Office Ladies - Second Drink: Back from Vacation
Episode Date: July 28, 2025This week we're breaking down Back From Vacation and we reached out to some of our favorite The Office cast and crew for the inside scoop on this episode. First, Kentapedia (Kent Zbornak) and Phil She...a help us answer fan questions about Michael and Jan's vacation photo, and Kim Ferry sends in her memories of creating Michaels beaded vacation hair. Then Angela does some amazing detective work to discover just what was written on that Post-it note on Angela Martin's partition, and we head to the warehouse inventory-luau and discuss what Spam is made of. Finally, we get an audio clip from the hilarious Kate Flannery about doing her own stunt work, and Jenna shares her memories of that really sweet scene between Pam and Dwight. We hope this episode has left you feeling hot-hot-hot! Office Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestion Follow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPod Follow Us on YouTube Follow Us on TikTok To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to your second drink of Back From Vacation.
This is the episode that sees Michael returning from his vacation with Jan in Jamaica.
Tan everywhere.
Jan everywhere.
Well, when we first broke down this episode, we mentioned that there were a number of deleted
scenes and, you know, some of them are added back into those superfan versions.
For example, there's a whole runner of Michael at the airport getting his bags, losing a bag,
driving into work, and we got a letter about them.
Courtney Ann wrote in and said,
"'You forgot to mention in the driving scene with Michael,
talking about the chill pill,
he drives past a sign that says Dayton Rogers of California.
It's a sign that they were clearly filming in California
and not Pennsylvania.
Yes, Courtney Ann, I watched the Peacock super fan of this one
and these scenes are very funny.
Angela, you described them in our breakdown.
And I saw the sign that Courtney is talking about.
We tried so hard not to show those kinds of things.
Yes, and I'm sure that this sequence got cut for time,
but I also have
to wonder if this sign is one of the reasons, because otherwise they probably would have
had to pay to remove that in post. They would paint out the palm trees, they would paint
out California references on our driving shots. I kind of wish it said Dave Rogers of California
and it was an Easter egg. Well, I can't believe they shot in an airport
baggage claim. And they did a whole driving sequence. That's a lot of budget.
That's a lot of money right there.
And then they all got cut. Yeah.
I need to mention another nugget from the Peacock superfan episode.
I just loved it. OK, so you know the scene where Michael is in his office
and he's playing hot, hot, hot, hot Pam over and over again.
Well, right before that, he has a talking head
that would have led into that scene
that they added back to the super fan episode.
You have to hear it.
I did a little scuba diving at Sandals, Jamaica,
and I learned about a thing called decompression,
which means if you're underwater
and you rise too quickly, you can die.
It didn't apply to me because I was in the shallow end of the pool, but coming back here,
it does apply.
I can't just start my job up immediately.
I need time to decompress or I will die.
Feeling hot, hot, hot. Feeling hot, hot, hot.
Feeling hot, hot, hot.
So that's what he's doing. He's decompressing.
He's easing himself back into the workday.
Yes.
Yeah. Well, next up we got a letter from Christine W.
She says, at 12 minutes, 11 seconds,
is Michael sitting in his office
holding a bottle of chocolate sauce?
Okay, Christine, first of all,
I need to say you have the vision of a hawk.
I mean, this is like blink and you miss it.
Yes, he is sitting in his office
holding what looks like a bottle of chocolate sauce,
and then Dwight bursts through the shades
to tell him he needs to come to the warehouse.
I did not clock the chocolate sauce.
You wouldn't see it.
It's like, I watched it several times
after we got this letter.
It's so quick, but also it's not chocolate sauce.
What is it?
It is a bottle of tanning lotion.
So here's what's going on.
Michael is really stressed out because, you know,
this photo of Jan on the beach has gone
all over the place.
Yeah.
Well, in the super fan episode, there is a scene of Michael sitting in his office, sniffing
this bottle of tanning lotion.
He's taking like deep breaths.
And then he has a talking head where he explains that his sense of smell is most important
to him and that he's sniffing the tanning lotion because the smell is taking him back
to the
relaxed feeling of his vacation.
But in the episode that aired, you just see him sitting there holding it and then Dwight
burst through the window.
You don't see the whole-
You don't know any of the backstory.
No, none of it.
Well, you know in this episode, the party planning committee is tasked with throwing
a luau in the warehouse and they're serving spam.
So in our breakdown, we got into this whole discussion about spam and we got some mail.
Kristen Oh said, FYI, you guys are cutting up spam because it is a popular thing to eat
in Hawaii and you're preparing a luau.
As Meta said, spam is short for spiced ham.
Yes.
I didn't know it was short for spiced ham.
I didn't either.
We got so much mail about Spam after this episode aired.
And in our episode 64, Revisited with Randall Einhorn,
I shared a letter that we received from two sisters,
Laura and Amanda, with a whole bunch of fast facts about Spam.
Yeah, it was so great.
We learned about Spam's connection to Hawaii.
We learned there is a spam museum in Minnesota.
Mm hmm. Laura and Amanda sent us some spam merch.
I have a spam hat. I have spam socks. Thank you, ladies.
Well, speaking of I had some spam fried rice in Hawaii earlier this year and it was so good.
Like so good. That sounds wonderful. It was one of our favorite things that we ate during our
Hawaii vacation was on the very first night,
we ordered this spam fried rice.
Do you know how to make it?
No, but I kind of want to figure it out.
Yeah.
Because it was like a crowd pleaser.
The crowd being my family.
Well, you'll have one more at the table if you make it.
Okay.
Well, listen, that's all we got.
Please enjoy this breakdown of Back from Vacation.
Feeling hot, hot, hot.
I'm Jenna Fischer.
And I'm Angela Kinsey.
We were on The Office together.
And we're best friends.
And now we're doing the ultimate office rewatch podcast just for you.
Each week we will break down an episode of The Office and give exclusive behind-the-scenes stories that only two people who were there can tell
you. We're The Office ladies.
Hi lady, how's it going? It's going really great. I'm in my new podcast closet. I
moved from one closet to another closet, but this is my permanent podcast closet.
It's for podcasting.
This is the third closet I've seen you in podcasting.
That's right, because I did casino night
from my daughter's closet.
Well, let's tell everyone what we're here to talk about today.
We're talking about the episode Back from Vacation.
It is season three, episode 11, written by Justin Spitzer
and directed by Julian Farino.
Let's hear a summary.
All right, well, in this episode,
Michael returns from his all-inclusive trip to Jamaica.
He is tan.
He is happy.
We find out who he went with.
Mm-hmm.
Yes, we do.
Jan.
Scandalous office romance.
Well, despite Jan's insistence that Michael keep Yes, we do. Jan. Scandalous. Office. Romance.
Well, despite Jan's insistence that Michael keep their vacation a secret, Michael accidentally
circulates an intimate photo of them to the entire office and beyond.
So he and Dwight are going to spend this episode trying to retrieve and delete the photo while
Michael awaits Jan's arrival in Scranton.
Meanwhile, Angela has to throw together a last minute luau,
and Pam gives Jim advice that helps
his relationship with Karen.
Hmm.
Yeah.
Let's jump into Fast Fact number one.
This episode was written by Justin Spitzer.
Now, we talked a little bit about Justin before.
He created the show Superstore.
And remember, we found out that he's the person that wrote the twin absorption line for Dwight
in grief counseling. Yes, that was the Jen Salata deep dive. And we found that out.
Well, this was Justin's first full episode. So I reached out to him because I've kept in touch
with Justin since we wrapped.
Justin's just one of my favorite people, I have to say.
He is so lovely.
So I reached out to Justin and I asked him, where did the idea for this episode come from?
And he said it was really simple.
Greg really wanted to explore this idea of that feeling you get when you have to come back from your vacation
and go back to your work grind. And that was it. That was, they built the whole story around that
one theme. You know what I love about that is that I find the stories I like the most have such a
simple premise. They're not heavy on premise, and I find them usually the most relatable.
Same, same.
I feel like that's what made Halloween so great.
You have to fire someone on Halloween.
Yeah.
That's it.
That's it.
That's it.
You've just had a great vacation
and now you're faced with the reality of your life back home.
Yes.
So then I asked Justin, what was it
like being your first full script?
And he said he was incredibly nervous about doing a good job.
And he remembers that it was normal for writers
to get a full week to write their first draft.
You would usually get sent off on a Friday,
and you would have the whole next week,
and it wouldn't
be due until the following Monday. You'd get about nine days. So he said that this
script though, they did not finish breaking it until Monday night pretty
late and Greg said I'm gonna need this Friday morning. Ah! So he only had three
days. This is reminding me of when Gene and
Lee had to do their first script in like three days. Yeah, or the time Steve had to
write his script over a weekend with his in-laws visiting. Yes, exactly, exactly.
Justin said he grabbed a case of Diet Coke out of the kitchen. He said he
basically lived on that for the next 72 hours. Oh, gosh.
And I guess apparently after Justin left to go write the script,
because you could write your scripts at home,
one of the other writers said to Greg,
we're not behind.
Why does he have to write it so fast?
And that Greg smiled and said,
to keep the pressure up, just tighten in the screws.
Oh, Greg! And he said, just tighten in the screws. Oh, Greg!
And he said, I think in retrospect, it weirdly did relieve some of the pressure
of it being the very first script that he was writing,
because no one really expects a script that you write
in only three days to be very good.
So he was like, well, this is what it is.
He did a dad mind trick.
Oh my gosh. He was like, yeah, this is what it is. He did a dad mind trick. Oh my gosh.
He was like, yeah, I need it in three days.
But also knowing that that way, Justin
wouldn't make it too precious and take too long with it
and kind of just shake off the cobwebs
and jump in the deep end.
How many analogies can I use?
It was good.
I liked them.
Well, Justin said he wants everyone to know that what we ended up shooting was way, way
better than what he originally wrote, that he brought that
script back. And he said he was not able to write the script
that you see on the screen in three days. It went through a
bunch of rewrites. And basically, he said, if I showed
you my first draft, your reaction would be Yeah, that
pretty much seems like
something it would take a person three days to write.
But anyway, I thought that was so sweet.
I love all of that.
That's some really great behind the scenes
in the writer's room.
All right, fast fact number two, Angela,
directed by Julian Farino.
Julian!
Julian was born and raised in London.
He attended Cambridge University.
We loved him.
We loved this British man.
Well, Jenna, we were so excited to meet him
because he had directed an episode of Rome on HBO.
And you and I, at this time,
were binging that show together.
We were really into it.
Jenna, I even remember one day when he was on set
that we quoted a line to him. We were like, do you remember the line where we were like,
13? 13?
Oh, yeah. That was such a good scene.
And he looked at us and he was like, okay, okay, ladies. Well, if if you could go back
to reception, we're
Anyway, you guys, Rome was a show on HBO. And in my opinion, Rome was the first Game of Thrones.
It was very Game of Thrones-y, yes.
It's extremely violent and bloody.
And there's lots of warring political factions.
What are you wearing?
I'm wearing my Game of Thrones shirt because I don't know.
Rome makes me think of Game of Thrones.
So today on the podcast, I'm wearing my Game of Thrones shirt.
Well, Julian also directed the first three seasons of Entourage,
including Rainn Wilson's episode, I Love You Too.
Oh, I just think it's very funny because Charles McDougall, our other
director, had also directed episodes of Rome.
I just think it's really funny that we had these guys who had been
directing bloody battles come into our little paper company.
But they were so fun.
I mean, yeah, that the scale of production that they had to do
with chariots tipping over and people flying through the air and
and then literally it'd be like, hey, can you use the stapler slightly harder next to the copier?
Like, the difference in our quote unquote action
sequence on Dunder Mifflin versus Rome.
Well, I think part of Greg's thinking
here was remembering that our show was not just a comedy,
that it had dramatic elements, and was
about real human people.
And so by having some of these directors who are known for doing these dramas, not just a comedy, that it had dramatic elements and was about real human people.
And so by having some of these directors
who are known for doing these dramas,
these character-driven stories,
I think that might've been why he was drawn to them.
I'm speculating, but that feels right.
I like your speculation.
I like it.
Thank you.
Okay, I am moving us to fast fact number three.
In this episode, Michael circulates a photo of himself and Jan in Jamaica on their vacation.
Yes.
And then the guys in the warehouse blow it up into a poster and hang it on the wall.
Mm-hmm.
Right.
All right.
We got a lot of mail about this picture.
Yeah.
We have a fan question from Prisha Singhal, Amanda McKnight, Megan Kiel, Meredith Warlow,
Stephanie Callahan, and many others they want to know.
Was the Jan Michael photo made?
Was it Photoshopped? Some people wanna know if Steve and Melora went to Jamaica
to take this picture.
Did they do a photo shoot there?
How was this picture made?
A lot of curiosity about this picture.
We never had the budget to all go to New York or Scranton.
So I doubt they went to Jamaica.
Just kidding, I know they didn't.
They did not. Well, I reached out to Kent Zbornak, Kentopedia, and also to Phil Shea Props,
and they explained how we made this photo and poster. Are you ready?
Yes. Kent told me that they built a tiny beach down in the warehouse,
a little like set that looked like a beach.
It had sand and lounge chairs, and it was against a green screen.
I remember that. I remember us all seeing it and being like walking over there.
I have a total memory of going down into the warehouse and there was this tiny beach.
And then he said that he and Phil Shea reached out
to the people at Sandals Resort,
who donated all kinds of products, which they featured,
like the umbrellas and all of the stuff that said Sandals.
They put it all in there.
So then Melora and Steve got on the little beach set
and they took a bunch of pictures.
And both Justin and Kent remember that, you know,
Melora did not have to get nudie for this.
They did that in Photoshop, you guys.
And Phil told me that then he had the posters printed
from a little graphics shop in Culver City.
And that is how they made the picture.
That was some good fast facts, lady.
Hey, well, thanks.
All right, why don't we take a break, Jenna,
and when we come back, we'll be back from
vacation.
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All right, so we are back and let's get into this episode. There's a really fun cold open.
It's Jim. He's got the sales team in the conference room because he's in charge while Michael's
away and he's running this sort of sales meeting. Dwight, of course, I'm sure is bumping up
against Jim and his authority. So he sets a little recorder in the middle of the table
to record the meeting. And then Jim, of course, has to mess with him.
He has to mess with him.
He starts being like, Dwight, why are your pants off?
And he's like, my pants aren't off.
And then everyone starts chiming in.
And then of course, Andy takes it to an absurd place
and is the fun stopper.
Yeah.
We had a fan question about this cold open
from Sam Terizaz and Eva Mars,
how much of the cold open was improvised?
And, Ange, I went to the script and it's basically all scripted.
Like, all of the stuff that Jim says that Dwight is doing
and Karen's line and all of that, all scripted.
I would have thought it was scripted.
I feel like this is our writers at their best.
Like, they were so great at heightening a comedic moment.
So that tracks for me.
I did write down everything that Jim accused Dwight of doing.
Do you want to hear?
Of course.
Okay, so first of all, he says,
Dwight, you're not allowed to take off your pants
in the middle of the office.
And then he's like, oh God, he's got a knife.
He's naked and he has the plastic knife to Stanley's neck.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. He's what?
He's naked? Like his neck holding up his head?
He's naked or he's naked?
This is like a whole thing.
My husband's always like say that again.
Naked. Naked. Naked. How do you say it?
Naked. It's an A. It's spelled N-A-K-E-D. Naked.
Where I'm from is naked.
To be fair, it is also naked where I'm from as well.
Really? In St. Louis, it's naked?
Well, in Missouri.
It's interesting. St. Louis and Missouri have two different accents.
If you're from St. Louis, you're from Missouri,
but if you're from outside of St. Louis,
you're from Missouri and you're naked. But if you're from St. Louis, you eat with a fork.
Yes, that's what Phyllis would always say. She'd be like, oh, I can't find my fork.
Right. So she would eat her dinner naked with a fork in Missouri, but someone else is going to eat it with a fork fork in Missouri. But someone else is gonna eat it
with a fork naked in Missouri.
Well, Jenna, if you're in North Texas,
don't run around naked.
And then he also says that Dwight has a baby's bonnet.
And then Phyllis is so adorable.
She's so adorable in this whole episode.
She wants to desperately chime in
and she's like, Jim Carrey's here.
Get his autograph. You're like, what Carrey's here, get his autograph.
You're like, what?
And then Karen says,
is that a Muppet Baby's tattoo on your belly?
And then of course, Andy takes it to the place of,
I'm chopping off Phyllis's head with a chainsaw.
Ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring.
My favorite part of all of that is that when Jim says,
oh my God, Dwight is holding a plastic knife
to Stanley's neck, the camera pans to Stanley and he does not even look up.
He gives absolutely no reaction to everything that's happening in the room.
It's awesome. It's amazing. It's amazing. I will point out that this conference room scene is a conference room table scene.
Noted, the table is in the room.
Table is in the room.
Let's move on. Sorry I took us on a detour with how I say Nicked.
So now Michael has returned from Jamaica.
He's super excited.
He's desperate for Pam to ask him how his vacation was.
But instead, Pam lets him know that Hannah quit while he was gone.
And she's filed some complaints and he might have to be
deposed and Michael's like oh Pam it can wait and she's like it's kind of
important. His exact response was blah blah blah relax. There's a really sweet
deleted talking head that is a Pam talking head that I think would have come
about right here and Jenna Jenna, guess what?
She says that Michael sends her a postcard
from every vacation he takes.
I remember shooting this talking head.
They gave me a bunch of postcards,
and I held them up one after the other,
which I found sweet because that means Pam saves them.
I know.
And to me, it's like you just really
see who Pam is to Michael. You see why ultimately she's the last person he speaks to before he leaves at the end of, you know, his time on the office. Like, he sees her as family. I really think he does. Well, we had a fan question for this opening scene. There's that moment where Michael shakes his hair
at Pam because he's gotten some little beads in his hair
on his vacation.
I'm telling you, Sandals was like adult camp for Michael.
I mean, he says how you go, hey, mon,
and then everyone yells, hey, mon.
I can see him being so enthusiastic.
He's going to do everything.
Braid my hair, learn the dances, learn the chants.
He's in it, Jenna.
He's in it.
You're right.
Well, we had this question from Ashley Browning, Hope Cogville,
Jess Graham, Rachel LaPointe, and Teresa Rambucuella.
They want to know whose idea was it
to put the beads in the hair.
Were they sewn in?
Were they glued in?
Well, Jenna, you know, we wanted to get the behind in the hair? Were they sewn in? Were they glued in?
Well, Jenna, you know, we wanted to get the behind the scenes story on this braid.
So we reached out to Kim Ferry, who did our hair on the office for all the scoop.
And this is what she had to say.
Well, hello, lovely office ladies.
Gosh darn it, I miss both of you so much.
Thank you for asking me these questions.
As usual, if there were any hair gags,
Greg Daniels would either have me paged up
or he would come find me and we would discuss
what the look would be for whatever the actors were doing
in this episode.
In this one, it was specifically Michael Scott.
And I know on the makeup side, he was gonna be tan
because they wanted him to kind of have that,
you know, tan glow from Jamaica.
But on my side, it was about having something in his hair.
Could it be dreaded?
Could it be beaded?
You know, what could we do?
And in the end, I kind of liked the idea
of putting beads in, but I was a little nervous
because his hair was
only one inch on the sides and the back.
He had a short haircut at that time.
So I wasn't sure if something would stick in there,
but I, you know, I rose to the challenge
and told my team I was gonna be in the trailer
for a little bit and I did a couple of variations of it.
And I also had human hair.
So you can have these actual real human hair clips
and I would sew them into these little things
called toupee clips.
And I ended up braiding it down
probably about two inches long, two to three inches long.
And at the very end, I had a little elastic on the bottom
and that really held all the beads in place. and I know I had done a few options for Greg with different colors
but in the end he liked the red and yellow and green so that's what we went
with and the little clip it just kind of like hooks into the hair so it sticks
really well and if I just back combed it a little bit and then a little bit of
hairspray
and then popped that clip in, it wasn't going anywhere.
And it didn't, it didn't move at all during that episode.
So I was very happy.
But that's just one of the things that I love doing.
When I get challenges from Craig,
it was always fun to not only make him happy
after he saw it, but just to kind of really, he would just, he would enjoy it. It made me so happy after he saw it but just to kind of really he would just he would
enjoy it it made me so happy when he would smile and he'd be like yeah yeah
that's it so that is my story for this episode and I miss you both so much and
I'm sending you hugs and I'm so proud of you I love your podcast and I can't
wait to hopefully join you guys there someday. All right, you guys take care. Love you both. Bye.
Aw, that was so sweet.
I love that.
I love knowing that they didn't do anything
to his actual hair.
She would just clip that in and out every day.
Yeah, I remember Kim always having these heads
with like different forms of hair and wigs and braids
and like whatever she was tinkering on on she had like a row of like fake hair with like different
versions of things especially for Meredith oh my gosh
Meredith was always having something done to her hair so yeah thank you so
much Kim for the behind the scenes on that one so listen and I know we're
still talking about this opening scene, but I had
to bring up something else.
What?
So when Michael walks through the door,
he's carrying like nine gazillion bags, right?
And we're going to come to learn that one of them
contains this steel drum that he is obsessed with playing.
He's holding a box.
He's holding bags and a box.
And the steel drum, I think, is in the box,
because it's a big box. He's holding bags and a box. And the steel drum, I think, is in the box
because it's a big rectangle.
Same.
But it made me wonder what is in all the other bags.
And that is an amazing deleted scene.
Yes, Jenna.
So those bags were gifts.
They were like souvenirs that he bought everyone.
They definitely look like the souvenirs
you bought at the airport.
And it's all in the deleted scenes.
He goes around the office handing them out.
Well, I remember doing that scene
because the thing he gives Pam is a coconut bra.
And he's like, some coconuts for your coconuts.
And I'm like, thanks.
Then he says, do you wanna see if it fits?
And you're like, no.
I'm not gonna go try on this coconut bikini top right now.
Thanks.
Yes, exactly.
But I remember shooting that with Steve
because I couldn't get through it.
Every time I opened it up, it was so ludicrous to me
that that was the gift he gave Pam.
It would make me laugh.
He gives Angela Martin a lei, and he puts it around her neck.
And she's like, thank you.
And he goes, you just got laid.
And I'm like, no, I didn't.
And you like rip it off, right?
Yeah, I get really mad.
Well, next we're gonna find out that Karen and Jim
are experiencing some tension.
Oh yeah.
And here is why.
It is because Jim does not want Karen
to move into an apartment that is two blocks away
from his apartment, even though she's been having
a really hard time finding an apartment
and she is currently living in a motel.
She said a day's in.
That's what we learned that in the deleted scene.
I mean, come on.
Well, she says it down in the warehouse to Pam as well later. She needs to
find a place to live. You know what I noticed? When Karen does her talking head,
she's standing at the copier in the annex. Remember in the other episode we
were like, is this copier always here? That's where she's standing. That's back
by Kelly's desk and Toby's desk in the annex.
Jenna, what does it mean if your talking head
is in the annex?
What does that mean?
What does it mean?
I think it means you're trying to avoid somebody
and you're using the copier in the annex.
Yeah.
Jenna, speaking of deleted scenes,
there's another great runner between Phyllis and Stanley.
Because Stanley says he doesn't get all of his bonus,
and he's not going to work, not a lick,
until he gets that bonus money.
And it starts driving Phyllis crazy,
because he won't answer his phone.
She has a phenomenal talking head.
So that's in the DVD Deleted Scenes.
I remember shooting those, and they were very funny
and I love any time there's a dynamic between Phyllis and Stanley. So now we're in Michael's
office and he's playing the steel drum for Pam. He's telling her all about his trip to Jamaica.
He's explaining that everyone in Jamaica just relaxes all day and they party all the time.
They love it.
Yeah.
He's like, write this down, Pam.
Pina colada is every day at 3 p.m.
Like he is just, he is definitely not ready to go back to work.
And this is when Pam breaks the news to him that they have to do inventory, which is something
that he was hoping to avoid by going on vacation.
And she says, Michael, we can't do inventory without you. We had to wait. It has to be done today.
He is so bummed out. He hates doing inventory. He says it's boring. So he decides to make it a party.
And he tells Angela, get the party planning committee together,
we're gonna have a luau this afternoon.
And she is not having it.
She's like, what?
At four minutes, you get a shot of a real snarky expression
from Angela Martin about this luau
that she now has to throw.
But please look at the outfit.
Crazy blouse with a high collar,
froufy collar,
Argyle sweater in shades of beige and brown,
brown skirt,
ponytail with what Kim Ferry and I called the sloop.
This is a classic Angela Martin outfit,
if I have to say so myself.
Well, lady, we had a fan question from Katie Wegman,
who is asking, is the shirt that you're
wearing the same one you were in Benny Hawn at Christmas because it looks almost identical?
No, it is not.
This season, the wardrobe department had bought me all of these high-collared, frouffy blouses,
which only live this season and never come back.
But that is not the same one.
It's yet another frofy boss. Well now we go into the
conference room Angela because Michael wants everyone to watch a video slideshow on island
life and a big thing happens. Karen does not sit next to Jim. Yeah. It's serious. This fight is
serious. And then while they're watching this slideshow,
Pam spots Jan on the beach with Michael,
but he denies that it's her.
Jenna, hold up.
I have written down here,
Pam pulls a Michael.
Pam, why did you call it out?
Why?
I mean, that's something Michael would do.
I feel like a normal move for Pam would be to notice Jan,
totally know it was her, and not say anything.
And instead, be like, oh, right?
And then maybe go be chatty with Jim about it later.
But instead, Pam points at the screen and goes, wait,
is that Jan?
That's Jan.
And I feel like that's something Michael or Dwight
would have done normally.
I totally hear that. I think that's a valid analysis. I will say I think it was probably so shocking to Pam that she just blurted it out. I mean, it's to see Jan in the picture. She just,
I imagine she was just like, oh my gosh. Okay, okay, fair enough.
Okay, I get it.
Well, we had a fan question about this scene, Angela,
from Marin Allen.
She wrote in to say,
my 13-year-old daughter, Dakota,
pointed out that when Pam notices Jan
in Michael's vacation slideshow,
Michael says that she's actually a German woman
named Ergelgrue.
And my daughter would like to know
if this name was improvised
and if it has anything to do
with Steve's Despicable Me character Gru.
I had the same question.
So I looked it up.
This episode was filmed in 2007, back from vacation.
Despicable Me came out in 2010.
So then I researched animation production
and how long it takes a movie like Despicable Me to be made,
and they take three to five years.
So it is possible that there was an overlap
that Steve was doing voiceover
while we were filming on The Office.
It's possible.
Oh my gosh, and maybe that is why because in the
script it says Earl-Grah but he says Urkel-Gruh maybe it was like on his mind
and that's why he said Gru. Let's move it on Michael I mean he's got to tell
someone right? He's so excited to tell Packer that Jan went
with him to Jamaica and Packer doesn't believe him. He's like, no way. So Michael's
like, you know what? I'll send you a picture. And Packer's email is Packer at
Dunder Mifflin, but he sends it to Packaging at Dunder Mifflin. And how this
all goes down in the scene
is so great because Michael is like, did you get it?
Hit refresh.
Hit refresh.
And Packer is like, no, I didn't get it.
And then all of a sudden he says, oh, I just
got it from someone else.
And then Michael's like, wait, wait, what?
Who else?
What?
And then Michael realizes he has sent it to the wrong place.
He sent it to Daryl in the warehouse.
Who has clearly forwarded it to Packer or someone else
who forwarded it to Packer.
But it is out, basically.
I want to point out that that line at the end, when
Packer says, how do I get you out of this picture?
That was an improv.
That was a Dave Keckner ad.
Yeah, that's Dave Keckner at his best.
After Michael gets off the phone with Packer,
he is freaked out.
Oh, he's freaking the heck out.
He needs to do damage control.
So he runs, he sprints to the warehouse.
We had a fan question from Anna Rhodes.
She says, at seven minutes, 20 seconds,
where is that hallway that Michael is running down
to get to the warehouse?
Anna, I had the same question.
So I did some digging, but Jenna, I know you did too.
And you went to Kentopedia.
So what do you got?
All right, Kent told me that that is the hallway
where our writers work.
He is running down the writers' hallway.
All those doors you see are writers' offices.
And when he turns the corner and he runs through that doorway, he is running into Mindy Kaling's office.
Is he really?
Yes.
Oh my God. I thought that was Kent's office.
Oh my gosh. Okay. I love that.
Well, I have a little catch, Jenna.
He runs past a woman sitting at a desk, right?
Right at the very beginning of his sprint.
Well, that is Mary Wall,
and she was our executive producer assistant.
She's in an orange hoodie.
She was the best.
She did everything for us.
I love that we put Mary in that scene.
So I guess they just made all the writers close their doors, She was the best. She did everything for us. I love that we put Mary in that scene.
So I guess they just made all the writers close their doors, but they let Mary keep
working and they just shot that scene.
Steve ran right past her.
Yeah. And the desk that Mary is sitting at is directly outside of the writer's room conference
room.
They had their own conference room and Steve starts his sprint right in the doorway of
that writer's room conference room,
and he runs right past Mary at the desk outside of it.
Well, after he runs into Mindy's office,
obviously it's a dead end, so they had to cut there.
Then Steve had to go down into the warehouse,
walk up the steps, and get into that little fake box
at the top of the stairs that actually leads nowhere.
And then come back down.
Yes.
And then they would yell, action, and he would come running back down the stairs as if he
had actually come from somewhere.
Right.
So then he runs into Daryl's office.
And I believe, Angela, this is the first time we've seen Daryl's office in the warehouse
where we've actually gone inside of it. In this
scene at seven minutes 38 seconds, Daryl is eating a giant plate of food. We had a fan question
from Dave H and Andrea Poteet Bell. What is up with Daryl's massive plate of food
when Michael goes in to ask him about the picture? Well, Angela, it is not in the script that Darryl is eating.
And usually it is.
Usually it is scripted that we're eating food.
Here's why I went to look.
When I looked at that plate of food,
it 100% looked like the stuff they would
serve us at craft services.
I thought the same thing.
Jenna, oh my god.
When I looked at it, I was like, is Craig, as Daryl,
just holding his lunch?
Or like a snack he made?
Yeah.
I think he was hungry, and he was having a plate of food.
And they were like, oh, you should just
eat that in the scene.
That food brought me back.
I had a sense memory when I saw the plate. I was like, that's our food. That's what we used to eat all the scene. That food brought me back. I had a sense memory when I saw the plate.
I was like, that's our food. That's what we used to eat all the time.
Yeah, especially like they would bring in those big trays of chicken wings. Remember?
Yes.
Like drumsticks and wings.
Yes. Well, so when Michael is there, he's asking Darryl, did you get my email? Did you?
And Darryl's like, yeah. And he's like, well, did you get my email about deleting that email? And Darrell's like, You know what, Mike, I'm very busy down here.
So clearly Darrell is going to be no help in getting Michael's picture deleted.
Oh, no. Well, I want to take us back to accounting for a second, Jenna humor me for some background
catches at eight minutes, 12 seconds, Andy, Meredith, and Jim
are gathered around Kevin's computer looking at the photo.
Now, over Kevin's shoulder, you can see a message
on his bulletin board that says,
don't eat the yellow snow.
Maybe Kevin needed a reminder,
but at eight minutes, 18 seconds,
there is a post-it note on Angela Martin's side
of the partition. And Jenna, I zoomed in on that sucker. I zoomed on it so hard. And do you know
what it says? We got so much mail about this post-it note. Angela, you're going to make so many
people very happy right now. What does it say? Well, I have to thank my husband Josh because
this was half an hour of our lives
that I made him do with me.
He has editing software.
I made him screen grab, blow it up.
We put different filters on it
that would highlight different letters.
You guys, it was a huge task, but we did it.
This is what we 99.9% believe that it says
after our half an hour research,
Angela, comma, can I have $8 petty cash
to buy some more jelly beans?
I'll get you licorice and cherry.
Thanks, Pam.
Oh my gosh.
I'll get you licorice and cherry.
Well, you know that Dwight likes licorice.
Wow. I guess you're the one who likes cherry.
I guess so. But we literally, it was
like, it was like we had found the Rosetta Stone. We're like, that's an R. I'm positive. Okay, that's
a C. That's a Y. Like, literally, like we were like, figuring out hieroglyphics. And we became
obsessed. And that's what we're pretty sure it says. Well, what I love about that is that it reveals that Pam doesn't pay for her own candy.
She gets petty cash from Angela,
and that it is something that Pam is doing for the office,
almost like maybe the person before her did it too.
I could imagine Pam starting work
and Angela going up to her and saying,
you will put out candy on your desk.
I will give you petty cash.
You need to bring me a
receipt. But like this is part of Pam's like work list. Yeah, it made me rethink front reception too,
especially during the holidays because I thought all those little decorations, I always sort of
thought that was Pam's effort to spruce up her desk area. But now I think maybe Angela Martin is
like, remember, you have a budget for decorating the front reception.
It's the first thing people see when they walk through the door.
Yeah, like this candy and the decorations are mandated. Can we
though believe that Pam buys the plants herself?
If you want to.
Thanks.
She can't keep any of them alive. Okay.
Okay.
All right. So now we have two things happening.
We have Michael who tells Dwight about the photo.
He says he needs Dwight's help in retrieving it.
My favorite part of this scene is when we learn
that Michael has named the photo Jamaican Jan Sun Princess.
Amazing.
And then the other thing that happens is that Jim,
sad, sad Jim is in the break room.
Pam walks in and she gets Jim to confide in her.
And he says that he is in kind of a stupid fight with Karen.
And Pam says, do you want to talk about it?
I have a question for you.
What?
Do you really think that Pam wants to talk about it?
Or do you think somewhere deep in her subconscious,
I don't think she's a mean spirited person,
but maybe she has found a way
just to spend time with him again?
Of course.
Of course.
She has ulterior motives here.
Well, I think it's also though,
you know what, I actually don't think she has those ulterior motives.
I think she is really trying to believe and convince herself
that she can have a friendship with Jim
and that this is what friends do.
So yes, I think part of her is craving that connection.
But I think the real thing and why
she's going to break down later is
that she thinks she's ready to be this kind of friend to him.
And she's going to find out that she's not.
Right.
But she thinks that she is.
And this is her attempt.
Well, I'll tell you, there's a deleted scene between Jim
and Pam.
I'm actually, for their storyline,
I think it was the right thing to delete it,
because it takes Pam's
sort of earnestness to want to help him and try to really be a good friend to him. And
it makes it seem like maybe she just wanted to hang out with him. And it's the two of
you at front reception at Pam's computer, kind of in that canoodling form, the way you
guys used to play and pranks on Dwight and he'd be leaning in, you'd be laughing and
looking at each other.
You're doing all of that,
but you're looking for apartments together for Karen.
Oh.
And it felt, it felt off.
And so I think it was the right move to delete it.
I'm glad they deleted that because my takeaway
from this episode was that Pam was being really earnest.
Yeah.
And then just realized she can't.
She can't be that yet.
Well, we also get a big piece of information
about Jim and Karen's relationship in the scene.
We find out that they've been dating a month.
Jim says, we've only been dating a month.
That is not very long.
No. So definitely the whole dating thing started after she moved to Scranton.
Because we are about four weeks into her move.
That kind of makes Jim's argument make sense.
I mean, if you've just started dating someone, you're only dating them a month,
you might not want them living right down the street because you're like,
what if it doesn't work out?
Yeah, but are you really going to see them that much unless you
want to? I mean, it's not like they're direct neighbors or living in the same building.
I don't know. Two blocks away is far if you want it to be. I don't know. I might be on gym site on
this one. I might be like, hey, I want to be able to go for a walk or jog. I mean, who are we kidding? I'm not jogging anywhere.
But my point is, I don't know.
That might be too close.
So in the end, Pam tells Jim that she thinks maybe he's
being unreasonable.
Maybe he should reconsider.
She very gently suggests this.
And then they start giggling about the fact
that Michael went to Jamaica with Jan.
Yes.
And that must feel like a little bit like,
like they're back, and that must make Pam happy.
You know? That's like that moment.
I want to give a little shout-out to a Toby line,
because Toby confronts Michael in the next scene,
saying that he has to report it if he's having a relationship,
you know, with a coworker.
And Michael's denying everything,
but Toby says nine different people emailed me that photo,
including my ex-wife and we don't even really talk.
I love that.
And then that made me laugh out loud.
And then Michael's response is,
well, maybe this will be the icebreaker.
That's how Mike responds to that.
But if it just shows you how far and wide this photo is going now.
So now here's what's happening in the rest of the office.
Angela's in the conference room.
She has called together an emergency meeting of the party planning committee.
How are they going to throw this luau?
She's very stressed.
Oh, she's not happy about it.
So then the very next scene, we're all out in the bullpen again.
We're done with our meeting, apparently. Pam is back at reception.
She's fielding a phone call from Jan.
This must be a time jump. Maybe it was a continuity error.
I don't know. There's a little, there are a couple times when
Pam is both in the break room talking to Jim and at the reception desk.
Pam has superpowers. She's like all over the place.
Pam is in a lot of places at once in this episode. But in this moment, Jan has called
the office and Michael will not take the call. He is freaking out. He says he will call Jan
back. And I want to note, Angela, not only are you not in the conference room at 12 minutes,
4 seconds, you are standing at the mail cart with Andy.
Hold up, lady. Three seconds ago, you were shredding green construction paper
to make decorations for the luau. Now you're at the mail cart. What's happening?
Using the mail cart, apparently. Very important. Mail cart tracking.
What? With Andy?
Well, I have a question for you, Jenna.
At 12 minutes, 14 seconds,
Dwight opens Michael's office window,
not the window that faces the bullpen,
the window that faces like front reception in the couch,
you know, the hallway as you come in.
He slides the window open
and tries to poke his head through the blinds
to tell Michael he needs to come down to the warehouse ASAP.
Yeah.
Jenna, is that the first and only time that windows open?
I'm not sure.
I feel like we've opened that window before
and there were other people who wrote in
and pointed that out that why did Dwight do that?
How did he do that?
But yeah, he slid the window open
and spoke through the blinds,
I guess because he's been in the warehouse, he's run upstairs, and he needs to tell Michael
immediately. And for some reason, I guess he thinks this is more secretive or something,
a way to get Michael's attention. I mean, it was so jarring to me. I'm like, Oh, God, Dwight,
where are you coming from? What's happening? Well, then Michael and Dwight, they do that run down the hallway again.
They go into the warehouse to discover that they have turned his picture with Jan into
a giant poster and hung it on the wall.
And all the guys start applauding for Michael.
Michael is so conflicted in this moment.
He doesn't know if he wants to be popular or if he wants to do the
right thing. Yeah. And you know, Jan is legendary within this office. She is the corporate boss.
So this is a big story. And Michael is very conflicted. All right. Well, I think maybe we
should take a break. And when we come back, we'll figure out how Michael is going to solve this problem
and see if this luau party actually happens.
Yes.
["The New York Times"]
All right, we are back.
Michael makes an announcement in the office
and tells everyone that they have to delete this photo.
That is not Jan. It could be Jan, but it's not Jan. But whatever the case, just delete the photo.
Then he goes down into the parking lot and he starts playing his steel drum again.
It's a very wintery parking lot, too. Like the trees are covered in snow, but he's determined to play the only thing he knows,
which is feeling hot, hot, hot.
Yes, and only one note from that song
can he play on the steel drum.
But I'm really glad that you mentioned the weather, Angela,
because we had to set all of that up.
We shot this in October,
but of course this aired in the middle of winter.
So we wanted to make sure
that our seasons on the show coordinated with what would actually be happening in Scranton,
Pennsylvania at the time. And it was my idea to not come all the way out the door. I said,
Pam doesn't have her coat on. I think if this were really me, I would just sort of hover inside and
kind of talk through a crack in the door when it's really cold. And I just love that that made that in. They liked that idea. And so
that's why Pam doesn't come all the way outside to talk to Michael. Oh, I loved that. I didn't know
that. But it felt very real to me that you'd be like, Hey, idiot, come inside. Can I confess something? I really love when I get to pretend to be cold.
Really?
Yeah, because I'm cold all the time. I feel like I have such a full suitcase of material to pull
from when I need to be cold. I'm cold constantly. And so that's why I was like, oh, you need me to
pretend to be cold. Well, I'll tell you what I would do. I wouldn't walk all the way outside without a coat on.
Let me throw that at you.
And there was like, there was an episode,
a few episodes ago where we were all in the parking lot
and we were pretending to be cold.
And I saw myself, I kept putting my mouth down
into the front of my coat and breathing into it
because that's something I do when I'm cold.
I'm noticing all of my cold detail acting and I'm really proud of it so I'm giving a
little flex to it right now.
All your cold schtick.
You've got your cold schtick down.
I own a sweatshirt that says always cold that my family gave to me as a gift because I drive
everyone crazy.
I sneak up behind and turn the thermostat off like I'm
that person. So Jenna, I don't know if I'm great at pretending to be cold, but
I'm with you. I mean you and I froze our butts off on that set. So now we're at
the luau. Angela Martin is cutting up spam because... I guess that's all you
could get. You couldn't get a full pig from the petting zoo, as you had told Phyllis.
Oh, Lord.
Well, my dad loves spam.
So when I saw that, I just got tickled because it made me think of my dad.
My dad, whenever he...
My mom was really in charge of all the cooking and meal prep when I was growing up, unless
it was barbecuing.
Like, they were so traditional.
My dad, like, manned the barbecue.
But if my mom...
And it was very rare, but let's say my mom woke up and she's
like, oh gosh, I have a cold, I have a fever, you know, whatever. One of those mornings where my dad
had to take over, my dad would fry spam and we'd all be like, ah, and you'd be like, you're gonna
have spam. And then he would fry it up for breakfast. And then if he had to make our lunch, you'd be
like, well, we got leftover spam. It was like, dad, so much spam. What is spam?
I think spam's a lot of parts.
Does it have flavors in it?
Is it a specific flavor?
It's very salty.
OK, wait.
We're getting a message from Cody.
This is the benefit of zooming our podcast.
Our producer can pop on.
She is telling us that spam's basic ingredients are, quote,
pork with ham added, salt water, modified potato starch
as a binder, sugar and sodium nitrate as a preservative.
There is also a natural gelatin that is formed during cooking
in its tins on the production line.
Cody's clarifying, ham is from the pig's hind leg
while pork is any meat from pigs.
Wait guys the spam conversation is not over. I know you were worried that we were stopping
the spam conversation but Sam just threw down that there are 15 different flavors of spam.
Okay well that seems crazy. It's what you're here for guys. It's what you're here for, guys. It's what you're here for. It's what you're here for.
All right.
Well, so yes, we're back to the luau in the warehouse.
Jim gives Karen some papers.
What are they, Jenna?
Yes.
He hands her a rental agreement for the apartment that is two blocks away from him.
And they're so happy and they make up.
You know, Angela, we got a lot of questions about why are they
having this luau down in the warehouse.
People were kind of confused.
And I think that's because there were a bunch of scenes
that got deleted from this section of the show that
remind you that we're supposed to be
doing inventory down there.
There are so many deleted scenes from the warehouse. So
there were all of these little vignettes. One of the ones I loved was that Ryan is
staring at a bunch of boxes and he has like a clicker in his hand like you know
that you would check off like a barcode like beep beep and Roy walks up and goes
what's the problem and Ryan's like well we're seven boxes short of whatever
yellow paper whatever it was.
And Roy just takes the clicker from Ryan and then just scans into the air like seven,
and he goes fixed. So there's like, and Ryan's like, oh, so we're not doing we're just fudging it. But like, there's all these different moments within the warehouse that are happening
that remind you that we're actually there to do inventory. Then another deleted scene that happens is Meredith is doing
inventory and she's trying to get to one of the boxes on top of the shelf and she does that thing
you guys I have done so many times especially in a grocery store when I can't reach something on the
top. I climb up the bottom of the shelf, and she does this, and the whole entire shelf
comes crashing down on her head with all the boxes.
She's completely buried.
If you watch the deleted scenes,
you can't even see Kate anymore.
She's buried, no one notices,
people just keep on business as usual,
and then you hear this muffled voice say,
hello, I'm stuck.
Hello? We got a fan question about this moment.
Jess Moore wrote in and said, did Kate Flannery do her own stunt in that deleted scene in the
warehouse? Well, Jess, we reached out to Kate and this is what she had to say. Hey, Office Ladies podcast fans, it's me, Kate Flannery, Meredith from the Office.
Yes, I did a lot of my own stunts.
I kind of got the idea that as much physical comedy as I could do, I was going to do.
So I said yes to a lot of my stunts, even though I know that there was a stunt double
there that day.
Debbie Evans, but they did not use her, happened several times.
So I think the stunt people still got paid.
And I never went to the hospital, so who cares, right?
But yeah, we sort of perfected things.
So by the time Meredith gets hit by the car in season four, we were really off to the
races.
So this episode, this stunt was kind of the beginnings
of my bravery.
So thanks for watching.
She's fearless.
She really is.
That is insane.
I mean, she is fearless.
If you go and watch that deleted scene,
truly a whole entire shelf full of stuff falls on her
and you can't even see her.
It's, she's, she's
fearless. I would have been like Debbie I'm gonna need you, I'm gonna need you in.
Debbie get on in here because I'm, there is no way I would have done that. No way.
I am too much of a scaredy cat. You know what's interesting is that one of the
things I really wanted to do on this show, I don't know why, I think I think
I'm a badass driver. I'm probably not but I really wanted to do on the show, I don't know why, I think I think I'm a badass driver.
I'm probably not, but I always wanted
to do all my driving stunts.
And when they let me, like, because you know,
Dwight and I have a few driving scenes,
I would get really excited.
Don't want to do those either.
I like it when they hook it up to a rig and pull the car.
I'm like, I don't want to drive this down the road
while I'm acting.
No one wants that.
I've had to do that before.
I'm always terrified. Well, one thing that did make it into the scene is this very odd moment of Daryl finding
his iPod. And I want you to know that is not in the script. That was an improvisation by Craig
on the day. He actually found an iPod deck and speaker somewhere back in the warehouse,
and he just did this bit,
and it made it into the show,
and it is so funny to me.
We got so much mail about it.
People were like, is there something I'm missing?
Is there a deleted scene from a previous episode
where Daryl loses his iPod?
Is this product placement for iPod again?
No, it was just this random funny bit.
He does it with such like real enthusiasm.
Well, we had to be there pretending
like we were going through boxes, guys.
So we were really doing stuff, which you don't really see.
It didn't really make it into the show,
but I think that he legitimately opened up a box
and that was in there and he got all excited. Yes, exactly.
Well, I have a little Angela Roy moment
that happens right at the same time.
At 14 minutes, 44 seconds, you can see Angela starts
to walk up to Roy and is about to go up to him.
And then Daryl yells, I found an iPod dock.
And I whip my head and I pivot the other way.
Wow.
You have to go and watch it.
More of the untold Angela Roy story.
And I'm wondering, I mean, what was meant to happen there?
Like, it's not in the script, it's not in deleted scenes.
But I'm sure I was given some direction maybe to go over
and, you know, in the background sort of talk to Roy.
But yeah, when Darryl yells,
I turn around and go the other direction.
It's a fun little catch.
Well, then we see Pam is doing some inventory
and Karen comes up to her and thanks her.
She says, thank you so much for talking sense into Jim.
Karen is so happy. Her relationship is back on. Everything's OK.
And then we cut to Pam just sobbing
on a bench in the hallway.
And Angela, I watched this scene,
and it just brought tears to my eyes
because I remember shooting it so clearly, so clearly.
And we got a lot of, you know, I watched this scene and it just brought tears to my eyes because I remember shooting it so clearly, so clearly.
And we got a lot of questions about it.
So we got questions from Joe Salazar, Angie Letworth,
Elisa Goldman, Jillian Riley, and Charlie Sparkenbaugh.
They wanted to know, how was it filming that iconic
Pam and Dwight scene when Pam is crying?
Well, guys, this was like early on in the show.
And whenever we had these really emotional scenes,
like that parking lot scene with Jim and Pam,
we would just kind of shut down everything.
And I remember that we shut down the set
and we took hours prepping and shooting this crying scene.
It was really important to Greg that I really be crying. They did not want to put fake tears in my
eyes. He wanted me to really go there. And this is a really big challenge for an actor.
And so what they did was they made everything really quiet
and no one talked to me for about a half hour.
And I put on the saddest music I could find.
And it was sad because it was personal to me, right?
It was music that brought up memories of breakups,
music that I listened to at different times in my life
when I was having a particularly hard time.
So it would bring up a lot of emotions.
And I had spent the previous week creating this playlist
because I knew that it would invoke a lot of emotion.
And I sat and I listened to it until I was crying.
And then Kelly, our first AD, came and took the headphones away from me,
and then they started rolling.
And that's how they were able to begin the scene with me crying.
Because when you play a scene, Angela, and you have dialogue and you have connection with a person,
a lot of times that will bring the emotion out of you,
but it's really hard to start a scene in a full cry,
because you
would just have to get yourself there.
No, that's so true.
It's actually really hard because you're basically taking yourself emotionally from
zero to 60.
And I had to do a crying scene in a show called Haters Back Off that was like something in
the middle.
And I remember they let me sort of just step away from set to get myself there.
And once I was there, they started rolling.
I took this acting class, and it was
talking about emotional journeys.
And the acting teacher encouraged us
to pick a song, one song, because sometimes on set,
you don't have the luxury of being able to go listen.
That really shows how much our show was taking care of you
in that moment, I feel like.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But sometimes you only have a few minutes
to reset yourself emotionally and to get to that place.
So we took, everyone picked one song
and in your mind you sing that one song
and by the end of that song,
you should be in that emotional place.
And it really worked for me.
And I find for myself now, I'm older now, guys.
I'm 49, and more life has happened to me.
And it's easier for me to get to that place
than when I was a younger actor.
Yeah, same.
But music is a big way to trigger it for me, and I think for a lot of actors.
I've created musical soundtracks
for a lot of things I've done.
I had to do a play, and I had to start out the play in a rage.
I had to start out very, very angry.
And I couldn't find a song that exactly triggered my anger.
I had a song that would kind of amp me up,
and then I realized I had some audio of an ex-boyfriend,
ah, who I, like, really was pissed at still to this day.
I found this audio tape, and I played his voice.
And it made me so damn mad that I could,
you can hear me right now just thinking about it.
It made me so damn mad that I could just walk out on
stage and start screaming at the other actor on stage because just his voice triggered me.
Wow.
So I think that music,
something you can listen to, that works.
Yeah. I think that goes, I mean, you guys listening,
I know there are songs that take you right back to a moment in your life.
That's the power and beauty of music, right? The song that would make me tear up by the
end is a lefty Fizel song called That's the Way Love Goes. It's an old song. Some of you
will know it. Some of you in this moment know that I'm 100 years old because it's a
really old song. Well one of the songs I was listening to to help make me cry for
Pam was a Ben Fold song but I had a whole Pam soundtrack that I would listen
to on my drive to work during season three when her and Jim were estranged
and it was Nora Jones. Lady! She's just so soulful and wishing and a little lost.
I remember you guys doing the scene.
And I remember it from the filter of your BFF.
And I remember you were really anxious about it.
You really wanted to get it right.
You were doing all the prep.
I remember when you guys went to do the scene
that I left you alone.
You know, you don't need your chatty five foot one.
Ha la la la la la.
I was like, I'm gonna give her all the space she needs.
And rewatching it, Jenna, it made me tear up.
It's so beautiful.
And I think I see Rain as Dwight tearing up.
But surely Dwight wouldn't tear up,
but I think Rain, your friend,
is tearing up watching you cry.
Angela, it's making me get choked up when you say it
because this is a little bit of a place
where the line blurred between the Rain
that you and I know and Dwight.
Rain simply couldn't do that scene
without empathizing with Pam.
Every time we did a take,
he teared up when I cried harder.
It was like Rainn Wilson, the man,
was incapable of sitting next to a person in pain
without feeling their pain.
And this is the thing that we know about Rainn.
It's the thing that we love about Rainn.
And when I saw it in the scene, it just made me miss rain so much because
that's who rain is to me on a personal level. Yeah. Yeah. I just saw rain. I just saw him
and he's tearing up. And then he has to snap back to Dwight, you know, and say the line or, you know, PMSing
pretty hard, right?
Yeah.
Yes.
One of my favorite things he does in the scene as Dwight is he takes his jacket off and you're
positive he's going to wrap it around Pam and he ties it around his waist so awkwardly.
Yes, that was in the script.
That's the other thing, all the little beats, all the moments, him putting his jacket around
his waist, giving the handkerchief, awkwardly putting his arm around her shoulder, all of
that is scripted, all those moments.
It's just, it was a beautifully written scene and they gave us great time to figure it out
and shoot it.
I'm really proud of that scene.
It's one of my favorites from the series that I got to do.
I know.
You just did it so well.
Where are we now?
Well, Jan has arrived.
Oh, it's so awkward.
Jan has arrived, and you could cut the tension.
Even though we were acting, I remember
Melora has such a presence.
And when she walked into that warehouse,
it was like you could hear a pin drop.
Even though we knew we were acting,
it just was a powerful moment.
Yes.
And Michael's slow walk up the stairs was so good.
So good.
So good.
And then Jenna, when they get back to Michael's office,
what a power move.
Jan is sitting in his seat.
He has to sit across from her where the other employees would
normally sit.
It was so bad ass.
I so loved it.
So now in this scene, you don't know what's going to happen.
You're pretty sure that she knows about this picture
and she has come to just lay into Michael
about sending out this photo.
But she's either unaware of the photo or she doesn't care
because she tells Michael this amazing speech.
It's so amazing.
It's so good.
She says her therapist thinks she has
self-destructive tendencies and she should just lean into them.
Let's try that for a change.
Let's just go with the destruction.
I love it. She says, in this past year,
I have been through a divorce,
an identity theft, an identity theft. She's like, my ex-husband, you know,
can't or won't share his feelings with me. And then she says, maybe she will find happiness by
lowering her expectations and following her instinct to be with Michael. Everything in Melora's performance is perfection and then it is
mirrored by Steve's perfect reactions to everything she's saying. He is confused,
he isn't sure if he can be happy, he's clearly like afraid to react. Yeah he's
frozen because he's like she's breaking up with me. Wait she's not? Which she
likes me. Oh but she's leaving me. Who's this therapist?
What's happening?
It's like, all of those things are happening.
And then, you know, she grabs him
and gives him a big sloppy kiss.
I wrote on my card, Jan, hashtag DGAF.
What's DGAF?
Don't give a f**k.
Oh, because she knows the camera crew is there.
She is clearly over it.
She's like, I'm going to lean into this,
just like my doctor said.
She says, meet me back at your condo in 15 minutes.
And then it's my favorite moment.
I mean, well, there's many favorite moments,
but this is one of my favorite moments.
He is stunned and he looks at her and says,
you complete me like from Jerry Maguire, like that scene in the elevator.
He's like, you complete me.
And she looks at him and pauses.
It's such a such a wonderful pause.
And she goes, oh, God.
All of that was scripted, Angela.
It's so good.
It says that he says that line, and then it says,
Jan pauses and then sighs.
But she's like, still gonna meet him at his apartment.
Yeah, that oh, God is like,
well, I'm in it now.
Lady, we got a fan question about this scene
that so intrigued me.
Listen to this.
This is from Nilly.
Nilly said, Daniel Levinson and Roger Gould
are adult developmental psychologists
who have contributed massively to the field,
including the study and definition of the midlife crisis.
Is Jan Levinson-Gould's name a reference to the fact that she is the epitome of a midlife
crisis or is it just a coincidence?
That is an amazing catch.
I think it's a coincidence because I don't think they knew that the character of Jan
was going to become what she was when we started.
So when they named her Jan Levinson Gould,
they were not aware that she was going to spin out and go
down this road with Michael yet.
That happened over time.
But I will tell you that I appreciate this fan letter
because it sent me down a fabulous two-hour rabbit hole
where I googled Dr. Roger Gould adult development
theory. Fascinating. I'd like you to know that you can also get a book called The Seasons
of a Man's Life by Dr. Daniel Levinson. But all of their work was combined into a wonderful
book by Gail Sheehy. She's a feminist journalist and she wrote Passages, Predictable Crises
of Adult Life. Did I buy all these books and I'm waiting for them? Maybe I did, Nilly. She's a feminist journalist and she wrote passages predictable crises of adult life
Did I buy all these books and I'm waiting for them. Maybe I did Nilly. Maybe I did
I'll report back. But guys if you want to go on the journey with me, you can Google it all. It was really awesome
Jenna I love this so much because you and I do our prep separately. So I don't know the rabbit holes You going down. You're doing that and I spent half an hour looking up different flavors of jelly beans.
It's all valid, lady. It's all good. And all important. It's all important. Well, you know,
so we go back to the luau. It's not going great. People look like they're having a pretty lame
time and there's a scene between Roy and Pam and he kind of cheers her up. Yeah yeah Roy says remember how we were deciding where
to go on the honeymoon you wanted Hawaii I wanted Mexico well I was right so I
think he's sort of saying that Mexico would be better than Hawaii because this
Luel's lame I don't track his, but Pam laughs and I think she really needed that laugh.
Yeah, this was the first moment where we show that like Pam is being comforted by Roy. So all
along we've been seeing Roy try to make these gestures reaching out to her and this one lands.
And this was kind of going to maybe put Pam and Roy back on track. Well before we wrap up Back From Vacation, Jenna, I have one deleted scene.
It's a Michael talking head and I have to share it with you because it really
sums up Michael's state of mind as he comes back from Jamaica.
Alright, I gotta hear this. What is it?
So Michael is driving in his car to work.
It's his first day back to work from Jamaica,
driving in his car, talking head.
He says, you know how they say take a chill pill?
In Jamaica, I took one.
Guy on the beach sold it to me for $40.
And after I finished vomiting, I was more relaxed than
I've ever been. I lost six pounds too. And that's how I want every day to be. Yeah. He wants to take
a pill, vomit his brains out, then be relaxed, and then have a pina colada at three o'clock. Yeah.
have a pina colada at three o'clock. Yeah.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Well, guys, that was back from vacation.
Yes, thank you so much for sending in your questions.
And a big thank you to Kim Ferry.
You can find her on Instagram at hairfairy.kim.
That's H-A-I-R-F-E-R-R-Y.kim.
She posts so many fun behind the scenes things
from all the projects she's worked on, including the office.
And Kate Flannery, thank you so much for your audio clip.
I asked Kate, was there anything I could share?
And she said, will you tell them all that I'm just so tickled that I, Meredith Palmer has a Funko pop?
I love that.
You can see what Kate's up to at The Real Kate Flannery on Instagram.
And also thank you to Justin Spitzer and of course, Kintopedia for helping us answer all
those fan questions.
Thanks guys.
Yes, and Phil Shea.
I reach out to these guys all the time and they always come through for me.
We couldn't do the podcast without them, just like we couldn't make the show without
them.
That's right.
And you guys, and Sam, and Cody. Love you all.
Have a great week and we'll see you next time.
Thank you for listening to Office Ladies' Second Drink. This episode was initially
created in collaboration with Earwolf. Office Ladies is a presentation of
Odyssey and is produced by Jenna Fisher and Angela Kinsey. Our executive producer
is Cassie Jorkins
and our audio engineer and associate producer
is Molly Nugent.
Odyssey's executive producer is Leah Reese Dennis.
Office Ladies was mixed and mastered by Bill Schultz.
Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton. Music