toby-related stories
Posted Nov 20th 2008 11:52PM by Jay Black
Filed under: OpEd, The Office, Episode Reviews, Reality-Free
(S05E08) Being a fan of
The Office is kind of like dating Scarlett Johansson (which I can comment on because I have the WOPR running continuous simulations of me and Scarlett Johansson dating; incidentally, every scenario seems to end in global thermonuclear war). You get spoiled. Whenever she comes to bed wearing something insanely sexy, you think, "Well, of course she's wearing Princess Leia's gold bikini, she's Scarlett Johansson!"
The one time she shows up in sweatpants and one of your t-shirts, however, you don't know what to do. She's entitled to be comfortable, and, after all, lots of girls wear sweatpants to bed, but it doesn't seem right. Scarlett Johansson doesn't wear
sweatpants.
Tonight's episode felt like sweatpants. It was ordinary. It was a
sitcom episode. And, worse than that, it was an
unlikeable episode.
Continue reading The Office: Frame Toby
Posted May 16th 2008 1:19AM by Jay Black
Filed under: OpEd, Video, The Office, Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Episode Recaps
(S04E14) I performed tonight in Hartford, CT. Coming out of the comedy club, a woman who wasn't at the show checked me out. I heard her say
helloooooo in a guttural way, like I was a really good looking guy. A few seconds later, though, once she got a better look at me, she said, "Never mind." Then, she and her friends laughed for as long as I could hear them.
Apparently, I'm only good looking when someone is looking at me out of the corner of her eye.
I bring this up not to inform you that I'm unattractive -- my blogger profile photo does a better job of informing you of that than I ever could -- but rather because I didn't think I could be any more depressed than I was after that comment. I honestly thought their derisive laughter was going to be the low-point of my evening. Then I watched tonight's
Office finale...
Continue reading The Office: Goodbye, Toby (season finale) - VIDEO
Posted May 11th 2007 3:02PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming
I recently posted news that producers of NBC's The Office were seriously thinking about extending the show to an hour every week next season. Some of you loved that idea and some of you hated it. Well, looks like we have a compromise.
According to Kristin over at E! Online, the show will have four, one-hour specials next season, as well as 24 episodes total. That's really good news, in this new age where many "full seasons" of shows often don't even hit 22 episodes. I was watching some old comedies on DVD the other day and noted that they often had 25 or 30 episodes a season back then.
Speaking of one hour, The Office one-hour season finale airs next Thursday at 8.
Posted Apr 12th 2007 4:19PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Web, The Office
First Stephen Colbert, now The Office.
On a recent episode of the NBC comedy, boss Michael Scott (Steve Carell) went to Wikipedia for tips on how to fire one of his employees. So fans of the show have, naturally, gone to the site and started to edit the entry on negotiations like crazy. Because, as Michael put it (I'm paraphrasing here, don't remember the exact quote), "having a bunch of people edit a web site is best way to get accurate information."
Continue reading Office fans go Wikipedia happy
Posted Apr 6th 2007 2:21PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: OpEd, Commercials, The Office
First off, it was a great episode. Dwight shooting Roy in the eyes, all the Toby/Michael stuff (Toby is truly one of the great characters on TV right now), and Ed Helms returning at the end (which I didn't see coming) were all really funny moments. But I'm wondering: was the show really "supersized?"
Oh, I know it was longer. It started at 8pm and got over at 8:40, so it was longer in length, but didn't it seem like there were more commercials than usual? And what about that 4 minute long commercial for 30 Rock? Sure, they increase the length of the episode by 10 minutes, but 4 of those minutes are for an extended promo for another one of NBC's shows? It seemed to be shoved in there and was rather distracting.
Continue reading Was last night's episode of The Office really supersized?
Posted Mar 30th 2007 1:22PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, OpEd, Watercooler Talk, The Office

It's amazing to me how well episodes of
The Office hold up to repeated viewings. The funny moments are just as funny, and the uncomfortable moments are just as cringe-inducing, as they were the first time around. That notion was brought home to me last night during NBC's
Office marathon.
The network decided to air five "HR nightmare" episodes of the show (and one very funny episode of
Andy Barker, P.I.), with new wraparounds featuring Toby the HR rep and a few of the secondary characers. All three seasons were represented, including the second episode that ever aired, "Diversity Day." The consistency of the humor from the first, little-watched season to now is pretty remarkable: Michael is inappropriate and uncomfortable, Dwight is an unrepentant suck-up, Pam is sweet with a bit of a snarky streak, and Jim is Jim. But what is really apparent when you look at the three seasons of the show mashed together is how many little things have changed.
Continue reading The more The Office changes, the more it stays the same
Posted May 7th 2006 9:22PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, OpEd, West Wing
(S07E21) This was an odd episode. I mean, it's the next to last show, and we're supposed to believe that everyone is getting ready to leave the White House and they're packing up and they're thinking about new job offers. But at the beginning, even though C.J.'s office is filled with boxes and Will goes to see someone about a possible political job, it didn't "feel" right. Focusing on C.J. is fine, but focusing on Will and Kate? I just don't see it.
Then Andy walked into C.J.'s office and asked her to ask the President about pardoning Toby, and that's when the episode kicked into gear for me.
Continue reading The West Wing: Institutional Memory
Posted Apr 16th 2006 9:59PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, OpEd, West Wing
(S07E18) Now
this was the type of
episode longtime
West Wing viewers were hoping for. If you had asked me what should happen in the Leo's
funeral episode and who should be in the episode, this is what I would have done. The montage at the beginning of the
episode showed everyone getting ready for the funeral - President Barlet, Josh, Toby, C.J., Donna, etc - and then
showed all of the people at the church. Sure, it was jarring not to have Sam there (Rob Lowe isn't back yet), but you
really can't complain when you have Mallory, Nancy McNally, Carol, Margaret, Hoynes, Russell, Joey Lucas, Danny and
everyone else. Nice touch having Toby stay in the church til everyone leaves and Charlie offering to walk out with
him.
I was a little afraid they'd rush though the Leo memories and shove in the whole Santos plot, but that
didn't happen. You had to show what was going on with the Santos plot (life does go on after all), and it was a nice
balance of the old and the new.
Continue reading The West Wing: Requiem
Posted Dec 25th 2005 8:18PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, Talent, West Wing
There was a lot of confusion last week when The West Wing's John Spencer passed away. Every
single newspaper, magazine, and web site (including this one, but in our defense we missed the opening scene
and were just repeating the news sites) reported that the character of Leo had appeared in a three years later
flash forward in the first scene of the season opener. And that would pose a problem, since Spencer passed away and
couldn't have been in a scene three years in the future.
But NBC is repeating the episode right now and it's official: Leo was not in the scene. So some of the speculation
we talked about last week is still
valid.
Posted Dec 16th 2005 6:26PM by Kim Voynar
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Talent, West Wing
The West Wing star John Spencer, who played Leo McGarry, died today in a Los Angeles
hospital of a heart attack, according to his publicist. Spencer played Chief of Staff to Martin Sheen's President Jeb
Bartlet. On the show, ironically, Spencer's character suffered a heart attack that forced him to give up his White
House gig. In a main storyline this season, though, his character had been tapped as a vice-presidential running mate
for Democratic hopeful Matt Santos, played by Jimmy Smits.
Continue reading West Wing actor John Spencer dead at 58 - BREAKING NEWS