Office Ladies - Second Drink: Booze Cruise with Greg Daniels

Episode Date: February 24, 2025

Lake Wallenpaupack, listeners! We've made it to the Booze Cruise episode of The Office and we're joined by living legend, Greg Daniels (The Office, Upload, Star Force). Jenna, Angela and Greg break do...wn this episode together and Greg brought his own notecards! They chat about creating the U.S. version of The Office, Brenda from corporate, and Greg shines a light on the Kelly to Mindy transition. This episode is jam-packed with info and fun insights, so wait to do your snorkel shots until the episode is over y'all!  Check out Office Ladies Merch at Podswag: https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladies  Office Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestion  Follow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPod Episode Transcript 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
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Starting point is 00:00:00 One of my favorite things to do with my family is to go on a road trip. We are road trippers. Josh and I love to pack up the car and hit the road with our kids. And I just love the sense of adventure of exploring new places. And we love to use Airbnb. We love staying in a home. We love having a kitchen, having some type of backyard, our patio to sit on at night.
Starting point is 00:00:24 I love the privacy of it. And also it just feels like you're still at home even though you're on this adventure because you make your own home. And you know, Airbnb is just so great for families because you can really pick a place that suits your whole group. You know, we did that one year with my family.
Starting point is 00:00:42 We all met up in the mountains and picked this great Airbnb and all stayed in it together. Cousins and nieces and nephews and aunts and uncles. It was so much fun and it was so cozy. And Airbnb really made that family memory special. So use Airbnb for your next adventure. With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
Starting point is 00:01:06 You know, for texting and stuff. And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan, you're not with Fizz. Switch today. Conditions apply. Details at fizz.ca. Grab your life preservers, everyone. Get ready to set sail. Today we are taking a second drink of booze cruise. This was such a fun breakdown. Do you remember, Jenna, we had Greg Daniels in the studio with us for the whole thing. Yes. He was so excited, remember? He was like, I have a time code.
Starting point is 00:01:35 Yes, yes. And it was his first time being on Office Ladies. It was very special. And I felt like we covered this episode so well. We also wrote an entire chapter about it in our book, Office BFFs, with tons of behind-the-scenes pictures that we took. But I did find a couple of things that we could mention here.
Starting point is 00:01:55 Okay, first off, we talked about Mindy's play, Matt and Ben, that she did with her friend, Brenda Withers, who appears in this episode. This is what got Mindy discovered. And we got this comment from Christine A., who said, Google Matt and Ben Mindy Kaling and the full show comes up on YouTube. Questionable legality, but it's there. So if you wanted to follow up and watch it, there you go.
Starting point is 00:02:21 It's very grainy. But I also found a paperback version of the play on Amazon, Angela. What? Yes, it's been published and it has 4.7 stars out of 5. That's very highly rated. Very highly rated. I think, you know, if you're an aspiring writer, maybe reading it would be like a good research
Starting point is 00:02:41 or something. Well, another thing we talked a lot about was the Jim and Pam 27 Seconds of Silence. Yes. We recently got a letter from Caio from Brazil. Caio, I hope I'm saying your name correctly. They write, the 27 seconds of silence in Boo's Cruise may hold the record for the longest moment of silence in a comedy, but I was just watching the West Wing episode from season seven called Here Today, and I think that might take the cake. When Tony confesses
Starting point is 00:03:11 to CJ that he leaked the space shuttle story, there is a whopping 56.9 seconds of silence between when CJ says they can't talk until the council's office shows up and when the lawyer finally does talk almost a full minute. That is wild. Wow. Wow. Okay. We did 27 seconds of silence. West Wing did almost a full minute. It makes me want to go watch that scene. It does. Me too. That was a long time.
Starting point is 00:03:39 Me too. There's got to be so much playing out on their faces in that minute. Yeah. Thank you for writing in their faces in that minute. Yeah. Thank you for writing in. I thought that was so interesting. Well, finally, Kaylee Kay commented on this episode, quote, I know the extra that jumped from the boat in Booze Cruise. His name is R.C. Ormond, and he's a stunt actor in Los Angeles. Oh, that's fantastic.
Starting point is 00:04:02 Kaylee, thank you so much. I found his credit. He is listed as Panicked Man. And according to his bio, he has appeared as both an actor and stunt man in a wide range of productions, from Transformers and The Time Machine to the TV miniseries The Fugitive. I liked this nugget from his bio. His first professional acting job was in the Batman stunt show at Six Flags Over Texas as a teenager. How about that? I love those stunt shows.
Starting point is 00:04:32 I know. There's a really good one at Universal Studios. Yeah. I know. Well, we went one step further, and we reached out to RC because I wanted to ask him about that experience of jumping in the water. Yeah. Here's what he said. He said, so what's really crazy to me because I wanted to ask him about that experience of jumping in the water.
Starting point is 00:04:45 Yeah. Here's what he said. He said, So what's really crazy to me is that we filmed that episode 20 years ago. At the time, I was a big fan of the show. We filmed it in the middle of winter in Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach. It was a night shoot, and by the time they got to my scene, it was about one in the morning. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:05 That water was freezing. I bet. He said, I was wearing a wetsuit under my clothes, and it was still cold. He went on to share, I remember when we were setting up the scene, a lot of the background actors, and even some of the series regulars, started asking me questions like, hey,
Starting point is 00:05:22 are you the stunt guy that's jumping off the boat? Is the water cold? Are you scared? Can you swim? All great questions, he said. All that to say, if I had to narrow my experience down to one quote, this would be it. It was one of the coolest, most exhilarating and chilling experiences I've ever had. That describes all of it. If I had the opportunity to do it all over again, I totally would in a heartbeat. That's how much fun I had on that show. It was pretty awesome.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And then he added, just to be clear, I hate cold water with the passion of a thousand suns. But to be blessed with the opportunity to work on that show, I didn't even care. And he noted, we got the shot in two takes. So he only had to do it twice. Well, I just looked up the average temperature of Rainbow Harbor in the winter. It's about 57 degrees.
Starting point is 00:06:18 That's about what my cold dip is set on. That's cold. That's cold. And who knows what it is at midnight. Yeah, exactly. Well, you know, Jenna, we also got a comment from CKFresh522, who wrote in to say, there is footage of RC jumping in the water
Starting point is 00:06:34 during your video blog at three minutes and 10 seconds. Oh my gosh, in the background. Yes, your whole video journal of our time on the Booze Cruise. That's right. Well, everyone, we hope you enjoyed these tidbits. Now, please enjoy time on the Booze Cruise. That's right. Well, everyone, we hope you enjoyed these tidbits. Now, please enjoy our breakdown of Booze Cruise. I'm Jenna Fischer. And I'm Angela Kinsey.
Starting point is 00:06:54 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. We're gonna booze it up today. It is the Booze Cruise episode, everybody.
Starting point is 00:07:14 Are you running a party? Written by Greg Daniels, directed by Ken Quapus, Angela's been on a booze cruise. In the Cayman Islands. Ooh, I've been on a booze cruise of Lake Ozark, Missouri. That's the one I wanna go on. Oh yeah, live band, all of it, very similar. Okay, let's get into this.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Let's get into it. I will start with a summary. I feel like this episode doesn't need it, but I'm gonna give one anyway. Michael takes the office on a booze cruise of Lake Wallinpah Pack. So corporate won't pay for any more parties, but Michael found a loophole. As long as he calls it a leadership training exercise, then corporate will endorse it.
Starting point is 00:07:56 So that's what he does, but it's really just an excuse for a party. Michael loves a party. All right, let's jump in with fast fact number one. Boo's Cruise was the first episode to air on Thursday nights. Yeah, this was a huge deal. This was a huge deal for us. Must-see TV lineup. We were so giddy about this. We were so excited.
Starting point is 00:08:18 I wrote a whole MySpace blog about it. I was so happy. I did too. Yeah. Announcing our move to Thursday nights because I don't know if people know, but we started on Tuesday nights at 930 and now we were moving to the Thursday must-see TV lineup. This was a coveted time slot, you guys. It's where Friends was. It was a big, big deal. It still is. It's still their big night of comedy. So we felt like we'd really made it.
Starting point is 00:08:41 And also, this is a fan question from Sean Anna Yaa. In episode two of the podcast, Angela mentioned that she and the other supporting cast members became series regulars during the booze cruise. Yes! Angela, how did that feel? It was such an exciting time, Jenna, because our agents called us and said,
Starting point is 00:09:01 hey, they want to make you series regulars. We were all so, so excited. It also meant that maybe we wouldn't get fired. Now, did that happen in the middle of filming Boos Cruise or at the beginning? What was the timing? In the middle. We were on the boat. I remember we were on the boat when I got the call
Starting point is 00:09:17 saying that NBC would like for you to be series regulars and you're going to have like an extended contract. You're not going to be a week to week day player. Oh my gosh. We were all talking. We were all so excited, the supporting cast. You and I, we had a break where we got to go off the boat, but we're standing right by the boat, Jenna.
Starting point is 00:09:33 We're right by the boat. And I gave Oscar Nunez my camera and I said, Oscar, I want you to capture this moment. You and I had been jumping up and down, holding hands, screaming, cause we were so excited. And you have that photo? I have the photo and you and I had been jumping up and down, holding hands, screaming, because we were so excited. And you have that photo? I have the photo. And you and I look insane.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Because I'm sure we're so tired. We're tired, and we're mid jumping up in air holding hands, like two school girls. And Oscar was like, oh, you two are so silly. And he gave us a big hug. But this was job security. Yeah, and this, yes, this was like we all knew now, one, our show must be doing well because now they're going to pay us all to be here all the time. Yeah. And, and then we knew we had
Starting point is 00:10:11 a job. Special, special. I know. Things are starting to turn now. We've been talking about how we were really wondering week to week if we had jobs and now we're starting to feel like, oh, we're on a TV show that's going to keep coming back. Now we still haven't been picked up for season three yet, but we know, okay, we at least have a job for like another 13 weeks at this point. This was the most job security any of us had had since the beginning of the show. Oh yeah, for sure, for sure.
Starting point is 00:10:38 All right, fast fact number two, let's talk about our guest stars. Big, big guest stars. First up, this is the third and final appearance of Amy Adams as Katie. Now I went back and I was looking at the timeline. She had not yet been nominated for her Academy Award for Junebug.
Starting point is 00:10:56 That happened just a couple weeks after we finished filming this episode, but there was a ton of buzz. There was a lot of buzz that she was gonna be an Oscar contender. And it was just so wonderful knowing her the way we did at this point and knowing that she had just been a hard working actress.
Starting point is 00:11:15 Some things had gone her way, some things hadn't and to just sort of see this electricity around her and she is just such a humble, sweet, kind person. You just can't help but root for her. And I remember being so happy for her and hopeful. I was seated next to her for pretty much most of the work in this episode. And we just became such good friends doing this.
Starting point is 00:11:36 We shared so much about our lives and our hopes and our dreams, and she was just a very open, warm, generous person. And then, you know, this boat was no frills. No frills. No frills on this boat, okay? We were just sleeping on those benches between takes and she was all in. Another big guest star from this episode is Rob Riggle as Captain Jack.
Starting point is 00:12:02 Riggs! All right. So a few facts about Rob in case people don't know. He is a real Marine Corps veteran. He joined the Marines in 1990 with the intention of becoming a naval aviator, but then he left to pursue comedy. Yeah. Comedy.
Starting point is 00:12:20 Yeah. But he stayed a member of the Marine Corps Reserves until he retired in 2013 after 23 years of service. I mean, he's the real deal. He is the real deal and the man has such a heart for service. You do the softball game with him. I do. He's one of the people.
Starting point is 00:12:39 He's one of the people for Children's Mercy Hospital and Rob is just an inspiration to me. Well, you guys out there might recognize him also from SNL or from The Daily Show where he played their military correspondent or from like a gazillion movies, including Furry Vengeance with Angela Kinsey. He was in Furry Vengeance and then you won't recognize him from a pilot he and I
Starting point is 00:13:00 did called The Gabriels on Fox that Never Saw the Light of Day where we played husband and wife. We had so much fun. I keep telling him, I'm like, Rob someday we're gonna get to play husband and wife again. Oh, I would love to see that. You guys would be great. Yeah, so you know him, you're friends with him.
Starting point is 00:13:15 Yes, we are pals. So I called him yesterday and he's like the busiest guy ever. I was like, Rob, where are you? Are you in Los Angeles? Because the last time I talked to him, he was in Scotland. Oh. He's like doing some really fun stuff.
Starting point is 00:13:29 But I talked to him and I was like, Rob, what do you remember about Captain Jack and the whole Booze Cruise episode? And this is what he said. Okay. He said, well, Anne, on a personal level, it was one of the first jobs I had after leaving Saturday Night Live.
Starting point is 00:13:43 I was so nervous. I was really green and I hadn't done much in front of a camera. I was scared and I wanted to do a good job because I loved the show so much. And the character was so much fun. He also said he really enjoyed that we shot on the water and that it was a night shoot.
Starting point is 00:14:00 And he said, you know, Anne, I don't know if you remember this, but no one could retreat to their trailers. Between scenes, you had nowhere to go. So we all hung out in that boat all night. We sat in the booths and hung out and people would sort of booth hop between scenes. You would have people that were like, oh, let's go talk
Starting point is 00:14:17 to John and Jenna and Amy Adams and David Denman. Oh, let's go talk to the counting. You know, and so he said it was so fun. We would booth hop and everyone would hang out. And I really felt like I got to know some people that night. The second thing he said was he felt really bad for Steve because Steve was shooting Evan Almighty all throughout the day. And then he would come over to our set and film throughout the night.
Starting point is 00:14:41 But even though Steve was so tired, he was still kind and thoughtful and professional. And he said that Steve really became an inspiration for him for work ethic. Now, if you know Rob, you know he has an amazing work ethic, but he really saw that in Steve. Okay. So the third thing he said, and he was like, Ange, this is going to haunt me. It's haunted me for 14 years. What? He said, I had to say Lake Wall and Paw Pack. And he said, Ange, this is going to haunt me. It's haunted me for 14 years. What? He said, I had to say Lake Wallenpah Pack. And he said, Ange, did you just hear how I said that? Lake Wallenpah Pack.
Starting point is 00:15:12 I said it like it just rolled off my tongue, like I grew up there. Yeah. He said, I could not get it. He said, I don't even know if they had a usable take. He said, I must have messed it up 10 times in a row. He said, I started sweating. I was so embarrassed.
Starting point is 00:15:24 Oh, no. He said, I could not messed it up 10 times in a row. He said, I started sweating. I was so embarrassed. Oh no. He said, I could not say Wall and Paw Pack. He said when his shoot was done and he was driving home, all he did on his drive home from Long Beach, it was like an hour and a half drive, he was like, Lake Wall and Paw Pack, Wall and Paw Pack, Wall and Paw Pack. He said, I could say it with no problem in my car driving home. He said, but I could not say it in the take. And he said, and it's haunted me for 14 years.
Starting point is 00:15:50 Rob, I love you. I know. Rob is fantastic and I adore him. Thanks so much, Rob. Oh, that was amazing. Good intel, Ange. So we have yet another guest star on this episode. Brenda Withers plays Brenda, the corporate liaison
Starting point is 00:16:07 sent on the booze crews to keep tabs on Michael. And there's some fun facts about Brenda. Let's hear them. Brenda and Mindy Kaling were a writing team before The Office. They wrote and performed in an off-Broadway play called Matt and Ben, which was about the friendship of Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. And they played Matt and Ben. Yes.
Starting point is 00:16:31 Brenda played Matt and Mindy played Ben. It was set in 1995 and it tells the story of Matt and Ben before they were stars in their apartment fantasizing about being famous. It was a huge hit. It was a smash critical hit. I would have loved to have seen that. I looked up the New York Times review and it was just glowing.
Starting point is 00:16:51 And this really put them on the map. And it's definitely what got Mindy noticed. We haven't even talked about this. We haven't even mentioned who's coming on the show today. I know, I was just about to let it roll off my tongue as if we had announced it. I know, I thought about it too. And I was like, wait, we didn't even mentioned who's coming on the show today. I know, I was just about to let it roll off my tongue as if we had announced it. I know, I thought about it too and I was like, wait, we didn't even say, you guys,
Starting point is 00:17:10 we have an amazingly huge, awesome, the guest of all guests is on today. Greg Daniels, the creator of the show, is coming on the episode today. He's gonna be here any minute. He is gonna sit with us. We are a little giddy, as you can tell. We're super giddy. He's going to be here any minute. He is going to sit with us. We are a little giddy, as you can tell.
Starting point is 00:17:27 We're super giddy. And I believe he went and saw this show and that's how he discovered Mindy. Yeah, we'll have to ask him. We'll ask him. We'll ask him because he'll be here. Because he's going to be here. Yes, that's right. Greg Daniels, showrunner of The Office and writer of this episode will be joining us.
Starting point is 00:17:41 That's hilarious. Why did we not lead with that? Talk about burying the lead. I think we're just so excited. I know I'm watching the clock cause he's gonna be here soon. So I was like, oh, let's get fast facts done. Cause then Greg's gonna be here.
Starting point is 00:17:53 Oh, just get fast facts. Hey now. Hurry up and get your fast facts. I had a good tidbit for you fast facts. No, I'm kidding. I'm kidding. All right, well let's finish with these fast facts so that Greg can get in here.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Fast fact number three. We shot on location, guys, on a boat. On a boat. On a boat. This was outside of the Long Beach Harbor, which is about 45 minutes south of Los Angeles. We shot there for three days. Now, for two of the days, we filmed while the boat was docked. And then there was one night when we were moving, because we were in Long Beach and they put us up at a hotel, I had these grand fantasies that we were gonna be all hanging out back at the hotel and like kind of partying or something.
Starting point is 00:18:37 I don't know, I like have this idea. I'd never really been on location before. We never even saw the hotel. Literally we were on the boat all night and we would go to the hotel and maybe sleep a few hours and then we'd go right back. I have no memory of the hotel. No, I did bring poker chips thinking that we would hang out
Starting point is 00:18:53 at the hotel and play poker, but it never happened. We actually filmed from like late afternoon, overnight until the sun came up. Yes, I wrote in my journal that we filmed from 2.30 PM and usually wrapped around 5 AM. And I wrote, I felt the motion of that boat all week the next week. I would be in line at the grocery store and realize I was swaying. Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:19:16 It was intense because even when the boat wasn't moving, you're still on water. Well yeah, even I actually think it's worse when you're just docked, because then it's like doing this weird like a lump, lump, lump, lump, lump kind of thing. And when you're moving, it's better. It's like a forward motion. But that kind of rocking against the dock for days on it. Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh, just bringing back memories.
Starting point is 00:19:40 I have some fantastic photos from this episode, because I brought my camera, my old school camera. I already mentioned we got a photo when I found out I was series regular, but I had it on the boat with me the whole time. So I have so many, I was looking at all my office photos, all my memorabilia and Boo's Cruise is a huge chunk of photos.
Starting point is 00:19:58 I brought my camcorder. Back then we didn't have iPhones on this boat, but I had a little camcorder and I filmed all of us behind the scenes. I remember this. A documentary of Booze Cruise, which you can find on YouTube. If you go on YouTube and like Jenna Fisher Booze Cruise documentary, it'll pop up. It's amazing. I interviewed crew members. I asked them what they did, and it's very funny because you see us getting on the boat. Dave Rogers, our editor, I gave him all the footage and he put together this video.
Starting point is 00:20:32 You see us all getting on the boat and we're like, yeah, the Booze Crews! And then the first night we're like, yeah, Booze Crews, we're still, we're doing it, we're doing it. And by the third night, no one will speak to me. But you definitely see the progression. I watched the whole thing and it just made me smile. Man, it just brought me right back.
Starting point is 00:20:53 We also look 12 years old. We do. We just look so... I was like, oh man, time has marched on across my face. Oh no. I was like, wow, we look so young. Well, that's all I've got. Should we go get Greg and bring him in here and break down this episode?
Starting point is 00:21:10 Yes, cause I have a ton of note cards. You really do. I really do. Angela guys got here early because Because I had so many note cards to lay out. She had so many note cards that she was like, I came in and I was shocked. I said, what is this?
Starting point is 00:21:25 Here it is though. All right, well, let's do it. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. You know, you often hear about like the red flags to look for in a relationship, but what if, what if we like changed that focus and started making a list of the green flags that we were looking for in friends and partners? You know, like more like instead of framing it, here's what I'm avoiding.
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Starting point is 00:23:19 Terms and conditions apply. Invest with RBC today. conditions apply. Invest with RBC today. Okay guys, we're back from our break and we are sitting here with Greg Daniels, writer of Booze Cruise, showrunner of The Office. Greg, thank you so much for coming in. Well, thank you so much for inviting me. I love your show. You guys are so good together. It's so entertaining to hear you and it's so fun for me to hear your voices and your points of view and everything. Thank you so much, Greg.
Starting point is 00:23:51 If not for you, Greg, we would not be best friends and this show wouldn't exist. Our lives would be completely, I don't even know. I can't even put it into words, honestly, because now I'll get emotional. Here I go.
Starting point is 00:24:02 Angel's crying already. I'm already, I can't. Sorry. It just all kind of hit me. You know how Jim says he'll bet a paycheck that Michael in this episode is going to do the Titanic thing? Yeah. I would have said Angel was going to tear up. And it happened already.
Starting point is 00:24:20 It happened so soon. I know. I'm sorry. I just all like the wave hit me of just gratitude I have for you, just absolute gratitude in my heart. Likewise. Yeah, you. It was a great time for all of us.
Starting point is 00:24:33 And if your friendship was the only thing that came out of it, that would be cool. Oh. And yet it's not, is it? I know. No. Well, Greg, when we have guests, we always like to start with asking them,
Starting point is 00:24:46 how did they end up being on the office? How did you end up developing the office for American television? I will go back a little ways because I was kind of already with a career at the time that the show started. You had a very successful career, Greg. I mean, you had done King, I won't list your IMDb, but you were the real deal. You had a very successful career, Greg. I mean, you had done King of the Hill. I won't list your IMDB, but you were the real deal.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Please, go ahead. People don't know it enough. You created King of the Hill. King of the Hill. And you were running that show. Yeah, yeah. But you had written on Saturday Night Live and- Simpsons.
Starting point is 00:25:17 The Simpsons forever. And oh my gosh, there's that one song that you wrote on the Simpsons that is just amazing. Anyway, okay, okay. Who Needs a Quickie Mart? Yes, who needs, yes, yes. Okay. So you were the real deal. Things were cooking. So yeah, so I was in a good position. You know how they say like you need 10,000 hours to be good at something? Yes.
Starting point is 00:25:37 So I had sort of 10,000 hours on The Simpsons and Saturday Night Live, and then I had another like 15,000 hours on King of the Hill. So I was like prepared. And what happened was my agent sent me the tape of the office and it was pretty unknown over here and it had a pretty boring title and I didn't watch it. The BBC version. The BBC version, yes. And so he called me, it was over Christmas, like two years before our show came out.
Starting point is 00:26:09 He said, all right, I'm going to send this to somebody else if you don't watch it. I was like, oh, okay, hang on, hang on, I'll watch it tonight. I put it in around 11 and I stayed up till like three in the morning watching it. I thought it was just brilliant. So I called and I said, I really want to meet these guys. And I had been kind of like a good little student, you know, always in my career. And I always wanted to interact with people who I respected. And, you know, I sold the episode to Seinfeld so I could work with Larry David. And that was like a career important move for me.
Starting point is 00:26:45 And I kind of identified that Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant had done something that put them in the top ranks of people working in this profession. So I really wanted to meet them. And I didn't really think it could be adapted. So I was kind of scamming them. I was like, I'm gonna go meet you
Starting point is 00:27:01 and take this interesting meeting. Take your knowledge from you. Ask you questions. Build a relationship maybe for something in the future. You never know what's not gonna be this. It's like, I'm gonna go meet you and take this interesting meeting. Take your knowledge from you. Yeah, I know. Ask you questions. Build a relationship. Maybe for something in the future. You never know. What's gonna be this?
Starting point is 00:27:09 And anyway, so we met over at Ben Silverman's office because he had the rights and we got along very well because it turned out that they loved American TV and specifically The Simpsons and specifically their favorite episode or Ricky's favorite episode was Homer bad man which I had written and so we kind of hit it off. That's amazing! And I was telling them you know all the kind of theories that I had about making a TV show that I put into place in King of the Hill which was you know a slower pace and allowing for awkwardness and realism and all this stuff.
Starting point is 00:27:50 And they really responded to that. So we decided, well, maybe I would be the person to adapt it into America. And then there was a couple of months where we were kind of hammering it out. But it was always the thought was always to bring it to someplace cool and cabley, because the show was not like what was on TV. You know, I think the biggest show at the time was Will and Grace, which was very kind of multi-camera, fast-paced.
Starting point is 00:28:25 Far more broad. Yeah, very different feel. Yeah, it didn't have a network feel of like television. Yeah, it felt weird. So we were talking about, well, maybe we'll go to HBO and apparently Kevin Reilly at FX really likes it. So we had a couple of thoughts. And anyway, so I signed on to do it. And then Kevin Reilly left FX and went to NBC. And HBO didn't want to do it because they
Starting point is 00:28:51 didn't want to do a remake. And Ben was like, you got to sell this to NBC. And then I got very worried because I was like, this is not going to work on NBC. You're like, this isn't what I signed up for. Cool cable show. Yeah, exactly. And I also had these stress dreams
Starting point is 00:29:12 where I would be put on trial by all the comedy nerds in the world for doing this lousy NBC version of The Office. But eventually we were like, well, maybe the value of it will be to move network comedy into a new direction, maybe open it up just a little bit and make it more like what I liked about animation, which was single camera and didn't have a laugh track and stuff like that. So I was like, okay, I kind of convinced myself it was worth doing just for that. And it ushered in this whole new type of American television. Completely. All right, well, let's get into Boo's Cruise. All right, let's do it, Jenna.
Starting point is 00:29:56 What was the inspiration for this episode? You know, one of the things we were doing was we were looking for classic office situations and trying to test them for was there comic potential. And the idea of going on a booze cruise sounded funny. And this was like our biggest episode yet. This was where we were kind of feeling some oats as a show. And if you remember, they bought a whole bunch of hotel rooms for everybody. And this was sort of gonna be like the new thing.
Starting point is 00:30:32 We were maybe gonna have more location shooting and it was very exciting. Speaking of the booze cruise, when we were on the boat, I remember I was standing next to you and I had told you that I had been on a booze cruise and I had done a snorkel shot like when we were talking about them after the-
Starting point is 00:30:50 Did we roll with that right away from that? No, no, no, we were, so I think we read, we had the table read, we read the script and I went up to you and I was like, this is great. I said, you know, I went on one of these and it is, it gets crazy. I mean, there were snorkel shots and you're like snorkel shots and you're like, okay, I want to talk to you more about snorkel shots. And then you kind of
Starting point is 00:31:09 went off and we were like, just like you were busy with the episode. It was a very big episode. And then we were on the boat and I think you had mentioned it to Phil Shea. And so he had snorkels and I just remember all of a sudden I was like talking to Brian and Oscar and I heard Angela, Angela, get over here. And it was you and you're like, get over here. Talk to them about snorkel shots. I was like, oh, okay. You poured it at the top. And so we sort of had this quick snorkel shot tutorial and then it made it in the episode.
Starting point is 00:31:36 That's great. I forgot about that. It was just so fun. I always, we talk about this a lot, how you were so open to in the moment collaboration and getting people's ideas. And it made for such a fun, awesome work environment. Yes, completely. I loved that work that you guys did.
Starting point is 00:31:52 Because part of the thing that I wanted to do with the show was the experiences that I'd had that I didn't like in show business were mostly factory-made TV, where they keep the writers over here and the actors are over here and nobody talks to each other and they got to get the scripts out fast and it didn't feel very creative and I really wanted to mix it all and have a more handmade feel to it and so I had a lot of the writers act and I would ask the some of the actors to write and I always love to get access to the kind of actor prepares
Starting point is 00:32:33 work that you guys did. You know, and, and I would hop on any great ad lib like that whole thing with rain being Amish just came out of an ad lib, if you remember, where he was talking about his grandfather's name and he said Dwight Schrude Amish. And then we were like, ooh. And then you just ran with it. Yeah, that sounded fun. I also remember in the casting process, we initially wanted Steve,
Starting point is 00:33:03 and then he took that other show, Come to Papa before Alison Jones came on board. I don't know if you know that. No. Yeah, so we had heard, Ben had specifically heard about how cool, great Steve was in Bruce Almighty, and he really had that amazing sort of scene stealing moment where he's speaking in tongues as the newscaster.
Starting point is 00:33:22 Yes. And everybody knew he was really great and would be a good choice for this. And I'm very methodical, as you know, and I was like, okay, that sounds great. First, I wanna get the casting director on board and I really wanted to use Allison Jones from her works on Freaks and Geeks, which I loved.
Starting point is 00:33:45 And it took two weeks to get her on board. And in those two weeks, Steve took this other show. And we were like, ah! You know, it might have been. I didn't know that. Yeah, it was awful. So then we went on this incredibly long process of looking at every single person in town
Starting point is 00:33:59 who could possibly be in the age range for Michael Scott. And including various writer friends that I had who I threw into the mix and just normal people, like we walk down the street, go, oh, you look good. You know, come in. Come in. Read this. Yeah, but anyway, it came full circle.
Starting point is 00:34:18 And then after three months of intense casting, we got a little tip off from Kevin Reilly that maybe come to Papa wasn't gonna go the distance and we could get Steve in second position to that other show and we'd be safe and so. Let's get into Boo's Cruise. Oh my gosh. All right.
Starting point is 00:34:34 No card, no card. Okay, okay. I'm saying no card. I'm saying cold open. No card. Oh wait, Greg has a no card. Greg has one, go. No card, minute 45.
Starting point is 00:34:41 Oh, yes, yes. An early one. I believe Kevin is packing a Speedo. A metallic blue Speedo. Yes. And lots of condoms. And condoms, yes. And lots of condoms.
Starting point is 00:34:54 Also, we have a great Jim Pam talking head, a joint talking head, which I know was really fun for you guys to do right before that. Yes, where we're reading the memo from Michael that he has sent around, telling us to prepare for a surprise outing. He tells us to pack a toothbrush, a swimsuit, a ski mask, and wear
Starting point is 00:35:11 your rubber-soled shoes. I love how delighted Pam is by Jim and this talking head. And also at 1 minute 53 seconds, please notice the winter Scranton backdrop outside of the window of our talking head. We would change those backdrops seasonally. They were, we had a springtime one. We had a summer and a winter. So this was our winter backdrop out the window. January on Lake Wallenpop. That's right.
Starting point is 00:35:38 Stanley's like a booze cruise in January. And also on that note, like we said, we are jumping ahead, but at six minutes, 45 seconds, when Kevin is walking down the ramp to get on the boat, he is wearing a ski mask. Is he? You see a man in a ski mask. Oh, Jina, you're right.
Starting point is 00:35:58 That's such a good catch. He followed the memo to a T. Wait. OK, wait. Now, wait. We do have to give our background people who love the background stuff. In the cold open, what all is in the vending machine? Oh, yes. wait, now wait, we do have to give our background people who love the background stuff in the cold open, what all is in the vending machine?
Starting point is 00:36:08 Oh yes, oh yes, the cold open, Jim puts Dwight's stuff in the vending machine. Pam buys Dwight's pencil cup. Which is letter H is the pencil, metal pencil cup. Someone did a deep dive. G is Dwight's desk name plate. FF is a picture frame of Reign's actual family. Yes, fan question. Hannah Watkins asked, there is a framed picture in the vending machine. Is that a real photo from Reign's childhood? It is a photo of Reign's aunt and uncle and
Starting point is 00:36:35 nephew. Mm-hmm. Yes. Reign had brought in, I remember, a family photo album of sort of country cousins of his that lived in Oregon, I think. And that was part of what he was drawing from for Dwight. For his character, yes. Yeah, and I think we put it in a frame. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:56 Oh, that's perfect. It's so good. HH was a stapler. I was Mike, Greg, I might say this wrong, Mike Leberthal. He was a bobblehead of a Phillies baseball coach. I don't know. I don't know the Phillies. Well, that's something that you shouldn't really
Starting point is 00:37:09 go to me for. I'll tell you that right now. There was, I mean, Phil Shea, who was a brilliant prop master on our show for the whole time of the show, used to go to Scranton and return with truckloads of tchotchkes from the different businesses and giveaway pens and local sports figure bobbleheads and stuff.
Starting point is 00:37:31 And I think that was on the Penguins maybe. No, he was a Phillies. He's a Phillies? I looked him up. I Googled him. Mike Lieberthal, he was a Philadelphia Phillies catcher on their baseball team. And then also letter J is Dwight's wallet.
Starting point is 00:37:47 Yes. And Jim gives Dwight a bag of nickels to get all his stuff back, which I love that detail. So then we go to the scene where Stanley goes into Michael's office to find out if they will be spending the night. And Michael is so coy and just loves that nobody knows where they're going. And Stanley says, should my wife tell her boss she's not coming in tomorrow? And he's like Stanley, Bo Manley, Banana Nana Family, me, my mom, and Lee Stanley. Like he can't, poor Stanley can't get anything out because Michael's interrupting him with
Starting point is 00:38:19 this ridiculous like song. That was also like an early season running joke was him changing people's names. He did it to Pam constantly. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. It feels like we dropped that after a few years. Yeah. He didn't really do that to people anymore.
Starting point is 00:38:36 All right. We move into the conference room where Michael finally reveals to everyone that they're going on a booze cruise of Lake Wallenpah Pack. I became obsessed with the question personally, do they really have booze cruises of Lake Wall and Paw Pack? Yes and no. I did a deep dive on the internet. So what they mostly have are pontoon boat tours, open-air tours where a guide tells you about the scenery. Well that boat, the real boat that we filmed on was a boat from Long Beach Harbor and was big metal boat.
Starting point is 00:39:10 I can't picture how it would have gotten to Lake Wallenpah Pack, which is, you know. Yes, also, I did a little bit of a deep dive. I think they have like a motor restriction law. On Lake Wallenpah Pack? Yeah. So like you can only have like, I don't think our boat size would be permitted. Well, supposedly they do have a dinner cruise. So if you're in the area, you can look that up.
Starting point is 00:39:33 I'm sure there's beer and wine. I mean, I'm not sure, but. Wait, can we, okay, in the conference room scene, first of all, these are some of my favorite scenes because Michael has something he so desperately is trying to say, and then we just keep interrupting him. I went and looked at the first draft of the episode, and there is a scene that was in the first draft
Starting point is 00:39:53 where Brenda, the person from corporate, tells Michael that she hears he's planning this booze cruise and she tells him that corporate won't pay for it unless it has a certain amount of educational content. he's planning this booze cruise and she tells him that corporate won't pay for it unless it has a certain amount of educational content. And he panics because he hadn't prepared anything. And then we go into the conference room scene and he's trying to make up stuff off the top of his head. Leadership. It's all about the pause. But we had a very hard time keeping a straight
Starting point is 00:40:24 face in the scene as we often did in conference room scenes. And I caught a few people breaking. Mindy? Mindy at three minutes, 41 seconds. When she says I took the tags off already, when she's talking about her bathing suit, because Michael says bring a bathing suit, and now she doesn't need one,
Starting point is 00:40:41 Mindy puts her hand to her mouth. Yeah, she covers her mouth. And that's what she would do when she was about to break. Mindy was an easy breaker, that's for sure. So easy. Her hair is half up, half down, Kelly. We're tracking when Kelly is fully Mindy. Because Greg, maybe you can shine some light on this.
Starting point is 00:40:58 Mindy, the character of Kelly Kapoor started out as a very kind of like stuffy, updo. Her hair was in a bun. She always had. She had like a paisley top on. That went all the way up to her neck. Like an ascot kind of thingy. Yes, and then she very slowly just turns into Mindy Kaling.
Starting point is 00:41:15 Yes. Basically, and now her hair has transitioned. Well, this is a long campaign that Mindy waged. Behind the scenes, taking, you know, and I know she plotted it and every step was a victory and a lot of it would be we'd kind of do a double take and go, hey wait, what what are you wearing? And she would have, she would have slipped something in. Yeah, and she kind of hijacked that character and made it into her character. Well, we are enjoying watching the slow evolution of this. It's been really fun. Yes. I think her hair has now transformed. We're waiting for her wardrobe to transform.
Starting point is 00:41:53 And also we're waiting for the first Beyonce reference, which has not happened yet. Well, Brenda also, I don't know, this is maybe, was this a fast fact? Fast fact? I did discuss Brenda in fast facts, but we were going to come to you and ask you for your input about Brenda. Well, Brenda was Mindy's writing and performance partner in the play that is how I cast Mindy,
Starting point is 00:42:16 because Mindy wrote this off-Broadway play called Matt and Ben about Matt Damon and Ben Affleck writing Good Will Hunting. And Mindy played Ben Affleck writing Good Will Hunting. And Mindy played Ben Affleck, and Brenda, who's in Blue's Cruise, played Matt Damon. And it was a hilarious play. You went and saw it? Yes, I went and saw it.
Starting point is 00:42:36 By accident or on purpose? No, I was actually, I was a guest of my wife, Suzanne Daniels, who was a network executive, possibly at the WB at that time, I'm not exactly sure where she was working, and she went to see it to do talent scouting. And I thought it was super funny. You went with her?
Starting point is 00:42:55 Yeah, and it was great. And then by coincidence, Mindy's spec script came in, like the next day for me to read for staffing for writers. I was like, hey, wait, that's the one I just saw. Amazing. Amazing. Wow. I would have loved to seen that.
Starting point is 00:43:12 So, so now we have Brenda and she's like the corporate person. You guys, I just have to point out something about Brenda. I know we're not on the boat yet, but Brenda drinks the whole boat ride. She's there to check in on Michael. She has a beer in her hand. You look, look at her scenes on the boat yet, but Brenda drinks the whole boat ride. She's there to check in on Michael. She has a beer in her hand. You look, look at her scenes on the boat. She has a beer the whole time. She's at the bar.
Starting point is 00:43:32 I mean, he only sees her when she's at the bar, pretty much. Pretty much. Or she walks up with a beer, like to check in on him. Wait, before we get out of the conference room scene, Phyllis broke so hard. Do you remember this? Oh, yes. Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:43:45 So Michael has said that the sales team could be, is like the furnace of the ship. Yes. It keeps things moving along. Yes. He compares them to the people from Titanic. Right, Titanic. And at five minutes, 20 seconds,
Starting point is 00:44:01 Phyllis has to put her head down because she starts laughing. Cause she says, she asked what the furnace does. And then at five minutes, 20 seconds, Phyllis has to put her head down because she starts laughing because she says, she asks what the furnace does. And then at five minutes, 50 seconds, she says, everyone in the engine room drown. Do you remember that? She could not get out the word drown. Like she couldn't, she just broke every time. And you can see her like starting to break. That would, that made me break on the day. Yes, me too. So sadly realized
Starting point is 00:44:25 that everyone in the engine room drowned. She was like, but Michael, everyone drowned. Well, now we have to have the moment everyone gets on the boat. We've left the conference room. Yes. We're jumping around a little. At six minutes, 20 seconds,
Starting point is 00:44:40 Michael says that Pam is Mary Ann, Katie and Jim are the professor and ginger, Angela's Mrs. Howell, Kelly's the native, Stanley is one of the Globetrotters, Michael is a skipper, and Dwight is Gilligan. And this begins the war between Captain Jack and Captain Michael. Yes, I love that Michael has worn his captain hat to the booze crews. He has it on in the booze crews and he still has it on. And now they're having their little power struggle. Who is going to be the boss of this trip?
Starting point is 00:45:12 Captain Jack is clearly gonna win. I mean, I feel like his boundary is very strong from the beginning. Very strong. And I want you to know I- We should say Captain Jack played by Rob Riggle. Yes. Who was a Marine.
Starting point is 00:45:23 Who was a Marine. Yes. And so there's a lot of authenticity to Captain Jack's by Rob Riggle. Who was a Marine. Who was a Marine. Yes, so there's a lot of authenticity to Captain Jack's military bearing there. How did you find Rob? Well, I mean, you know Rob, right? I know Rob. We talked a little bit about it in one of our fast facts,
Starting point is 00:45:36 but Rob wanted me to give you a message as I talked to him yesterday. And he said, thank you so much. Also, he's sorry that he couldn't say Lake Wellampaw back. Rob was in the Alison Jones orbit. So, and we certainly knew about him. And I don't know whether he came in for one of the other parts.
Starting point is 00:45:57 Like he might've come in for Dwight or something. I'm not a hundred percent sure. Did that happen sometimes? People who had come in for main cast members, you would ping them for a future episode? Sure, yeah. I mean, I think Alison released some of the audition tapes as part of the DVD extra,
Starting point is 00:46:13 but there were a lot of cool people that came in. It would have been very interesting to see Seth Rogen as Dwight, for instance. Yes, definitely. Or Kristen Wiig as Pam. I think she came in to read Pam. I think she's in my site on my, on my, Alison Jones. And Catherine Hahn.
Starting point is 00:46:27 Yeah, Alison Jones gave me my sign in sheet day and Catherine Hahn is on it and Bob Odenkirk is on it. Yeah, well Bob was really the number two. If we didn't have Steve, it would have been Bob. He did a great job. And then in season nine, we brought him back as the sort of echo. He was so fantastic too. Yeah, he did a great job. And then in season nine, we brought him back as the sort of echo. He was so fantastic too.
Starting point is 00:46:46 Yeah, he's great. So I have a lot of fan questions about the boat. Sure. Okay. So since we're getting on the boat, Casey Wright asked, was the boat really moving? And Sam Pellet asked how cold it was. The boat was really moving through the water for one of the days of shooting.
Starting point is 00:47:04 The other two days, I believe it was docked. And it was, the boat was really moving through the water for one of the days of shooting. The other two days, I believe it was docked and it was cold. It was December, 2005, which was chilly, especially at night out on the water. A lot of people wondered, were you pretending to be that cold? I remember being cold. Yes, I don't think there was a lot of pretending.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Your cheeks are like white pink in that scene. Yes. So, Lorne Michaels has a thing that he says sometimes where like he will get in character underwear for the actors. And yeah, I think this is it. And people will say, well, why? Who cares?
Starting point is 00:47:38 That's not gonna be on camera. And he goes, yes, but the actors know. Oh, I kind of get that. Yeah. I kind of get that. I kind of get that. And so we certainly believed in that and went out on this real boat in Long Beach Harbor and it was this huge thing.
Starting point is 00:47:51 And to me, the key of it was that romantic scene on the top deck between Pam and Jim. And I just thought it'd be so pretty up there with the twinkling lights of the harbor and the background and everything. So we do that scene and later in the editing room somebody was like, what did you do? Did you just put a row of Christmas lights against a black piece of duveteen there and do it in a studio? And we're like, no. You know. What? We're on a boat. We're on an actual boat. But it didn't really look that impressive
Starting point is 00:48:29 when it came down to it was just this one little twinkle thing of lights on the horizon. Like we could have been on a soundstage. Yeah, we could have been nice and toasty and comfortable. But the wind was blowing and I could, I don't know, I could tell you're on a boat. I think so. Well, one of the challenges of being on the boat
Starting point is 00:48:43 was how sick everyone got. Greg, do you remember that? We were all really sick. Well, one of the challenges of being on the boat was how sick everyone got. Greg, do you remember that? We were all really sick. Yeah, there was a lot of seasickness. Yeah. People were really throwing up. Yeah. I did not get seasick, but do you remember coming up to Kate Flannery and I and saying,
Starting point is 00:48:57 hey, you guys, I want to get some B-roll of people vomiting off the side of the boat? Greg, do you remember? I don't, but that would be something I would have done. It was like three in the morning and you said, so you had Matt sown grab as many people as he could and we had the choice of cream of mushroom or minestrone. Craig Oh, right, right, right, the fake vomiting. Nicole The fake vomiting, the fake vomiting. And I
Starting point is 00:49:17 did, I did minestrone. Nicole Yeah, good choice. Nicole But you had to take a swig of it and hold it in your mouth until action and then puke it. And that, I don't know, five to 10 seconds you held it in your mouth was the most horrible thing because you were just like, like trying not to gag. So I didn't puke for real, but I did fake puke. Well, I got really sick, so did David Denman.
Starting point is 00:49:43 And I was wearing those wristbands. Yes. Did you pass out bony into or stuff? Yeah, there were all these remedies, but nothing really worked. Seasickness, gum. Someone gave me something to chew on. Maybe the gum. There's like a ginger gum. So at one point, the real captain of the boat heard that I was struggling. There were three captains. There were three captains. And then there was also, there was Dwight steering the ship and a guy and then a real guy. At one point, the real captain of the ship
Starting point is 00:50:15 heard I was struggling and he got out this oil that he rubbed behind my ears. And about 10 minutes later, I was totally fine. So I written about this in my diary. I looked it up and I found some on Amazon. Here's what's in it. Here's where we turn this whole thing into an essential oils pitch podcast. By the way, we're sponsored by... Sold by Jan, Jan's essential oils and candles. So here's what it has in it. Lavender, peppermint, chamomile,
Starting point is 00:50:48 something called ylang ylang, birch, and then it has frankincense and myrrh. That's the stuff that the wise men gave to Jesus. Two of the things. Expensive, very expensive stuff. Yeah. Fancy. Who knew?
Starting point is 00:51:03 I didn't even, I mean, I know frankincense and Myrrh are real, but- I didn't know they were real. I mean- I thought they were part of a Christmas song. That's not real. But like, what are they? I guess they are what you rub behind your ears when you're seasick. It sounds like they just threw everything in the kitchen sink into this.
Starting point is 00:51:21 Yeah. They did. The ylang ylang? I don't know. Ylang ylang. Ylang ylang. All right, so in the script, there was a scene, Greg, that as the boat is pulling away, Toby's car suddenly drives up and he,
Starting point is 00:51:37 and Michael yells at him from the ship, oh, come on, what's up? And he's like, I'm sorry, there was an accident or there was traffic. And then Michael says, we're not going back. We're not going back from him, just leave him. And then Paul turns to camera as Toby and he kind of gives a little wink.
Starting point is 00:51:54 Yeah, it's a big smile. Yeah, like he did on purpose. But you can find that in the deleted scenes. We shot it. Yes, I remember shooting that. We shot it and it was very nice. And that is why Toby is not on the boat for anyone who was wondering.
Starting point is 00:52:03 Maybe we should take a- There's a lot of excuses for why Toby wouldn't be on things so that he could help out as a writer and producer. Toby and BJ and Mindy, like they sat in the, you know, Mindy was in the annex, like things like that. Yeah. I thought I was so clever in season one making them actors so that they would have this experience of being actors.
Starting point is 00:52:23 And then at some point in season two, I'm looking around and 50% of the writers are gone because they're on set. I'm like, oh, what have I done? Okay, at seven minutes, 55 seconds, Rob Riggle breaks. He totally breaks. What? We talked about it. It just, it stayed in the shot.
Starting point is 00:52:41 So Rob as Captain Jack is going over the safety features of the boat and Michael really wants to hijack this speech and give it and he can't. So he just starts doing like the flight attendant like pointing to the exits. Yeah. And Rob just breaks. He just starts laughing but he just keeps going. And then Rain as Dwight laughs. So it just sort of like but it stays in. Oh that's amazing. But Rob was like yeah I just I just laughed, but I just kept talking through my laugh. When Steve is doing his dancing, I remember trying to build the reactions because everybody's
Starting point is 00:53:15 supposed to be unimpressed and just straight faced. And it was almost impossible because everybody was breaking. We made him do that over and over and over again. For so long. I remember when we rewatched it, I just wrote, oh my gosh, Michael's dance because he danced for so long. In my journal, I said that we started taping that around 2 a.m. It was really late. A fan question from Tara Leitchke, was Steve's dance choreographed? I don't think so. I really think he improvised that. I don't remember it being in the script.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I think he just kind of went for it. I have the script at home for this episode and I read it and there is no direction for Michael's dance in the script. It just says, pan over to see Michael doing a weird dance. That's it. That's as much as there was. Another fan question about the dance, Steve Dresser says, how many takes of that superb dance did it take to get Steve's full moves? I'm gonna say about six, I think.
Starting point is 00:54:22 What do you think? What do you remember? That seems about right. I can't remember when he started slapping his think. Yeah. What do you think? What do you remember? That seems about right. I can't remember when he started slapping his legs. Yeah, that was amazing. If that was early on or later. And the worm. I mean, they were different.
Starting point is 00:54:33 I feel like there were different versions of the dance, and then we kind of made the highlight reel in the other room. Yes. And there's, on the deleted scenes, you can see even more of the dancing, if you want to. I remember when Ken finally was like, okay, cut, Steve was on the ground doing the last worm.
Starting point is 00:54:49 Yeah, that was the last one, yeah. And he got up and everyone applauded for him. And like, you guys came over and gave him a hug because he had really gone for it. That was exhausting. Yeah, he completely did. That was amazing. Here's a fan question.
Starting point is 00:55:01 Was there music playing when Michael danced or was it added later? My memory is that it was added later. I mean, I feel like what we often did was we would do one take with the music and then somebody would have a little earwig, you know, and they would say, do you want to do it with an earwig? And a lot of effort had gone into making a tiny invisible thing that could play the soundtrack and then the actor would go, no, I don't need it. And then it was to do the next five takes just for memory.
Starting point is 00:55:31 That's how I feel like it probably went down. I do remember some fun facts about the band on Booze Cruise. Yes, we had a lot of questions about the band. Yes, exactly, because my friend Bob Thiel Jr., as you were pointing out on your card, who did our theme song was in the band. And three out of the four band people were the guys who played our theme song, Hal Craigin and Dylan O'Brien, who's a big songwriter in LA. And these guys were friends of mine, or Bob was. And the theme song for The Office
Starting point is 00:56:14 was written by Jay Ferguson, but he set over a version of it on synthesizer, which was a little, it was great. It was obviously a great song, loved it, but it didn't sound, didn't have the energy that you'd want. And so Bob had this kind of rockin' band that he put together of his friends, and we went and recorded the theme song with all live instruments in a session.
Starting point is 00:56:43 Yeah. That is so cool, I did not know that. Yeah. That is so cool. I did not know that. Yeah. That is so cool. And then he became, you know, then he called his band the Scrantones. Yeah. And then he came to Scranton with us
Starting point is 00:56:53 and would play at our parties often. And he was in the, I had a fan write in and say that he's also in Phyllis's wedding with Kevin in Scrantonicity. I had a fan as well. Vanessa McLoad said that she noticed that at least one of the band members shows up later in Scrantonicity at Phyllis's wedding. Yeah, it's Bob. Oh. Bob also did music, the music for Sons of Anarchy and the Mayans, so he's quite talented.
Starting point is 00:57:22 He's so talented. I have it 11 minutes, 14 seconds. This is really crazy if you know these three people. Phyllis, Kevin, and Angela are dancing together. Oh! What? I'm telling you. Isn't there a shot of Phyllis dancing with Creed at one point? Yes, yes. Towards the end, there is, they're dancing together,
Starting point is 00:57:43 but we're doing that awkward dance, where like, I almost feel like an eighth grade, where like a group of girls dance together. Except it's me, Phyllis and Kevin. We're just kind of doing like a little sway like that. It's just very funny to me. Well, I don't know if you remember Greg, but there was a runner, I read it in the script, and then I went back and I saw it in the deleted scenes. There was this whole runner through this episode that Oscar is a really mean drunk. Yes. I'm glad we cut that. So on the booze cruise.
Starting point is 00:58:10 Yeah. I didn't like that. I re-read the script too and I was like, ooh, glad we didn't use this. Oh my gosh. Where he's just, he's getting drunk and then he's going around and he's insulting all of you. So that is probably why Oscar is not dancing with you guys. And also later- He's isolated himself. Yeah, later it's just Kevin and I in the booth. And that's probably why.
Starting point is 00:58:29 Because Oscar's off talking about you. Oh, I forgot about that. Well, I wanna go back to the scene with Jim, Katie, Pam, and Roy sitting around the table. Great. Katie makes a comment where she says, ah, we're at the cool table. And then they all talk about what they were like in high school, except Jim. We don't hear about Jim, but we find out that Katie was a cheerleader and that Pam was artsy fartsy, thanks Roy, and that Roy played sports. And then Amy does her little cheer, Amy as Katie does her awesome cheer,
Starting point is 00:59:05 and that was not in the script. We found out on the set that Amy Adams was a cheerleader and she knew a bunch of cheers and you had her do little cheers for us to react to. Amy and I did a few cheers together. We were all really punchy, you guys. It was like three in the morning. So do you remember?
Starting point is 00:59:24 Because I remember when we were doing that scene and Amy started to do the cheerleader stuff, we did a couple of takes of it. And then Ken wanted to move on. And something was bothering me. And I didn't want to move on from that scene. And I realized that the balance, she kind of shifted the balance.
Starting point is 00:59:43 Because Amy Adams, obviously very charismatic, yeah, you know, beautiful actress, and she did that really fun, cute cheerleader thing. And then we were going to move on. And I realized like, Pam is just basically not participating on the same level here. She's kind of denying the cheerleader thing, but she isn't doing her own charismatic thing. And we went back and at 909, I went back to you and I said, you got to kick this up a notch, do something. Do you remember that? Yeah. And then you kind of mocked her cheerleader thing. You did that and I was like, yeah. Yeah. Because that was not in the script. That wasn't. That was added in the moment. Yeah. And that's, yeah, I kind of flirt with Jim there.
Starting point is 01:00:27 I have a private moment at the table. I thought that was like so bold with Roy sitting next to you. Like when I watched it again, I was like, wait, she's flirting with Jim with Roy next to her and also kind of making fun of Katie. Yeah. I was like, Pam's having a moment.
Starting point is 01:00:45 Well, I think it was an important connection there, Greg, because it is certainly gonna help give Jim the courage to do what he's going to attempt to do, which is tell Pam his feelings. I think without that little moment of them bonding over how ridiculous their significant others are being, it's like you need to see them as that bonded couple. So it doesn't come so out of the blue that Jim would think, this could be my moment.
Starting point is 01:01:13 Well, also Pam really gives them an opening on the top of the boat there. She does. Yeah. That to me, the Jim thing of it was she's engaged and he wants to be a good person and respect the fact that she's engaged. But he's also like, there's all these clues coming in that there could be something and he doesn't go for it. It's very frustrating to watch.
Starting point is 01:01:43 It's so painful to watch, but also feels so honest. Yeah. Because that's how you would be. You'd want to say everything, and you wouldn't be able to. Well, I remember, to me, that was probably one of the most personal and sort of raw things that I would have put into a script, because it did not feel like a very,
Starting point is 01:02:06 like noble Jim successful social guy moment. It felt really like, people are gonna hate him for this or disrespect him or whatever. So I kind of felt it was risky to put it out there. I don't know, it was very hard also in the edit to keep it that long. I mean, we tried to make the same length
Starting point is 01:02:31 that you guys really did in the scene and there was a lot of urge to like trim that up. That's an awful long time to have people not talk. Yes, let's talk about that. It's so beautiful, it's so beautiful. Pam and Jim are on the deck of that boat and Pam does give him an opening. She says, sometimes I just don't get Roy. And this is the first time we've seen her complain about Roy to Jim to disparage her relationship. Really, it's
Starting point is 01:03:01 the first time she's verbalized it. I'm't, I'm pretty sure. And then it is 27 seconds of silence. And a fan wrote in Anthony Snead said, what was the motivation behind that awkward silence? There's a lot going on in those 27 seconds, just because people aren't talking doesn't mean nothing's going on. And I think that you look at his face and you can see him trying out different things and thinking and being urged to go forward and blocked and, you know, and then I think also on your face, there's all this kind of like disappointment
Starting point is 01:03:40 that he's not gonna do anything and face saving when you're like, well, I'm cold. And it was kind of good that it was cold actually. And we really did shoot it out in the harbor because I think you wouldn't have been able to, like your nose was red. And you know what I mean? It was like-
Starting point is 01:03:57 I was cold. Yeah, you were cold. Yeah, I believed it. Now, Greg, it wasn't in the script that there would be a big pause. It didn't say there's a long, big pause. It just says that they look at each other and then finally Pam says.
Starting point is 01:04:13 But I remember on the day you really encouraging us to take our time and don't be afraid to just look at each other. Well, I mean, that was part of, I think, what made the show so special was that, and so different from what was on TV, was that moments of behavior were really important, more so than jokes and setups
Starting point is 01:04:36 and punch lines and lines and stuff. And I think that came out of appreciating what's good about a documentary. And documentaries just are all about finding the truth in what people are doing and leaning in. And no matter what they think they're doing or what they say they're doing, what are their actions show you that they're doing? And this was like a good romantic example of it all being in between the lines and it all being on the
Starting point is 01:05:05 faces and not in the script. That is so smartly said. You guys, should we talk about what else was going on during this scene? Do you mean when half of the cast got lost at sea? Yes. All right, so here's the deal. When we started this scene, I think we knew it was gonna take a while. And so they told the other cast members
Starting point is 01:05:29 that they could leave for the day, but the only way to get off the boat, because we weren't gonna take the boat back and dock it. No, there were these little dinghies that would pull up and you would get in the little boat and it would take you to shore. Exactly. Well, that did not go as planned.
Starting point is 01:05:44 No, it didn't. I remember getting this panicky radio thing. The boat with Phyllis on it is gone. Look, look at my card. Were you, you were on the boat too. I was stranded on the boat. And Brian too, right? And Rain, and I wrote about it in my journal.
Starting point is 01:06:00 Yeah. Yeah, okay, so- It was crazy. Well, for some reason it fixated on me that it was Phyllis. That Phyllis was, that we had, we had lost Phyllis. She seems like the most vulnerable of the group. Right? Kind Phyllis. Yeah. So, um, so I wrote her about it and she- I can't wait to hear what she says. Well, she says the first memory, she said it was about 2 30 in the morning and she was waiting to leave, uh, the ship And her first memory was seeing Steve Carell
Starting point is 01:06:25 on a tiny little boat holding onto some kind of a pole with no life jacket disappearing into the night. And she remembers thinking that if NBC knew that their star didn't have a life jacket and was being pulled off back to the harbor, they would be upset. And then she got on the boat and she thought it was Oscar, Brian, and somebody from the wardrobe department. I wrote about it the day of.
Starting point is 01:06:52 But that was you. Oh, she says, I'm not sure if Angela was there or not. And then she talks to, everything was fine pulling away. We were enjoying the smell of the ocean, the lights in the distance. And then all of a sudden, nothing, the engine died. So you were there. So this is what I wrote the day after we filmed the scene.
Starting point is 01:07:12 All right, I wrote, one of the coolest things that happened to me while we shot this episode happened the last night, or I guess I should say the morning of, Ray and Phyllis and Brian and I were all wrapped at 5.30 a.m. We were on the main boat, but they said they had more shooting to do so we could stay on the big boat and sleep in a booth.
Starting point is 01:07:30 Yeah. Or they said they had these little rubber boats that would pull up next to the big boat that we could get on and they would take us to shore. So we said, okay, we'll do that. They said it's about a 15 minute boat ride on the little rubber dinghy. So we decided to do it.
Starting point is 01:07:44 It was really tricky getting on the little rubber dinghy. So we decided to do it. It was really tricky getting on the rubber boat. We just had to climb out a ladder off the side of the boat. And these guys- It was very unstable. Phyllis said that at one point she had to switch boats. She was terrified of falling in. Yes. And I said, okay, the little rubber boat, picture the kind of like rubber boat that the Navy SEALs do the the back flips off of with the little like me like outboat. That's what this looked like. So we're lowered down into it. And it was me, Rain, Jen, one of our wardrobe gals, Phyllis and Brian. It was tiny and really
Starting point is 01:08:18 bouncy. We took off. It was dark out and the ocean looked like black glass. It was very peaceful. Oh, it's so poetic. Yeah. Sorry. About five minutes into our ride, our engine made a weird worrying sound and stopped working. And then we heard the boat driver radio and say, the engine's dead, you need to come get us. Brian started laughing and said, you've got to be kidding me. Then we just floated in the darkness, which felt like for a while. It was quiet and peaceful. It turned into the Titanic.
Starting point is 01:08:50 I know, I know. And then we, another rubber boat pulled up and then we had to just straddle from one rubber boat with just two guys kind of holding it together into the other one. This was very tricky. We slowly made our way past the Queen Mary, picture an old cruise ship that looks like the Titanic. And there was a huge plume of fire coming
Starting point is 01:09:10 from a refinery behind it. Rain said to me, this is so surreal. And that's exactly what it was. You know, the wheels really came off when we went on locations. We talked about this a little bit. I mean, you know, this is for season nine, but death bus almost killed us all. Work bus, I should say. We've called it death bus for so long. The cast calls it death bus. All right, well, we'll take a break and we'll be back.
Starting point is 01:09:43 Sick of dreaming smaller? Sick of investing but not seeing your money grow? and I'll see you next time. financial future you deserve. Get yours, Questrade. Starring Kaylee Cuoco and Chris Messina. The only investigating I'm doing these days is who pooped their pants. Killer messaged you yesterday? This is so dangerous. I gotta get out of this. Based on a true story. New season Mondays only on W. Stream live and on demand on Stack TV. Are you crushing your bills? Defeating your monthly payments. Sounds like you're at the top of your financial game.
Starting point is 01:10:45 Rise to it with the BMO Eclipse Rise Visa Card, the credit card that rewards your good financial habits. Earn points for paying your credit card bill in full and on time every month. Level up from bill payer to reward slayer. Terms and conditions apply. All right. So we are back from break. I have a question for you, Greg. Yeah. All right, so we are back from break.
Starting point is 01:11:05 I have a question for you, Greg. Yeah. I've been waiting to ask you this. I know we're sort of jumping around with time codes, but at 11 minutes, 34 seconds, there's this beautiful shot that goes outside of the boat and goes around the boat. You pass Dwight, right, like steering, and it goes around the boat. How did we do that? That is Kent Zbornak.
Starting point is 01:11:27 So Kent was our line producer, and he was also in the DGA. And he managed to launch us on the budget that we had, which was tiny, into Long Beach Harbor on a boat for days and get hotel rooms for everybody and He realized that we really needed that a shot like that and he shot that himself with his own equipment You know while we were shooting the rest of it Because he just had an instinct that there was no way the production could get that and stop everything and you know
Starting point is 01:12:04 so that was kind of a guerrilla move and super valuable. And Kent was fantastic at doing those kinds of things. Like he was always stitching together amazing stuff on our little budget. That is so cool. I did not know that. Did you?
Starting point is 01:12:20 No. When I saw it, I was like, wait, I know Randall and Matt were inside with us. Yeah, who did that, right? Our camera guys. I was like, how did that happen? And then I was like, is that a plane? It's in the air. Is it a drone? What is it? He's on one of those dinghies. He's on one of those zodiac dinghies. He's on a dinghy. Okay. All right. Wow.
Starting point is 01:12:41 This is another question about a camera movement. So, you know, after they're at the bar and they're all talking about who they would save, Jim gets up his courage and he's going to walk over to Pam and he says, I would save the receptionist. I think I need to make that clear. Well, right before that, Greg Phelps noticed at 14 minutes, 37 seconds, there's a continuous shot of Jim looking down the length of the boat to Pam as he thinks about who he would save. The camera then zooms in on Pam at the exact moment
Starting point is 01:13:13 she has a really cute laughing smile. How did you time that out so perfectly? He wants to know, Jenna, were you given a cue when the camera was about to zoom in on you? But we used to do that stuff all the time. That was... Go ahead. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:28 People, I think, have the wrong idea about how we did the show in a way, because most filmmaking is super intentional. And you would say to the camera operator, okay, at this signal, you need to zoom in, and then you'd try and get the actor to do it at exactly the right time. And our show was more like the theory of natural selection, kind of. Like, there would be a situation and I would give notes or the directors would give notes to the camera operators that were not about what they did specifically, but more about their intentions. So we would say, okay, you're really interested in what he sees down at the end of the hall,
Starting point is 01:14:10 so just go find it. And we had all these people who'd come from reality shows who were used to finding the story on their own. And that turned out great, you know? And I can't really speak for Ken as the director, he directed it and he might've known exactly what he was going for and kept doing it until he got it. But a lot of the times,
Starting point is 01:14:33 there were just lots of happy accidents. And then you'd tell the story through all the happy accidents and you had enough like flexibility that you could have gone a bunch of different ways with it. I think our editors don't get enough credit. Well, first of all, I think our camera operators don't get enough credit for all of those happy accidents. But then you would assemble those with the editors in the editing room.
Starting point is 01:14:56 Yeah. To tell even more of a story than what was in the script. Totally, the editors are amazing. We had fantastic editors. This one was Dean. Dave Rogers is, you know, I'm still working with, work with him all the time. Brilliant. Claire Scanlon.
Starting point is 01:15:14 Claire Scanlon. Also brilliant. And there was enormous amounts of leeway for the editors and in post, because like a documentary, we shot way more stuff than we could ever possibly use. And so our rough cuts were always about 38 minutes long, but the show's only 21 minutes, you know, six seconds or something like that.
Starting point is 01:15:40 So tons of good material was discarded. And that was like a large part of my job. Like I loved being on set, and I also loved being with the writers, but this whole other area of my job was sitting with the editors, and they're fun people too with great creative ideas. And you could tell so many different versions of the show by what you left in and what you took out.
Starting point is 01:16:08 And there was always a thing where you'd go, everybody kind of agreed on the first six or eight minutes to get rid of, you know. And probably we all agreed having Oscar make snarking mean comments is not great or whatever it is. But then you get to like about 26 minutes and there was a lot of really good stuff. And I used to have all these regrets
Starting point is 01:16:31 about things that were great that couldn't get in the show. One of them for this, if you remember was Creed sitting in with the band and us finding out that he'd been in the grassroots. And that was like fantastic. And we had all this footage and I found footage of him from late sixties and playing guitar with the grassroots on Playboy After Dark with Hugh Hefner
Starting point is 01:16:57 and like all this great footage which was gonna be the B-roll under him talking about playing with all these greats in the late sixties. And that was in for a really long time. the B-roll under him talking about playing with all these greats in the late 60s. And that was in for a really long time. I think it's in the DVD extras. It is, it's in the deleted scenes. It's great. Michael, the guitar player is gonna take a break
Starting point is 01:17:15 and then Michael tries to fill in for him and he's horrible. And then Creed says, let me give it a shot. And then he just gets up there and rocks out. And it's so cool and satisfying. And then he just gets up there and rocks out. And it's so cool and satisfying. And then he has a talking head where he explains that he is himself basically. He is Creed Bretton, member of grassroots.
Starting point is 01:17:33 And that he kind of fried his brain with drug use. Now he can barely concentrate on his job. And then there's a talking head of Angela going, he wasn't that good or something like that. I've seen better. Oh man. By the way, I would wear a shirt that says, I'd saved the receptionist. I think that is-
Starting point is 01:17:51 We should have shirts that say, I'd saved the receptionist. I think that's so cute. I think Ken did a really good job with that too, because that was, I believe, supposed to just be a talking head. And he- Yes, in the script, it's a talking head.
Starting point is 01:18:02 Yeah. And he really rightly said, well, where exactly did he say this? Cause he, you know, he had the thought and then he walks over to Pam and then she gets interrupted by Roy setting a date. So he couldn't figure out where there was gonna be a time to interview him about this.
Starting point is 01:18:21 And so he, it sort of invented this on the fly interview where he kind of just passed the cameraman and set it into camera then. And it was cool. Yeah, I really liked that. No, and you're with him. Like Jim's got his courage. He's gonna save the receptionist.
Starting point is 01:18:35 He almost gets up to Pam. And that's when Roy stands up and says that he's setting a wedding date, June 10th. A fan question from Ed's art quizza said, was Pam genuinely happy when Roy proposed or was she just caught up in the moment? Well, I looked at the script. The script said, Pam looks happy.
Starting point is 01:18:56 So I played it that Pam was genuinely kind of overcome with this moment. You know, she's been trying to get Roy's attention. I think she wants him to treat her like this so badly. And so she's also invested years into this relationship. I feel like I feel for her because she's like, all right, we're going to we're going to do it. This is it.
Starting point is 01:19:20 Yeah, I think it makes it so much worse, too, because he had his moment on the deck. Yeah. and she was quite receptive there and then he didn't go for anything. And then here, look how happy she is that she finally, after three years of being strung along, and then you could just picture like, oh, maybe I could have made that face on her if I'd said something upstairs. Yes. It's heartbreaking.
Starting point is 01:19:45 And then he's mean to Katie. Well, Amy's, first of all, Amy's reaction is so sweet. So sweet. She is, I mean, she's waiting for her moment. Please propose to her somebody because she's like, oh my God, this is amazing. Amazing. And then you're right, Jim breaks up with Katie, very abruptly,
Starting point is 01:20:07 Jibbity Jenkins actually wrote in. Jibbity Jenkins. That's not a real name. Come on. First, it's not real. Also, you just rolled into it. I thought it was part of your sentence. You're like, and then Katie, Jibbity Jenkins. I was like, is this a close word? That's like a Missouri thing, right? Probably Jibbity Jenkins. From Dogpatch, Jibbity Jenkins. Jibbity Jenkins says, Jim was kind of a dick to Katie,
Starting point is 01:20:31 the entire cruise for no reason, other than he wanted to be with Pam. She's really innocent through all this. And then he just breaks up with her. Also don't break up with someone on a boat. Well, yeah. A lot of the writers said that too, to me. And I thought it was the most efficient breakup you could possibly have, pretty much.
Starting point is 01:20:56 And we always had time issues. And I just didn't really want to see a long drawn out scene with Katie. And it just wasn't about that. And it seemed to me he was motivated to be brusque and. He was really upset. He was hurting. He was hurting and he just sort of lashed out. I didn't think it needed to be long.
Starting point is 01:21:17 I thought it was perfect, but I also love, and this is something we've talked about a lot, Greg, is that these characters are flawed people. They're not perfect people. So they're going to have moments like Pam was petty. I think Pam has been petty. And my character is certainly, we've talked about my character is certainly, you know, not the nicest person. You went the longest being not the nicest of any character. Yes. And which was great because then when we got into season nine and I was kind of casting about
Starting point is 01:21:48 for what the arc of season nine should be, it was like, well, there's only one character left who hasn't warmed up at all. Let's put Angela through hell this year. And let her soften just a smidge. Let her deserve a happy ending. Yeah. So then we have a scene where we see that Captain Jack and Meredith are sneaking away to make out, get it on something. Meredith's going to come back later without a shirt on and just a life preserver.
Starting point is 01:22:18 Do you remember the letter her dad wrote her? Do you remember that letter? Yeah. That said, Dear Kate, stop taking your clothes off. Thanks, dad. Yes. Well, this gives Michael the opening to take the microphone and really start his presentation,
Starting point is 01:22:32 which he does by announcing that the ship is sinking. Most of the people don't realize that this is a metaphor, passengers panic, and a man jumps overboard. JT wrote in to ask who was the actual person who jumped in the water? And a lot of people are asking what happened to that person? Yes, well that was one of the non-Dunder Mifflin people
Starting point is 01:22:56 on the boat. And as I recall, he was not supposed to jump off the boat. As I recall, I mean, I may be blowing this because it was a while ago, but I think there was a little bit of shock that one of the extras jumped off the boat in that take. And I think we were probably not supposed to let him jump off the boat.
Starting point is 01:23:18 Oh my God. Well, on the DVD commentary, Greg, you said he really jumped out of the window into the freezing cold water. Yeah. And you said that you always felt bad that there is no, like this person jumped into the- It wasn't on camera. It wasn't on camera.
Starting point is 01:23:38 He didn't jump in a boat. He didn't jump in a boat. Like he had to be fished out of the water. There could have been just a rubber dingy there. I believe it only happened the one time. Yeah, I think so. I think he may have either misinterpreted some direction or he just was super enthusiastic. I have a slight memory of that being a little too gorilla. That's like Kent was out there running that shot, Kent's before that. Kent was in the boat that was supposed to catch him, but he went and took the shot.
Starting point is 01:24:09 Well, I loved it. So this is around 17 minutes, 34 seconds for my time code people, but I love that the Dunder Mifflin employees know immediately that there's no emergency. And like even like Kevin and Angela, like we're in a booth together. Oscar I guess is off somewhere being snarky. And we're like, no, no guys Angela, like we're in a booth together, Oscar, I guess, is off somewhere being snarky. And we're like, no, no, guys, no, no, there's nothing. Right. You're trying to calm it down. Yeah. Yeah. And you pan across all the different Dunder Mifflin employees and they're like,
Starting point is 01:24:34 oh God, here we go. But the rest of the boat doesn't know. Well, this, oh, go ahead. What are you going to say? Well, I'm just saying this was leading up to him being handcuffed on the roof. Yes. Yes. And the kind of secret impetus for this whole episode was that we had come on the air in the first season and we were given six episodes and we didn't do a great job in the ratings.
Starting point is 01:25:09 And there was a lot of question whether we'd get invited back. And so at one point in between the seasons, Kevin Riley said, come in and pitch me a new take on the show, why should I bring you guys back? Oh my gosh, pressure. There was a lot of pressure. And so I had initially kind of thought that The Office was such a special, unique show, which I had so much respect for
Starting point is 01:25:36 that I wouldn't change very much on it. And I realized that I needed to change something. And I had some experience with this, with King of the Hill, in making Hank likable, the lead of King of the Hill. And he has certain qualities that were invented to keep him likable. And so I was like, oh, this isn't really that different, because Michael has some negative qualities
Starting point is 01:26:01 and I just gotta find a way to give him some stories that are gonna warm him up. And so I wrote out a bunch of story ideas somewhere, like in probably in Norms, no, we weren't at Norms yet. That was my go-to place in the mornings on Sherman Way in Woodman. But yeah, so I was in some coffee shop and I wrote down a bunch of moments
Starting point is 01:26:26 that I thought would warm them up. And one of them was that, for instance, that even though the staff finds him irritating, they'll back him against an outsider. So that was like the end of Dundee's. And one of them was like, he should be good at his job, which happened in the client. He actually was a good salesperson. And this one was that he should give a piece of really good advice to somebody that the audience was going to be happy that that advice
Starting point is 01:27:01 was transferred, you know, and you'd be like, yeah, good for you, Michael. And so it was sort of all about him telling Jim to never give up on the top of that thing. BFD. Yeah, BFD, right? Engaged Ain't Married. Yeah. But that's what the audience wanted to see.
Starting point is 01:27:21 Jim was so sad. You wanted somebody to give him some hope and keep this Jim Pam thing going. And so Michael kind of stepped in and I took the never, ever, ever give up from actually the Winston Churchill speech, which was too- This is perfectly you. This is so nerdy of me, right?
Starting point is 01:27:38 This is perfectly you. Yeah. But like I always choke up at the speeches of Winston Churchill in World War II and you know fight him on the beaches You know and he has something where he says never ever ever ever given, you know, and I was like, that's cool I'm gonna crib that for Well, it worked and it also worked for me but like on a different level for Michael like it works for Jim But for Michael the whole, he just wanted someone to feel inspired by him. Yeah, that too.
Starting point is 01:28:07 So when Roy announces the engagement, he was like, is this because of the talk you and I had? And he goes, no, Captain Jack. And he's like, so you see Jim's appreciation in this moment. And I feel like Michael feels it. And I'm like, oh, Michael got one person. Yeah, it was great because the two plots kind of intersect there for a moment. And when Jim first walks up to Michael as an audience member, I'm thinking, oh gosh, this is the worst person for him to be around right now. He is so vulnerable. This is bad. And then it turns into what it is. And it's perfect. So after a few of those, It's perfect. So perfect.
Starting point is 01:28:43 After a few of those, Michael starts to get to be a better lead. Well, guys, we did it. We did it. Greg, thank you so much. I want to give a plug. You have a new show coming up called Upload, which premieres on Amazon Prime this April.
Starting point is 01:29:00 This is crazy. This is the first show that you have written since you wrote The Finale of the Office. That's correct. I've been working on this for so long. It's kind of ridiculous. We had our strike in 2008 and this was my sort of idea to write a book, like a sci-fi book. Okay.
Starting point is 01:29:22 And then we went back to work. And so, you know, it was gestating for a long time and it's sort of a romance, very intense, and it's set in the future. And I am in, I am in, I love sci-fi, I am so in. Well, it's got a very kind of accessible, more Harry Potter-y than like on a spaceship kind of deal. And yeah, and anyway, so I had been working on it pretty much since the office went down, which is ridiculous, but I wrote it, I sold it to HBO. It was there for a couple of years and then it went over to Amazon and we shot it in Vancouver
Starting point is 01:30:03 at the beginning of the year and yeah, it's finally coming out. I can't wait to see it. I love all of this. These are like some of my favorite movies. And it's a comedy. Yeah, it's funny too. It's a comedy.
Starting point is 01:30:15 It's like a lot of stuff. There's a mystery. There's, it's basically, there's this idea that in the future, medical imagery will get much better and virtual reality and it'll become possible if you're in an accident and you get to the hospital in time to have your brain scanned and then you can be uploaded, it's called upload, into a virtual reality hotel
Starting point is 01:30:41 that's run by all the big tech companies. So the six big tech companies that have things like Alexa and Siri, they have programmed these luxurious sort of virtual hotels along the lines of different themes. So like the Facebook one is like a casino and the Apple one is like some sort of beachy kind of resort. And the one that he ends up being uploaded in is like this mountain hotel on a lake and
Starting point is 01:31:09 Anyway, that's now did his body die, but then yes upload his brain was a spoiler. No, his brain was scanned No, I know but I'm saying is it's your head it burns your head off when when the scan when the scan happened So you have died in the real world and now you live out as an upload. But the information exists and it's digitally presented in a piece of software so that you think you're still alive. I love it, I love it. Upload on Amazon, I can't wait. In April.
Starting point is 01:31:40 So yeah guys, if you want more from the man who gave you the office, you have to check out Upload. Yay, Greg, if you want more from the man who gave you The Office, you have to check out Upload. Thanks Greg. Thank you so much. What a pleasure. Thank you. Thank you for listening to Office Ladies' Second Drink. This episode was initially created in collaboration with Earwulf. Office Ladies is a presentation of Odyssey and is produced by Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey. Our executive producer is Cassie Jerkins and our audio engineer and associate producer is Daniela Silva. Odyssey's executive producers are Jenna Weis-Berman and Leah Reese Dennis.
Starting point is 01:32:15 Office Ladies is mixed and mastered by Chris Basil. Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.

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