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Posted Oct 27th 2006 6:04PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Industry, OpEd, Watercooler Talk

Yesterday,
an article in
USA Today talked about what appears to be a new TV trend: the portrayal of sensitive male buddies who talk about their hopes and fears and (gasp) their feelings. Riffing off a silly
New York Times article from 2005 about "man dates," USAT talks to relationship experts and psychologists about why these new "couples" exist.
In the process, they examine pairs like William Shatner and James Spader from
Boston Legal, Matthew Perry and Bradley Whitford from
Studio 60, Julian McMahon and Dylan Walsh from
Nip/Tuck, among others. They even include Michael Scott (Steve Carell) and his search for a male friend on
The Office in this article as evidence of this "trend."
There are two little flaws with this article, though, which I'll mention after the jump.
Continue reading Straight male couples are all the TV rage
Posted Oct 7th 2006 12:57PM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Video, The Office, Celebrities

Jenna Fischer, who plays Pam on
The Office, recently had an article published in Esquire magazine listing "10 Things You Don't Know About Women". The cast and crew of The Office decided to get together and have a reading of it... and it's on YouTube. The guy who shot and edited it did so on his telephone and he's calling it a phone-isode.
Video is embedded after the jump (
WARNING: Profanity!):
Continue reading Cast of The Office reads Jenna Fischer's article -- VIDEO
Posted Sep 21st 2006 4:09PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, OpEd, Video, The Office

If you just can't wait until tonight's season premiere of
The Office,
Slate has a little something to whet your appetite: clips from
The Office. Well, more specifically, they have clips from
Le Bureau and
Stromberg, the French and German versions, respectively, of the original British classic.
The article, written by Liesl Schillinger, examines the reasons why the remakes -- including the American version -- were done, paralleling how each fictitional office is portrayed with how each country views their respective 9-to-5 grinds. For instance, the "Tim and Dawn" equivalent in Germany are even better looking than the American "Jim and Pam," and are already fooling around under the desk. And, the British and French
Offices emphasize that life isn't all about work, while the American version reflect our nation's desire to revolve our lives around the workplace, even if we don't actually do much productive work. Not a bad read for a lazy Thursday afternoon at work.
Posted Dec 27th 2005 9:11PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, Late Night, OpEd, Saturday Night Live, Music and Variety

Interesting
article in today's
New York Times
about the genesis of the "Lazy Sunday" film that took the
SNL audience and the Internet by storm.
The article, written by Dave Itzkoff, focuses mainly on Andy Samberg and the two other members of the comedy group
The Lonely Island, Jorma Taccone and Akiva Schaffer. All three got hired by
Lorne Michaels on the strength of short Web films that were similar to "Lazy Sunday", which led to work
on Comedy Central and MTV as well as the
SNL gig.
Then, the article goes into the process of how
the movie was written, shot, and put together, all in the Tuesday thru Saturday timeframe the rest of the staff gets to
create their "magic." The funniest detail? The rap was recorded on a laptop that Taccone bought on Craigslist.