonderful this year. I love that it is always on a Thursday so we get four day weekends. Props to teh Thanksgiving planning committee.
Here is the news tidbits that I either found or was sent:
1) Jill told me about an article in TVGuide about Dwight and Angela. She took a photo to show me the article (her scanner was at work), and I also saw the text typed out at GMMR.
2) Bland pointed me to the trailer for Evan Almight, Steve Carell’s new movie. You can see it here.
3) Julie told me that Steve Carell is featured on Business 2.0. I couldn’t find the official site for the magazine, but LJ has it here.
4) The Washington Post had a really fun article on where the name “Jim Halpert” comes from. It turns out that “James Halpert” is a friend of Greg Daniels, the executive producer of The Office.
It was just a few weeks before the U.S. version of “The Office” aired that Daniels told Halpert he had named a character for him. Halpert, aware of the British version of the show, was a little apprehensive and a bit insulted: “Most of the characters were despicable,” he said. But he was relieved once he saw Daniels’s version of the program. The Jim Halpert character is sympathetic. Sure, he makes jokes. But he’s got a little sweetness to him. And gosh, what about that heart-melting crush he has on Pam?
The full article is here.
5) Abby tells me that the Official NBC Store is now selling a Dunder Mifflin Snow Globe
6) Brian (Kevin) will be on the Megan Mullally show this Wednesday. Megan was so annoying the last time we saw her, I don’t think I’ll be watching this interview. But, I’ll try to get the video on YouTube and post it here.
Whew, I think that’s it from the weekend. Your regularly scheduled posts will now continue.
Well, Yahoo has given us something to be thankful for on Thanksgiving. They have posted four video previews of “The Convict”, which airs next week. (Maybe someone thought it aired tonight.)
The third preview that shows the conversation between Andy and Jim is great. Andy’s first line is funny! I guess we now know how the Pam coaching gets started.
In case you can’t tell from the title, there will be a spoiler in this post…
I had never heard of Kristin from E! until I started getting into The Office. But, it seems like this lady is hooked up in the entertainment world. She’s always full of little tips and tidbits.
In one of her latest blog entries, Kristen gave a little spoiler about The Office.
From Heather: Thursday’s episode of The Office had me dancing around the living room, then at the end I wanted to throw my TV out of the window. Please, tell me there is hope for Jim and Pam!
I am right there with you, babycakes. And while I have nothing giddily delicious to report on the Jam front (sorry—aside from a great new Orange Marmalade I did just discover at Whole Foods) I do have major news in the Office romance department! Carol dumps Michael in the next couple weeks, which leaves him heartbroken at first, until he realizes he can rebound with—who else?! Jan! To my surprise, I’m hearing Ms. Levinson is totally into it, and even goes on a romantic getaway with Michael over the Christmas holidays. “Man” (Michael/Jan) is on!
Well, we knew that Michael would be heading to Jamaica when we saw an earlier video, but we were all guessing it would be a honeymoon with Carole.
If Jan does hook up with Michael again, I will never put trust in any of her words again. She either has to give more respect to Michael, or just completely leave him alone.
NBC has posted a total of four deleted scenes from The Merger. Thank fully they have posted them the way they used to post them so you don’t have to deal with the annoying new player the created.
The most recent one is here.