When did Andy start becoming a dick, season 8 or 9?
The Office was dead as soon as Michael Scott left, and they should have sent it out to pasture.
I like that he didn't feel the need to intervene when Angela was trying to murder Oscar.The whole Jim and Pam Conflict, and the camera man just kinda made me cringe. Hated it. It was a tonal shift in the show and relationship I wasn't looking for
The Asian Jim prank was hilarious though
What is the general opinion on Ryan in the later seasons, I started hated him mid-season 5, after he came back, he didn't really do much beside take advantage of Micheal and creepily obsess over Kelly.
Also, Season 9 has one of the funniest tag scenes in the show. Dwight and Angela asking Toby about Homosexuality
What is the general opinion on Ryan in the later seasons, I started hated him mid-season 5, after he came back, he didn't really do much beside take advantage of Micheal and creepily obsess over Kelly.
Also, Season 9 has one of the funniest tag scenes in the show. Dwight and Angela asking Toby about Homosexuality
Ryan is three completely different characters through the life of the show.
He starts off as a mild mannered Everyman who is just trying to keep his head down and survive in an office full of ludicrous personalities. He actually might be intended as someone the audience can relate to, to ground the show in reality at least a little bit.
Then he becomes Michael's boss out of nowhere and turns into a total dick to everyone, using that dickishness as a mask for his loneliness. This is a very sudden change, but it could possibly count as a progression from his original character, as someone who acquired too much power too quickly, didn't know how to handle it, and spiraled out of control.
Then the next time he returns, in season 6 or so, he is a hipster doofus conman cartoon character who has nothing in common with either prior incarnation. He stays that way for the rest of the series.
The show started going downhill once Jim and Pam got together. Before then it was fantastic. There were still good episodes after that but that friction was really missing.
The show started going downhill once Jim and Pam got together. Before then it was fantastic. There were still good episodes after that but that friction was really missing.
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Are you kidding me? Robert California was the best thing of the post-Michael Scott episodes
The show started going downhill once Jim and Pam got together. Before then it was fantastic. There were still good episodes after that but that friction was really missing.
Agreed. I felt it was a pretty perfect amount of time to.The worst thing shows can do is stretch out a 'will they won't they' situation. I'm glad the show simply got it over with in 3 seasons.
I may be late as hell to this (I've never posted in this thread), but did anyone realize in "Goodbye Michael" that Will Ferrell was humming/whistling the Marble Zone tune from Sonic the Hedgehog?
I went back to Hulu and it's definitely what he's humming. It's during the scene he was grilling a steak on the coffee machine.
Robert California was hilarious for the four minutes he was there during the interview episode. They made the mistake of thinking he could be a full, recurring character. Jim Carrey's finger lakes guy was just as good, same as Ray Romano's, but they didn't try to force them in.I am agahst at how many of you like Robert California. He was completely pointless and unfunny. His mannerisms were annoying and the way he spoke made no sense at all.
Every scene he's in I want to fast forward through because I know it won't be funny. And I'm right. Every time I rewatch the show; he's still not funny and completely pointless.
Also the Andy/Erin romance was an unnecessary retread of Jim/Pam. I still enjoyed the show because I like the characters, but season 8 and 9 were uneven and not very funny.
He seemed to get a lot more screen time after The Hangover. I agree, though, I grew deeply tired of his character near the final seasons.
The Asian Jim prank was hilarious though
Ryan is three completely different characters through the life of the show.
He starts off as a mild mannered Everyman who is just trying to keep his head down and survive in an office full of ludicrous personalities. He actually might be intended as someone the audience can relate to, to ground the show in reality at least a little bit.
Then he becomes Michael's boss out of nowhere and turns into a total dick to everyone, using that dickishness as a mask for his loneliness. This is a very sudden change, but it could possibly count as a progression from his original character, as someone who acquired too much power too quickly, didn't know how to handle it, and spiraled out of control.
Then the next time he returns, in season 6 or so, he is a hipster doofus conman cartoon character who has nothing in common with either prior incarnation. He stays that way for the rest of the series.
What I didn't like:
-Show got a little dark tonally Care to elaborate?
-Some episodes and arcs seriously dragged
-Robert California was a terrible character and we didn't need him that long (or at all) Disagree. He was hilarious. 'It's all about Sex.' If anything, he wasn't on the show enough.
-California's wife and divorce related episodes were pointless too Don't think too hard about the meaning of each episode. They don't all need to revelatory to the through-plot
-Andy getting screwed over by Erin. Wtf? Him chasing Erin and vice versa was a colossal waste of viewer's times. I like the way it went with Erin going for Plop. Andy is really a flawed character - completely self-centred. I was very happy to see Erin say no to his bullshit. It's like she finally stood up for herself. Her and Plop are a nice couple too.
-Plop and Erin. Plop was a shitty character with zero substance, fuck him. I disagree. Plop was like the younger Jim. He was dry, but the show was full of a range of personalities.
-Clark sucked too Clark and Jan though! haha! Seems like his career blew up after this, so I think most people were okay with him
-Robert California had no balls to stand up to a woman who simply waltzed in to steal a job? Didn't Robert end up talking his way into being the CEO of Sabre?
-The Jim and Pam conflict was deep, but felt a bit dark sometimes. It works out well in the end, but it felt out of character for them both. A little realism and drama. It was honest and heartfelt. I'm glad the show matured in the later seasons to tackle these themes
-Cathy ‘the Pam replacement' was lame. Her trying to get Jim to cheat felt like the show was trying too hard to put their relationship to the test. Athlead and the move to Philly/Austin should've been the extent of that battle between both seasons. I kind of agree here with Cathy. But again, it's not a show to think so hard about. She wasn't a major character, and putting his marriage to the test with Pam was good watching.
-Brian the boom mic guy having a crush on Pam was unnecessary, creepy and distracting. I did like that they had a major interaction with the doc crew, but still...that was a little off. I love this aspect. Near the very end of the show they slowly dip into being self-reflective and aware that it's still a documentary on a paper company. It was really clever if you ask me. Also, Brian was the same actor as that hilarious guy from Silicon Valley. I love Brian the boom mic guy.
-Dwight's son...uhhh, Dwight literally had a DNA test that said it wasn't his? Was this a retcon? A theory says that it was Philip Halpert's diaper that Dwight stole. But it's still a bit odd. Was baby Halpert even in that scene/episode? I don't remember this. There's a lot TV shows change. If you watch season 1 of the Office, Kevin was completely different. If you watch season 1 of Family Matters, they had ANOTHER SISTER! Where did she go? We'll never know.
-Andy crashing and burning. I don't think Andy's character was given a fair shake. Not sure why the writers felt compelled to cast a dark cloud over him between his love life, family, and overall lack of successes. He was so annoying. I'm glad he got what was coming. In the last episode there is a bit of redemption for him.
-Ryan abandoned a baby...I laughed and also gasped. Not sure what to think. Although, it did wrap up a character arc for Nellie. This was just too hilarious for me. It's also pretty dark. He runs away with Kelly finally. It's like their self-absorbed bullshit and twisted relationship never ends!
-Why wasn't Michael in the final scene with them in the office? I really think he should have been. I understand Carell did not want to steal any one's thunder, but he was extremely important to the show. He basically was the show at one point. And he also only said like 5 words the entire time. His return felt so cold and hollow. I think it was contractual. He only had two lines in that final episode, and one of them being 'that's what she said'. It was short, poignant, and brilliant.
For me it was great and I loved every episode (except fun run) up until will ferrel came on.
I tried my best to keep watching even after he left, but outside of a few moments here and there I gave up. Barely saw any of season 8 and only saw the last episode of season 9. Oh and my wife showed me the radio show bit. That was alright.
From the beginning of the show till its end, every character slowly devolves into cartoony caricatures of their former selves and by season 8 I just couldnt take it anymore.