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Company Picnic

"Company Picnic" is the fifth season finale of the American comedy television series The Office, and the 100th overall episode of the series. It originally aired on NBC in the United States on May 14, 2009. In the episode, Michael plans to win back his ex-girlfriend Holly at a Dunder Mifflin company picnic, while the rest of the Scranton office get involved in a competitive company volleyball tournament.

"Company Picnic"
The Office episode
Episode no.Season 5
Episode 28
Directed byKen Kwapis
Written by
Cinematography byRandall Einhorn
Editing byDavid Rogers
Production code528
Original air dateMay 14, 2009 (2009-05-14)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"Cafe Disco"
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The Office (American season 5)
List of episodes

The episode was written by Paul Lieberstein and Jennifer Celotta, and directed by Ken Kwapis. It marked return appearances of former guest stars Amy Ryan as Holly Flax and Idris Elba as Charles Miner. Actress Jenna Fischer is not as talented a volleyball player as she is portrayed in the episode, so some of her scenes were modified with computer-generated imagery.

The scene in which Jim and Pam discover the pregnancy includes no dialogue, and is a homage to a similar scene in the original British version of The Office, where Tim Canterbury silently proclaims his love for Dawn Tinsley. The episode also features a sketch about the history of Dunder Mifflin which parodies the film Slumdog Millionaire.

"Company Picnic" received generally positive reviews, particularly for the return of Holly and the scene in which Jim discovers Pam is pregnant. According to Nielsen ratings, the episode was watched by 6.72 million viewers. It was the lowest-rated episode of the season and had the lowest original episode rating for The Office in two years, which reviewers said was especially surprising given that it was a season finale episode.

Plot

Employees arrive at the Dunder Mifflin company picnic, where Michael Scott (Steve Carell) plans to win back his ex-girlfriend Holly Flax (Amy Ryan), whom he has not seen since she was transferred back to Nashua. Holly arrives with her boyfriend A.J. (Rob Huebel), who tells Michael the couple are designing a house together. CFO David Wallace (Andy Buckley) allows Michael and Holly to do a presentation about the history of Dunder Mifflin, and the two spend time in the woods to come up with ideas. Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) and Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) run into Charles Miner (Idris Elba) for the first time since he left Scranton, and Charles is still short with Jim. Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) brings his best friend, Rolf (James Urbaniak), who makes constant insults to Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey) for breaking Dwight's heart; Dwight tells Rolf to stop, much to Angela's surprise. The Scranton branch competes in the picnic's volleyball tournament, facing off against the other branches of Dunder Mifflin. They initially struggle until Pam reveals herself to be a very talented volleyball player. With her help, they reach the final round where they face the corporate head office.

Michael and Holly perform a skit that parodies Slumdog Millionaire (called "SlumDunder Mifflinaire"), presenting Dunder Mifflin trivia in the form of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, as well as acting out torture scenes featured in the film. Nobody except Stanley Hudson (Leslie David Baker), finds their presentation amusing, but things take a turn for the worse when they reveal that the Buffalo branch, whose staff are hearing this announcement for the first time, will be closing in the near future because of the economic recession. After reluctantly confirming this news to the Buffalo staff, David berates Michael for revealing this as it was something David told to Michael in confidence. In his own defense, Michael insists he thought they already knew about it. As Michael and Holly talk about next year's presentation, he prepares to ask for her back but stops himself, deciding not to ruin the moment. As Holly leaves with A. J., Michael says he believes he will eventually be reunited with Holly, although potentially not for a long time—and he's fine with this because "I'm in no rush".

The Scranton branch faces off against the corporate branch, commenting that they deserve to lose for deciding to close down Buffalo. The game is close, and Pam ends up injuring her ankle, although she wants to continue. Seeing an opportunity to remove Scranton's best player from the game, Charles insists that Pam take a seat on the grounds of her injury being a company liability. Determined to beat corporate, Jim takes Pam to a local hospital to get an X-ray while Dwight stalls the game to give them time to get back. When the doctor calls Jim into the room for an update, the doctor informs Jim and Pam of some news that causes them to be ecstatic. Jim then calls Dwight to send in the substitute players.

Production

 
The Office actor and producer Paul Lieberstein wrote "Company Picnic" along with co-writer Jennifer Celotta.

The episode was written by Paul Lieberstein and Jennifer Celotta, and directed by Ken Kwapis. "Company Picnic" was the 100th overall episode of The Office, and show creator Greg Daniels said he was especially proud the series made it to that landmark because he felt it meant he did not disappoint Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, who created the original British version of the show. Daniels said, "I remember interviewing with them seven years ago, and this (100th episode) was certainly the goal, so I'm very pleased that we got to 100 episodes in a strong fashion. I think the show is in a very good place right now."[1] Steve Carell said he was especially pleased with the landmark because when the show began, people had doubts it would live up to the original series and were skeptical about its mockumentary style: "It's sort of remarkable, especially with this show because I don't think anybody felt it would go past the pilot. ... I think most everyone was kind of dubious about our chances of pulling it off."[2] Likewise, Ben Silverman, co-chairman of NBC Entertainment and an Office executive producer, said, "It's a thrill that we got to 100 episodes, and probably incredibly surprising looking back at the process it took. But the reality is, we believed in it."[3]

"Company Picnic" was filmed in Malibu, California. The episode featured about 360 extras,[4] and was shot over the course of four days.[5] Actor Ed Helms said of the episode, "What the writers did is really fun and creative. It doesn't boil down to passive aggressive little picnic games with a vengeance. There's a lot more going on than that."[6] The episode marked return appearances of former guest stars Amy Ryan as Holly Flax and Idris Elba as Charles Miner.[7] Ryan said she would love the prospect of returning to The Office in future episodes, but that there were no plans for such a return at the time: "I think that door [to return] will always be open, just because it's such a nice party to go to. But that said, there are no plans any time soon for them to be reunited again."[8]

In an interview with The Office fansite "OfficeTally", Celotta said she and Lieberstein had only about one weekend to finish the script and distribute it to the actors, so there was little discussion about their individual volleyball abilities. Once the scripts were circulated, the writers learned that Jenna Fischer was not very good at volleyball and had trouble making certain motions with her arm over her head due to a previous injury. As a result, director Ken Kwapis arranged for stunt doubles to perform some of the volleyball moves; a handful of scenes were also shot with Pam doing an overhead motion with the ball being added later using computer-generated imagery. The opening credits were trimmed down to ten seconds and no post-credits scene was used in order to keep the episode within the network-mandated 21 minutes and 35 seconds. The producers considered making the episode an hour long like other season finales from past seasons, like "The Job" and "Goodbye, Toby", but they found they did not have enough plot points to conclude in "Company Picnic" and would have had trouble filling a full hour.[9]

Precautions were taken to prevent secrets from the season finale being revealed; only certain staff members were provided with copies of the episode, which were given on watermarked DVDs and distributed to secret hiding places. The writers wanted Michael to have a big plan to get Holly back, but to realize throughout the course of the day that his relationship with Holly was something special and that he did not want to disrupt it; they felt it showed that Michael had become more mature, calm and confident about this relationship than that of Jan Levinson and others in his past. The first scene with Michael and Holly discussing their sketch possibilities in a secluded area was filmed with three cameras: one focusing on each side of the two actors, and one from the front of both of them to establish that the picnic was still going on behind them. Due to space limitations, the latter angle was filmed through a mirror (with the actors appearing to be opposite sides) and then the image was reversed and undistorted in post-production.[9]

 
Amy Ryan reprised her recurring guest role as Holly Flax in "Company Picnic". Ryan and Carell improvised a number of moments during the "SlumDunder Mifflinaire" sketch.

Although the "SlumDunder Mifflinaire" skit and the scenes in which it was prepared were all scripted, Carell and Ryan improvised several of the moments including Michael's "Yay!" cheer upon getting an answer right, the bow Carell and Ryan take at the end while the Buffalo branch employees are angry, and Michael's Indian accent. Carell improvised with several different accents on the set, with the producers settling on the one that sounded most like the character from the film, although he used his regular accent when answering the final question in the skit. Carell and Ryan also made up the Jaws song parody ("Dunder...Dunder...") while filming, and Carell made up the subsequent line "We're circling it" about their good sketch idea. The extras were told not to laugh or react at all to the "SlumDunder Mifflinaire" sketch, but Carell and Ryan were not told of those instructions in order to create a genuine stage fright awkwardness among the two actors; Ryan in particular was thrown off guard by their lack of response.[9]

The ending sequence with Pam and Jim in the hospital was filmed at the North Hollywood Medical Center using the Sacred Heart Hospital set from Scrubs.[10] Although the good news Jim and Pam learn in the hospital was never specifically stated, episode writer Jen Celotta confirmed that the news was that Pam was pregnant; the script included an off-hand question from a nurse to Pam about whether she was pregnant so that viewers would make the connection later. Celotta said the idea of the pregnancy came as the writers were working on this specific episode, although she felt the show had always been heading in that direction. The series producers considered filming the scene with audible dialogue, but they thought the scene was more powerful without audio and felt actors John Krasinski and Jenna Fischer "are such great actors and have the ability to convey so much without hearing their dialogue."[9] Celotta said the show's producers have no plans to release the scene with audio. While filming Jim Halpert's emotional reaction to the pregnancy news, Krasinski and director Ken Kwapis discussed the fact that Jim has been surrounded by this camera crew for the last five years, so he would be glad to share this moment with them. The moment when Jim looked directly at the camera, in particular, was meant to convey the idea that he was celebrating the news with the crew. The script did not call for tears, but Krasinski cried naturally as part of his performance.[9]

Lieberstein and Celotta originally planned to have Mose Schrute, Dwight's cousin and a popular minor character, appear in the episode along with Dwight, but actor Michael Schur was unable to attend because he was busy directing "Rock Show", the first-season finale of the NBC series Parks and Recreation, which Schur co-created along with The Office creator Greg Daniels. Instead, the writers created the role of Rolph, and several of the actors suggested James Urbaniak be cast in the role. Celotta said she intends to have both Urbaniak and Schur come back to the show in future episodes; she said of Schur, "Who knew Mose would run a show some day? We'll get him one of these days, rest assured."[9] Jennie Tan, the creator of The Office fansite OfficeTally.com, appeared as an extra during the picnic scenes; her site has grown so large she has become known by the cast and crew of the show, who invited her to appear on the season finale.[11][12] Brian Stack, a writer and actor on Late Night with Conan O'Brien and The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien, had a small role as the Buffalo branch employee who yells angrily at David Wallace. The Office editor Dave Rogers makes a cameo appearance as the volleyball player who tells Andy he is wearing expensive sunglasses.[13] After filming wrapped, the cast and crew held a 100th episode party, where Dave Rogers presented a montage of "100 Moments" of The Office, with one moment from each episode.[1]

When the Pam character discusses her impressive volleyball ability, she says she played volleyball in junior high, senior high, college and went to volleyball camps most summers. However, in the episode "Job Fair", she said her high school gym brings back memories of her faking PMS to get out of playing basketball and volleyball. Writer Jen Celotta acknowledged this was a continuity error: "Yeah, we screwed up. I didn't remember that she said that, specifically about volleyball. And we really do try to be careful about those things."[9]

The official website for The Office included three cut scenes from "Company Picnic" within a week of its original release. The first clip, one minute and fifty seconds long, is an extended sequence of company picnic scenes, including Michael talking about how excited he is to see Holly, Stanley convincing Creed to stand in his sunlight to provide shade, and Dwight and Andy mocking the Utica team by calling them "You-sucks-ti-ca!"[14] The clip also featured a brief appearance of Meredith's son Jake, played by Spencer Daniels, who has not appeared in the show since the second season episode, "Take Your Daughter to Work Day"; after he rudely and pointedly addresses her by her first name, Meredith orders him to spend the picnic locked in their car.[13] In the second one-minute long deleted scene clip, Andy yells at his volleyball teammates when they make a mistake, a Buffalo branch player snaps at his own team, and Charles makes fun of Jim from the sidelines.[15] In the third 30-second clip, Dwight bullies and pesters everyone about the final point of the volleyball game against corporate, prompting Meredith to throw the game by throwing the ball at Dwight during her serve.[16] Within a week of the original broadcast of "Company Picnic", the official NBC store website made the red Scranton branch T-shirts and black New York City corporate T-shirts worn by characters in the episode available for sale.[17][18]

Cultural references

 
Holly and Michael act out a sketch inspired by Slumdog Millionaire, including the torture scenes from that film.

The "SlumDunder Mifflinaire" sketch is a reference to the 2008 film Slumdog Millionaire; references to the film included the game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, the torture scenes intercut with the game show and Carell's impersonation of Slumdog actor Dev Patel's voice.[9][10][19] Before settling on Slumdog Millionaire, Michael and Holly considered writing Dunder Mifflin-themed parodies of the 1975 Steven Spielberg film Jaws and the 1985 science fiction adventure film Back to the Future.[20] While discussing the Jaws idea, they hum John Williams' Jaws "Main Title" song, substituting the famous two-note theme with the words "Dunder...Dunder..."[21] During the sketch, Michael and Holly announce the closing of a Dunder Mifflin branch in Buffalo, the second largest city in the state of New York. Alan Pergament of The Buffalo News said of the city's inclusion in the episode, "It ruined the party for the Buffalo workers but made the episode a lot of fun, especially for Buffalo viewers."[22] Holly and A.J. come from the Dunder Mifflin branch in Nashua, New Hampshire.[23]

Michael compared his relationship to Holly to that of the protagonists in the 1989 romantic comedy, When Harry Met Sally....[24] "Company Picnic" writer Jennifer Celotta said the final scene with Jim and Pam reacting to her pregnancy while the cameras film from outside the hospital room was an homage to a scene in the British version of The Office. In that scene, Tim Canterbury proclaims his love for Dawn Tinsley in a meeting room, but Tim turns off his microphone first so the cameras pick up only their reactions and no sound. Celotta said of the scene, "We are all big fans of the moment that Tim takes off his mic and tells Dawn how he feels. Such an intimate moment that, to me, it feels like it's nice to have it just be theirs."[9]

Reception

In its original American broadcast on May 14, 2009, "Company Picnic" was watched by 6.72 million viewers, according to Nielsen ratings. It was the lowest original episode rating for The Office in two years, a fact commentators said was especially surprising given that the episode was a season finale.[25] The rating was a 13 percent drop in viewership from the previous week's episode, "Cafe Disco",[26] which was seen by 7.71 million viewers.[27] It also unseated "Casual Friday", which was seen by 7.3 million viewers, as the lowest-rated episode of the fifth season.[28] "Company Picnic" received a 3.9 rating/12 share among viewers aged between 18 and 34, and a 3.5 rating/9 share among viewers between 18 and 49.[25]

Alan Sepinwall of The Star-Ledger described the episode as "a great end to what may have been my favorite season of The Office to date." He said the episode included great laughs and sublime dramatic moments, including Michael's moment with Holly after the sketch and the silent moment in which Jim learns Pam is pregnant. Sepinwall said Jim's moment of composing himself in the hallway after calling Dwight in that scene was, "Maybe Krasinski's single best moment on the series to date."[10] Margaret Lyons of Entertainment Weekly said she had "some mixed feelings" about the episode and wished it had more from Ryan, Creed and Kelly, but she especially praised the ending scene with Jim and Pam, which she said she did not expect.[19] Dan Hooper of VH1's Best Week Ever said, "Office finale was awesome, as we expected, capping about seven straight weeks of just top-notch episodes with great character moments, a legitimately interesting plot, and just laugh line after laugh line, reminding us all [why] we spent time talking about this show every week." Hooper also praised NBC for not advertising the twist ending: "They didn’t stupidly dramatize it, and it ended up being a really nice, really fitting end" to the season.[29]

Nathin Rabin of The A.V. Club, who gave the episode a B+ grade, said it was "long on pathos and awkwardness but short on laughs", but described it as "a very satisfying way to end a very satisfying season". Although Rabin said the final scene with Jim and Pam was filmed and handled artfully, he also expressed concern that the subplot could turn into a clichéd device, and said "part of me felt it was a rather pat, heavy-handed way of ending the season on a dramatic note."[20] Will Leitch of New York magazine expressed concern about the dangers of television shows adding a pregnancy subplot, but said of the episode, "For now, we’ll bask in the happiness of two main characters who have waited a long time for it." Leitch, who called Holly the show's "most beloved guest star", also complimented the way the episode handled Michael and Holly's brief reunion: "The couple and the producers seem to have come to the same conclusion about this relationship: Holly (Amy Ryan) can’t actually stay with Michael (Steve Carell), so let’s just enjoy her while she’s here."[30] Travis Fickett of IGN complimented the episode but said it "doesn't really reach that high", which he said was disappointing following a string of eventful episodes. He praised the Holly character and the way Jim and Dwight worked so well together during the volleyball game, and although he said the final scene was a nice moment between Jim and Pam, he also said the twist was "predictable and telegraphed".[31]

TV Guide listed the final scene about Pam's pregnancy as one of the twelve top television moments from the week it aired.[32] "Company Picnic" was voted the ninth highest-rated episode out of 26 from the fifth season, according to an episode poll at the fansite OfficeTally; the episode was rated 8.36 out of 10.[33]

References

  1. ^ a b Carlson, Daniel (May 13, 2009). "Q&A: Greg Daniels: Showrunner paid his dues at other TV comedy hits before taking the corner 'Office'". The Hollywood Reporter.
  2. ^ Yo, Michael (April 30, 2009). "The Office: "This Is Their Wedding Episode"". E!. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  3. ^ Carlson, Ben (May 14, 2009). "Overtime at "The Office" – 100 episodes". Reuters. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  4. ^ Eng, Joyce (April 29, 2009). "The Office's Creed Bratton Gets Casual, Shares Wonders of Ginseng Suppositories". TV Guide. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  5. ^ Tan, Jennie (May 14, 2009). ""The Office" set visit 2009". OfficeTally. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  6. ^ Masters, Megan (April 9, 2009). "The Office Puts On Its Dancing Shoes". E!. Retrieved May 8, 2009.
  7. ^ Jokinen, Rain (May 14, 2009). "Hey, Watch It! – Thursday's TV Picks". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  8. ^ Godwin, Jennifer (May 13, 2009). "Amy Ryan Says Goodbye to The Office". E!. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i ""Company Picnic" Q&A with Jen Celotta". OfficeTally. May 22, 2009. Retrieved May 23, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c Sepinwall, Alan (May 14, 2009). "The Office, "Company Picnic": Holly's back, and Jim and Pam have news". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved May 15, 2009.
  11. ^ Howard, Brian (May 14, 2009). . The Journal News. Archived from the original on May 18, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  12. ^ Ryan, Maureen (May 15, 2009). "Finale watch: 'The Office' goes out in fine style". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  13. ^ a b Tan, Jennie (May 15, 2009). "The Office Season 5 spoilers and news". OfficeTally. Retrieved May 18, 2009.
  14. ^ . NBC. May 15, 2009. Archived from the original on May 16, 2009. Retrieved May 18, 2009.
  15. ^ . NBC. May 17, 2009. Archived from the original on May 19, 2009. Retrieved May 18, 2009.
  16. ^ . NBC. May 18, 2009. Archived from the original on May 22, 2009. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  17. ^ "Dunder Mifflin Scranton Branch Picnic T-Shirt". NBC (official). Retrieved May 23, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "Dunder Mifflin Scranton Branch Picnic T-Shirt". NBC (official). Retrieved May 23, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ a b Lyons, Margaret (May 14, 2009). ""The Office" Recap: Team (and Family) Building". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  20. ^ a b Rabin, Nathan (May 14, 2009). "The Office: Season 5: Episode 26: "Company Picnic"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  21. ^ "The Office Rundown: Episode 28, "Company Picnic"". BuzzSugar. May 15, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  22. ^ Pergament, Alan (May 21, 2009). "Pergament: Season finales left questions, had few surprises". The Buffalo News.
  23. ^ Shaw, Andy (May 15, 2009). "The Office: Company Picnic". TV Fodder. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  24. ^ Amatangelo, Amy (May 15, 2009). . Zap2it. Archived from the original on May 18, 2009. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  25. ^ a b Gorman, Bill (May 15, 2009). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 23, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  26. ^ Mitovich, Matt (May 15, 2009). "Ratings: Which of 11 Finales Delivered the Biggest Bang?". TV Guide. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  27. ^ Gorman, Bill (May 8, 2009). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 23, 2012. Retrieved May 8, 2009.
  28. ^ Gorman, Bill (May 1, 2009). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 22, 2012. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  29. ^ Hopper, Dan (May 15, 2009). "THE OFFICE FINALE: But Who Won The Volleyball Game??". Best Week Ever. VH1. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  30. ^ Leitch, Will (May 15, 2009). "The Office Season Finale: Wait for It, Wait for It..." New York. Retrieved May 15, 2009.
  31. ^ Fickett, Travis (May 15, 2009). "The Office: "Company Picnic" Review". IGN. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  32. ^ "Top Moments: Lost, Loser, Office Offer Feuds and Finales". TV Guide. May 15, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  33. ^ Tan, Jennie (May 19, 2009). "The Office Fan Ratings, Season 5". OfficeTally. Retrieved May 21, 2009.

External links

company, picnic, fifth, season, finale, american, comedy, television, series, office, 100th, overall, episode, series, originally, aired, united, states, 2009, episode, michael, plans, back, girlfriend, holly, dunder, mifflin, company, picnic, while, rest, scr. Company Picnic is the fifth season finale of the American comedy television series The Office and the 100th overall episode of the series It originally aired on NBC in the United States on May 14 2009 In the episode Michael plans to win back his ex girlfriend Holly at a Dunder Mifflin company picnic while the rest of the Scranton office get involved in a competitive company volleyball tournament Company Picnic The Office episodeEpisode no Season 5Episode 28Directed byKen KwapisWritten byPaul Lieberstein Jennifer CelottaCinematography byRandall EinhornEditing byDavid RogersProduction code528Original air dateMay 14 2009 2009 05 14 Guest appearancesAmy Ryan as Holly Flax Idris Elba as Charles Miner Andy Buckley as David Wallace John Hartmann as Kendall Rob Huebel as A J Ellie Kemper as Erin Hannon Bobby Ray Shafer as Bob Vance Brian Stack as a Buffalo branch employee James Urbaniak as Rolf AhlEpisode chronology Previous Cafe Disco Next Gossip The Office American season 5 List of episodesThe episode was written by Paul Lieberstein and Jennifer Celotta and directed by Ken Kwapis It marked return appearances of former guest stars Amy Ryan as Holly Flax and Idris Elba as Charles Miner Actress Jenna Fischer is not as talented a volleyball player as she is portrayed in the episode so some of her scenes were modified with computer generated imagery The scene in which Jim and Pam discover the pregnancy includes no dialogue and is a homage to a similar scene in the original British version of The Office where Tim Canterbury silently proclaims his love for Dawn Tinsley The episode also features a sketch about the history of Dunder Mifflin which parodies the film Slumdog Millionaire Company Picnic received generally positive reviews particularly for the return of Holly and the scene in which Jim discovers Pam is pregnant According to Nielsen ratings the episode was watched by 6 72 million viewers It was the lowest rated episode of the season and had the lowest original episode rating for The Office in two years which reviewers said was especially surprising given that it was a season finale episode Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Cultural references 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot EditEmployees arrive at the Dunder Mifflin company picnic where Michael Scott Steve Carell plans to win back his ex girlfriend Holly Flax Amy Ryan whom he has not seen since she was transferred back to Nashua Holly arrives with her boyfriend A J Rob Huebel who tells Michael the couple are designing a house together CFO David Wallace Andy Buckley allows Michael and Holly to do a presentation about the history of Dunder Mifflin and the two spend time in the woods to come up with ideas Jim Halpert John Krasinski and Pam Beesly Jenna Fischer run into Charles Miner Idris Elba for the first time since he left Scranton and Charles is still short with Jim Dwight Schrute Rainn Wilson brings his best friend Rolf James Urbaniak who makes constant insults to Angela Martin Angela Kinsey for breaking Dwight s heart Dwight tells Rolf to stop much to Angela s surprise The Scranton branch competes in the picnic s volleyball tournament facing off against the other branches of Dunder Mifflin They initially struggle until Pam reveals herself to be a very talented volleyball player With her help they reach the final round where they face the corporate head office Michael and Holly perform a skit that parodies Slumdog Millionaire called SlumDunder Mifflinaire presenting Dunder Mifflin trivia in the form of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire as well as acting out torture scenes featured in the film Nobody except Stanley Hudson Leslie David Baker finds their presentation amusing but things take a turn for the worse when they reveal that the Buffalo branch whose staff are hearing this announcement for the first time will be closing in the near future because of the economic recession After reluctantly confirming this news to the Buffalo staff David berates Michael for revealing this as it was something David told to Michael in confidence In his own defense Michael insists he thought they already knew about it As Michael and Holly talk about next year s presentation he prepares to ask for her back but stops himself deciding not to ruin the moment As Holly leaves with A J Michael says he believes he will eventually be reunited with Holly although potentially not for a long time and he s fine with this because I m in no rush The Scranton branch faces off against the corporate branch commenting that they deserve to lose for deciding to close down Buffalo The game is close and Pam ends up injuring her ankle although she wants to continue Seeing an opportunity to remove Scranton s best player from the game Charles insists that Pam take a seat on the grounds of her injury being a company liability Determined to beat corporate Jim takes Pam to a local hospital to get an X ray while Dwight stalls the game to give them time to get back When the doctor calls Jim into the room for an update the doctor informs Jim and Pam of some news that causes them to be ecstatic Jim then calls Dwight to send in the substitute players Production Edit The Office actor and producer Paul Lieberstein wrote Company Picnic along with co writer Jennifer Celotta The episode was written by Paul Lieberstein and Jennifer Celotta and directed by Ken Kwapis Company Picnic was the 100th overall episode of The Office and show creator Greg Daniels said he was especially proud the series made it to that landmark because he felt it meant he did not disappoint Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant who created the original British version of the show Daniels said I remember interviewing with them seven years ago and this 100th episode was certainly the goal so I m very pleased that we got to 100 episodes in a strong fashion I think the show is in a very good place right now 1 Steve Carell said he was especially pleased with the landmark because when the show began people had doubts it would live up to the original series and were skeptical about its mockumentary style It s sort of remarkable especially with this show because I don t think anybody felt it would go past the pilot I think most everyone was kind of dubious about our chances of pulling it off 2 Likewise Ben Silverman co chairman of NBC Entertainment and an Office executive producer said It s a thrill that we got to 100 episodes and probably incredibly surprising looking back at the process it took But the reality is we believed in it 3 Company Picnic was filmed in Malibu California The episode featured about 360 extras 4 and was shot over the course of four days 5 Actor Ed Helms said of the episode What the writers did is really fun and creative It doesn t boil down to passive aggressive little picnic games with a vengeance There s a lot more going on than that 6 The episode marked return appearances of former guest stars Amy Ryan as Holly Flax and Idris Elba as Charles Miner 7 Ryan said she would love the prospect of returning to The Office in future episodes but that there were no plans for such a return at the time I think that door to return will always be open just because it s such a nice party to go to But that said there are no plans any time soon for them to be reunited again 8 In an interview with The Office fansite OfficeTally Celotta said she and Lieberstein had only about one weekend to finish the script and distribute it to the actors so there was little discussion about their individual volleyball abilities Once the scripts were circulated the writers learned that Jenna Fischer was not very good at volleyball and had trouble making certain motions with her arm over her head due to a previous injury As a result director Ken Kwapis arranged for stunt doubles to perform some of the volleyball moves a handful of scenes were also shot with Pam doing an overhead motion with the ball being added later using computer generated imagery The opening credits were trimmed down to ten seconds and no post credits scene was used in order to keep the episode within the network mandated 21 minutes and 35 seconds The producers considered making the episode an hour long like other season finales from past seasons like The Job and Goodbye Toby but they found they did not have enough plot points to conclude in Company Picnic and would have had trouble filling a full hour 9 Precautions were taken to prevent secrets from the season finale being revealed only certain staff members were provided with copies of the episode which were given on watermarked DVDs and distributed to secret hiding places The writers wanted Michael to have a big plan to get Holly back but to realize throughout the course of the day that his relationship with Holly was something special and that he did not want to disrupt it they felt it showed that Michael had become more mature calm and confident about this relationship than that of Jan Levinson and others in his past The first scene with Michael and Holly discussing their sketch possibilities in a secluded area was filmed with three cameras one focusing on each side of the two actors and one from the front of both of them to establish that the picnic was still going on behind them Due to space limitations the latter angle was filmed through a mirror with the actors appearing to be opposite sides and then the image was reversed and undistorted in post production 9 Amy Ryan reprised her recurring guest role as Holly Flax in Company Picnic Ryan and Carell improvised a number of moments during the SlumDunder Mifflinaire sketch Although the SlumDunder Mifflinaire skit and the scenes in which it was prepared were all scripted Carell and Ryan improvised several of the moments including Michael s Yay cheer upon getting an answer right the bow Carell and Ryan take at the end while the Buffalo branch employees are angry and Michael s Indian accent Carell improvised with several different accents on the set with the producers settling on the one that sounded most like the character from the film although he used his regular accent when answering the final question in the skit Carell and Ryan also made up the Jaws song parody Dunder Dunder while filming and Carell made up the subsequent line We re circling it about their good sketch idea The extras were told not to laugh or react at all to the SlumDunder Mifflinaire sketch but Carell and Ryan were not told of those instructions in order to create a genuine stage fright awkwardness among the two actors Ryan in particular was thrown off guard by their lack of response 9 The ending sequence with Pam and Jim in the hospital was filmed at the North Hollywood Medical Center using the Sacred Heart Hospital set from Scrubs 10 Although the good news Jim and Pam learn in the hospital was never specifically stated episode writer Jen Celotta confirmed that the news was that Pam was pregnant the script included an off hand question from a nurse to Pam about whether she was pregnant so that viewers would make the connection later Celotta said the idea of the pregnancy came as the writers were working on this specific episode although she felt the show had always been heading in that direction The series producers considered filming the scene with audible dialogue but they thought the scene was more powerful without audio and felt actors John Krasinski and Jenna Fischer are such great actors and have the ability to convey so much without hearing their dialogue 9 Celotta said the show s producers have no plans to release the scene with audio While filming Jim Halpert s emotional reaction to the pregnancy news Krasinski and director Ken Kwapis discussed the fact that Jim has been surrounded by this camera crew for the last five years so he would be glad to share this moment with them The moment when Jim looked directly at the camera in particular was meant to convey the idea that he was celebrating the news with the crew The script did not call for tears but Krasinski cried naturally as part of his performance 9 Lieberstein and Celotta originally planned to have Mose Schrute Dwight s cousin and a popular minor character appear in the episode along with Dwight but actor Michael Schur was unable to attend because he was busy directing Rock Show the first season finale of the NBC series Parks and Recreation which Schur co created along with The Office creator Greg Daniels Instead the writers created the role of Rolph and several of the actors suggested James Urbaniak be cast in the role Celotta said she intends to have both Urbaniak and Schur come back to the show in future episodes she said of Schur Who knew Mose would run a show some day We ll get him one of these days rest assured 9 Jennie Tan the creator of The Office fansite OfficeTally com appeared as an extra during the picnic scenes her site has grown so large she has become known by the cast and crew of the show who invited her to appear on the season finale 11 12 Brian Stack a writer and actor on Late Night with Conan O Brien and The Tonight Show with Conan O Brien had a small role as the Buffalo branch employee who yells angrily at David Wallace The Office editor Dave Rogers makes a cameo appearance as the volleyball player who tells Andy he is wearing expensive sunglasses 13 After filming wrapped the cast and crew held a 100th episode party where Dave Rogers presented a montage of 100 Moments of The Office with one moment from each episode 1 When the Pam character discusses her impressive volleyball ability she says she played volleyball in junior high senior high college and went to volleyball camps most summers However in the episode Job Fair she said her high school gym brings back memories of her faking PMS to get out of playing basketball and volleyball Writer Jen Celotta acknowledged this was a continuity error Yeah we screwed up I didn t remember that she said that specifically about volleyball And we really do try to be careful about those things 9 The official website for The Office included three cut scenes from Company Picnic within a week of its original release The first clip one minute and fifty seconds long is an extended sequence of company picnic scenes including Michael talking about how excited he is to see Holly Stanley convincing Creed to stand in his sunlight to provide shade and Dwight and Andy mocking the Utica team by calling them You sucks ti ca 14 The clip also featured a brief appearance of Meredith s son Jake played by Spencer Daniels who has not appeared in the show since the second season episode Take Your Daughter to Work Day after he rudely and pointedly addresses her by her first name Meredith orders him to spend the picnic locked in their car 13 In the second one minute long deleted scene clip Andy yells at his volleyball teammates when they make a mistake a Buffalo branch player snaps at his own team and Charles makes fun of Jim from the sidelines 15 In the third 30 second clip Dwight bullies and pesters everyone about the final point of the volleyball game against corporate prompting Meredith to throw the game by throwing the ball at Dwight during her serve 16 Within a week of the original broadcast of Company Picnic the official NBC store website made the red Scranton branch T shirts and black New York City corporate T shirts worn by characters in the episode available for sale 17 18 Cultural references Edit Holly and Michael act out a sketch inspired by Slumdog Millionaire including the torture scenes from that film The SlumDunder Mifflinaire sketch is a reference to the 2008 film Slumdog Millionaire references to the film included the game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire the torture scenes intercut with the game show and Carell s impersonation of Slumdog actor Dev Patel s voice 9 10 19 Before settling on Slumdog Millionaire Michael and Holly considered writing Dunder Mifflin themed parodies of the 1975 Steven Spielberg film Jaws and the 1985 science fiction adventure film Back to the Future 20 While discussing the Jaws idea they hum John Williams Jaws Main Title song substituting the famous two note theme with the words Dunder Dunder 21 During the sketch Michael and Holly announce the closing of a Dunder Mifflin branch in Buffalo the second largest city in the state of New York Alan Pergament of The Buffalo News said of the city s inclusion in the episode It ruined the party for the Buffalo workers but made the episode a lot of fun especially for Buffalo viewers 22 Holly and A J come from the Dunder Mifflin branch in Nashua New Hampshire 23 Michael compared his relationship to Holly to that of the protagonists in the 1989 romantic comedy When Harry Met Sally 24 Company Picnic writer Jennifer Celotta said the final scene with Jim and Pam reacting to her pregnancy while the cameras film from outside the hospital room was an homage to a scene in the British version of The Office In that scene Tim Canterbury proclaims his love for Dawn Tinsley in a meeting room but Tim turns off his microphone first so the cameras pick up only their reactions and no sound Celotta said of the scene We are all big fans of the moment that Tim takes off his mic and tells Dawn how he feels Such an intimate moment that to me it feels like it s nice to have it just be theirs 9 Reception EditIn its original American broadcast on May 14 2009 Company Picnic was watched by 6 72 million viewers according to Nielsen ratings It was the lowest original episode rating for The Office in two years a fact commentators said was especially surprising given that the episode was a season finale 25 The rating was a 13 percent drop in viewership from the previous week s episode Cafe Disco 26 which was seen by 7 71 million viewers 27 It also unseated Casual Friday which was seen by 7 3 million viewers as the lowest rated episode of the fifth season 28 Company Picnic received a 3 9 rating 12 share among viewers aged between 18 and 34 and a 3 5 rating 9 share among viewers between 18 and 49 25 Alan Sepinwall of The Star Ledger described the episode as a great end to what may have been my favorite season of The Office to date He said the episode included great laughs and sublime dramatic moments including Michael s moment with Holly after the sketch and the silent moment in which Jim learns Pam is pregnant Sepinwall said Jim s moment of composing himself in the hallway after calling Dwight in that scene was Maybe Krasinski s single best moment on the series to date 10 Margaret Lyons of Entertainment Weekly said she had some mixed feelings about the episode and wished it had more from Ryan Creed and Kelly but she especially praised the ending scene with Jim and Pam which she said she did not expect 19 Dan Hooper of VH1 s Best Week Ever said Office finale was awesome as we expected capping about seven straight weeks of just top notch episodes with great character moments a legitimately interesting plot and just laugh line after laugh line reminding us all why we spent time talking about this show every week Hooper also praised NBC for not advertising the twist ending They didn t stupidly dramatize it and it ended up being a really nice really fitting end to the season 29 Nathin Rabin of The A V Club who gave the episode a B grade said it was long on pathos and awkwardness but short on laughs but described it as a very satisfying way to end a very satisfying season Although Rabin said the final scene with Jim and Pam was filmed and handled artfully he also expressed concern that the subplot could turn into a cliched device and said part of me felt it was a rather pat heavy handed way of ending the season on a dramatic note 20 Will Leitch of New York magazine expressed concern about the dangers of television shows adding a pregnancy subplot but said of the episode For now we ll bask in the happiness of two main characters who have waited a long time for it Leitch who called Holly the show s most beloved guest star also complimented the way the episode handled Michael and Holly s brief reunion The couple and the producers seem to have come to the same conclusion about this relationship Holly Amy Ryan can t actually stay with Michael Steve Carell so let s just enjoy her while she s here 30 Travis Fickett of IGN complimented the episode but said it doesn t really reach that high which he said was disappointing following a string of eventful episodes He praised the Holly character and the way Jim and Dwight worked so well together during the volleyball game and although he said the final scene was a nice moment between Jim and Pam he also said the twist was predictable and telegraphed 31 TV Guide listed the final scene about Pam s pregnancy as one of the twelve top television moments from the week it aired 32 Company Picnic was voted the ninth highest rated episode out of 26 from the fifth season according to an episode poll at the fansite OfficeTally the episode was rated 8 36 out of 10 33 References Edit a b Carlson Daniel May 13 2009 Q amp A Greg Daniels Showrunner paid his dues at other TV comedy hits before taking the corner Office The Hollywood Reporter Yo Michael April 30 2009 The Office This Is Their Wedding Episode E Retrieved May 17 2009 Carlson Ben May 14 2009 Overtime at The Office 100 episodes Reuters Retrieved May 17 2009 Eng Joyce April 29 2009 The Office s Creed Bratton Gets Casual Shares Wonders of Ginseng Suppositories TV Guide Retrieved May 17 2009 Tan Jennie May 14 2009 The Office set visit 2009 OfficeTally Retrieved May 17 2009 Masters Megan April 9 2009 The Office Puts On Its Dancing Shoes E Retrieved May 8 2009 Jokinen Rain May 14 2009 Hey Watch It Thursday s TV Picks San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved May 17 2009 Godwin Jennifer May 13 2009 Amy Ryan Says Goodbye to The Office E Retrieved May 17 2009 a b c d e f g h i Company Picnic Q amp A with Jen Celotta OfficeTally May 22 2009 Retrieved May 23 2009 a b c Sepinwall Alan May 14 2009 The Office Company Picnic Holly s back and Jim and Pam have news The Star Ledger Retrieved May 15 2009 Howard Brian May 14 2009 The Office finale recap Company picnic The Journal News Archived from the original on May 18 2009 Retrieved May 16 2009 Ryan Maureen May 15 2009 Finale watch The Office goes out in fine style Chicago Tribune Retrieved May 17 2009 a b Tan Jennie May 15 2009 The Office Season 5 spoilers and news OfficeTally Retrieved May 18 2009 The Office Company Picnic Clip One Video NBC May 15 2009 Archived from the original on May 16 2009 Retrieved May 18 2009 The Office Company Picnic Clip Two Video NBC May 17 2009 Archived from the original on May 19 2009 Retrieved May 18 2009 The Office Company Picnic Clip Three Video NBC May 18 2009 Archived from the original on May 22 2009 Retrieved May 19 2009 Dunder Mifflin Scranton Branch Picnic T Shirt NBC official Retrieved May 23 2009 permanent dead link Dunder Mifflin Scranton Branch Picnic T Shirt NBC official Retrieved May 23 2009 permanent dead link a b Lyons Margaret May 14 2009 The Office Recap Team and Family Building Entertainment Weekly Retrieved May 16 2009 a b Rabin Nathan May 14 2009 The Office Season 5 Episode 26 Company Picnic The A V Club Retrieved May 16 2009 The Office Rundown Episode 28 Company Picnic BuzzSugar May 15 2009 Retrieved May 16 2009 Pergament Alan May 21 2009 Pergament Season finales left questions had few surprises The Buffalo News Shaw Andy May 15 2009 The Office Company Picnic TV Fodder Retrieved May 16 2009 Amatangelo Amy May 15 2009 The great TV fake out Grey s Bones amp House Zap2it Archived from the original on May 18 2009 Retrieved May 17 2009 a b Gorman Bill May 15 2009 Ratings ABC Grey s Anatomy Win Finale Thursday But Declines Continue TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on September 23 2012 Retrieved May 17 2009 Mitovich Matt May 15 2009 Ratings Which of 11 Finales Delivered the Biggest Bang TV Guide Retrieved May 17 2009 Gorman Bill May 8 2009 Thursday Ratings ABC Wins Southland Parks amp Rec Still Falling TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on September 23 2012 Retrieved May 8 2009 Gorman Bill May 1 2009 Thursday Ratings ABC Wins Southland Continues To Head South TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on September 22 2012 Retrieved May 6 2009 Hopper Dan May 15 2009 THE OFFICE FINALE But Who Won The Volleyball Game Best Week Ever VH1 Retrieved May 16 2009 Leitch Will May 15 2009 The Office Season Finale Wait for It Wait for It New York Retrieved May 15 2009 Fickett Travis May 15 2009 The Office Company Picnic Review IGN Retrieved May 16 2009 Top Moments Lost Loser Office Offer Feuds and Finales TV Guide May 15 2009 Retrieved May 16 2009 Tan Jennie May 19 2009 The Office Fan Ratings Season 5 OfficeTally Retrieved May 21 2009 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Company Picnic Company Picnic at NBC com Company Picnic at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Company Picnic amp oldid 1129800099, wikipedia, wiki, 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