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Chair Model

"Chair Model" is the fourteenth episode of the fourth season of the American comedy television series The Office and the show's sixty-seventh episode overall. Written by B. J. Novak, and directed by Jeffrey Blitz, the episode first aired in the United States on April 17, 2008 on NBC. The episode guest-stars Brooke Dillman and Robert R. Shafer as Bob Vance.

"Chair Model"
The Office episode
Episode no.Season 4
Episode 14
Directed byJeffrey Blitz
Written byB. J. Novak
Cinematography byRandall Einhorn
Editing byDean Holland
Production code414
Original air dateApril 17, 2008 (2008-04-17)
Running time22 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Dinner Party"
Next →
"Night Out"
The Office (American season 4)
List of episodes

The series depicts the everyday lives of office employees in the Scranton, Pennsylvania branch of the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company. In the episode, Michael Scott (Steve Carell) finds himself lonely and wanting a relationship after breaking up with Jan Levinson (Melora Hardin). While looking through an office-supplies catalog, he falls in love with a chair model. Meanwhile, Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner) and Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) fight to reclaim lost parking spaces, and Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) tells Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) that he is going to propose.

The final scene was originally going to be a parody of "Candle in the Wind" by Elton John, but John refused permission. The scene was then re-written to feature a parody of the song "American Pie" by Don McLean. "Chair Model" received mostly positive reviews from critics, although some fans were alienated by the dark nature of the storyline. The episode received 5.8 Nielsen rating and was watched by 9.86 million viewers.

Plot

While browsing an office-chair catalog, Michael Scott (Steve Carell), who has broken up with Jan Levinson, becomes enamored of one of the female chair models. As a result, he decides to resume dating with the help of the office employees, even going so far as threatening to fire them if they do not help. No one in the office wants to set up any of their friends with Michael, but when Michael learns that the chair model had died in a car crash some time ago, Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) takes pity and sets him up on a blind date with her landlady (Brooke Dillman). The date does not go well, beginning with Michael pretending he is not who she was supposed to be meeting. After Michael admits his own blind date was a failure, Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) convinces him that he needs closure on this person he loved who is gone. The two end up in a cemetery at the grave of the chair model, where Michael "grieves". They are both singing "American Pie" by Don McLean and dancing on her grave.

With Michael busy, Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner) and Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) work to reclaim parking spaces that they have lost to construction workers working in a neighboring office. They arrange a meeting with the bosses of the office park, and are given the parking spots back. Kevin feels happy to have won his space back, as his fiancée Stacy broke off their engagement and it's been a hard time for him.

While flirting, Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) drops a hint about proposing to Pam, even going as far as telling her that he is not going to do it at work ("because that would be rather lame") and when he does it, it will "kick her ass". Pam is not sure if he's joking. Alone with the camera, Jim reveals that he was not joking and shows an engagement ring that he bought "the week after [they] started dating." After work, while walking back to his car, he stops and gets down on one knee. When Pam stops and looks he says he has a question to ask her. After a second or so of hesitation, he asks her if she will wait while he ties his shoes. She laughs and they continue walking hand in hand. At the end of the episode, Michael and Dwight are seen singing "American Pie" and dancing in the same cemetery at night, having never left.

Production

"Chair Model" was the third episode of the series directed by Jeffrey Blitz. Blitz had previously directed "The Convict" and "The Negotiation".[1][2] The episode was written by B. J. Novak, who plays temporary worker turned corporate manager Ryan Howard.[3][4] Novak was originally going to name the episode "Michael Dating", but the title could have potentially been a spoiler because fans with DVRs would have seen it before "Dinner Party" aired and deduced that Michael and Jan's relationship had completely fallen apart. For a while, "Parking" was going to be the title, but even that was decided against because that refers to the subplot, and also because it was generic and boring even by the show's no-frills-titles standard. Eventually, someone suggested "Chair Model", which was eventually kept as the name.[4] Originally, Novak wrote Jim putting Dwight through a "phony management training", but NBC pointed out that it felt like the writers had done it before even though they had not. As a group, the writers tried to think of a new idea for the plot; they considered having Pam move in with Jim, but they thought that first the two should be engaged.[5]

There was an auditioning process for both the chair model (Deborah Shoshlefski played by April Eden) and the young blond woman whom Michael sees in the coffee shop. According to Novak, the chair model was supposed to be "pretty" and "perhaps even prettier than your average model", but more of just an "average single girl", because the episode is more about Michael wanting to start dating again than the model herself.[4] In the scene with the "Five Families", one of the actors, Paul Faust was the only first-time actor. Faust is the cousin of writer Paul Lieberstein, and had been on a tour of the set and talked to many of the writers. He made a good impression and so the character of "Cool Guy Paul" was based on him. The day before they were scheduled to shoot, the show still had not cast anyone for the role, so they called Paul in New York City and had him read the lines into a camera and e-mail to them. In less than an hour, Faust had landed the part and was flown out to Los Angeles.[4]

Although Novak wrote the majority of the episode, Jennifer Celotta and Paul Lieberstein were actually the ones who came up with the graveyard scene in the end. The original song for Michael to sing was going to be a parody of "Candle in the Wind" by Elton John. Elton John however, refused to give The Office permission to use the song, because 30 Rock had requested permission for a parody of "Candle in the Wind" that offended Elton John, and he did not want to have his song parodied again. So then, the writers wrote parodies of "Legs" by ZZ Top and "Ruby Tuesday" by The Rolling Stones, but eventually "American Pie" by Don McLean cleared, so the writers went with it.[5]

Cultural references

Michael calls Oscar Martinez (Oscar Nunez) an "Oscar Mayer Wiener Lover", a reference to both the sausage of the same name, as well as Oscar's homosexuality. Andy and Kevin hold a meeting with the head of the "Five Families" of the office building, a reference to the New York City American Mafia "Five Families". Michael later tries to call a "hot and juicy redhead" named Wendy, but it turns out it was the number for Wendy's, the fast-food restaurant.[6]

Reception

"Chair Model" first aired on NBC on April 17, 2008.[7] The episode received 5.8/9 percent share in the households demographic in the Nielsen ratings. This means that 5.8 percent of all households watched the episode, and nine percent had their televisions tuned to the channel at any point. The episode was watched by 9.86 million viewers total, as well as 6.49 million viewers in the 18–49 demographic.[8]

"Chair Model" was generally well received by critics, although some fans were alienated by the darkness of the episode. Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club gave the episode a moderately positive review and awarded it a "B+".[9] He noted that the episode "fell on the wrong side of the funny/creepy divide for a lot of Office fans", but that he enjoyed the entry, calling the grave scene "unexpectedly sweet".[9] He also enjoyed the maturation of Andy, describing him as "coming into his own [and becoming] something more than just a foil for Dwight".[9] M. Giant of Television Without Pity awarded the episode an "A".[6] BuddyTV senior writer Oscar Dahl wrote that "The Office is sharp as ever" and Jim's saying that he was going to propose was "a big time moment in the Jim/Pam story".[10] Dahl also praised the parking lot storyline, saying "what started as merely a joke (Kevin was dumped), became a feel-good moment."[10]

IGN's Travis Fickett said that Michael falling in love with the chair model was "a hysterical turn and highlights just how deluded Michael—and Dwight—can be".[11] Fickett was critical of the "parking" storyline, saying that it was "a bit over the top and runs a bit thin", but he did think that the scene at the end with Kevin was "a sweet and genuine moment".[11] Aubry D'Arminio of Entertainment Weekly stated that, in relation to the previous episode "Dinner Party", "Last night's show took another approach. Don't get me wrong. It was a blinder—but a totally different animal, so to speak."[12] D'Arminio went on to praise the dual plots of the episode.[12]

References

  1. ^ Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant (writers); Jeffrey Blitz (director) (November 30, 2006). "The Convict". The Office. Season 3. Episode 5. NBC.
  2. ^ Michael Schur (writer); Jeffrey Blitz (director) (April 5, 2007). "The Negotiation". The Office. Season 3. Episode 19. NBC.
  3. ^ . NBC. Archived from the original on April 11, 2008. Retrieved July 6, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d Novak, B.J. (April 23, 2008). "B.J. Novak Answers "Chair Model" Questions". OfficeTally. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  5. ^ a b Pashman, Dan (May 12, 2008). "The Office's BJ Novak: Uncut". NPR. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  6. ^ a b Giant, M. . Television Without Pity. NBCUniversal. Archived from the original on August 29, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  7. ^ . NBC. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved May 7, 2008.
  8. ^ Seidman, Robert (November 18, 2007). . TV by the Numbers. Zap2it. Archived from the original on June 15, 2008. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  9. ^ a b c Rabin, Nathan (April 17, 2008). "'Chair Model' | The Office | TV Club | TV". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  10. ^ a b Dahl, Oscar (April 17, 2007). . BuddyTV. Archived from the original on June 22, 2008. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  11. ^ a b Fickett, Travis (March 18, 2007). "The Office: "The Chairmodel" Review". IGN. Retrieved July 7, 2008.
  12. ^ a b D'Arminio, Aubry (April 18, 2007). "The Office Recap: Michael's Love Seat? Review". Entertainment Weekly. Time, Inc. Retrieved July 7, 2008.

External links

  • at NBC.com
  • "Chair Model" at IMDb  

chair, model, fourteenth, episode, fourth, season, american, comedy, television, series, office, show, sixty, seventh, episode, overall, written, novak, directed, jeffrey, blitz, episode, first, aired, united, states, april, 2008, episode, guest, stars, brooke. Chair Model is the fourteenth episode of the fourth season of the American comedy television series The Office and the show s sixty seventh episode overall Written by B J Novak and directed by Jeffrey Blitz the episode first aired in the United States on April 17 2008 on NBC The episode guest stars Brooke Dillman and Robert R Shafer as Bob Vance Chair Model The Office episodeEpisode no Season 4Episode 14Directed byJeffrey BlitzWritten byB J NovakCinematography byRandall EinhornEditing byDean HollandProduction code414Original air dateApril 17 2008 2008 04 17 Running time22 minutesGuest appearancesBrooke Dillman as Margaret Bobby Ray Shafer as Bob VanceEpisode chronology Previous Dinner Party Next Night Out The Office American season 4 List of episodes The series depicts the everyday lives of office employees in the Scranton Pennsylvania branch of the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company In the episode Michael Scott Steve Carell finds himself lonely and wanting a relationship after breaking up with Jan Levinson Melora Hardin While looking through an office supplies catalog he falls in love with a chair model Meanwhile Kevin Malone Brian Baumgartner and Andy Bernard Ed Helms fight to reclaim lost parking spaces and Jim Halpert John Krasinski tells Pam Beesly Jenna Fischer that he is going to propose The final scene was originally going to be a parody of Candle in the Wind by Elton John but John refused permission The scene was then re written to feature a parody of the song American Pie by Don McLean Chair Model received mostly positive reviews from critics although some fans were alienated by the dark nature of the storyline The episode received 5 8 Nielsen rating and was watched by 9 86 million viewers Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Cultural references 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlotWhile browsing an office chair catalog Michael Scott Steve Carell who has broken up with Jan Levinson becomes enamored of one of the female chair models As a result he decides to resume dating with the help of the office employees even going so far as threatening to fire them if they do not help No one in the office wants to set up any of their friends with Michael but when Michael learns that the chair model had died in a car crash some time ago Pam Beesly Jenna Fischer takes pity and sets him up on a blind date with her landlady Brooke Dillman The date does not go well beginning with Michael pretending he is not who she was supposed to be meeting After Michael admits his own blind date was a failure Dwight Schrute Rainn Wilson convinces him that he needs closure on this person he loved who is gone The two end up in a cemetery at the grave of the chair model where Michael grieves They are both singing American Pie by Don McLean and dancing on her grave With Michael busy Kevin Malone Brian Baumgartner and Andy Bernard Ed Helms work to reclaim parking spaces that they have lost to construction workers working in a neighboring office They arrange a meeting with the bosses of the office park and are given the parking spots back Kevin feels happy to have won his space back as his fiancee Stacy broke off their engagement and it s been a hard time for him While flirting Jim Halpert John Krasinski drops a hint about proposing to Pam even going as far as telling her that he is not going to do it at work because that would be rather lame and when he does it it will kick her ass Pam is not sure if he s joking Alone with the camera Jim reveals that he was not joking and shows an engagement ring that he bought the week after they started dating After work while walking back to his car he stops and gets down on one knee When Pam stops and looks he says he has a question to ask her After a second or so of hesitation he asks her if she will wait while he ties his shoes She laughs and they continue walking hand in hand At the end of the episode Michael and Dwight are seen singing American Pie and dancing in the same cemetery at night having never left Production Chair Model was the third episode of the series directed by Jeffrey Blitz Blitz had previously directed The Convict and The Negotiation 1 2 The episode was written by B J Novak who plays temporary worker turned corporate manager Ryan Howard 3 4 Novak was originally going to name the episode Michael Dating but the title could have potentially been a spoiler because fans with DVRs would have seen it before Dinner Party aired and deduced that Michael and Jan s relationship had completely fallen apart For a while Parking was going to be the title but even that was decided against because that refers to the subplot and also because it was generic and boring even by the show s no frills titles standard Eventually someone suggested Chair Model which was eventually kept as the name 4 Originally Novak wrote Jim putting Dwight through a phony management training but NBC pointed out that it felt like the writers had done it before even though they had not As a group the writers tried to think of a new idea for the plot they considered having Pam move in with Jim but they thought that first the two should be engaged 5 There was an auditioning process for both the chair model Deborah Shoshlefski played by April Eden and the young blond woman whom Michael sees in the coffee shop According to Novak the chair model was supposed to be pretty and perhaps even prettier than your average model but more of just an average single girl because the episode is more about Michael wanting to start dating again than the model herself 4 In the scene with the Five Families one of the actors Paul Faust was the only first time actor Faust is the cousin of writer Paul Lieberstein and had been on a tour of the set and talked to many of the writers He made a good impression and so the character of Cool Guy Paul was based on him The day before they were scheduled to shoot the show still had not cast anyone for the role so they called Paul in New York City and had him read the lines into a camera and e mail to them In less than an hour Faust had landed the part and was flown out to Los Angeles 4 Although Novak wrote the majority of the episode Jennifer Celotta and Paul Lieberstein were actually the ones who came up with the graveyard scene in the end The original song for Michael to sing was going to be a parody of Candle in the Wind by Elton John Elton John however refused to give The Office permission to use the song because 30 Rock had requested permission for a parody of Candle in the Wind that offended Elton John and he did not want to have his song parodied again So then the writers wrote parodies of Legs by ZZ Top and Ruby Tuesday by The Rolling Stones but eventually American Pie by Don McLean cleared so the writers went with it 5 Cultural referencesMichael calls Oscar Martinez Oscar Nunez an Oscar Mayer Wiener Lover a reference to both the sausage of the same name as well as Oscar s homosexuality Andy and Kevin hold a meeting with the head of the Five Families of the office building a reference to the New York City American Mafia Five Families Michael later tries to call a hot and juicy redhead named Wendy but it turns out it was the number for Wendy s the fast food restaurant 6 Reception Chair Model first aired on NBC on April 17 2008 7 The episode received 5 8 9 percent share in the households demographic in the Nielsen ratings This means that 5 8 percent of all households watched the episode and nine percent had their televisions tuned to the channel at any point The episode was watched by 9 86 million viewers total as well as 6 49 million viewers in the 18 49 demographic 8 Chair Model was generally well received by critics although some fans were alienated by the darkness of the episode Nathan Rabin of The A V Club gave the episode a moderately positive review and awarded it a B 9 He noted that the episode fell on the wrong side of the funny creepy divide for a lot of Office fans but that he enjoyed the entry calling the grave scene unexpectedly sweet 9 He also enjoyed the maturation of Andy describing him as coming into his own and becoming something more than just a foil for Dwight 9 M Giant of Television Without Pity awarded the episode an A 6 BuddyTV senior writer Oscar Dahl wrote that The Office is sharp as ever and Jim s saying that he was going to propose was a big time moment in the Jim Pam story 10 Dahl also praised the parking lot storyline saying what started as merely a joke Kevin was dumped became a feel good moment 10 IGN s Travis Fickett said that Michael falling in love with the chair model was a hysterical turn and highlights just how deluded Michael and Dwight can be 11 Fickett was critical of the parking storyline saying that it was a bit over the top and runs a bit thin but he did think that the scene at the end with Kevin was a sweet and genuine moment 11 Aubry D Arminio of Entertainment Weekly stated that in relation to the previous episode Dinner Party Last night s show took another approach Don t get me wrong It was a blinder but a totally different animal so to speak 12 D Arminio went on to praise the dual plots of the episode 12 References Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant writers Jeffrey Blitz director November 30 2006 The Convict The Office Season 3 Episode 5 NBC Michael Schur writer Jeffrey Blitz director April 5 2007 The Negotiation The Office Season 3 Episode 19 NBC B J Novak as Ryan Howard Writer Supervising Producer Producer NBC Archived from the original on April 11 2008 Retrieved July 6 2008 a b c d Novak B J April 23 2008 B J Novak Answers Chair Model Questions OfficeTally Retrieved July 7 2008 a b Pashman Dan May 12 2008 The Office s BJ Novak Uncut NPR Retrieved July 7 2008 a b Giant M Chair Model Television Without Pity NBCUniversal Archived from the original on August 29 2012 Retrieved September 24 2012 The Office Seasons Season Four NBC Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved May 7 2008 Seidman Robert November 18 2007 The Office Ratings 2007 2008 TV by the Numbers Zap2it Archived from the original on June 15 2008 Retrieved July 7 2008 a b c Rabin Nathan April 17 2008 Chair Model The Office TV Club TV The A V Club The Onion Retrieved September 24 2012 a b Dahl Oscar April 17 2007 The Office Dead Chair Models and a Surprise Twist BuddyTV Archived from the original on June 22 2008 Retrieved July 7 2008 a b Fickett Travis March 18 2007 The Office The Chairmodel Review IGN Retrieved July 7 2008 a b D Arminio Aubry April 18 2007 The Office Recap Michael s Love Seat Review Entertainment Weekly Time Inc Retrieved July 7 2008 External links Chair Model at NBC com Chair Model at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chair Model amp oldid 1217395313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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