A Look Back on Beach Games
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
Listen and follow along
Transcript
I used to have this idea of what home security was.
I thought it was like an alarm that goes off after someone tries to break in and that scares off the intruder.
Maybe it gets your neighbor's attention.
But what I learned is that's really a reactive approach.
By the time the intruder's in your home, it's too late.
And you know, that's one of the things I really love about Simply Safe because their system is designed to be proactive, not reactive.
And here are ways that they are proactive.
They use smart, AI-powered cameras to identify threats lurking outside your home and immediately alert SimplySafe's professional monitoring agents.
You also might be wondering, how do I design my home security system?
And I can tell you from personal experience, their website is so easy to use.
They literally have a toggle that says build my system.
And you click on it and you go through all the different features that they offer.
And there are so many.
I've found that really helpful.
Some of the cameras they offer are like the outdoor cameras, the video doorbell pro, which that one I really like because you can see who's coming right up to your front door.
Visit simplysafe.com slash office ladies to claim 50% off a new system.
That's simplysafe.com slash office ladies.
There's no safe like simply safe.
All right.
If you're like me,
you want to look put together, but you don't have a lot of time to put into your routine to trying to look put together.
I'll give it 15 minutes.
I want to look polished in 15 minutes.
And I'm talking that's everything.
That is skincare and makeup.
Yeah.
Well, Merit helps you simplify what it takes to get ready.
Merit is designed for people who want to look put together without spending a ton of time on their routine.
AKA, me and Angela.
That's right.
Merit is a minimalist beauty brand that has curated sets to create easy to use routines for you.
All of their products are clean, vegan, and cruelty-free, and they're made with skincare ingredients that leave your skin looking better long after you take your makeup off.
In fact, Merit's products are so easy to use, they claim you don't even need a mirror when you're doing your routine.
Okay,
okay, I'm listening, Merit.
I am listening.
It's time to simplify your morning.
Head to meritbeauty.com to get their signature makeup bag free with your first order.
Hello, happy Wednesday, everyone.
Hi there.
Listen, summer is almost over.
Labor Day is upon us.
It's almost back to school.
We thought we needed one last little break.
We do need one last little break, and we hope you guys have a great week.
We thought you could use one last trip to the beach.
So here is a rerun of Beach Games.
We'll see you next week with an all-new episode.
Counseling.
Bye.
I'm Jenna Fisher.
And And I'm Angela Kinsey.
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.
Angela.
Hey!
We are so excited today, you guys.
We're going to the beach today.
We're going to play some beach games.
Yes.
Season three, episode 22, written by Jen Salata and Greg Daniels, directed by Harold Ramos.
It's Beach Games.
We have so much to talk about.
I kind of feel like
we just got to get to it.
We should dive in because I took very diligent notes.
And I think you did in real life.
We'll get to that.
All right, here's a summary.
Michael is invited to interview for a job opening at Corporate.
Certain that he's a lock for the job, he takes his employees to the beach at Lake Scranton and holds a series of challenges to determine his successor.
At the end of the day, Michael sets up a coal walk as a final challenge.
Pam does the coal walk and summons up the courage to tell Jim and the whole office her real feelings.
Oh, man, that was, that was so tough to watch.
It was beautiful, Jenna.
Pam broke my heart in this episode.
Yeah, I had not seen this episode since it aired, and I,
it shocked me.
And I did it, and I was still shocked.
Isn't that funny?
Like the way the brain works, where you're like, wait, I did all that.
That's crazy.
That's kind of cool.
Yeah.
So fast fact number one, Angela, our beach games is set on Lake Scranton.
Obviously, we didn't go to the real Lake Scranton, but I did want to just talk a little bit about it.
Oh, let's hear it.
Well, Lake Scranton is actually a reservoir, and it was built with a dam in the early 1900s.
The dam was built by William Walker Scranton, and the body of water it created was originally called the Burnt Bridge Reservoir.
Although the public calls it Lake Scranton.
Well, Jenna, you and I have both been to Scranton, and one of the times that I went, they drove me around Lake Scranton, and it is so pretty.
So pretty.
There is a running track around the real Lake Scranton, and it's absolutely gorgeous.
But I did look up a few facts about it, Ange.
Yeah.
Swimming is not permitted.
Boating is not permitted, but canoeing and kayaking is allowed.
I wonder why you can't swim in it.
Like, I get the no motor, right?
That's like,
I think that's sort of really cool, but I wonder why the no-swimming.
I don't know.
Hmm.
I'm not sure.
We're intrigued.
Scranton, write us.
Tell us why you can't swim in your lake.
Well, this leads me to fast fact number two.
I brought up all these facts about Lake Scranton because we had a fan question from Sophia B., Erin W., Dana D.
Marin B., and Faye B.
Where was the beach that you filmed this episode?
Was it a long commute?
And how many days did you film at that location?
Well, I will tell you.
Tell us.
I know.
I remember one or two things, but I bet you got all the details.
So let's hear it.
Well, I reached out to Kentipedia and here's what he told me.
We filmed at the beach at the Hansen Dam Recreation Center in Sylmar.
We shot there for four days and nights.
Will you mention that you've been to the Real Lake Scranton?
I've been to this real...
Hansen Dam Recreation Center outside of us filming.
You have?
Yes, because there is this museum, this children's museum called the Discovery Cube that's right nearby.
And when you go through this area, there's also like
an equestrian center, there's an aquatic center, there's a playground.
Because lady, the place that they put us to film this episode
was like you had, I had no idea all this stuff was there.
My memory of where we filmed was it was like a chemical pond runoff like from a dam where I was like, are we like breathing in fumes?
It was really
like gross.
They often maybe like the only place they let you film is in this like weird janky corner of this where this air is.
Where the runoff water goes.
Yeah, because this recreation center is actually really nice.
But
here's something I found out too.
The lake where we filmed is filled with circulated drinking water.
What?
Yeah, circulated drinking water and it offers fishing and public boating.
Oh my gosh.
So when Ed is out there floating in the water, he was in some recycled drinking water.
Oh, well, that's good to know.
All these years, I worried for him that he was going to get like some kind of weird rash.
All right, well, let's move on to fast fact number three.
So like we said said earlier, this was written by both Greg Daniels and Jen Salada, and we reached out to Jen Salata and she sent us audio clips.
She sent us so many.
She is so gracious.
We're going to sprinkle them throughout.
But here she has one for us right now.
Yes, she is going to tell us a little bit about the inspiration for this episode and what it was like to write a script with Greg.
I think the inspiration for this episode was just survivor.
I think it was Greg's idea.
And I remember all of us talking about Survivor being a perfect way for Michael Scott to pick his successor.
I mean, what other way would this man use to try to pick somebody who could run a branch?
It just seemed like a no-brainer for Michael Scott to do it this way.
And then we tried to sit down and write the whole thing together and we were like, this isn't going to work.
So we divided it up.
We can't remember exactly how we did it.
I think sometimes with Paul, when I'd write a script with Paul, I'd do the first half, he'd do the second, or vice versa.
And with Craig, I think we didn't do cleanly divide it up that way.
I think just he did some of the scenes, I did others.
And I do remember that.
the Pam speech was mostly Craig.
And I think that is such a beautiful part of the episode.
And the Pam arc pre-existed the idea of the Beach Games episode.
So I think some of the ideas from that speech were in his notes.
But I love that part.
It is one of my favorite parts, if not my favorite part of the episode.
So credit to Greg for that part for sure.
But we both wrote a bunch of it.
I just don't think we clearly divided it up.
Well, Ange, I remember Greg talking to me about this Pam arc of her finding her voice.
Yeah.
And he planted this idea a few episodes ago and we sprinkled it in.
And so I just love this idea that he'd been maybe writing down little notes about what pam will finally say when she says something and i remember getting the script for this episode and just being so excited as an actor there was just so much to chew on
i mean i thought that it was just beautifully done really just Pam's whole journey this season about even her sending the wrong beer back.
You know what I mean?
And just having these moments where she stood up for herself and spoke her truth.
And it all builds to this one moment.
And it's just so well done.
When I was re-watching this, I was marveling at what a well-written episode this was.
Yes.
Well, maybe we should take a quick break and then come back and break down this episode.
I can't wait.
Jenna, we have so much to talk about.
I know.
We've been trading a lot of texts about this one.
Are you ready?
Because it is Macy's big ticket sale.
What does that mean?
That means you can get up to 60%
off.
These are the lowest prices of the season on furniture, mattresses, and rugs.
So let me break it down a little bit.
Mattresses are 20 to 60% off.
Outdoor furniture, 50 to 60% off.
This is the area I will be clicking on.
Definitely need some new outdoor chairs.
Ours are a little rough looking.
Also, indoor furniture, 10 to 60% off.
Rugs, 55 to 65% off.
There are great financing options and white glove delivery.
Macy's big ticket sale runs August 27th through September 15th.
Shop now at Macy's.com or in store.
Having people in your corner to help you makes all the difference.
And with State Farm, you can feel good knowing that whether you need coverage for your car, your home, or even boats, motorcycles, and RVs, you can choose the right amount of coverage for you.
With State Farm, an agent can help you along the way.
And if things get complicated and you have questions, you've got options too.
Go online at statefarm.com or use the award-winning app to get help from one of their local agents.
You know, this is going to age age me a little bit here, but when I got my first car, my dad got me State Farm car insurance and there was no online and there was no award-winning app.
And I have to think my dad would be so happy that that was more streamlined now because it really is so helpful, especially the app.
It's right on your phone.
Talk to your agent to help you choose the coverage you need.
Have coverage options to help protect the things you value most?
File a claim right on the State Farm mobile app.
Reach a real person when you need to talk to someone.
Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.
I remember when I left home and I had graduated college and I was getting my own apartment.
And I remember so clearly my dad saying, And you won't be able to do this every month the same, but every month, make a commitment, save a little every month, and just try to make that a life goal.
That's something that Acorns does for you.
Acorns makes it easy to give your money a chance to grow.
Here's what it is.
It's a financial wellness app that helps you invest for your future, save for tomorrow, and spend smarter today.
And you don't need to be a finance whiz.
Acorns puts money into an expert-built portfolio to make sure you're investing wisely, not wildly.
Sign up now and Acorns will boost your new account with a $5 bonus investment.
Join the over 14 million all-time customers who have already saved and invested over $25 billion with Acorns.
Head to acorns.com/slash Office Ladies or download the Acorns app to get started.
Paid non-client endorsement, compensation provides incentive to positively promote Acorns.
Tier 2 compensation provided investing involves risk, Acorns Advisors, LLC, an SEC registered investment advisor.
View important disclosures at acorns.com/slash office ladies.
All right, so this episode starts with this very funny cold open.
It is Dwight and Michael.
They're in Michael's office, and Michael's convinced that he's sick, you guys.
He's convinced.
They're scrolling through a website.
It's like WebMD or something, trying to figure out what he is sick from.
Dwight's very concerned.
Yes, Pam has a talking head where she explains that this happens about 40 times a year.
Michael, it's sick that has no symptoms.
Yes.
Well, Jen left us a really great audio clip about this, about the inspiration for this cold open.
Sam, can you play that?
Greg and I wrote the episode together and it was really fun.
I remember being really curious what is Greg's process going to be like because writing scripts, it was such a solitary part of what we did.
And so I was always wondering, like, what are other writers like when they go off to write a script?
It became quickly...
obvious that his process at the beginning was like mine, which is like every other writer I've ever met, which is there's a fair amount of procrastinating right away before you have to get into the hard work.
It's figuring out what you want to eat.
It's sharpening your pencils.
It's figuring out the temperature of the room.
And for both of us, we started focusing on ailments, like what was wrong, how we weren't feeling well.
Like my ear was bothering him and he wasn't feeling super well at the time.
And so we went on WebMD and we tried to diagnose ourselves and each other.
And
they used to have a little body where you could like put point to the part of the body that hurt and that was bothering you and so he diagnosed me with an ear infection or at least inner ear congestion and he ended up putting some oil from the kitchen that we found in my ear it turns out you can do this
it is it is a home remedy and it helped it helped my ear and i think we diagnosed him with walking pneumonia so we did this right when we were sent off to write the beach games episode and it ended up becoming our cold open
because we were probably looking for a cold open, and we're like, What about what we're doing right now?
There is so much about that audio clip that I love.
It's so relatable.
It's like whenever you sit down to do something, and it doesn't matter what it is.
I mean, there's this writing assignment, but all the different ways you procrastinate before you get to that thing.
Yes.
Well, Angela, you and I are working on a project that we can't say exactly what it it is, but it involves quite a bit of writing.
And
I, every time I sit down to write, I will write one sentence and then I will get up and get a snack.
And then I'll come back and write a sentence and then I'll be like, I need more coffee.
Yeah.
It's like the procrastination.
I loved that she shared that because I think my perception is always that creativity comes easy to people who are successful.
I always think like it must pour out of them.
And it is such a slog.
So I loved hearing that.
But then the other thing I loved was that their procrastination,
it got turned into a story idea.
Like it's worth it.
Like all of that nonsense, it produced something, right?
Well, I had a writing professor in college that used to always say, write what you know, write what you know, and it will be honest.
Oh, well, I just loved this opening.
And, you know, before they can really diagnose Michael, Pam walks in the office and says, David Wallace is on the phone.
Yeah.
It's very clear that David Wallace does not call very often.
No, it's a big deal.
Well, Michael gets on the phone with him.
Oh, my goodness.
Michael, what are you doing?
Michael, the way Michael talks to his bosses are even when he goes to New York to corporate, there there is such a casualness to how he relates to them that is so not work appropriate.
It's so true.
Well, we find out the reason that David Wallace is calling is because there is a job opening at corporate and he would like Michael to apply.
I can't believe he still wants Michael to apply after this phone call, but I think Michael has a very, very good sales record and a good record of connecting with people out in the sales world.
Yeah, he's a really good salesman.
Here's a little interesting tidbit, Jenna.
There was a scene that was deleted right after this phone call of David Wallace and Michael.
David Wallace calls Jim and tells Jim the same thing.
I saw that in the script.
And they chose not to use it.
They chose to like reveal it later that it's Jim calling.
It's Jim being more proactive in his life.
But there was a version where David calls Jim.
Yeah, I noticed that in the script because that scene on the beach with Jim and Karen calling David and kind of asking if they could go for the job as well, that was not in the original script.
So that must have been something that they added later.
Well, I remember when we were at the beach, there were a few scenes that sort of happened on the fly.
They were like kind of pitched in the moment.
And that was one of them.
Yeah.
So now it is beach day.
And at two minutes, 28 seconds, you get a fantastic look at Michael's outfit.
He clearly bought everything he could at sandals in the gift shop.
He's got a t-shirt.
He's got a hat.
He has a necklace that he probably bought there, a little Puka Shell necklace.
He's really ready and he tells everyone they better go potty
before they leave.
I'm just like, Michael's so ready to be a dad.
You know, he just is.
Bless his heart.
And you get to see everybody in casual attire.
And I just loved it.
Well, I noticed something about our wardrobe.
What's that?
Do you see how many layers we all have on?
Oh, well, that was for a reason.
Yep.
It was because we shot this episode in March, and we knew that that location was going to be perfectly warm and lovely during the day.
It turned out to be hot as F.
There was a heat wave.
There was this crazy freak March heat wave.
It was 98 degrees.
I wrote in my journal that it was 98 degrees our first day.
Yeah.
But then when the sun went down, it was freezing cold.
Yeah, we were in this valley.
So it was like these really huge swings of temperature.
Yeah, so Wardrobe tried to give us layers
to help take us between these two extreme temperatures.
And I noticed when I was looking at everyone's beach attire.
Their layers.
Well, you know what I noticed?
This is really, really fun to me.
Toby and Angela almost have on the same outfit.
What?
I did not notice that.
They're both wearing these beige tops.
They have huge beige floppy hats and like sort of like just like pants on, but like, and they're also both obsessed with sunscreen, both of them.
Well, I noticed that both Andy and Stanley are wearing a red polo shirt.
Oh,
yeah.
I did not catch that.
But guess what I did catch?
And I know it's your favorite moment of the day.
Is it a new plant at reception?
Because we need a sting for this.
New plant alert.
Three minutes, 32 seconds.
It is a red flowering plant.
There are big red flowers on this plant.
Okay, I'm sorry.
I see that as a metaphor because Pam is going to bloom in this episode.
That is so good.
Pam's going to flower.
She's going to bloom.
Well, we forgot to talk about how Michael has told Toby he can't come on the beach day.
Oh, that was so good.
Toby's disappointment.
He doesn't get to see you in a two-piece.
Jenna, I wrote, how did you get through that scene without laughing?
How did you do it?
Because when you were like, oh, thanks, I'm going to wear my two-piece.
His face is so good.
It's so funny.
We also didn't mention, and I'm tracking this, the Meredith flash count.
This is flash number two.
Yes.
Meredith has that great talking head where she explains that she wore her bathing suit to work.
Yeah.
And she lifts her shirt to show you and she's like, oh, shoot, it's in my purse.
Michael has a special assignment for Pam on Beach Day.
Of course, because she needs an assignment.
Yeah.
Michael tells her that she has to take notes.
all day on people's character, humor, charisma, and the indefinable qualities that they possess, but not their hotness per se.
I loved that line.
Yeah.
Per se.
Like you, she could add that if she wanted, but it's not 100% necessary, I guess.
But he also doesn't tell her why she has to do this.
No, he just needs to find out which of his employees has the skills to be a chicken with a head.
That's right.
That makes sense.
What?
What?
Well, let's see.
Now the gang is all going to board the bus.
Michael's got a big party bus to take take everyone to the beach.
Yeah, Crete's got a boogie board.
He's ready to go.
Yeah, Kevin says he just wants to lay on the beach and eat hot dogs.
It's literally all he's ever wanted.
Now, this bus that we're all riding in, we really rode in that.
That's how we got to the beach.
That day, but then the days after that, we drove ourselves.
Yes, that first day, though, they shuttled us from the stages, and the plan was that we would use the time to shoot the scene with Michael
but then we had extra time
yeah so we all started singing well listen I watched the DVD commentary for this and I thought it was so sweet because Harold Ramos is on the DVD commentary and and Jen Salada was on it as well and Jen was like you know Harold said I'd never been on a bus where we didn't sing
Yeah, he was like, everybody, when you get on a bus with people, you sing, right?
That was Harold Ramos, Being Genius.
And I do do know two other songs we sang, Jenna.
Do you remember?
What?
We sang Tiny Dancer.
Oh, yes.
And then we also sang Friends and we did the hand claps.
I remember that.
Yeah.
I didn't know all the words to that, so I just clapped.
Well, Angela, I have to say, I remember that vibe of us just singing our way to the beach that very first day.
And then, frankly, as we walked off the bus and got hit in the face with that 98-degree weather,
I feel like you see that play out on our faces.
I felt the same thing in re-watching this.
That shot when we're walking across the beach, we're all carrying our stuff.
Meredith is dragging a cooler.
Do you know the shot I'm talking about?
I took a photo of it because I think it's so amazing.
I took a screen grab.
That is all real.
Like
that struggle to drag that stuff across the beach and it was hot.
You guys have all been there.
You've been to that beach where you had to park super far away and lug your stuff in the heat and all your enthusiasm of getting there is so quickly like, oh God, here we go.
Well, Angela, you mentioned a little bit about the challenges of this location and Jen talked about that as well.
So Sam, will you play that?
Audio clip number eight.
It was a super fun episode, but it was really challenging.
I remember even the bathrooms weren't close to the location.
So, I mean, they were as close as they could be, but we needed a golf cart.
And so anytime anybody had to go to the bathroom, there was a golf cart taking people up a hill.
And I remember it was super hot and super cold all within the course of one day.
There were heat lamps and heat warm hand warmers.
And then it was really, really hot in the middle of the afternoon.
So
everything about this episode was a challenge.
And I feel like
we just, in order to get everything great, it just took a long time.
Oh, yeah.
It was slim pickings out there on the beach.
I mean, we had just enough room to shoot.
There was, I mean, I remember us just being huddled under like a little pop-up tent or something.
Yeah, I mean, when I was looking at the photos that I have,
there's nothing out there.
Once we were on the beach, we're sort of on our own because things couldn't be in the shot.
They did get us like some lawn chairs.
I have this great photo, Jenna, of Steve and I sitting next to each other, clearly between a scene.
And we're just like in lawn chairs, like just hanging out and talking.
I just love it.
and also this week jenna i brought my football
okay in real life i had it in my car and when they would have some setups to do in particular like when when they were setting up the hot dogs and all that i have these photos of us throwing the football on the beach Aww, we were having our own beach day.
So yes, it was sort of like there weren't bathrooms nearby and it was hot, but we were also just making our own fun.
And we always did that.
I felt like as a group, Jenna, we were really just kind of roll with it and make the best of it.
And I always love that about our show.
All right.
Well, let's see.
Where are we?
We've arrived.
We're yanking our stuff down the beach.
And Michael tells us it's time to start the fun tivities.
Such a great word.
I want to use it.
It's like nifty gifties.
Fun tivities.
Like, can you imagine if I did that like at a family reunion?
All right, everybody.
It's time for fun tivities.
I love it.
I know.
Personally.
You and I would both be excited.
We'd want to be on the fun Funtivities organizing group.
The Funtivities Committee.
The Funtivities Committee.
Or the Committee to Plan Fun Tivities.
Or what was wrong with my brain?
The Funtivities Organizing Group.
What?
Mama needs another cup of tea.
Well, Michael tells everyone that they have to divide into teams.
He picks the team leaders, quote unquote, randomly.
They are Jim, Dwight, Andy, and Stanley.
These guys are clearly clearly his top contenders for the job.
And he makes them choose their tribes.
Yes.
But not Pam.
And Pam cannot be included.
Pam can't be included.
And also, these are the team names.
Ready?
Yes.
We have Gryffindor, Voldemort, Blue, and USA.
It's incredible.
Yes.
Well, I loved all of these Harry Potter references.
You know, my son is right in in that age range where we've got Harry Potter over here.
And
we reached out to Jen about this.
Yeah.
This up with the Harry Potter thing.
Yeah, I was so curious.
I was like, was this like an inside joke in the writer's room?
And this is what Jen had to say.
We had a bunch of Harry Potter fans in the writer's room.
It even evolved to a situation where we had chopsticks hanging around the room from
takeout, you know, because we ate a lot of our meals in the writer's room.
And so one afternoon we decorated our chopsticks while we were probably pitching stories and jokes.
We each decorated chopsticks, and then we had, we were pretending that they were Harry Potter wands and we would do spells on each other, probably just comedy spells.
But we even had wand stands near the writer's room door that were just little thumbtacks, you know, spread apart so that we would rest our wands on them.
So everybody had their Harry Potter Potter chopstick wands and our wand stands.
And that sounds super dorky.
And I believe it is.
It was really fun.
Once again, what the writers were doing to procrastinate made it into a script.
Yeah, I feel like there's probably more of that than we will ever know.
Yes, exactly.
All right.
So at seven minutes, six seconds, Michael has his big survivor speech.
Now, you guys, we've shared this before, but our camera operators, Randall and Matt, both worked on survivor.
So this had been a little bit of an interesting callback for them, right, Jenna?
Well, yes.
And how prepared were they to lug cameras on their shoulders on a beach?
I mean, these guys, they were like, oh, I've come full circle.
Yeah, bring it.
So Michael says this.
A group of Americans will undergo the ultimate challenge one day,
14 strangers who work worked together, but only one survivor.
And they're all like, what?
What's about to happen here?
Well, what's about to happen is a spoon and egg race, Angela.
Oh, yeah.
Except the person with the egg will be blindfolded.
Also, Jenna, I don't know if you remember this, but poor Brian, they had him in the background.
He's just eating his egg.
He's eating, and it didn't make it on camera.
And I remember feeling so bad that Brian, in the course of this time, in the heat, had to eat hard-boiled eggs and hot dogs.
I was like, this poor guy.
And also, I think it's very funny that Michael hard-boiled the eggs.
Yes.
Because then if they fall off the spoon, it doesn't matter.
There's no point.
There's no point.
Now, I am wondering, and I don't know the answer.
I'm speculating, but I wonder if we had to hard boil the eggs because we couldn't risk having eggs break on the beach and sort of leaving behind that kind of debris.
Because when we left there, we had to make it seem like we'd never been there at all.
Not only that, but there's no way we could be dealing with wardrobe issues with egg yolk.
Yes, exactly.
But I like to think that it was just Michael's strange choice, but it was probably a very, very practical one.
Oh, I'm sure it was very thought out.
I wrote, what the heck?
Who is setting up these tiki torches?
Where did the blindfolds come in?
Who carried the eggs?
Who had the spoons?
What is happening?
Oh, Angela, I don't know if it's in the deleted scenes, but in the script, there was an extra scene where Dwight discovers these boxes of supplies that Michael has packed in the back of the bus.
And he's trying to get Michael to tell him what they are.
What are the torches for?
What is this for, Michael?
And Michael's like, stop badgering me.
That is in the deleted scenes, but it's just a bag where he's trying to zip up.
And Dwight's like, is that a sumo suit?
Are we going to do Japanese business exercises?
And, but none of the other supplies are seen.
And I guess my whole point is, fine, fine, Jenna.
He had the supplies on the back of the bus.
Who's setting them up?
Where's my B-roll footage of Dwight having to run around and stab tiki torches in the ground?
Well, I know I'm jumping ahead, but later we're going to see two guys setting a giant fire pit thing with a red pickup truck.
Who are these dudes?
I guess.
I don't know.
Michael had some assistance.
Okay, we just have to suspend belief a little bit, guys.
I guess so.
Well, during this egg race at nine minutes 54 seconds, you can fully see Mindy starting to laugh.
Oh, yeah.
When Ed is yelling at her, when she's afraid she's going to run into the big rock,
she starts laughing.
Yes.
And I personally love how Ryan
says to Dwight, if you keep shouting at me, I'm going to stop.
I'm going to stop this race.
And he doesn't stop shouting.
So he just takes off his blindfold and throws his spoon on the ground.
Now, Jenna, I think there's a portion of that scene.
That was an on-the-fly kind of scene.
And that was improvised dialogue between BJ and Rain.
That's what they talked about in the DVD commentary.
Do you remember that?
Yes, yes, that's right.
Well, now Pam has her talking head
where we see that she's taking her diligent notes.
And we had some fan questions from Lily S., Ashley Hildreth, and Madison Barton.
Jenna, did you really write the notes?
And if so, what did you write?
I'm with you.
I want to know too.
I'm like, I know my BFF and I'm guessing you actually were writing things down.
What were you doing?
I was taking diligent notes.
I knew it.
I knew it.
In character.
Yeah.
So there's a moment where I hold up my notebook and I tried to freeze on it to see if I could copy down what it said.
And
it was too fuzzy.
But you can see that I am writing.
You know, Dwight did this.
Dwight did that.
Jim did this.
I thought
that the best way to get through those scenes was to actually write down what was happening around me as if I was in character.
I figured you were.
So you can see Michael is losing people.
Like Stanley is so happy Phyllis dropped the egg.
He's going to go sit down.
He's going to do his crossword on his lawn chair.
Creed wanders off and in the background, we see him catch a fish with his bare hands.
Yeah.
Well, there's a really fun little tidbit about that on the DVD commentary.
Harold said, you guys, this is how we did it.
There was a rubber fish that they sort of submerged like in a bucket.
What you can't see is this rubber fish in water in a bucket.
And they really were able to cheat it because Creed's a little bit over the hill, you know?
Yeah.
And he reaches down real fast and he pulls it out.
But I thought Creed did a great job of selling that.
That was some good hand acting.
It was.
And Harold said, true to Hollywood form,
this gag, that rubber fish, costs $500.
Well, here's an interesting tidbit.
Fishing is not allowed on Lake Scranton.
Oh, that's true.
But maybe if you're Creed and you grab it with your bare hands well you know what that scene reminded me of angela what the edge oh good lord having to just get the fish you gotta
i mean i don't know if anyone actually catches a fish with their hand in the edge but i mean that's survivalist maybe the bear did
the bear did oh i won't bring up the bear i know it's i know it's a trigger for you i really think you need to watch the series alone about the survivalist in the woods because that's what it made me think of now.
Maybe I should.
Okay.
I'm currently really obsessed with The Chef Show.
The Chef Show.
The Chef Show.
Okay.
So Jon Favreau, who incidentally directed an episode of The Office in season nine, we'll get to it.
Yeah.
He has this movie called Chef, and it's so good.
Came out several years ago.
It's one of my favorite movies.
Well, he is obsessed with bread baking and cooking.
And so he has started this series called The Chef Show, where he goes and he interviews different chefs while they make their signature dishes.
I can't get enough of it.
You must love it.
Now, this is a total tangent, but Isabelle and I love the greatest British bake-off.
We love it so much.
And it's, it's, it checks off all my boxes.
It's like in the beautiful English countryside.
Yeah.
And I just love, I love everything, like, especially when things don't go well.
They'll say, like, it was a bit of a disaster, wasn't it?
Yes, quite far apart.
Yep.
I know.
So, matter of fact.
I love that show as well.
That show is the show that got me to start making bread.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's my bread origin.
Your bread origin story.
My gosh.
We are very off topic.
We are very off topic and we have a lot to cover.
We've got to get to this hot dog eating contest.
Let's do it.
We have a scene.
Michael comes up to Pam and hands her 800 hot dogs that she needs to have ready in 10 minutes.
What was Michael's budget for this day?
I don't know.
Where did he get the money for this?
Just the 800 hot dogs alone.
I know.
How much does that cost?
Can someone do some math on that?
800 hot dogs.
I need to know how much money Michael spent on hot dogs.
Well, also during that scene, and this is slightly off topic, but also not, we got some mail about it.
At 11 minutes, 27 seconds, you can see my bra strap oh
and a lot of people wanted to know why am i wearing a bra
and a bathing suit
so here are my layers for the day guys i had on a bra because i like wearing them that's why i have a bra on because i didn't want to wear just a flimsy swimming suit top i like some support On top of the bra, I'm wearing my wardrobe swimming suit top, which I loved because Carrie Bennett, she came up with this idea that if it was like a halter suit, we would get an indication of a bathing suit, even though you never see me in the bathing suit.
Right.
I thought it was a great idea.
Right.
Then I have on a tank top, and the reason I'm wearing the tank top is to cover up the bra strap.
We had a little bit of a fail here at 11 minutes, 27 seconds.
And then I'm wearing a hoodie.
Those were my layers.
So I guess somehow Pam cooked these hot dogs.
I mean, she has has a glance to camera where she's like, I don't know, maybe I didn't cook them.
There is a deleted scene between Pam and Michael where she is grilling the hot dogs and he comes over and he's like, speed it up, Pam.
Why aren't these done yet?
And you're like, because there's 800 of them.
Amazing.
Amazing.
So now it's time for the big hot dog eating contest.
Where, by the way, Michael takes credit for cooking up the hot dogs.
I know, I know.
And there is a wonderful deleted scene, Jenna.
It wasn't scripted.
It was a collective improv moment.
When Michael says, dip it in the water so it will slide down your gullet more easily.
Our whole table said that's what she said.
I remember that.
And it didn't make it in, but it's so good.
That's because that line from Steve was an improvisation.
He, he, in the script, he yells at Phyllis, dip it in the water, dip it in the water.
But that's all that was scripted.
So Steve in the moment added the so it'll slide down your gullet faster.
And then we all.
How can you not?
That was a layup.
No, that was a softball.
Isn't a layup and a softball sort of the same idea?
I don't know.
A layup?
After I've thought about it, I'm going to give this to softball because a softball involves more than one person, right?
So a softball, one person sends a softball to another who then hits it out of the park.
Whereas with a layup, it's you do it on your own.
You do it on your own.
And I mean, a layup through a crowd is not easy to do if there's a bunch of guys in the paint.
Let me throw some basketball at you.
But maybe if you've got a.
If you think a layup is
when's the last time you did a layup?
I did one this week.
What is it to you?
A layup is when you dribble up to the basket and you put it in
on your own.
But I'm telling you, if you're doing a layup,
you know, and you're being
a layup and you're being guarded, but then there's the breakaway layup, right?
If you steal the ball and you got the whole back of the court to yourself and you're like, yeah,
and you do your layup, and then sometimes you want to dunk on your layup.
Hard for me because I'm 5'1.
What's happening right now?
I don't know.
Where are we?
What is what?
Wait.
Do you watch basketball?
Are you like a basketball fan?
Where's all this lingo coming from?
I play basketball.
I play JV.
And then when everyone got really tall, I had to stop playing because I was too short.
And we had a really good point guard.
So then I became a basketball cheerleader.
And I was also the manager on the basketball team.
And I was also a mascot one basketball season.
And I love basketball.
And we have a hoop in our driveway.
And we play all the time.
And I have a fantastic outside shot.
And I often win it horse.
Angela, I'm clapping because people couldn't see me bowing down to you.
But I mean, I'm speechless.
I did not know this about you.
And also, I, I mean, I defer to you here.
If this were a debate and someone had to win, you won.
I mean, that was just.
I want you to know, it's not out yet, but I have this Advil commercial where I have to shoot baskets.
And I made like 13 baskets in a row.
And one of them they used in the actual shot.
And I was so happy that they showed the whole shot because I was like, I made that sucker.
You were Brian Baumgartner while shooting the basketball episode.
You have like a secret basketball skill that no one knew about.
Don't you remember the basketball hoop by our trailers and we would play horse?
I was always out there with the guys playing horse.
I do remember that and I have a picture of it.
Yeah.
Well, listen, I feel like we've gone off topic.
What do you think?
Wait, we're back to the the hot dogs, guys.
Back to the hot dogs.
Andy wins the competition.
But this was an arduous scene for everyone to shoot.
I was really lucky, Jenna, because I said my character is a vegetarian.
She's not going to be eating these.
I made a really big plea about that.
But
poor Brian and Ed.
Leslie, all those guys were shoving hot dogs in their face.
And Jenna, do you remember they were starting to gag?
Do you remember that?
Yeah.
You know, we got a fan question from Caitlin Mulvihill who said, How many times did you have to film the hot dog contest scene?
And did you have to eat all the hot dogs every time?
I just remember it took a long time.
It was a lot of angles, a lot of coverage, a lot of reaction shots.
We were there for like half a day.
Yeah, and Jen, we asked Jen,
what was the hardest stunt during Beach Games?
And this is what she had to say.
I think the answer for what was the hardest stunt of this episode depends on who you ask.
I think for the actors, it was possibly the hot dog eating contest.
I'm curious what you guys think.
I remember Spit Buckets.
I could be wrong about that, but I'm fairly certain there were a bunch of Spit Buckets.
But there was some actual eating of hot dogs.
And I think Ed Helms ate an enormous amount of hot dogs, if I remember correctly.
I think he was going really hard for winning the contest.
So
I think that that was probably a lot of people's answers.
For me, it was getting the shot during the Michael talking head of Andy floating away at sea.
Yes, we will get to that.
She sent in some more amazing stuff about that stunt, but I do remember the spit bucket, Sange.
I do too.
And one of the things, you guys, on some shows, the way they shoot, you know when you're on camera.
And when you're off camera, you don't have to sort of participate.
You can kind of not eat, right?
But the way we shot this, there was a huge group shot, right?
There's a camera that's capturing everything.
So these guys had to eat on every tape because they never knew when the camera was specifically on them or not.
And I remember when they would yell, cut, immediately, like the prop guys would run over with buckets and these guys would all start spitting in the buckets because they couldn't have the buckets on the ground.
There was nowhere to hide them, right?
And so the prop guys would run over with the buckets.
And Ed said this thing in the DVD commentary.
He said, first of all, spitting out food that I've been chewing and holding in my mouth,
the action of spitting out this chewed food would activate my gag reflex.
So I'd start gagging.
And he said, but then on top of that, this bucket that they would bring around, several other people had spit their food out into.
He said, just all of it.
All of it.
He said, like, they were all getting so grossed out.
Well, this scene really reminded me of that birthday cake scene from Meredith's birthday,
where we all ate milk.
Hey, chocolate chip ice cream cake.
I can't eat it to this day.
I can't eat it.
Same.
We ate so much of it because we never knew when we were on camera.
And then, like that,
I feel like there's barely any footage in this episode of these guys eating the hot dogs.
It does not accurately reflect how much hot dog eating happened.
Not at all.
These poor guys.
And Jim isn't eating the hot dogs.
There's a deleted scene where he brought a tuna salad and he is not even participating.
So John did not have to do this.
And neither did I.
And neither did Steve.
Oh, God.
Well, Jenna, so Andy wins with 13 hot dogs, right?
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
I just looked up this year the hot dog eating contest, the Nathan's hot dog eating contest for 2020.
Did you too?
Did you too?
Because I've been to the hot dog eating contest.
What?
Yeah.
When?
In 2011.
What?
How?
I went to Coney Island.
Lee and I were in New York.
We were looking for something to do over July 4th weekend.
And you went to it?
We saw that the Coney Island hot dog eating, we got on the subway and we rode it out there.
I was very pregnant.
I was like seven months pregnant.
Oh, my gosh.
I did not know any of this.
See, you think you know your best friend.
And then all of a sudden she's going going to hot dog eating contests and she knows how to play basketball.
Yeah, exactly.
And I, here's my memory: it was super exciting.
We only saw the men's contest.
I saw Joey Chestnut win the hot dog eating contest.
He won again this year.
Yeah, and he broke his world record this year.
His nickname is Jaws, Joey Jaws Chestnut.
Yeah, this year, because we both looked it up, Joey Chestnut ate 75 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes.
And Jenna in the female category, Miki Sudo ate 48 and a half hot dogs in 10 minutes and now has the new world record.
Yeah, Joey Chestnut has won every year since 2007, with the exception of one year.
In 2015, Matt Stoney won.
But Joey has won every year since.
And Miki has won every year since 2014.
I will say one thing.
When I went to the hot dog eating contest, I mentioned I was very pregnant.
I had to pee and there were no restrooms.
And all of the businesses, because there's such a giant influx of people that come down, they all have signs that say no public restroom, no public restroom, no public restroom.
You can't just go in and use their bathroom.
But I found an employee at the Dunkin' Donuts who sneaked me in and let me use the bathroom there.
And I still to this day want to say thank you so much for helping me relieve my pregnant bladder that day.
Thank you, nice person at Dunkin' Donuts on Coney Island in 2011.
You know, if you were Meredith, like the deleted scene, you would have just gone and squat in the bushes right by the bus.
Oh, no.
That's poor Kate.
Kate in this episode.
Oh, my God.
Well, maybe, Angela, on that note, we should take a break here and both use the restroom.
And then we'll come back.
With some sabotage.
Sandwich.
No, I said sandwich earlier.
This time I'm saying sabotage.
So you know Boarshead has been dedicated to crafting premium deli meats and cheeses for more than 120 years.
They know what they're doing.
And you're going to love their Boarshead Sweet Bees Honey Barbecue Glazed Chicken Breast.
It's honey drizzled and barbecue sizzled.
It's got all the things.
It's so good.
I love some barbecue.
And are you ready for this?
It is slow roasted and crafted with layers of proprietary glaze and a zesty dry rub, then infused with the delicate sweet wildflower honey.
Boar's head, sweet bees, honey barbecue, glazed chicken breast.
It is perfectly balanced.
It is all the flavors you want.
Barbecue and real hickory smoke.
You can get it sliced fresh at the deli.
Do you hear how excited I am about it?
Get Get me that sandwich right now.
I love it.
And it's made with wildflower honey, which just gives you that little bit of sweetness.
And then you've got barbecue.
You've got some smoked paprika, some garlic powder.
Come on, get me to the deli counter.
Try sweet bees today and experience the flavor of authentic barbecue at your local Boarshead deli counter.
Boarshead, committed to craft since 1905.
This show is sponsored by Liquid IV.
So you guys know I play a lot of tennis.
I love it.
And it gets pretty hot here in the summer and it gets really hot on that tennis court.
So one of the things I always bring with me are my packets of Liquid IV.
New Liquid IV's Energy Multiplier.
Sugar-Free Hydrating Energy.
It is scientifically formulated to support physical energy, hydration, focus, mood, and social stamina.
How about that?
Just one stick and 16 ounces of water hydrates better than water alone.
Powered by LIV HydroScience, an optimized ratio of electrolytes, essential vitamins, and clinically tested nutrients that turn ordinary water into extraordinary hydration.
Here are two of my favorite flavors I've got in my tennis bag right now: guava and lemon lime.
Hot tip for me, get the variety pack because then you get a lot of different flavors.
Ditch the glitch with zero sugar and zero crash from Liquid IV.
Tear, poor, live more.
Go to liquidiv.com and get 20% off your first order with code Office Ladies at checkout.
That's 20% off your first order with code Office Ladies at liquidiv.com.
Okay,
we are back.
And,
oh, Angela, I love this scene so much.
I rewound it and watched it twice.
I do love this scene.
It's one of my favorites.
So this is the scene where Dwight and Angela have tiptoed away from the group and they're having a private conversation about sabotage.
Dwight would like Angela to sabotage her team.
Yes, the ancient art, like Dutch sabotage.
I was like, what?
This scene was so fun to film.
First of all, I remember Jen and Harold and Rain and I trying to figure out where Dwight and I would be, where it would really look like we were away from everyone.
And also that we would think that we got away with it, right?
Yes.
And that the spy shot would have to be far enough away.
So we did sort of climb.
There were these little sand dunes, Jenna.
Do you remember?
They were sort of small and they had like big, sort of like tall kind of grass growing out of them.
Yeah, like reedy grass coming out of them.
Itchy, itchy, reedy grass.
Like it kind of remember.
It kind of cut you a little if it touched your skin.
But we we sort of tucked back in there for this scene and there are some great bloopers and it's mostly just me laughing because I could not get through it when he said sabotage and I said sandwich every single time.
The absurdity of these two.
Not to mention, I could hear Jen Slada laughing from her little group of bushes where her and Harold were hiding.
And I would be like, Jen, stop laughing.
I just got it together.
And now Jen is laughing.
And you couldn't see her.
It was just like this little clump of bushes that was like,
oh my gosh.
I love it so much.
I love the end when Dwight says, if Michael organizes a group hug, stand next to me.
Jen told me she loved writing for Dwight and Angela, that she loved their sort of suppressed love for one another.
Yeah.
Oh, it's such a good scene.
Such a good scene.
One thing about the scene that made it tricky that you might not think of is that this is one of the few times where Dwight and I have to be standing facing one another,
and you really see our height difference.
I knew it was a wide shot because it was a spy shot, but now it makes me think it was also that wide to fit you both in frame.
Yes.
And the other thing, the other thing to point out, which I thought was really great, is you can really see that Dwight is wearing a Cooper Seafood t-shirt.
Hey,
local Scranton reference there.
I know.
Well, next up is the sumo competition.
Oh my goodness, Jenna.
Where to begin?
Where to begin?
Where to begin?
I'll tell you, I did one of those like a goofa.
Is that the word where you laugh out loud?
Like it just like it takes over your body and you can't even suppress it.
When I saw John and his little toothpick legs walk out in that sumo suit, look at his legs.
If you haven't, look at his tiny little legs sticking out of that sumo suit and his little head popping up.
It made me laugh so hard.
Now, I know that those guys were just so hot in those suits.
Oh, yeah.
They were dying.
And we had these little fans that they would try to like cool them off with, but I'm sure that they were just
so sweaty.
They also had the best time in those.
They were like, they all turned into children and they were loving it.
I have to say.
They couldn't wait to run at each other and like throw themselves at each other and all of it.
They were having so much fun.
But I do remember between takes, they could not sit down.
Yes.
They could not sit down and people would run over with like little umbrellas and these fans to try to cool them off.
And Jenna, I was hanging out with Rain and I have this great photo that one of the things I loved is that I could lean on Rain's belly like I had something to prop myself up on.
So I have this photo and it's him and I casually talking, but I'm resting myself on his sumo belly.
That's incredible.
Well, we had a fan question from Freya McKenzie and Jesse Madgison.
Is it true that Rain Wilson actually put Leslie David Baker in the hospital while shooting beach games?
Yes.
What happened was that during all this sumo wrestling, Leslie got sand in his eyes and they tried to flush it out, but they couldn't.
And I remember he had to leave set.
And I don't know if he went to the hospital or to an eye doctor, but he had a scratched cornea.
Yeah, I thought they took him to a local, like a, the clinic, the, the nearest hospital.
Every single day when you're filming, whether it's on set or location, they put in the call sheet the location where you're filming and the nearest hospital's location.
Yeah.
So they researched that ahead of time for this reason.
So I think they took him to the nearest, whatever that was, clinic, right?
Yeah.
And he was in quite a bit of pain.
And he was like, no, it's still in there.
There's something wrong.
You know, that moment in your body where you're like, it's not right.
Something's not right.
And it had, in fact, scratched his cornea.
And they treated him.
And then he came back and finished filming because he's such a trooper.
Well, I've had this this happen to me, Angela.
I got a piece of sand in my eye by using a face scrub.
Oh, Lord.
Sand in it.
And I got a piece in my eye and I was like,
it feels like something's in your eye when you scratch your cornea, but I couldn't find it.
So I went to an eye doctor and I had scratched my cornea.
So I.
I feel for Leslie.
It is a very, it is a not fun feeling.
I have never scratched my cornea, but one time I was eating jalapeno potato chips because I love them so much.
And I bit into it kind of aggressively and the jalapeno dust off the chip went into my eyes and
it was very painful.
Why are you laughing?
This really happened.
I bit into the chip and then I was like,
Why am I laughing?
How could you listen to that story and not laugh?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Okay, we should probably get back on topic.
Yeah.
Well, here's the thing.
I remember Leslie leaving set, but I don't remember when exactly it happened or how it happened.
I just know he got sand in his eye.
All right.
This is what I think happened.
I watched the deleted scenes and there's a moment.
It's not in the episode where Dwight is wrestling with Stanley and knocks him to the ground and is like, take that, old man.
And he kind of kicks at the sand, right?
And I'm like, yes, I'm remembering.
Yes.
And I think then Rain felt really bad because he realized in that moment,
that's when we thought it happened.
Yes.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
Well, this was not the only injury from this episode.
Ed hurt his finger during the sumo wrestling.
Do you remember that?
I think he like lost a fingernail or something.
He was like, sorry, it makes me laugh so hard.
I shouldn't laugh, but it's when that moment, if you guys watch it, when Andy and Dwight really start going at each other, like Dwight walks over and he's eating a sandwich, even though he's eating all these hot dogs, he walks over and then they just start going at each other and Ed is like kind of flailing his arms at him.
Somehow in this tussle,
Ed broke his fingernail, but he said he broke it really bad.
Like it ripped.
I think it like ripped below the.
That's what I remember.
Like it was gruesome.
It was gruesome.
But Ed was like yelling in his sumo suit.
He was yelling, stop, stop.
And all he could get out was, I broke my nail.
And people were like, okay, did you break your fingernail?
And he's like, no, guys, I broke my nail.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
But he didn't leave set.
No, he didn't leave set.
They came over and they, but there was that moment when someone was like, what happened?
Like, Ed broke his nail.
And he's like, no, it's more than just a broken nail.
And then they, they wrapped it up.
Well, now, Angela, we're gonna get into a big moment this was huge for our show this is a huge stunt you you have to remember our show never left a little tiny office so we've got to break down we've got two big things coming up we've got this andy floating away and then the coals so jenna let's start with andy okay andy walks over to the water and we had a fan question about this from ally joe higginbotham who said when Andy walks to the lake, he has something yellow in his hand.
What is he holding?
And what is he planning to do with it at the shore?
Well, he's holding a
bandana.
He's holding a yellow bandana.
Michael had handed these out in the egg race, and that's what everyone had used to cover their eyes.
And Andy is holding his yellow bandana from the egg race, and he's going to...
He hopes to dip it in the water to then maybe wrap it around his neck to cool himself off.
This was the idea.
Yes, but instead he falls in the water and starts floating away.
When he fell in the water, you know, I wasn't too far off because my character witnesses this.
Yes.
And there's a take that didn't make it that he literally went, he like rolled, Jenna.
He like rolled into the water.
But they used this take because it was more clear why he was going down there.
He's trying to, trying to hang that bandana in the water, trying to balance.
Well, let me say, and we got another frequently asked question from Candice Kelso, Michael Lung, Olive Taylor, and Phoebe Bono.
Was that really Ed in the water, or was that a stunt double?
Guys, that was Ed in the water.
Ed did it all.
I don't know that they offered him a stunt double.
I don't know.
Kent told me they offered him a stunt double, but Ed insisted on doing all of the floating in the water himself.
He was out there floating for over 45 minutes.
And I'm thinking
maybe when he was like, oh no, I'll fall in the water.
Like maybe he didn't realize what that all entailed.
Yeah.
And perhaps having a stunt double on the side to complete some of the very far away floating.
But guys, that is Ed the whole time
floating out there.
Not only in the day, but then he had to do it again at night.
This was two different shoots for him in the water, a day scene and a night scene.
Now, when he was out there at night, he did have a thin wetsuit on underneath all that sumo gear to keep him warm.
So they did think of that.
But before we get too far into this stunt, Angela, we also had fan questions from Rebecca Gonzalez, Connor N, and Maura Anderson who said, Angela, how did you make it through the scene of Andy floating away?
It was so hard.
It was, that's what she said.
Oh, boy.
I'm sorry.
It was really,
it was really difficult.
Difficult not to laugh.
Really difficult, especially because Ed was improvising a little bit.
As he floated away, some of that dialogue was not scripted.
So, you know, when I'm like, I don't really understand what it is you're saying to me, that was scripted.
But then Ed, Ed was physically floating away and he was dealing with the elements and he improvised this line.
Look at what I'm doing and go tell somebody it.
I love that line so much.
That was Ed improvising.
That is awesome.
I know.
So it was really hard.
And I didn't want to laugh because poor Ed is floating out in that water.
You know what I mean?
Yes, if you laugh, you ruin that moment.
Yes.
And he has to float longer.
I was working hard.
Oh, the pressure of working hard not to laugh.
Well, we asked Chen about Ed in the water, and here's what she had to say.
Oh, shooting the Andy floating away scenes was really fun.
I love that part of the script.
I love when Angela pretends that she doesn't understand
what he's saying.
That was so much fun to write.
I
remember that Ed was like in the sumo suit and then there was a rope attached to him and he was being pulled by a boat.
And then at a certain point, the boat would leave him and then he would just drift.
But there was also a current.
I believe the water was also cold and he had to keep his head up.
And I remember that it was a challenging thing because his head would sort of get lost and it would just like go under unless he helped he put his neck up and just try to hold it up.
So I think it was a difficult thing.
Also, the timing of the boat
and the timing was trying to get it on camera with Michael's talking head was difficult.
So I remember that Ed was like a real trooper and there were a lot of discussions about like how far out he should be at sea because we wanted to see him.
We didn't want to be too obvious that it was him and that Michael might see him, but we didn't want him to be so far away that he was this tiny little dot.
So Ed was in the water for quite a while while we tried to work this out.
And the other thing I remember, which is crazy to say now, but there was a safety meeting right before it.
And
feel like the very beginning of the safety meeting, like Ed was Ed was there, but like he was just getting there because everything was so rushed.
And I think the safety person said one thing, like as Ed was approaching, that I wasn't sure Ed clocked.
And I had this moment of should I tell him or not.
And I remember the safety guy talking about water snakes.
And I was like, oh my god, oh my god, do I repeat this to Ed?
Do I not repeat this to Ed?
I don't think I repeated it to Ed because like he was going to be in this water.
it was going to be very cold.
Um,
I thought,
would I want to know about water snakes before I got into the water in a sumo suit or not?
So, um, yeah, I think I made that decision.
Tell me if you think that was the correct decision to make.
Anyway, so there were a lot of challenges of shooting that.
There were no snake events during the shooting of that sequence.
Uh, and I thought Ed did a phenomenal job, and so did Angela.
I'm just in love with that sequence
of
events but it was challenging to shoot.
Wow.
Ed.
Ed.
Possibility of water snakes.
Oh my God.
Oh boy.
Jen Salada.
Well now Jen mentioned in her clip that they would have to pull Ed behind a boat to get him in place.
So Kent told me that power boats were not allowed on the lake.
So they had to have a stunt coordinator in a rowboat i remember jenna i remember rowing him yes can you imagine if you're somewhere else at this park and you're just hiking or maybe you're riding a horse from the equestrian center and you look out onto the lake and you see a man in a rowboat rowing another man by a rope who's in a sumo suit what are you thinking when you see that i don't know what goes to here i don't know i don't know are you worried what are you thinking So I watched this play out because we would have to reset Ed to that spot where we would have dialogue.
And inevitably, he'd float away, right?
And then they would, the guy, there he was.
And I had to make sure I didn't look at the rowboat guy, right?
You know, like I couldn't.
have my art, my eyes dart away.
But off in the periphery of my vision was this guy in a boat.
And he would row and pull Ed.
Ed had a harness suit on under the sumo suit and they put through the arm of this the sumo suit a fishing line yeah and this guy would pull Ed and as he did Jenna I would see water break around his body you know like
something in the water
and Ed said that a majority of that water as he was being pulled would flush through the suit oh my god And out his neck.
Well, Kent told me if you look carefully in the Michael talking head where Ed is floating in the background, you will see that there's a pretty strong current in the water, but Ed is not moving.
That is because
at that point, the only way to keep him in the shot was to just keep him attached to the boat.
And so he said, if you look for it,
he's very oddly staying in one one place while a pretty heavy current is going underneath him so so insane
angela i also got the story about these sumo suits from carrie bennett our wardrobe designer oh let's hear it so she said that this was one of the most difficult costume challenges she had for our show.
She had to create these inflatable sumo suits, but because she knew Andy would end up floating away in it, whatever she put them in had to be safe for him to float on water.
So she said, as soon as she read the script, she immediately went to Greg and said, I cannot design a costume that will allow someone to float on water.
I need a stunt person to help me.
So
she got together with the stunt person and they realized that kind of like what Jen said, the biggest challenge was keeping his head from going underwater because she was like, his his body would float but the head would go under
so
that is why the guys are wearing those crazy headpieces in the episode those were custom made right yes yeah she said what if i made a floaty helmet in the shape of like a sumo wrestler's bun and the bun is actually a floating device brilliant
so she designed this extra bit of safety for Ed with this floaty bun.
And before we shot, they went over to Kent Sabornak's pool and they put a stunt guy in the suit and they tested it out.
And it worked.
Oh my gosh.
You were talking about what happens when, like, someone's riding a horseby and Ed's floating and there's a guy with a rowboat.
What about Kent's family?
Hey, Dad, what's who's in the pool?
Don't worry about it.
It's a little thing for work.
Totally.
Totally.
Also, when these guys in the writer's room wrote this sequence,
they had no idea the paces that they would put people through to make it realized on screen.
It was just a funny idea.
Oh, you know what would be funny?
They wrestle in these sumo suits and then Ed falls in the water and floats away.
I mean, the amount of effort that went into making that happen.
I know.
I think about this all the time with our scripts.
Like, oh, it'll be funny.
We'll have a funeral for a bird, but we need a specialized tiny coffin made.
Yeah.
And several dead birds to choose from.
And then Jim and Karen sneak off and they're sneaking off to call David.
But Pam doesn't know that, but you know, she saw them walk away.
You know she did.
She's aware.
Yeah.
And they have this moment where they, you know, call David.
Jim says he wants to be considered.
And then Karen does.
And then Jim is like teasing her because she, she sort of fumbles her words, right?
When she calls David.
Yeah, I didn't think that was cool boyfriend behavior, I have to say.
Oh, right.
Cause she's she's trying to leave a professional message, right?
She's speaking to David Wallace, and she's saying she'd like to be considered for this job.
And he's kind of heckling her during this phone call.
And
I, and he's distracting her.
And I know I think it was meant to be kind of like cute and playful, but
I don't know.
If I'm making a professional phone call, I don't appreciate being heckled.
Don't mess with me.
Don't mess with me when I'm making an important boss lady call.
Or is he trying to sabotage?
He might be trying to sandwich this moment.
He tried to sandwich it.
Well, we also mentioned earlier that this was an added scene.
Originally, these phone calls happened in the office before we went to Beach Day, but they made a change and they decided it was better to reveal this information later.
But
this led to problems.
Like we already had such a packed day and here we were trying to add little moments and add little scenes.
And Jen actually talked about this as one of the challenges, just trying to get everything shot on these days.
Cause, you know, You have so many things you have to shoot in daylight and then the sun goes down.
You can't make it stay out.
Also, these were such big, ambitious days.
And if we would go past the allotted time, we would get into overtime, which was incredibly expensive for the show because they would have to pay the crew overtime, the actors overtime.
And so Kent Sabornak, our line producer, was trying to keep us on our day.
And he was having to check in with Jen and Harold quite a bit about it.
Yeah, here's what she had to say about that.
And I remember Kent being very patient with us and giving us extra time and adding in cushions, but it was still really difficult to get everything that we needed to get done.
I mean, we were going very fast and working incredibly efficiently.
It was just hard.
And I remember there was one moment where Kent had already given us a cushion and maybe even a second cushion.
And then we were about to
go over it.
We were almost done.
We were so close to being done.
But Kent called and I got the call and we were about ready to say, you know, Harold was about ready to call action.
And Kent is like frustrated because he wants us to be done because he's given us extra time and he wants us to be done and completely understandable.
But I knew that if I kept talking to Kent, we were going to be slowed down by 10 seconds at that point.
And that 10 seconds would allow us to finish the shot.
So Ken is talking to me, and I very gently and gingerly just put the phone down on a chair, and we got the last shot, and we were done.
It was definitely this weird moment of like, this is the producer of your show telling you that you need to stop shooting and I realize I can either talk to him about the fact that we're going to stop shooting or get the shot.
So
we got the shot.
It was definitely one of those moments of like, ha, hope that was cool.
Angela, I think that what Jen is talking about is a little bit of sabotage.
Is she sabotaging?
She's not sabotaging.
She's sabotaging her phone call
so that they could get these shots.
I think it's pretty amazing.
Like I can sort of just visualize Kent going on and on, like, Jen, you can't keep adding scenes.
And she just set the phone down and was like, yeah, do it one more time.
One more time while he's venting.
Yes, exactly.
Well, you guys, part of Kent's job, he has such a hard job because he answers to both Greg, who is the creative voice of the show.
And, you know, his job is to make all of Greg's dreams come true creatively.
But he also answers to the network, who has given him a budget and a timetable.
And you can't spend more money than this.
And everything that you said earlier, Angela, about staying on time, because Kent will look at a script and he will try to estimate.
based on conversations with the director and the writer and the crew how long each scene will take so he'll say all right we need three hours to film Ed at sea but we I'm only going to give 45 minutes to Jim and Karen in the sand.
That's right.
And if any of these things go over even 10 minutes, they have to steal 10 minutes from another scene.
And it becomes just this logistical nightmare.
And Kent has to keep an eye on all of it.
And it is a vicious domino effect, too.
Once you get off, it just spirals your whole day.
I feel like this is like a great metaphor.
for partnerships because I feel like in every family, there's one person that's a little bit of the big thinker dreamer.
On vacation, we'll do all of this.
And then there's the person in the relationship that's like, I've allotted $80
for things at the gift shop.
That's all we're spending at the gift shop.
Okay.
Because if we spend more than $80 at the gift shop, we can't do that extra bungee cord thing that you all want to do.
Yes.
That is exactly Kent.
He is that person.
Keep us on budget.
Keep us on time.
Yep.
Well, now, Angela, it is time for the coal walk.
Talk about a big scene.
This was a big evening for us.
It was a very ambitious shoot.
We had a lot to cover.
We could not start till it got dark.
Yep.
And there was a lot of prep.
I don't know if you remember, Jenna, how they made those Kohl's.
Do you remember?
I do.
It was multi-layered.
And we had a lot of people ask this question about how did you make the coals?
We got mail from Ellie Troutman, Chandra M., Jamie S., Heather Donnelly, Renee R., and many others.
They wanted to know, how did the props department create the hot coals?
They looked so real.
Because guys, these were not real coals.
Yes, so we could not have a huge fire here, you guys.
We were allowed to have the tiki torches and little small flames.
For example, when the when the pile of wood bursts into flames, that's all special effects.
That was not at all a fire.
They put that in in post because there were fire fire regulations at this particular park, right?
Well, there are fire regulations in California in general.
Yes, yes, absolutely.
So, Harold Ramos talked a little bit about this coal fire pit on the DVD commentary.
He said they started first of all by digging a big hole in the ground, and then they buried in the ground a light box, just a big box that lit up.
And then they put on top of the light box these little yellow and orange gels to make it look like a flame.
And then on top of those light gels, on top of the light box, they put little lava rocks.
And then running on either side of this hole in the ground, they had put two gas lines with very small little flickers of real fire that popped out of the ground.
Yes.
And because there was real fire as part of the coal walk, we had a very big safety meeting about that.
One of our biggest.
Yeah.
For sure.
It's particularly important because, as you know, Rain,
as Dwight, is going to walk onto these hot coals, stand there, and then fall to the ground.
And that was real fire next to him.
On either side of him, yes.
And I remember when Rain did that, one of the most painful things for Rain was being barefoot on the lava rocks.
It hurt.
It's like, it's like stepping on a Lego.
You know how that feels.
I do know how it feels because I did it as well.
Yeah.
In fact, I'll say that people have mentioned that I look like my feet really hurt after I walk across the hot coals and they've wondered if I really walked on hot coals.
No, my feet were sore and bruised from having to run across lava rocks over and over again.
Yeah.
Like my feet did kind of hurt.
Throw a bunch of like hard Legos on the ground and run back and forth over them.
That's as good as a coal walk right there.
A Lego walk.
If you want that experience, you can do it at home.
Michael wanted everyone to walk over the hot coals.
We said he has to go first.
And Steve's hesitation as Michael to go over those coals, Jenna, was so brilliant.
His whole body posture, the expression on his face, and he improvised the line: the mind has to wrap around the foot.
I love that that was an improvisation.
I did not look that up.
I love knowing that.
And we have a callback to this whole runner of Angela being grossed out by Kevin's feet.
Yes.
She's like,
I am not going to go after you and your gross feet.
And he's like, Angela, it's like a thousand degrees.
One of my favorite moments in this whole sequence is when Michael says to the group, he's so disappointed that no one has walked across the coals except sort of Dwight.
And he says, you know what?
It's clear to me that if I had to name my replacement today, it would be Mr.
Outside Hire.
And then Angela says, or Mrs.
Outside Hire.
And Michael is like, yes,
or that.
He's so condescending.
It made me laugh so hard.
I know, but a little bit of Angela's sass there.
Like I pointed my finger.
Yeah.
Wait, Jenna, we do have a background catch.
We can't pass up.
It's too good.
Say it.
While Michael's going on and on about who won't walk across the coals and he's like, and Andy is never here today.
It pans past us to the water.
Andy has floated into the marsh.
He's stuck on his back.
Poor Ed, in the dark, in the lake.
And at 19 minutes, 55 seconds, you can see his wetsuit on his arm.
Oh.
Yeah, on his arm.
His arm is like extended out of his sumo suit, and you can see the beige wetsuit that he had to put on because it was so cold.
And then people wrote in, Angela, and they said, How come in season nine, when Pam is crying, the documentary crew helps her, but when Andy is floating away at night, they just turn off the camera lights and walk away.
I know.
I know.
That's one of the questions Jack had.
My stepson, he was like, why did the camera crew not help him?
I know.
And I was like, you know what?
At that moment, they were like, we can't disturb the natural course of the story.
Right.
Let's just document it.
Well, we're coming up to this big moment.
There is a huge moment about to happen for Pam.
Yeah.
She wants to run across the Coles and Michael says no.
No.
Yeah.
And then he moves them on and he wants them all to speak.
Dwight is doing his version of the aristocrats very badly.
And in the background, Pam runs across the coals.
Yeah.
And this just feeds her soul.
She feels so alive in this moment.
She did this one thing for herself.
And she runs over to the group and she wants to share.
Yeah.
And she gives this speech and everything just comes pouring out.
Her disappointment that people didn't come to the art show.
But more than that, her feelings for Jim and how much she misses him and the truth, the big truth, which is that while there were many reasons to call off her wedding to Roy, the reason she did it was because of how she feels about Jim.
Yeah.
And oof.
First of all,
I sat next to John in this scene.
Angela and Jim were side by side.
I don't know if you noticed that.
I did.
And so when you were talking to Jim, I was right in your eye line.
You know, I couldn't believe my luck, honestly, because this is such a beautiful performance by you, Jenna.
You do such a great job.
It's so moving.
to watch you as Pam transition through all of those beats.
And I had this out-of-body experience as your friend watching you in awe give this fantastic performance wanting to tear up and cry because my friend was crushing it
and then having to be Angela Martin who would never react to you that way
and then at the same time
Just being in awe of this moment.
It was just a beautiful thing to watch.
Jenna, you did such a great job and you had to do it over and over.
We did several takes because they had to get people's reactions.
And every time you crushed it, every single time.
Well, a lot of people ask if that speech was improvised or partially improvised, and it was not.
That was all written, and as Jen shared with us, written by Greg Daniels.
And I memorized it and delivered it word for word.
I worked on it for a very long time.
And
I remember trying to think about those times in my life where you've done something that give you a burst of adrenaline.
And
that's what I wanted her to come into the speech with.
She's just done this coal walk and she has this burst of adrenaline.
She doesn't even think about
that she's going to share.
it's completely different.
This is very impulsive.
And that was, that was kind of what I put behind the speech.
But I knew that speech backwards and forwards.
I could have delivered it for days because I also know as an actor, at least for me, especially, the more I know the material,
the less I have to think of the word.
Exactly.
And it can just be about the performance.
I never had to search for it.
I had it.
It was like on a little tape in my head.
That's exactly right.
You don't have to worry about what you're saying.
And you can just really experience the moment and feel it because the words are all there.
And I just thought it was brilliant.
And I thought everyone's reactions were great because
there is a dance that you do.
on a show like The Office.
There is the person who is driving the scene, who's putting out all this information.
And then the other side of the story is the people reacting to it.
And the two parts are very important.
And I thought that John is Jim.
His reactions were great.
Everyone in the crowd, they cut to.
Rashida, oh my God, her look is Karen was amazing.
It was like, I can't believe this is happening.
Oh, my God.
It was everything.
And also heartbreak.
It was all of it.
Yeah.
Well, and you mention.
about what it's like to be the person driving a scene.
This was kind of my first experience with that.
And it was this huge speech.
And that's another reason why I made sure I knew every single word.
And I got a real glimpse at what Steve does every single day, every single week.
Wow.
Delivering these big speeches to the group.
I mean, all your eyeballs were on me.
I was so nervous.
Yeah, it's a lot of work.
It's a lot of work.
And not just the cast watching you, the whole crew.
It's everything.
Yeah.
Well, I thought it was so great.
I just just loved it so much.
Well, thank you.
You know, I hadn't seen it since it first aired.
And when I watched it, I was really proud of myself.
You should be.
I was like, oh my gosh.
I love that that performance is on tape and I can watch it later because it really made me feel like a good actress.
I was like, oh, look at me, go.
You are a good actress.
You should be so proud of myself.
You should feel that way.
You should.
Well,
I was always curious why they sat me next to Jim and didn't have Karen next to him.
And then that moment ends with Jim looking straight ahead and me kind of looking off to the side like, oh my God.
Yeah, I think you are there to be the audience reflected, right?
You're what everyone at home is, like, whoa.
So I think it was good to have you there.
being that other piece of the conversation.
Yeah.
But you know, the episode was supposed to end there in the script.
That's the end of the episode.
But we added a little tag back on the bus, singing on the bus.
And this tag confused a lot of people.
Well, it's daytime.
We're clearly happy.
None of this has happened.
It doesn't make any time sequential sense, right?
Yes.
Everyone wanted to know, did you sleep at the beach?
You're all in the same clothes.
How does everyone look like they've bathed if they spent the night at the beach?
They just threw this tag on on the end.
It was an extra little bit of fun from the episode.
It was not meant to be sequential.
Yeah.
We did not spend the night at the beach, story-wise.
Yeah, they just, in editing, they liked it.
They liked to end on this sort of upbeat, you know, there's this huge emotional moment has just happened, and then it's us all as a group.
And Ed said in the DVD commentary that he started the song The Flintstones on the bus.
And for him, it was a nod to planes, trains, and automobiles.
Which I love.
I love.
I love that too.
You know, they do something similar in the Valentine's Day episode.
They had that little bit of extra footage of Steve improvising in front of the theater, and they threw that bit on the end as a tag for Valentine's Day.
So it's just something we did sometimes.
Yeah, and I think you can get away with that in a
cold open and a tag.
They sort of can be their little standalone moments.
But Jenna, before we wrap this up, I wrote about some of my memories of filming this episode in my journal.
And I said, one of the things I loved is that Rashida and I had our trailers side by side in the parking lot.
And we weren't very far away.
We were just really close to the catering truck.
And so in the morning, Harold Ramos would get his coffee.
and Jen and they would have to walk past Rashida and I and we would sit on like the front steps of my trailer like it was our front stoop right yeah and we would visit in the mornings with harold and jen and i have a photo of us and you know having our coffee in the morning i just love it i love that i love that i love that memory so much i don't know if we can say enough what an honor and pleasure it was to work with him but jen also mentioned this in one of her audio clips.
Yeah.
What it meant to her to have the opportunity to work with him.
I'm so glad he was the person in charge of this crazy, crazy episode.
Yes, because he was such a delight.
Jenna, I remembered as I was going through photos, do you remember because him and Jen had to be kind of far away where we were filming, that he had a microphone and he would give sort of big general notes on this microphone.
And then we would yell at him to tell us jokes and he would tell us jokes.
And in the DVD, Rain, they said that Rain would say, tell us more about Groundhog Day.
He would share little bits of trivia on this microphone to us, you know, as we were way, far away on the beach.
And he just made it all so fun.
Well, Jen mentioned that he was really instrumental in mentoring her.
And
actually, Sam, why don't you play that clip?
One moment, another thing that happened on that episode was there was a, there was a...
It was a challenging episode because we had a lot to get and the elements were tricky too.
I remember it was like incredibly cold, and there were heat lamps, and it was also scorching hot sometimes, and within the course of one day.
So, there were a lot of additional challenges to that episode.
And there was one day where I was like, We were not gonna make our day by sunset.
We had just way more to shoot than was actually possible to shoot in that day with our challenges.
And he said to me at one point, Jen, let's like divide up.
You work with the actors, and I'll do the tech stuff.
And it was only for a brief amount of time, but it was
one of, it was just a thrill of mine that I was able to
do that and kind of start talking to the actors in a slightly different way and start thinking about the course of being a director.
And it all started with that episode, him giving me a little bit of that responsibility because there was just too much to get done.
I'm so grateful for Harold, and it's one of the biggest thrills of my career that I got to work with him.
And guys, Jen ended up directing two episodes of The Office.
She directed Crime Aid and The Promotion.
It just fits so perfectly that he extended that to her and shared that with her.
And how lucky were we?
Yeah.
Well, guys, that's Beach Games.
That is Beach Games.
Thank you so much for listening.
This was so wonderful to re-watch.
I loved it.
I loved it.
This was one of my favorite weeks to prepare.
Me too.
For sure.
Yeah.
And to shoot.
We got to live it and relive it.
What a gift.
Well, next week we have a really big week.
It's the job and we're wrapping up season three.
Now we're going to divide the job into two parts because it's an hour-long episode.
We're going to have the job part one and the job part two, but it's all going to be good.
All right, guys.
We'll see you next week.
Have a good one.
We love you.
Thank you for listening to Office Ladies.
Office Ladies is produced by Erwolf, Jenna Fisher, and Angela Kinsey.
Our producer is Cody Fisher, our sound engineer is Sam Kiefer, and our associate producer is Ainsley Bubico.
Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton.
For ad-free versions of Office Ladies, go to stitcherpremium.com.
For a free one-month trial of Stitcher Premium, use code Office.
What kind of programs does this school have?
How are the test scores?
How many kids to a classroom?
Homes.com knows these are all things you ask when you're home shopping as a parent.
That's why each listing on Homes.com includes extensive reports on local schools, including photos, parent reviews, test scores, student-teacher ratio, school rankings, and more.
The information is from multiple trusted sources and curated by Homes.com's dedicated in-house research team.
It's all so you can make the right decision for your family.
Homes.com.
We've done your homework.