The Office on NBC

abomb

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From Time;

Get The Office At Your Office
Spending more time with your computer than with your TV? Then TV's coming to find you

By JAMES PONIEWOZIK

Posted Monday, Jun 26, 2006

The Office is an acutely funny workplace sitcom in which the cubicle prisoners fight wrenching boredom and dream of escape. By happy coincidence, that describes many actual offices, minus the acutely funny part. So NBC is giving real workers an escape this summer--by offering new episodes of the show to watch online, in the comfort of their own cubicles.

Starting July 13, The Office will begin streaming 10 2-min. "webisodes" through nbc.com Think of them as The Office, the downsized version. The cast is smaller: the plot follows the supporting characters of the Dunder-Mifflin paper company's accounting department as they track down $3,000 missing from the books. Most important, from the network's standpoint, the budget is smaller. "I don't even know if we had a budget," says executive producer Greg Daniels. "It's more like an extra fee." Chalk up another irony for The Office: you have a big year, and the boss asks you to work overtime for peanuts. But the webisode project is less a comedown than the highest-profile example of the race at the networks to bring the small screen to the even smaller screen, fast.

How fast? Just a year ago, the big networks were debating whether it was worthwhile to sell shows on iTunes. Millions of downloads later, CBS has launched an entire broadband network, Innertube, at cbs.com on which can be seen sketch comedy, reality makeovers and chat shows for superfans of Survivor and Big Brother. In June NBC Universal debuted online channels for gay programming outzonetv.com and reruns of critics' favorite series (brilliant but cancelled.com) ESPN, Comedy Central, MTV, Discovery, HGTV and more have broadband channels. (On Animal Planet's, you can watch Web-exclusive series Pet Trends for the latest in canine fashion and high-end doggie snacks.) Canceled shows are getting second lives online (CBS's Love Monkey), while new shows pull double duty (NBC's 30 Rock, about a sketch-comedy show, will run webisodes with skits from the show-within-a-show). NBC and CBS are even planning online-only reality shows from, respectively, record producer David Foster and Survivor honcho Mark Burnett.

Burnett's show is called Gold Rush, and that's pretty much what's going on here. NBC Universal Television Group CEO Jeff Zucker says digital ad opportunities were "all advertisers wanted to talk about" before this spring's "upfronts," where the networks announce their fall schedules to Madison Avenue. Who can blame them? According to technology-analysis firm Forrester Research, 28% of U.S. households had broadband access in 2005--and that's not counting access at work, which is prime time for online TV. (When CBS streamed NCAA basketball this spring, it included a "boss button" that fans could use to instantly hide the game under a bogus spreadsheet.) More viewers are skipping TV ads using TiVo or other recorders, whereas webisodes are usually preceded by a brief, unskippable ad. Meanwhile, the ratings of even hit shows have shrunk over the years, and some of those former viewers are having affairs with their desktops.

That's especially true of youth--one reason MTV launched MTVU Uber, an online-only channel for college students. It also goes for upscale viewers like The Office's, who downloaded the show in droves from iTunes. Still, says Forrester analyst Josh Bernoff, the more mainstream online video becomes, the more viewers of all ages and income levels use it. "It doesn't matter whether you're selling Preparation H or sports cars," he says. "Your audience is online looking at videos, so you want to be there."

The question is what to draw them with. "Online is the Wild West," says Zucker. "There are no rules yet." More precisely, online is Deadwood: a mother lode of new riches, with big companies trying to muscle in on the prospectors. (Or buy them out: Carson Daly just signed a development deal with 20-year-old YouTube comic sensation Brooke [Brookers] Brodack.) Online, the competition is not just CBS and Fox: it's college kids on MySpace and raunchy comedy sites like collegehumor com The networks can't take as many risks online--even though the FCC can't touch them there. Daniels considered letting actors swear in the Office webisodes but says he didn't think "people wanted to hear their favorite characters shouting profanities they wouldn't hear on the regular show." Advertisers sure wouldn't; one reason they're urging the networks online is not to have their mutual-fund spots run next to a home movie of a baby farting on YouTube.

Instead, networks are trying to capture the spirit of what makes the Web distinctive. Part of that, says Brian Graden, entertainment president of MTV Networks music group, is a first-person point of view. "If we do a Top 10 music-video list," he says, "it won't work as well as if we offer Snoop Dogg's list of his favorite Top 10." Short works best too--that quarterly planning meeting is in 10 minutes!--and maybe for that reason, comedy, which also relies less on impressive visuals, plays better than drama (though ABC is working on cell-phone mini-episodes of Lost).

Online shows need to be cheap, of course, because they still don't draw as many eyeballs as prime-time TV; they may get costlier, however, as actor and crew unions discover there's money in them. So they can risk seeming like low-rent, store-brand versions of "real" TV. An Office webisode screened at the upfronts was funny, highlighting the show's richly drawn supporting players, but fans of star Steve Carell will be disappointed to find he's not in any of the episodes. (His character, boss Michael Scott, is referenced, though; an accountant catches him having expensed a J. Crew receipt as "lunch.") Only a few network sites re-create the joyful weirdness of the best amateur viral video; Comedy Central's MotherLoad site, for instance, has Golden Age, a hilarious True Hollywood Story parody about the tragic lives of fictitious celebrity cartoon characters. Other sites are filled with extras that are geekily appealing (Sci Fi Network's site reveals how prop masters create futuristic beverages for Battlestar Galactica) or superfluous. (Does anyone really need to delve deeper into My Super Sweet 16 online? It's like scuba diving in a teaspoon.)

You can make the argument, though, that originality online--as on TV--isn't always the best business. Disney, for example, has resisted doing original Web video for ABC and the Disney Channel, but it's had huge success airing online reruns. Besides the popularity of Lost online, the Disney Channel's The Suite Life of Zack and Cody started getting its best TV ratings ever after airing episodes online. "This validates what we already knew: that broadband does not take away from television," says Disney--ABC Television Group president Anne Sweeney.

Maybe not, but it could ultimately meld with TV. After all, if you have a cable modem, you already get your Internet and TV through the same pipe. A decade from now, there could just be longer and shorter shows from the same companies (NBCUniversalYouTube, say) that you play on your HD video wall, telepathy phone or iPod contact lens. Or, at least, online and TV could well be separate but more equal. To advertisers, who still pay for most of TV, a picture is a picture. "We're not really calling it TV anymore--it's video," says Jeff Minsky, director of emerging media platforms at advertising agency OMD Digital. Call it what you want, the future of TV is coming soon to your screen. And your other one, and your other one, and your other one.

With reporting by Reported by Jeanne McDowell/ Los Angeles, Clayton Neuman/New York
 
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Pariah

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I just watched the episode titled "Casino Night," in which Jim let's the cat out of the bag. I'm assuming that was the season finale? Wow. Great acting from the guy who plays Jim, IMO.

It was one of my favorites...that one and "The Injury," in which Michael grills his foot and Dwight gets a concussion.
 

Pariah

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BTW, I don't think it's good news for the show that Jim told Pam. Usually when there's sexual tension/unrequited love on a show that's taken away by "requited" love the show goes downhill fast. Hopefully this'll be different.
 

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One of my favorite parts ever is the episode where there is the fire in the Office and Dwight sits in his car blasting "Everbody Hurts." Classic.
 

abomb

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Pariah said:
I just watched the episode titled "Casino Night," in which Jim let's the cat out of the bag. I'm assuming that was the season finale? Wow. Great acting from the guy who plays Jim, IMO.

Yep, that was the finale.

I know what you mean about the chemistry possibly getting messed up, but I am hoping the writers keep doing a great job.
 

Mike Olbinski

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BigDavis75 said:
One of my favorite parts ever is the episode where there is the fire in the Office and Dwight sits in his car blasting "Everbody Hurts." Classic.


And at the end...

"Ryan started the FIRE!!!" singing it to that old song...

So funny.
 

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Chandler Mike said:
And at the end...

"Ryan started the FIRE!!!" singing it to that old song...

So funny.

That was an excellent episode, my favorite is probably the basketball one.

Michael (to the black guy): I'll take you, obviously

:lmao:
 

Pariah

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abomb said:
Yep, that was the finale.
Did you guys notice that that one was written by Steve Carrol? I know BJ Novack writes a lot of them, how often does Agent Michael Scott write his own stuff?

It's weird, but lately I've been thinking about this show a lot. It's really grown on me--when I first watched it I thought it was just okay.
 

Mike Olbinski

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Pariah said:
Did you guys notice that that one was written by Steve Carrol? I know BJ Novack writes a lot of them, how often does Agent Michael Scott write his own stuff?

It's weird, but lately I've been thinking about this show a lot. It's really grown on me--when I first watched it I thought it was just okay.

Agent Michael Scarn!

Yeah, it was a good finale, and it was nice to see he wrote it.

I love this show...I felt the same way, it was "okay" at the start...but it just grows on you and you start laughing at everything.

It's because the characters are just so good...all of them.
 

D-Dogg

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Chandler Mike said:
I love this show...I felt the same way, it was "okay" at the start...but it just grows on you and you start laughing at everything.

It's because the characters are just so good...all of them.

I LOOOVE the feeling of this show...you watch it with a smirk the whole time, which turns into a grin, then laughs, then a smirk. You are never NOT involved with the plot of each episode (especially season 2) .

I'm excited to watch the online things, because although I love Jim, Pam, Micheal and Dwight, I also love every other bastard in that office. Everyone has such a deep character you want to find out more about...even the one-off characters like Bob Vance, Vance Refrigeration...
 

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Pariah said:
Did you guys notice that that one was written by Steve Carrol? I know BJ Novack writes a lot of them, how often does Agent Michael Scott write his own stuff?

It's weird, but lately I've been thinking about this show a lot. It's really grown on me--when I first watched it I thought it was just okay.


BJ, the guy who plays Toby and the chick who plays Kelly also write a lot of eps. That was the first ep that Steve wrote, however (though he did write 40 year old virgin).

BJ and Krasinski went to high school together, and Krasinski's first role was in a play that BJ wrote...nice little piece of trivia...
 

jenna2891

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D-Dogg said:
I LOOOVE the feeling of this show...you watch it with a smirk the whole time, which turns into a grin, then laughs, then a smirk. You are never NOT involved with the plot of each episode (especially season 2) .

I'm excited to watch the online things, because although I love Jim, Pam, Micheal and Dwight, I also love every other bastard in that office. Everyone has such a deep character you want to find out more about...even the one-off characters like Bob Vance, Vance Refrigeration...


:stupid:


in the mini episode "phyllis," the best part was at the very end when they're finished talking to her and she awkwardly rolls away in her chair. comedic gold.
 

Pariah

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D-Dogg said:
BJ and Krasinski went to high school together, and Krasinski's first role was in a play that BJ wrote...nice little piece of trivia...
BJ plays Ryan the intern, right?
 

abomb

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"Toby is in HR. Which, technically, means he works for corporate. So he's really not a part of our family. Also he's divorced. So he's really not a part of his family."
 

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jenna2891 said:
so how would you guys define an outtake? i would think it would be a scene from a show that went wrong in some funny way. nbc seems to think it means you take a scene out of an episode and then show just that scene.


The latter would be deleted scenes, the former would be outtakes. At least that's how I was raised.
 

abomb

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Holy crap! Phyllis was a St Louis Cardinals cheerleader;

http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/entertainment/columnists.nsf/gailpennington/story/9D88F81E90E76E178625716900323E07?OpenDocument

Phyllis went to Cleveland High School ... and now works at Dunder-Mifflin
By Gail Pennington
POST-DISPATCH TELEVISION CRITIC
05/10/2006

The Office -- NBC Series -- Pictured: (l-r) Angela Kinsey as Angela, Kate Flannery as Meredith, Steve Carell as Michael Scott, Phyllis Smith as Phyllis, Jenna Fischer as Pam Beesley
(NBC Photo: Paul Drinkwater )

Do you know Phyllis Smith?

Maybe you remember her from Cleveland High School, class of '67. These days, there's a better chance you know her as Phyllis on "The Office," the painfully funny comedy that, in its first full season, has turned into a real hit for NBC.

Adapted from the cult-favorite British series of the same name, "The Office" arrived in March 2005 for a limited run and performed well enough for NBC to pick it up for fall. Paired with "My Name Is Earl" and boosted by iTunes downloads, "The Office" took off and was rewarded with early renewal for next fall.

The highest-profile St. Louisan on the payroll of the fictional but all-too-realistic Dunder-Mifflin paper company is Jenna Fischer, a Nerinx Hall graduate who plays receptionist Pam Beasley. But Fischer is happy to share the spotlight; in fact, she was the first to suggest that fellow hometowner Smith had a good story to tell.

That turned out to be true - and how.

To look at Phyllis, an "Office" drone best-known for her deadpan double-takes, you might never suspect that Smith was a dancer with professional companies in St. Louis, a football Cardinals cheerleader, and a burlesque performer with Will B. Able and his Baggy Pants ***** at the Chase-Park Plaza in the 1970s. ("No stripping," Smith points out. "But I did wear feathers.")

She toured as a dancer, including a stint in a can-can review, until she injured her knee doing a jump split in the mid-1980s and had to quit. Staying in Los Angeles, she worked as a receptionist and took acting classes, but "I fell into a crack, that nebulous middle ground between old and young, pretty and ugly."

Answering a call for a mousy woman ("I didn't get it"), Smith got to know the casting director and became interested in the field. A year later, that same casting director hired her, and for more than a decade Smith worked in casting on shows such as "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman," where she spent six years.

The day that series wrapped, Smith signed on with another casting director, Allison Jones, and here's where the story gets bizarre. Jones cast NBC's version of "The Office," and part of Smith's job was to tape the auditions and to read with various actors.

Ken Kwapis, a movie and TV director (and Belleville native), was directing the "Office" pilot, and he kept asking Smith to read more roles. Big and small. Male and female. She read as Pam, she read as Jim and she read as Dwight, the obsequious second-in-command, played by Rainn Wilson.

According to executive producer Greg Daniels, that last one did the trick. "He told me later, 'We decided after you read Dwight,'" Smith says.

Nobody ever officially asked Smith to be in the show, however.

"I didn't believe it until a fax came through listing one of the characters as 'Phyllis, who has a background in burlesque,'" she says.

Jones, her boss, read it and said, "Is this MY Phyllis?" Then she kindly agreed to let Smith - still a bit stunned at this point - return to her job if the show didn't pan out.

Since then, Smith has enjoyed every minute on the set of "The Office," which is shot documentary style with some improvisation.

"There's not one ego in the whole group," she says, citing star Steve Carell as "the nicest person you can imagine" and the rest of the cast as so pleasant "the crew actually wants to be around us. The only problem is keeping a straight face."

The best gift she got this year wasn't even the early renewal but the announcement just before Christmas that all of the show's supporting players, some of whom still felt like background at that point, were being made regulars.

Being a regular means not just a steady paycheck but also the summer hiatus off, with no scrambling for jobs. Smith is using it for a long visit with her parents in St. Louis. Loy and Glenda Smith, who still live in the Carondelet neighborhood where Phyllis grew up, "are enjoying this so much. The joy this has brought to them has been the best thing about it for me."

The success still sometimes feels like a fantasy, she says.

"If you'd told me two years ago that I'd be here being interviewed, I'd never have believed it," she says.

More and more often these days, though, she's recognized.

"Never in St. Louis, except once at a Steak 'n Shake," Smith says. "But in California, I'm recognized every day now."

Kids on skateboards shout and wave. Joggers tell her, "Hey! I have you on my iPod." And once, at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport, "a very polite man asked me, 'By any chance, do you work at Dunder-Mifflin?'"

"I really do believe there's a divine plan," Smith says. "Every piece of the puzzle has fit together to put me where I am. This is really an example of God working in a mysterious way."

What we know about Phyllis (the Dunder-Mifflin employee on "The Office")

She's played by St. Louisan Phyllis Smith.
She's good at her job (selling paper). In the annual Dunder-Mifflin performance review, she ranked second.
She can play basketball and owns a sports bra.
She knits. In the Christmas episode, her "secret Santa" gift was a hand-knitted oven mitt. She wound up with a set of shot glasses meant for someone else.
She has a boyfriend, Jim Vance, who's in refrigeration and who sent her flowers on Valentine's Day.
"She's happy," Smith says. "Happier than most of those people."
 

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