avclub-ae75b895689d74f9c5a1baae54ff8a4a--disqus
Lionel Hutz ESQ.
avclub-ae75b895689d74f9c5a1baae54ff8a4a--disqus

That's how I always took it, that once she sees Meredith looking at her and kind of realizes everyone can see her and Jim flirting Pam kind of snaps out of it and wants to quickly put a stop to it. I thought of Pam Pong in this manner as well, that Pam was kind of unaware that people around her could see or perceive

I love that Ryan just pasted a url at the top of a word document and Creed thought it was an online blog.  I could totally see an older person who is not tech savvy believing something like that.  Now I want to go pause it and see what Creed wrote.

Yes!  Good recall, @avclub-94c52c22e9daa36a5c8da95c2a3575d1:disqus I couldn't quite remember the name.  Early season Dwight talking heads were terrific, as was early season Dwight before he became a felonious lunatic. 

"What it is really going to come down to is it will be the first person who gives him a dirty look in the hallway.  And therein lies the true essence of his charisma…"

I loved Conflict Resolution; the Toby vs. Michael battle was terrific, the office being subtly exposed to Dwight and Angela's relationship, Jim vs. Dwight prank war, and Toby's frustration when he says "Talk to Michael, he has the box".  John really played the frustration and uncomfortable bitterness toward Pam and

The funniest Michael moments for me in the series are those rare moments when he has a moment of actual insight or realizes someone else is making an ass of themselves.  The looks he gives the camera or the person he is with are priceless, and for some reason hearing Michael talking and pointing out someone else being

"Ryan has never made a sale.  And he started a fire trying to make a cheesy pita.  And everyone in the office thinks he's a tease."  They did absorb another branch and presumably gain a lot of clients after this, so some of it can be explained by that.  I know what you're getting at though, it seems as if Dunder

Phyllis whispering "ass" after Dwight brags about his costume was terrific, probably because no one expects to hear Phyllis swear. 

I love how they came back to this theme several times during the show's run, such as when Dwight in his talking head said his visit to South America to visit his grandpa or uncle was protested by the SHOAH foundation and when Michael scolded him for reading stories to the kids in bring your daughter to work day from

I'd never heard the whole version and that was so much better.  Thank you, Mr. Sterling. 

My favorite Creed moments are when he talks of homosexuality (I'm not offended by it.  In the 60's I made love to many, many women.  Often outdoors in the mud and the rain.  And it's possible a man slipped in there.  There's really no way of knowing) and fake breasts (I find it offensive.  Au naturel baby, that's how

Creed is a hustler, scammer, musician, and quabbity ashwitz at Dunder Mifflin.  I loved his talking heads in these first few seasons, revealing his fake I.D. shop he ran out of his car with a laminating machine he swiped from the sheriff's station where Dwight volunteered, his creation of William Charles Schneider to

And she told Angela she was more of a dog person.  For shame! 

Quite true, even Phyllis got a bit mean in the season 6-7 dead zone.  It seems like around this time almost every character on the show became quite mean spirited, most notably Dwight and Douche Ryan. 

I like how Phyllis evolved and got more confident when she married Bob Vance, Vance Refrigeration.  She went from timid and meek to a sex-crazed woman who would stand up to Angela and tell the camera in Weight Loss that the thing her coworkers would like most about her were her jugs.  Phyllis was always a pretty solid

If that's the one who looks like crazy cat lady on the Simpsons, she passes by the camera towards the end of The Fight episode and then was presumably caught by the Scranton Strangler. 

"Because some smart, sexy temp left his cheese pita on oven instead of timing it for the toaster thing!" 

F-Sallie Mae

I am so with you on Parks Season 2, there were so many great moments in that season with character development.  Introduction of Jean Ralphio, Andy turning into loveable doofus, Donna Meagle getting to let her presence be felt… great stuff

Yeah, I hated Angela as a character but Angela Kinsey was really good for most of if not all the series.  She was so believable as an insufferable, gruff, unsociable person that it was a shock when I saw her smiling and laughing on a commercial for shampoo.