disqusmd4fvlc36h--disqus
whaddup
disqusmd4fvlc36h--disqus

I like in the commentary how they talk about characterizing Michael's interaction with the cameras as him thinking that one day Jennifer Anniston will watch the documentary and he needs to be on his best behavior.

And eating jelly beans.

The cut to them on the doorstep is one of my favorite things ever.

Still love the close of Women's Appreciation with Michael talking about what he wishes for the women of the office, for Pam to have courage, and that scene of her getting on the elevator with Jim and Karen. They really did a lot of work with her character in S3.

This was right on the heels of Andy engineering Dwight's downfall, and Jim's assessment of Andy as a yes-man. He was also the archetypal "challenge to the established order" and therefore needed to be taken down according to TV logic.

Almost as bad as the "Give the people what they want" teaser for Phyllis's Wedding.

I can see it more in the light that Jim sheds on this time in season 4; that's he's very, very unhappy and his decision to remove himself from Pam hurt him so much more than being around her with Roy. Why not get plastered?

Extension cord so he can't go more than 6 feet from the wall. Dwight's earnest attempts to help Michael on his entirely wrong approach to grieving are always hilarious.

I don't necessarily agree they took it all away. I think Pam became a much stronger, assertive person who wanted what she wanted, and that just happened to be Jim. Pam's arc in season 3 is one of my favorite things the show did. She was oftentimes frustratingly devoid of agency and defined by the men in her life. Her