Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Beyond the Closed Doors

The Office has not closed its doors.

Even though the show aired its series finale recently, the fictitious world of Dunder Mifflin still exists selling paper in Scranton, Pennsylvania. When David Wallace purchased Dunder Mifflin from Sabre Printers, no other branches were mentioned as being in operation, so I assume that the Scranton branch is all that he bought. Given that David doesn't have an office in that branch, it is rather curious as to where he spends his days. The New York headquarters were liquidated in the sale, and Sabre headquarters was located in Florida.

Whatever.

Dunder Mifflin Scranton is still in operation with the following employees.

Dwight Shrute is the manager.
Angela Shrute is accounting.
Phyllis Vance and Clark Green are sales. Pete Miller is a customer service rep.
Erin Hannon is the receptionist.
Devon White was rehired and took Creed's position in quality assurance.

Gone are...

Accounting - Kevin Malone (fired for incompetence and now owns a bar in town).
Accounting - Oscar Martinez (running for State Senate).
Sales - Jim Halpert (moving to Austin, Texas to work in sports management).
Sales/Office Manager - Pam Halpert (moving to Austin with hubby Jim).
Darryl Philbin (moved to Austin).
Human Resources - Toby Flenderson (fired).
Quality Assurance - Creed Bratton (arrested).
Purchasing/Supplier Relations - Meredith Palmer (assumed to be pursuing a position in her Ph.D field).
Sales/Manager - Andy Bernard (left to work at Cornell University).
Special Projects Manager - Nellie Bertram (moved to Poland).

It would seem that much hiring will be needed to bring The Office back up to strength. Probably another salesperson or two, maybe one more accountant. Purchasing/supplier relations can probably be added to the receptionist's duties as all she does is answer the phone.  It always seemed like The Office was overstaffed anyway, though their sales volume was rarely mentioned if at all.

The series finale of The Office has come and gone, and while it didn't prove as emotional as the M*A*S*H series finale, it had its moments of sentiment. It also concluded with some neat lines.

Pam: I think an ordinary paper company like Dunder-Mifflin was a great subject for a documentary. There's a lot of beauty in ordinary things. Isn't that kind of the point?

Jim: Everything I have I owe to this job...this stupid, wonderful, boring, amazing job.

Andy: I wish there was a way to know you're in the good old days before you've actually left them.

Toby: I have six roommates, which are better than friends because they have to give you one month's notice before they leave.

Dwight: I never thought I'd say this, but I think I ate too much bone marrow.

Michael: I feel like all my kids grew up, and then they married each other. It's every parent's dream.

And all these lines succinctly summed up each character we came to know quite well over the nine seasons the show ran.

Don't you get the sense that a new series could be created about Pam and Jim and their new life in Texas? For that matter, a short series down the road about how Dunder Mifflin has fared with all the changes? Of course, a Michael and Holly show may be interesting. I'm not saying that any of this should happen, but the series finale didn't really seem to end anything except for the circumstances with which we had grown familiar. If anything it felt like it was establishing all sorts of new beginnings instead.

So it wasn't with a sense of sweet sorrow that the finale ran, but with a necessary closure to some story lines that had existed for a long time and some that had developed in the last season. There was a good balance of emotion, humor and lightheartedness that made the show a pleasure to watch. The only nod to pathos was Toby's few comments, but he was never a real sympathetic character anyway.

Creed, formerly of the Grass Roots, wrote a song for the episode and performed it. The song wasn't played in its entirety, just enough to underscore the finale with a haunting beauty. I will end this post and my time in The Office with the lyrics.

All the Faces
by Creed Bratton

I saw a friend today, it had been a while
And we forgot each other's names
But it didn't matter 'cause deep inside
The feeling still remained the same

We talked of knowing one before you've met
And you feel more than you see
And other worlds that lie in spaces in between
And angels you can see

And all the faces that I know
Have that same familiar glow
I think I must have known them somewhere once before
All the faces that I know

And all the faces we see each and every day
When I get home at night, you're the face I need
And when my mind's absorbed on my private little screen
And I'm walking blind through a sea of unknown men
I hear a voice reminding me there across the street
Walks an old forgotten friend

And we don't have to say a word
It's really better left unsaid
Just lights through eyes that recognize
All the faces that I know
All the faces that I know

And all the faces we see each and every day
When I get home at night, you're the face I need
When I get home at night, you're the only face I need



Now available for download here:  All the Faces: Amazon.com

3 comments:

Graham said...

I feel as though David Wallace didn't really need Dundler Mifflin, he just bought it to screw with them. He knows Dwight is going to be successful so he leaves him to it. It's probably going to expand now that he is in charge.

Jeff Howe said...

No, you are right. He didn't need DM given the $$ he made off Suck-It. And he may have wanted to screw with them, but Andy also talked him into it when he was on the verge of closing a large account. David may have seen this as a way to quickly make more money. Or, at least, he realized that it was still a good investment. I wouldn't discount a little sentiment in the decision as well. Thanks for commenting.

Jeff Howe said...

Oh, and sorry for the late reply. I don't get many comments and didn't see yours until today.