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Finale (The Office)

"Finale" is the series finale of the American comedy television series The Office. It serves as the 24th and 25th episodes of the ninth season, and the 200th and 201st episodes of the series overall. The episode was written by series developer and executive producer Greg Daniels and directed by Ken Kwapis, who directed the series' pilot episode. It originally aired on NBC on May 16, 2013, preceded by an hour-long series retrospective.

"Finale"
The Office episodes
Episode nos.Season 9
Episodes 24/25
Directed byKen Kwapis
Written byGreg Daniels
Featured music
Full list
Cinematography byMatt Sohn
Editing by
Production code9024/9025[1]
Original air dateMay 16, 2013 (2013-05-16)
Running time52 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"A.A.R.M."
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The Office (American season 9)
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The series—presented as if it were a real documentary—depicts the everyday lives of office employees in the Scranton, Pennsylvania, branch of the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company. In the episode, which takes place a year after the previous episode "A.A.R.M.", present and past employees of Dunder Mifflin gather for the wedding of Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) and Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey), during which Michael Scott (Steve Carell) returns to serve as Dwight's best man. In addition, Pam Halpert (Jenna Fischer) and Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) finally decide to pursue Jim's dream of working in sports marketing. Finally, everyone comes together for a final round of interviews and goodbyes.

The initial idea for the finale, involving the Q&A, was thought of by Daniels during production of the third season. The episode features the return of many recurring characters, as well as Carell, whose return was kept secret for many months and went uncredited. B. J. Novak and Mindy Kaling, who departed the series after "New Guys", are again credited as stars for reprising their roles as Ryan Howard and Kelly Kapoor. Many members of the show's crew—such as episode writer Daniels—made cameos in the episode as various background characters, and then-Saturday Night Live stars Bill Hader and Seth Meyers appear as themselves.

The episode was viewed by an estimated 5.69 million viewers and received 3.0 rating among adults between the ages of 18 and 49, making it the highest-rated episode of the series since the eighth season installment, "Pool Party". "Finale" received critical acclaim, with many critics complimenting the writers for wrapping up the storylines for most of the characters. Critics also praised Carell's cameo, with many arguing that it was perfectly executed. This episode received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards, and won for Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series.

Plot edit

Background edit

At the end of the previous episode, "A.A.R.M.", the in-universe documentary The Office: An American Workplace aired. Subsequent to this event, Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) has been promoted to the regional manager of Dunder Mifflin's Scranton branch; he and Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey) have also agreed to be married. Andy Bernard (Ed Helms), after being humiliated with his talent show audition tape going viral on the internet, has found a job at his alma mater Cornell University. Darryl Philbin (Craig Robinson) has helped Athlead (now named "Athleap") open a branch in Austin, Texas. Stanley Hudson (Leslie David Baker) is enjoying retirement in Florida, and Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner), after having been fired by Dwight, now owns a bar. Toby Flenderson (Paul Lieberstein) has moved to New York City to start a career as a writer, Nellie Bertram (Catherine Tate) has moved to Poland, Creed Bratton (Creed Bratton) has faked his death, and Oscar Martinez (Oscar Nunez) is preparing to run for a Pennsylvania State Senate seat.

Events edit

One year after the documentary has aired, the film crew has returned to shoot footage for DVD bonus features. Dwight and Angela are arranging their wedding, and Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) has been appointed the best man. Jim plans a series of "good surprises" for Dwight's bachelor party, and the party consists of most of the current and former male employees. The group has Dwight fire a bazooka and receive a lap dance from Elizabeth the Stripper (Jackie Debatin), but Dwight remains oblivious to the stripper's identity, to Jim's delight. At Angela's bachelorette party, the attendees also hire a stripper for entertainment. However, they are horrified to see that the stripper is Meredith Palmer's (Kate Flannery) son, Jake (Spencer Daniels). Later, Dwight's cousin Mose (Michael Schur) kidnaps Angela as part of the Schrute tradition and takes her to a bar owned by Kevin. Dwight tracks down his fiancée and, upon being confronted by Kevin, tells him that his firing was not personal but based solely on his poor job performance, which cheers Kevin up.

The following day, a panel comprising the office workers is held so that audience members can ask them questions. Dunder Mifflin CEO David Wallace (Andy Buckley) expresses his distaste for the documentary, and Pam Halpert (Jenna Fischer) is pressed with questions about why she did not allow Jim to follow his dream after he has paid her so many romantic gestures. At the panel, Erin Hannon (Ellie Kemper) also meets her birth parents (Ed Begley Jr. and Joan Cusack), who had put her up for adoption.

On the day of the wedding, Jim tells Dwight that under Schrute tradition, he is not allowed to be best man as he is younger than him. Jim surprises him with the arrival of Michael Scott (Steve Carell); when Dwight expresses his surprise at Michael coming to the event, Michael replies with an emotional "that's what she said" joke. The wedding proceeds in Schrute tradition with Michael as Dwight's new best man. When Jim and Pam briefly return home, Jim is surprised to find Carol Stills (Nancy Carell) showing their house to another couple. Pam admits that she has been showing the house for two months. She wants to repay Jim for all his romantic gestures and says she wants him to go to Athleap in Austin, at which point the couple seeing the house make an offer.

Jim and Pam go to an after party at the warehouse where they inform an elated Darryl of their plans. Pam then unveils a new painted mural depicting the history of the Scranton branch. A final picture is taken with the employees and the camera crew before the employees go back up to the office for a final toast. Jim and Pam tell Dwight they are quitting, but Dwight fires them instead so he can give them hefty severance packages, as a last gesture of friendship. The employees give one last round of interviews before leaving. The episode ends with Pam taking her watercolor of the office building that Michael bought from her in the third-season episode "Business School", which then transitions into the closing shot of the actual Dunder Mifflin Paper Company Scranton Branch Building.

Production edit

Writing and filming edit

"Finale" was written by series developer and showrunner Greg Daniels, making it his second writing credit for the year, after the season debut "New Guys", and his 12th writing credit overall.[2][3] It was directed by Ken Kwapis, who had originally directed the series' pilot episode.[4] Daniels joked that Kwapis was "the country vet who birthed this puppy" and had come "back to put it down".[5] Prior to directing "Finale", he also directed the fifth season episode "Company Picnic".[6] The initial idea for the finale was thought of by Daniels during production of the third season, described as "a reunion show", in the fashion of the reality show cast discussions common on reality shows like Survivor.[7] Daniels, at one point, approached Jeff Probst, the host of Survivor, to appear in the finale as a moderator for the fictional reunion, although he declined.[7] The initial table read for the episode took place on March 4, 2013.[8] Filming commenced on March 6.[9] According to Jenna Fischer, the episode took nine days to film, with the cast devoting 12 hours a day to the episode.[10] The finale was described as "ambitious", featuring multiple location shoots, including one in an AT&T Office Building, which stood in for the Scranton Cultural Center.[7] Filming for the episode and series as a whole came to an end on March 16, 2013.[11] Wilson later tweeted a picture of the empty set after all filming had been finished.[12]

Originally, the episode was supposed to be the 23rd and 24th episodes of the season, which would have meant that the series aired exactly 200 episodes. However, the series' penultimate episode was elongated into 2 separate episodes, resulting in "Finale" being the 24th and 25th episodes of the season. This meant that the last part of "Finale" is the series' 201st episode.[13] Once filming finished Daniels, in an interview with TVLine, expressed his hope to expand the episode, stating, "I was very excited with the footage we got ... It's very big. I'm going to beg NBC to super-size it or extend it."[14] Daniels later commented that when the editors cut together the first act, it was 23 minutes long; this is much longer than a normal first act for an hour long episode of television.[15] In response, OfficeTally—the largest fan site for the series—started an online petition to supersize the finale, similar to the petition to expand the second-season finale, "Casino Night".[15] By May 2, the petition had received over 20,000 signatures.[15] On May 7, it was announced that NBC had extended the episode by 15 minutes, meaning that the episode would air in a 75-minute time slot.[16] The episode is approximately 52 minutes in length.[17]

Casting edit

 
Former star Steve Carell returned for "Finale" as Michael Scott following months of speculation and anticipation regarding his appearance.

The series finale guest stars Rachael Harris, Dakota Johnson, Joan Cusack, Ed Begley Jr., and Malcolm Barrett.[18] The episode features the return of several of the series' actors and actresses, including former series writers and stars B. J. Novak and Mindy Kaling, as well as Andy Buckley, Robert R. Shafer, Michael Schur, and Matt Jones.[18] Other minor recurring characters also make appearances, such as Nancy Carell as Carol Stills (who played the recurring role as Michael's real-estate agent and short-time girlfriend), Sendhil Ramamurthy as Ravi (who first appeared in the eighth-season episode "Angry Andy"), Eric Wareheim as Gabor (who first appeared in the earlier ninth-season episode "Junior Salesman"), James Urbaniak as Rolf (who first appeared in the fifth-season episode "Company Picnic"), Jackie Debatin as Elizabeth (who first appeared in the third-season episode "Ben Franklin"), Devon Abner as Devon (who was a former Dunder Mifflin employee fired in second-season episode "Halloween"), and Spencer Daniels as Jake Palmer (who first played Meredith's son in the second-season episode "Take Your Daughter to Work Day").[3][19][20] The episode also features Bill Hader and Seth Meyers playing themselves.[3][20]

Many members of the show's crew made cameos in the episode. The documentary crewman's voice that speaks to Dwight was played by camera operator Matt Sohn. The "frat boy" who mocks Andy at the restaurant was Greg Daniels' former assistant, Jonah Platt. Jay Falk, a script editor for the series, and his wife stood in for the couple buying Jim and Pam's house.[20] Jennifer Celotta, a series writer and director, makes an appearance at Dwight's wedding. The episode's call sheet listed her character as "Jen Celotta Schrute".[21] Producer and writer Graham Wagner also makes a cameo in both Mose's group, as well as at the wedding.[20] Many of the individuals who asked questions were writers on the show: Brent Forrester asked about seeing their lives on TV, Amelie Gillette asked the question regarding Jim giving up Athlead, Steve Burgess asked if the camera changed the characters' behavior, Steve Hely asked if life has no meaning, Allison Silverman made the statement that Jim is attractive, and Dan Sterling asked what was in the teapot. Daniels' wife, Susanne Daniels, was the Q&A moderator.[20][22] Daniels himself appeared during the documentary after-party along with executive producer Howard Klein, editors David Rogers and Claire Scanlon, script supervisor Veda Semarne, first assistant director Rusty Mahmood, prop master Phil Shea, and casting director Allison Jones. The remaining extras in the scene were members of the crew of The Office.[19][20]

Jennie Tan, the founder of the largest The Office fansite OfficeTally appears in the episode as a fictional version of herself asking the members of the office questions. She initially emailed Daniels, asking if she could appear in the background in one of the scenes. He, however, hired her as a day actor and wrote her seven lines. During the filming, Daniels re-wrote part of Tan's line to make it more "pointed".[22] Tan called the experience "surreal", because she was "playing [herself] but talking to Jim and Pam", rather than Krasinski and Fischer.[22]

"I figured the character would go back and visit everybody, but he wouldn't do it on camera at this point. I think he had grown past the idea of being in the documentary, that was my take on it. That [Michael Scott] had said goodbye to that aspect of his life, that that's not what was important to him. I just thought, yeah he'd go back and visit, but he wouldn't want the camera crew to be documenting it."

—Steve Carell, explaining his initial hesitation to return to The Office.[23]

Early during production for the season, Kinsey and Wilson noted in an interview that the cast and crew were hoping for the return of former lead actor Carell.[24] In mid-December, Krasinski later revealed that he was optimistic about a return; in an interview with E! Online Krasinski said that the producers were supposedly "still trying to figure out [Carell's] schedule" and that the finale "just wouldn't be the same without him".[25] However, NBC chairman Robert Greenblatt later admitted during an interview that while he was "hopeful", he did not think Carell would return; he noted that Carell was satisfied with his character's exit and did not want to tarnish it.[26] On January 16, Daniels revealed that Carell would not appear in the finale in any capacity,[4] a decision that Carell later reiterated.[27] Several months later, however, TVLine reported that the producers for The Office mounted "an 11th hour effort" to get Carell to make a cameo in the show's final episode.[28] According to the article, "while no one is confirming that the final diplomatic push proved successful, no one is denying it either."[28] Carell's personal representative confirmed that Carell was on the set for the final episode, but that he did not film any scenes. However, an anonymous source close to the show cryptically said "don't rule anything out".[28] TVLine later reported on May 6, that Carell would appear in a cameo, although NBC declined to comment and Carell's representatives continued to deny the reports.[29] A month after the episode aired, Carell explained in an interview with TVLine that he "lied for months to the press, to almost everyone, really".[30] He noted that he "felt terribly for the cast and for [executive producer] Greg Daniels, because they all lied, too."[30] Krasinski, on the other hand, explained that "It was so thrilling. We all just flat-out lied... It was just one of those things that we all vowed and had to protect".[30] Even at the initial table read for the script, Carell's appearance was not revealed. In fact, his first line was not included in the read at all, and his second was scripted to be delivered by Creed Bratton.[31]

Deleted scenes edit

The Season Nine DVD contains a number of deleted scenes from this episode. Notable cut scenes include: more scenes from the Q&A panel; Pete discussing what he learned working at Dunder Mifflin; toasts at Dwight and Angela's wedding from Angela's sister, Phyllis, and Andy; more scenes with Erin and her biological parents in which they reconnect; further shots of the office members reminiscing about shared memories; and the office taking one of the potted plants outside and planting it in actual soil. Erin's parents explain that they, like Erin, are puppeteers, and when they worked on the movie The Dark Crystal, it gave them such gloomy thoughts they didn't think they could handle bringing up a baby.[32] The episode originally was scripted to begin with a different cold open; it would have entailed a prank on Dwight by Jim, in which Dwight is led to believe that he is actually living in the Matrix, a computer-simulation from the eponymous 1999 film of the same name. The scene was cut from the episode and not included with the other deleted scenes, but it was shared via Facebook by Peacock TV on January 1, 2021.[33] A table read of it—along with the rest of the episode—was included as a bonus feature on the ninth season DVD.[31]

Cultural references edit

The episode makes a reference to Creed being a member of the rock band The Grass Roots. In fact, Creed Bratton, who portrays a fictionalized version of himself on the show, did play with the band from 1967 to 1969.[34] The song he performs near the end is titled "All the Faces", which he wrote himself.[35] Andy mentions that both the "Double Rainbow Guy" and the "Star Wars Kid" reached out to help him after his viral video mishap.[36] Both Hader and Meyers appear in a fictional Saturday Night Live Weekend Update sketch involving Andy's viral fame.[37] After Pam compares her and Jim's relationship to a great book that never ends, Tan's character asks if it is comparable to the Harry Potter series.[22] Dwight claims that Google is actually a front for either the United States government or "the government of other countries".[38]

The episode also features several callback references to previous episodes. Oscar saying "Whazzup!" serves as a reference to a scene from "Pilot" between Michael, Dwight, and Jim.[19] Jim's description in his final talking head of his job is a direct quote from his first talking head in "Pilot".[39] Dwight hires Devon back after Creed quits, a reference to "Halloween", when Creed convinced Michael to fire Devon.[19] Pam sits at reception one final time and answers the phone, saying "Dunder Mifflin, this is Pam." This is a reference to Pam's former role as office receptionist and a common phrase that she said during the early seasons.[36] Pam's painting of the office building, introduced in "Business School", plays a prominent role in the final scene.[36]

Reception edit

Ratings edit

"Finale" originally aired on May 16, 2013, on NBC in a 75-minute timeslot, preceded by a one-hour retrospective.[40][41] The retrospective was viewed by 4.37 million viewers and received a 2.1/7% rating among adults between the ages of 18 and 49.[42] The finale itself was viewed by 5.69 million viewers and received a 3.0 rating/8% share among adults between the ages of 18 and 49.[42] This means that it was seen by 3.0 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds, and 8 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds watching television at the time of the broadcast. This marked a significant increase, of over one million viewers, in the ratings from the previous episode, "A.A.R.M.".[42][43] It also ranks as the highest-rated episode of the season, and, in terms of viewers, it was the highest-rated episode for the series since season eight's, "Pool Party", which had been viewed by 6.02 million viewers.[42][44] The episode ranked second in its timeslot, being beaten by the ABC medical drama series, Grey's Anatomy.[42] NBC increased their usual ad price by 200 percent for "Finale", asking for $400,000 per commercial. This was largely due to the anticipated increase in viewership that the finale would bring.[45] Via DVR viewing, the episode was watched by an additional 2.38 million viewers with an added 18- to 49-year rating of 1.4, bringing the total to 8.07 million viewers and an 18- to 49-year rating of 4.4.[46]

Reviews edit

"Finale" was met with acclaim from television critics.[47] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix gave the episode a highly positive review and called it "a tremendously satisfying conclusion to a show that could make us gasp with laughter, but that could also make us cry or smile". Sepinwall noted that, despite the inconsistency in the last few seasons, "the world was rich enough to fuel a lovely 75-minute trip through the past, present and future of The Office. Ultimately, he noted that the "biggest emotional moments" belonged to Jim and Pam, and their final talking heads.[19] Roth Cornet of IGN awarded the episode a 9 out of 10, denoting an "amazing" episode. She was highly pleased with the final fifteen minutes, noting that "in those final moments, this series hit every note we could have wanted, without overplaying any of them." She concluded that it "was a strong hour of television [and] the finale shone and delivered on all of its promise."[48] Hillary Busis of Entertainment Weekly praised the entry, writing that "for anyone who's stuck with The Office through thick and thin ... last night's 75-minute-long finale was pretty much perfect." She wrote that "the finale had no shortage of sob-inducing moments", and applauded all of the characters' various happy endings.[49]

 
Many critics complimented the way that the series was able to wrap-up the stories of almost all of the members of the ensemble cast.

Nick Campbell of TV.com wrote that the episode was "just right" for the series, and that it highlighted the fact that "the ending was more about the fact that you took a journey with these characters." He wrote that all of the character's subplots had emotion, even if they appeared slightly contrived. Ultimately he concluded that "it felt okay to say goodbye because it was the right atmosphere."[50] James Poniewozik of Time wrote that the finale was "touching, sweet, funny, messy, a little manipulative. And in the end, it worked." He found that "The stuff that was like latter-seasons Office", such as Andy and Dwight's antics, were "all right" but that "the stuff that recalled the sweep of the whole series was wonderful." Poniewozik was slightly critical of Pam and Jim's story, noting that in the grand scheme of the show it was successful, but that it makes slightly less sense when one examines it closely; however, he felt that even "if the details don't add up, the emotions do". He concluded that the episode "worked mostly as an epilogue" and allowed the cast of the series to have their final moments.[34]

Brian Lowry of Variety wrote that the finale "ignored" the last few seasons' missteps and was "awash in warmth and inside gags". He concluded that the show "deserved to finish on top", and that while some of the scenes, such as Dwight's wedding, seemed "a little bit trite", the resulting product was successful.[51] Michael Tedder of Vulture awarded the episode five stars out of five and wrote that the episode was able to provide solid conclusions for all of the characters.[36] Erik Adams of The A.V. Club awarded the episode an "A−" and wrote that "the quality of this series finale is found in the way it functions right now, in the afterglow of a TV show to which many devoted more than 100 hours of their lives. Some aspects of the episode fall flat, but when it hits, it hits." Ultimately, he found that "'Finale' is not a great piece of television" but that it was the finale that "The Office needed" because it was "the right point to jump off ... the circular track", due to the series idea of thematic reoccurrence.[52] Tom Gliatto of People magazine, however, gave the episode a negative review, and wrote that "this episode was poorly conceived and clumsily structured. It really wasn't worthy of all the years of affectionate humor that had gone before it."[47]

Steve Carell's cameo received glowing reviews from critics. Campbell noted that he was "glad [Carell's] return was still uncertain [before the episode aired] because the reveal was made that much sweeter."[50] Sepinwall noted that Carell's return managed to not "overshadow the stories of the people who remained after he left, but which made sense for the characters, and the end of the series."[19] Adams noted that "Carell doesn't get a lot to say—he's already had his chance to say goodbye—but that just makes each of his lines count more".[52] Cornet felt that the cameo's "brevity" was "the perfect amount of Michael for this particular episode".[48] Poniewozik described it as "a way that as best as possible walked the line between overplaying and underplaying Steve Carell's cameo."[34] Lowry called it a "perfectly orchestrated cameo".[51] Basis wrote that the appearance was "pretty great" and that "the notion of Michael finally getting the family he's always wanted was enough to melt the heart of even the nit-pickiest fan."[49]

Accolades edit

This episode received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards. Greg Daniels was nominated for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series and Ben Patrick, John W. Cook, and Rob Carr were nominated for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation. David Rogers and Claire Scanlon won for Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series, marking the fifth win for The Office at the Emmys overall and the series' first win since 2009.[53][54] Rogers and Scanlon also won an ACE Eddie award for Best Edited Half-Hour Series for Television.[55]

References edit

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  51. ^ a b Lowry, Brian (May 17, 2013). . Variety. Archived from the original on June 7, 2013. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  52. ^ a b Adams, Erik (May 17, 2013). "'Finale' | The Office | TV Club". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  53. ^ "The Office". Emmys.com. Retrieved July 22, 2013.
  54. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 15, 2013). "HBO, 'Behind The Candelabra' Lead Creative Arts Emmy Awards; 'Undercover Boss', 'South Park', Tony Awards, Bob Newhart, Dan Bucatinsky, Melissa Leo, Carrie Preston, Heidi Klum & Tim Gunn Among". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 16, 2013.
  55. ^ "64th Annual ACE Eddie Awards: 'Captain Phillips' Wins Drama Feature Prize; 'American Hustle' Top Comedy; 'Frozen' Wins Animation Trophy; 'Breaking Bad' & 'The Office' Take Top TV Prizes". Deadline Hollywood. February 7, 2014. Retrieved February 8, 2014.

External links edit

finale, office, finale, series, finale, american, comedy, television, series, office, serves, 24th, 25th, episodes, ninth, season, 200th, 201st, episodes, series, overall, episode, written, series, developer, executive, producer, greg, daniels, directed, kwapi. Finale is the series finale of the American comedy television series The Office It serves as the 24th and 25th episodes of the ninth season and the 200th and 201st episodes of the series overall The episode was written by series developer and executive producer Greg Daniels and directed by Ken Kwapis who directed the series pilot episode It originally aired on NBC on May 16 2013 preceded by an hour long series retrospective Finale The Office episodesEpisode nos Season 9Episodes 24 25Directed byKen KwapisWritten byGreg DanielsFeatured musicFull list S amp M by Rihanna Save a Horse Ride a Cowboy by Big amp Rich Angela by Vince Neil Here Comes My Girl by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Sara Smile by Hall amp Oates You Might Think by The Cars Meet You In the Middle by Stoll Vaughan By the Way by Jerry Honigman Rosalita Come Out Tonight by Bruce Springsteen All The Faces by Creed BrattonCinematography byMatt SohnEditing byDavid Rogers Claire ScanlonProduction code9024 9025 1 Original air dateMay 16 2013 2013 05 16 Running time52 minutesGuest appearancesSteve Carell as Michael Scott Ed Begley Jr as Martin Hannon Andy Buckley as David Wallace Joan Cusack as Fran Hannon Rachael Harris as Rachel Martin Dakota Johnson as Dakota Sendhil Ramamurthy as Ravi Malcolm Barrett as Malcolm Spencer Daniels as Jake Palmer Jackie Debatin as Elizabeth Matt Jones as Ziek Schrute Ameenah Kaplan as Val Johnson Mark Proksch as Nate Nickerson Michael Schur as Mose Schrute Nancy Carell as Carol Stills Eric Wareheim as Gabor Bill Hader as himself Seth Meyers as himselfEpisode chronology Previous A A R M Next The Office American season 9 List of episodes The series presented as if it were a real documentary depicts the everyday lives of office employees in the Scranton Pennsylvania branch of the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company In the episode which takes place a year after the previous episode A A R M present and past employees of Dunder Mifflin gather for the wedding of Dwight Schrute Rainn Wilson and Angela Martin Angela Kinsey during which Michael Scott Steve Carell returns to serve as Dwight s best man In addition Pam Halpert Jenna Fischer and Jim Halpert John Krasinski finally decide to pursue Jim s dream of working in sports marketing Finally everyone comes together for a final round of interviews and goodbyes The initial idea for the finale involving the Q amp A was thought of by Daniels during production of the third season The episode features the return of many recurring characters as well as Carell whose return was kept secret for many months and went uncredited B J Novak and Mindy Kaling who departed the series after New Guys are again credited as stars for reprising their roles as Ryan Howard and Kelly Kapoor Many members of the show s crew such as episode writer Daniels made cameos in the episode as various background characters and then Saturday Night Live stars Bill Hader and Seth Meyers appear as themselves The episode was viewed by an estimated 5 69 million viewers and received 3 0 rating among adults between the ages of 18 and 49 making it the highest rated episode of the series since the eighth season installment Pool Party Finale received critical acclaim with many critics complimenting the writers for wrapping up the storylines for most of the characters Critics also praised Carell s cameo with many arguing that it was perfectly executed This episode received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards and won for Outstanding Single Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Contents 1 Plot 1 1 Background 1 2 Events 2 Production 2 1 Writing and filming 2 2 Casting 2 3 Deleted scenes 3 Cultural references 4 Reception 4 1 Ratings 4 2 Reviews 4 3 Accolades 5 References 6 External linksPlot editBackground edit At the end of the previous episode A A R M the in universe documentary The Office An American Workplace aired Subsequent to this event Dwight Schrute Rainn Wilson has been promoted to the regional manager of Dunder Mifflin s Scranton branch he and Angela Martin Angela Kinsey have also agreed to be married Andy Bernard Ed Helms after being humiliated with his talent show audition tape going viral on the internet has found a job at his alma mater Cornell University Darryl Philbin Craig Robinson has helped Athlead now named Athleap open a branch in Austin Texas Stanley Hudson Leslie David Baker is enjoying retirement in Florida and Kevin Malone Brian Baumgartner after having been fired by Dwight now owns a bar Toby Flenderson Paul Lieberstein has moved to New York City to start a career as a writer Nellie Bertram Catherine Tate has moved to Poland Creed Bratton Creed Bratton has faked his death and Oscar Martinez Oscar Nunez is preparing to run for a Pennsylvania State Senate seat Events edit One year after the documentary has aired the film crew has returned to shoot footage for DVD bonus features Dwight and Angela are arranging their wedding and Jim Halpert John Krasinski has been appointed the best man Jim plans a series of good surprises for Dwight s bachelor party and the party consists of most of the current and former male employees The group has Dwight fire a bazooka and receive a lap dance from Elizabeth the Stripper Jackie Debatin but Dwight remains oblivious to the stripper s identity to Jim s delight At Angela s bachelorette party the attendees also hire a stripper for entertainment However they are horrified to see that the stripper is Meredith Palmer s Kate Flannery son Jake Spencer Daniels Later Dwight s cousin Mose Michael Schur kidnaps Angela as part of the Schrute tradition and takes her to a bar owned by Kevin Dwight tracks down his fiancee and upon being confronted by Kevin tells him that his firing was not personal but based solely on his poor job performance which cheers Kevin up The following day a panel comprising the office workers is held so that audience members can ask them questions Dunder Mifflin CEO David Wallace Andy Buckley expresses his distaste for the documentary and Pam Halpert Jenna Fischer is pressed with questions about why she did not allow Jim to follow his dream after he has paid her so many romantic gestures At the panel Erin Hannon Ellie Kemper also meets her birth parents Ed Begley Jr and Joan Cusack who had put her up for adoption On the day of the wedding Jim tells Dwight that under Schrute tradition he is not allowed to be best man as he is younger than him Jim surprises him with the arrival of Michael Scott Steve Carell when Dwight expresses his surprise at Michael coming to the event Michael replies with an emotional that s what she said joke The wedding proceeds in Schrute tradition with Michael as Dwight s new best man When Jim and Pam briefly return home Jim is surprised to find Carol Stills Nancy Carell showing their house to another couple Pam admits that she has been showing the house for two months She wants to repay Jim for all his romantic gestures and says she wants him to go to Athleap in Austin at which point the couple seeing the house make an offer Jim and Pam go to an after party at the warehouse where they inform an elated Darryl of their plans Pam then unveils a new painted mural depicting the history of the Scranton branch A final picture is taken with the employees and the camera crew before the employees go back up to the office for a final toast Jim and Pam tell Dwight they are quitting but Dwight fires them instead so he can give them hefty severance packages as a last gesture of friendship The employees give one last round of interviews before leaving The episode ends with Pam taking her watercolor of the office building that Michael bought from her in the third season episode Business School which then transitions into the closing shot of the actual Dunder Mifflin Paper Company Scranton Branch Building Production editWriting and filming edit Finale was written by series developer and showrunner Greg Daniels making it his second writing credit for the year after the season debut New Guys and his 12th writing credit overall 2 3 It was directed by Ken Kwapis who had originally directed the series pilot episode 4 Daniels joked that Kwapis was the country vet who birthed this puppy and had come back to put it down 5 Prior to directing Finale he also directed the fifth season episode Company Picnic 6 The initial idea for the finale was thought of by Daniels during production of the third season described as a reunion show in the fashion of the reality show cast discussions common on reality shows like Survivor 7 Daniels at one point approached Jeff Probst the host of Survivor to appear in the finale as a moderator for the fictional reunion although he declined 7 The initial table read for the episode took place on March 4 2013 8 Filming commenced on March 6 9 According to Jenna Fischer the episode took nine days to film with the cast devoting 12 hours a day to the episode 10 The finale was described as ambitious featuring multiple location shoots including one in an AT amp T Office Building which stood in for the Scranton Cultural Center 7 Filming for the episode and series as a whole came to an end on March 16 2013 11 Wilson later tweeted a picture of the empty set after all filming had been finished 12 Originally the episode was supposed to be the 23rd and 24th episodes of the season which would have meant that the series aired exactly 200 episodes However the series penultimate episode was elongated into 2 separate episodes resulting in Finale being the 24th and 25th episodes of the season This meant that the last part of Finale is the series 201st episode 13 Once filming finished Daniels in an interview with TVLine expressed his hope to expand the episode stating I was very excited with the footage we got It s very big I m going to beg NBC to super size it or extend it 14 Daniels later commented that when the editors cut together the first act it was 23 minutes long this is much longer than a normal first act for an hour long episode of television 15 In response OfficeTally the largest fan site for the series started an online petition to supersize the finale similar to the petition to expand the second season finale Casino Night 15 By May 2 the petition had received over 20 000 signatures 15 On May 7 it was announced that NBC had extended the episode by 15 minutes meaning that the episode would air in a 75 minute time slot 16 The episode is approximately 52 minutes in length 17 Casting edit nbsp Former star Steve Carell returned for Finale as Michael Scott following months of speculation and anticipation regarding his appearance The series finale guest stars Rachael Harris Dakota Johnson Joan Cusack Ed Begley Jr and Malcolm Barrett 18 The episode features the return of several of the series actors and actresses including former series writers and stars B J Novak and Mindy Kaling as well as Andy Buckley Robert R Shafer Michael Schur and Matt Jones 18 Other minor recurring characters also make appearances such as Nancy Carell as Carol Stills who played the recurring role as Michael s real estate agent and short time girlfriend Sendhil Ramamurthy as Ravi who first appeared in the eighth season episode Angry Andy Eric Wareheim as Gabor who first appeared in the earlier ninth season episode Junior Salesman James Urbaniak as Rolf who first appeared in the fifth season episode Company Picnic Jackie Debatin as Elizabeth who first appeared in the third season episode Ben Franklin Devon Abner as Devon who was a former Dunder Mifflin employee fired in second season episode Halloween and Spencer Daniels as Jake Palmer who first played Meredith s son in the second season episode Take Your Daughter to Work Day 3 19 20 The episode also features Bill Hader and Seth Meyers playing themselves 3 20 Many members of the show s crew made cameos in the episode The documentary crewman s voice that speaks to Dwight was played by camera operator Matt Sohn The frat boy who mocks Andy at the restaurant was Greg Daniels former assistant Jonah Platt Jay Falk a script editor for the series and his wife stood in for the couple buying Jim and Pam s house 20 Jennifer Celotta a series writer and director makes an appearance at Dwight s wedding The episode s call sheet listed her character as Jen Celotta Schrute 21 Producer and writer Graham Wagner also makes a cameo in both Mose s group as well as at the wedding 20 Many of the individuals who asked questions were writers on the show Brent Forrester asked about seeing their lives on TV Amelie Gillette asked the question regarding Jim giving up Athlead Steve Burgess asked if the camera changed the characters behavior Steve Hely asked if life has no meaning Allison Silverman made the statement that Jim is attractive and Dan Sterling asked what was in the teapot Daniels wife Susanne Daniels was the Q amp A moderator 20 22 Daniels himself appeared during the documentary after party along with executive producer Howard Klein editors David Rogers and Claire Scanlon script supervisor Veda Semarne first assistant director Rusty Mahmood prop master Phil Shea and casting director Allison Jones The remaining extras in the scene were members of the crew of The Office 19 20 Jennie Tan the founder of the largest The Office fansite OfficeTally appears in the episode as a fictional version of herself asking the members of the office questions She initially emailed Daniels asking if she could appear in the background in one of the scenes He however hired her as a day actor and wrote her seven lines During the filming Daniels re wrote part of Tan s line to make it more pointed 22 Tan called the experience surreal because she was playing herself but talking to Jim and Pam rather than Krasinski and Fischer 22 I figured the character would go back and visit everybody but he wouldn t do it on camera at this point I think he had grown past the idea of being in the documentary that was my take on it That Michael Scott had said goodbye to that aspect of his life that that s not what was important to him I just thought yeah he d go back and visit but he wouldn t want the camera crew to be documenting it Steve Carell explaining his initial hesitation to return to The Office 23 Early during production for the season Kinsey and Wilson noted in an interview that the cast and crew were hoping for the return of former lead actor Carell 24 In mid December Krasinski later revealed that he was optimistic about a return in an interview with E Online Krasinski said that the producers were supposedly still trying to figure out Carell s schedule and that the finale just wouldn t be the same without him 25 However NBC chairman Robert Greenblatt later admitted during an interview that while he was hopeful he did not think Carell would return he noted that Carell was satisfied with his character s exit and did not want to tarnish it 26 On January 16 Daniels revealed that Carell would not appear in the finale in any capacity 4 a decision that Carell later reiterated 27 Several months later however TVLine reported that the producers for The Office mounted an 11th hour effort to get Carell to make a cameo in the show s final episode 28 According to the article while no one is confirming that the final diplomatic push proved successful no one is denying it either 28 Carell s personal representative confirmed that Carell was on the set for the final episode but that he did not film any scenes However an anonymous source close to the show cryptically said don t rule anything out 28 TVLine later reported on May 6 that Carell would appear in a cameo although NBC declined to comment and Carell s representatives continued to deny the reports 29 A month after the episode aired Carell explained in an interview with TVLine that he lied for months to the press to almost everyone really 30 He noted that he felt terribly for the cast and for executive producer Greg Daniels because they all lied too 30 Krasinski on the other hand explained that It was so thrilling We all just flat out lied It was just one of those things that we all vowed and had to protect 30 Even at the initial table read for the script Carell s appearance was not revealed In fact his first line was not included in the read at all and his second was scripted to be delivered by Creed Bratton 31 Deleted scenes edit The Season Nine DVD contains a number of deleted scenes from this episode Notable cut scenes include more scenes from the Q amp A panel Pete discussing what he learned working at Dunder Mifflin toasts at Dwight and Angela s wedding from Angela s sister Phyllis and Andy more scenes with Erin and her biological parents in which they reconnect further shots of the office members reminiscing about shared memories and the office taking one of the potted plants outside and planting it in actual soil Erin s parents explain that they like Erin are puppeteers and when they worked on the movie The Dark Crystal it gave them such gloomy thoughts they didn t think they could handle bringing up a baby 32 The episode originally was scripted to begin with a different cold open it would have entailed a prank on Dwight by Jim in which Dwight is led to believe that he is actually living in the Matrix a computer simulation from the eponymous 1999 film of the same name The scene was cut from the episode and not included with the other deleted scenes but it was shared via Facebook by Peacock TV on January 1 2021 33 A table read of it along with the rest of the episode was included as a bonus feature on the ninth season DVD 31 Cultural references editThe episode makes a reference to Creed being a member of the rock band The Grass Roots In fact Creed Bratton who portrays a fictionalized version of himself on the show did play with the band from 1967 to 1969 34 The song he performs near the end is titled All the Faces which he wrote himself 35 Andy mentions that both the Double Rainbow Guy and the Star Wars Kid reached out to help him after his viral video mishap 36 Both Hader and Meyers appear in a fictional Saturday Night Live Weekend Update sketch involving Andy s viral fame 37 After Pam compares her and Jim s relationship to a great book that never ends Tan s character asks if it is comparable to the Harry Potter series 22 Dwight claims that Google is actually a front for either the United States government or the government of other countries 38 The episode also features several callback references to previous episodes Oscar saying Whazzup serves as a reference to a scene from Pilot between Michael Dwight and Jim 19 Jim s description in his final talking head of his job is a direct quote from his first talking head in Pilot 39 Dwight hires Devon back after Creed quits a reference to Halloween when Creed convinced Michael to fire Devon 19 Pam sits at reception one final time and answers the phone saying Dunder Mifflin this is Pam This is a reference to Pam s former role as office receptionist and a common phrase that she said during the early seasons 36 Pam s painting of the office building introduced in Business School plays a prominent role in the final scene 36 Reception editRatings edit Finale originally aired on May 16 2013 on NBC in a 75 minute timeslot preceded by a one hour retrospective 40 41 The retrospective was viewed by 4 37 million viewers and received a 2 1 7 rating among adults between the ages of 18 and 49 42 The finale itself was viewed by 5 69 million viewers and received a 3 0 rating 8 share among adults between the ages of 18 and 49 42 This means that it was seen by 3 0 percent of all 18 to 49 year olds and 8 percent of all 18 to 49 year olds watching television at the time of the broadcast This marked a significant increase of over one million viewers in the ratings from the previous episode A A R M 42 43 It also ranks as the highest rated episode of the season and in terms of viewers it was the highest rated episode for the series since season eight s Pool Party which had been viewed by 6 02 million viewers 42 44 The episode ranked second in its timeslot being beaten by the ABC medical drama series Grey s Anatomy 42 NBC increased their usual ad price by 200 percent for Finale asking for 400 000 per commercial This was largely due to the anticipated increase in viewership that the finale would bring 45 Via DVR viewing the episode was watched by an additional 2 38 million viewers with an added 18 to 49 year rating of 1 4 bringing the total to 8 07 million viewers and an 18 to 49 year rating of 4 4 46 Reviews edit Finale was met with acclaim from television critics 47 Alan Sepinwall of HitFix gave the episode a highly positive review and called it a tremendously satisfying conclusion to a show that could make us gasp with laughter but that could also make us cry or smile Sepinwall noted that despite the inconsistency in the last few seasons the world was rich enough to fuel a lovely 75 minute trip through the past present and future of The Office Ultimately he noted that the biggest emotional moments belonged to Jim and Pam and their final talking heads 19 Roth Cornet of IGN awarded the episode a 9 out of 10 denoting an amazing episode She was highly pleased with the final fifteen minutes noting that in those final moments this series hit every note we could have wanted without overplaying any of them She concluded that it was a strong hour of television and the finale shone and delivered on all of its promise 48 Hillary Busis of Entertainment Weekly praised the entry writing that for anyone who s stuck with The Office through thick and thin last night s 75 minute long finale was pretty much perfect She wrote that the finale had no shortage of sob inducing moments and applauded all of the characters various happy endings 49 nbsp Many critics complimented the way that the series was able to wrap up the stories of almost all of the members of the ensemble cast Nick Campbell of TV com wrote that the episode was just right for the series and that it highlighted the fact that the ending was more about the fact that you took a journey with these characters He wrote that all of the character s subplots had emotion even if they appeared slightly contrived Ultimately he concluded that it felt okay to say goodbye because it was the right atmosphere 50 James Poniewozik of Time wrote that the finale was touching sweet funny messy a little manipulative And in the end it worked He found that The stuff that was like latter seasons Office such as Andy and Dwight s antics were all right but that the stuff that recalled the sweep of the whole series was wonderful Poniewozik was slightly critical of Pam and Jim s story noting that in the grand scheme of the show it was successful but that it makes slightly less sense when one examines it closely however he felt that even if the details don t add up the emotions do He concluded that the episode worked mostly as an epilogue and allowed the cast of the series to have their final moments 34 Brian Lowry of Variety wrote that the finale ignored the last few seasons missteps and was awash in warmth and inside gags He concluded that the show deserved to finish on top and that while some of the scenes such as Dwight s wedding seemed a little bit trite the resulting product was successful 51 Michael Tedder of Vulture awarded the episode five stars out of five and wrote that the episode was able to provide solid conclusions for all of the characters 36 Erik Adams of The A V Club awarded the episode an A and wrote that the quality of this series finale is found in the way it functions right now in the afterglow of a TV show to which many devoted more than 100 hours of their lives Some aspects of the episode fall flat but when it hits it hits Ultimately he found that Finale is not a great piece of television but that it was the finale that The Office needed because it was the right point to jump off the circular track due to the series idea of thematic reoccurrence 52 Tom Gliatto of People magazine however gave the episode a negative review and wrote that this episode was poorly conceived and clumsily structured It really wasn t worthy of all the years of affectionate humor that had gone before it 47 Steve Carell s cameo received glowing reviews from critics Campbell noted that he was glad Carell s return was still uncertain before the episode aired because the reveal was made that much sweeter 50 Sepinwall noted that Carell s return managed to not overshadow the stories of the people who remained after he left but which made sense for the characters and the end of the series 19 Adams noted that Carell doesn t get a lot to say he s already had his chance to say goodbye but that just makes each of his lines count more 52 Cornet felt that the cameo s brevity was the perfect amount of Michael for this particular episode 48 Poniewozik described it as a way that as best as possible walked the line between overplaying and underplaying Steve Carell s cameo 34 Lowry called it a perfectly orchestrated cameo 51 Basis wrote that the appearance was pretty great and that the notion of Michael finally getting the family he s always wanted was enough to melt the heart of even the nit pickiest fan 49 Accolades edit This episode received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards Greg Daniels was nominated for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series and Ben Patrick John W Cook and Rob Carr were nominated for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series Half Hour and Animation David Rogers and Claire Scanlon won for Outstanding Single Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series marking the fifth win for The Office at the Emmys overall and the series first win since 2009 53 54 Rogers and Scanlon also won an ACE Eddie award for Best Edited Half Hour Series for Television 55 References edit Shows A Z Office The on NBC The Futon Critic Retrieved July 25 2013 Miller Bruce September 16 2012 Review Last Season of The Office Gets Its Footing Sioux City Journal Retrieved September 16 2012 a b c Greg Daniels writer Ken Kwapis director May 16 2013 Finale The Office Season 9 Episode 25 26 NBC a b The Office Staff on How The NBC Series Will End TCA Deadline Hollywood PMC January 16 2013 Retrieved January 17 2013 RainnWilson rainnwilson March 6 2013 1st day of our finale Ken Kwapis who did pilot directing Greg Daniels The country vet who birthed this puppy is back to put it down Tweet via Twitter Ken Kwapis director Paul Lieberstein amp Jennifer Celotta writers May 14 2009 Company Picnic The Office Season 6 Episode 28 NBC a b c Carter Bill May 1 2013 One Last Cringe for The Office Finale The New York Times Retrieved May 4 2013 Krasinski John March 4 2013 Wow Last table read of the last script of The Office in one hour Twitter com Retrieved March 9 2013 Kinsey Angela March 6 2013 Day 1 of filming of our final episode Twitter com Retrieved March 9 2013 Fischer Jenna March 2 2013 The finale will take 9 days to shoot Twitter com Retrieved March 9 2013 Helms Ed March 16 2013 Last day of shooting on The Office Twitter com Retrieved March 17 2013 RainnWilson rainnwilson March 17 2013 The empty set 8 30 pm 3 16 13 Tweet via Twitter Tan Jennie March 5 2013 The Office Season 9 Spoilers and News OfficeTally Retrieved March 5 2013 Ausiello Michael March 15 2013 The Office Series Finale Spoilers Ask Ausiello TVLine Retrieved March 20 2013 a b c Petition to supersize The Office series finale OfficeTally Retrieved March 20 2013 Ausiello Michael May 7 2013 Scoop NBC Expands The Office Series Finale TVLine PMC Archived from the original on July 12 2021 Retrieved May 7 2013 The Office Season 9 iTunes Apple Inc March 24 2005 Retrieved May 17 2013 a b Breaking News NBC Details the Series Finale of The Office on Thursday May 16 The Futon Critic April 25 2013 Retrieved April 25 2013 a b c d e f Sepinwall Alan May 16 2013 Series finale review The Office Finale That s What We All Said HitFix Archived from the original on November 23 2013 a b c d e f Martin Denise May 17 2013 Here s a List of All the Cameos on The Office Finale Vulture LLC Retrieved May 19 2013 Tan Jennie May 17 2013 Jen Celotta Schrute OfficeTally Retrieved May 18 2013 a b c d Tan Jennie May 16 2013 My Role in The Office Series Finale OfficeTally Retrieved May 17 2013 Matthews C J March 5 2013 Why Steve Carell Isn t Returning for Office Finale CNN com Archived from the original on March 9 2013 Retrieved March 9 2013 WPXI September 17 2012 Rainn Wilson Angela Kinsey Talk Final Season of The Office with WPXI YouTube Retrieved September 21 2012 Videos Steve Carell Returning to The Office E Online E Retrieved December 12 2012 Ausiello Michael January 6 2013 Update The Office Getting One Hour Send Off NBC Boss Doubtful Steve Carell Will Return TVLine PMC Retrieved January 7 2013 Will Michael Scott Return For The Office Finale Steve Carell Again Denies Possibility International Business Times International Business Times Inc January 26 2013 Retrieved January 26 2013 a b c Ausiello Michael April 17 2013 The Office Mystery Is Steve Carell Returning for the Series Finale After All TVLine PMC Retrieved April 17 2013 Ausiello Michael May 6 2013 Exclusive Steve Carell Back for The Office Finale TVLine PMC Retrieved May 6 2013 a b c Steve Carell On The Office Finale I Lied For Months Huffpost TV AOL June 18 2013 Retrieved July 5 2013 a b Greg Daniels et al 2013 Finale Table Read DVD The Office Season Nine Disc 5 Universal Studios Home Entertainment a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint location link Deleted scenes for Finale DVD Universal Studios Home Entertainment 2013 The Office Season Nine Disc 5 Peacock TV January 1 2021 This is not a drill Presenting a never before seen cold open from The Office Facebook Retrieved January 1 2021 a b c Poniewozik James May 17 2013 The Office Watch That s What She Said Time Retrieved May 17 2013 Haglund David May 17 2013 The Song From the Office Finale Slate Retrieved May 17 2013 a b c d Tedder Michael May 17 2013 The Office Finale Recap That s All She Said Vulture New York Media LLC Retrieved May 18 2013 West Kelly May 17 2013 The Office Finale Character Updates Where They Are Now CinemaBlend Retrieved May 17 2013 Nussbaum Emily May 17 2013 The Office Finale The New Yorker Conde Nast Retrieved May 19 2013 John Krasinski johnkrasinski May 17 2013 Mccaffreykaty fact that you used the exact line from the very first episode in the finale makes me so happy gold star for spotting that Tweet via Twitter Ausiello Michael February 7 2013 The Office Series Finale Set For May 16 TVLine PMC Retrieved February 7 2013 NBC The CW Confirm Retrospective Specials Prior to 90210 The Office Finales The Futon Critic April 5 2013 Retrieved April 7 2013 a b c d e Kondolojy Amanda May 18 2013 Thursday Final Ratings Hannibal The Big Bang Theory The Vampire Diaries Grey s Anatomy amp Office Retrospective Adjusted Up Ratings TVbytheNumbers TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on June 7 2013 Retrieved May 18 2013 Kondolojy Amanda May 10 2013 Thursday Final Ratings Big Bang Theory Grey s Anatomy American Idol Vampire Diaries Two and a Half Men Wipeout amp Elementary Adjusted Up Glee Adjusted Down TV by the Numbers Zap2it Archived from the original on June 7 2013 Retrieved May 10 2013 Gorman Bill January 20 2012 Thursday Final Ratings Big Bang Theory Tops American Idol 1st Half Hour Office Mentalist Grey s Adj Up Person Rob Parks Adj Down TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on January 23 2012 Retrieved January 21 2012 Crupi Anthony May 7 2013 Ads for The Office Finale Could Go for 400 000 Adweek Retrieved May 13 2013 Kondolojy Amanda June 3 2013 Live 7 DVR Ratings The Big Bang Theory Again Leads Adults 18 49 Ratings Increase amp Tops Total Viewership Gains 90210 Earns Biggest Percentage Increase in Week 34 TV by the Numbers Zap2it Archived from the original on June 8 2013 Retrieved June 4 2013 a b Reviews for The Office U S Series Finale Metacritic CBS Interactive May 17 2013 Retrieved May 23 2013 a b Cornet Roth May 17 2013 Finale Review IGN News Corporation Retrieved May 17 2013 a b Busis Hillary May 17 2013 The Office Series Finale When Did You Start Crying Entertainment Weekly Retrieved May 17 2013 a b Campbell Nick May 17 2013 The Office Series Finale Review That ll Do Show That ll Do TV com CBS Interactive Archived from the original on June 7 2013 Retrieved May 17 2013 a b Lowry Brian May 17 2013 The Office Finale Variety Archived from the original on June 7 2013 Retrieved May 17 2013 a b Adams Erik May 17 2013 Finale The Office TV Club The A V Club The Onion Retrieved May 17 2013 The Office Emmys com Retrieved July 22 2013 Andreeva Nellie September 15 2013 HBO Behind The Candelabra Lead Creative Arts Emmy Awards Undercover Boss South Park Tony Awards Bob Newhart Dan Bucatinsky Melissa Leo Carrie Preston Heidi Klum amp Tim Gunn Among Deadline Hollywood Retrieved September 16 2013 64th Annual ACE Eddie Awards Captain Phillips Wins Drama Feature Prize American Hustle Top Comedy Frozen Wins Animation Trophy Breaking Bad amp The Office Take Top TV Prizes Deadline Hollywood February 7 2014 Retrieved February 8 2014 External links edit Finale at NBC com Finale at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Finale The Office amp oldid 1218517094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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