Out of the cliques, the politics, the asbestos, the fluorescent lights… inspired by the show “Survivorman,” Michael’s idea of wilderness camping is more like wilderness survival, inspired solely by television. I also doubt that Michael knew, in his younger days, that he’d end up being like he is now. Take that for what you will, but I doubt Jim likes it too much. Michael, as we saw when he got a second job, has a great deal of Jim in him deep down, and as we find out later in this episode, Jim has a whole lot of Michael inside him. I like this connection we see between Jim and Michael. He hates Toby even more than usual, which is saying something! Toby, however, got to go along, and Michael is very displeased by this. The excuse is that they knew everything they knew about him. Kevin’s original list of ideas included combining objects, like a stapler-marker and, according to his list, a marker-phone, a phone-marker, a “stairs-man,” and something that started with “human-lady-something.If you were going to have a wilderness retreat, which Dunder Mifflin branch manager wouldn’t you invite? Of course, if you’re Ryan Howard, you don’t invite your old boss, Michael Scott. This included faking her water breaking with a water bottle. Pam is still pregnant, though we saw in the cold open that she isn’t above faking going into labor if it gets her and Jim out of boring or uncomfortable situations. Makes it hard for me to go to places like museums, historical monuments, elementary schools. “Apparently, I bear a passing resemblance to Abraham Lincoln. “Phyllis, think fast!” - Andy, before throwing a hat at Phyllis and hitting Gabe in the face. but we have to get through this.” His comment in response to Gabe’s boring presentation seemed like the kind of thing Michael would have said during one of Toby’s boring speeches. Was it me, or did Andy sound exactly like Michael when he said, “Obviously, we all want to die. Unless maybe if you save the burger for last.
The office season 8 ep 7 free#
Technically, saving one ingredient from a Big Mac and setting it aside each day would result in having a free Big Mac at the end of the week, but.
This revelation came after Kevin explained his Big Mac idea. It took Robert the rest of the episode to realize that Kevin’s comments about the vending machine wasn’t an analogy about underselling the top performing items at the company, but really, just a complaint about where stuff goes in the vending machine. It was Kevin’s rambling about the arrangement of cookies in the vending machine that got Robert’s interest. And Pam gave up on her coupon suggestion not long after she started to explain it.
He didn’t love Ryan’s “Origami is the sushi of paper” pitch, or Stanley’s “Papyr - Paper for women” idea. So while the rest of the staff was off not being inspired by Andy, Robert California was at the Scranton branch mostly not being inspired by a handful of people. Robert tasked the remaining staff-members to come up with clever ideas. Were it not for their enthusiasm about the historical place, I might be inclined to agree with those Dunder Mifflin staff members who decided not to go. In defense of Gettysburg, a place I’ve never actually visited, it’s one of my sister and brother-in-law’s favorite places to visit. In truth, they were all just the people who had no interest in spending hours wandering around museums and battlefields all day. Robert California showed up unexpectedly and decided that the people who chose not to go to Gettysburg were the free-minded people of the group. Some people would probably be proud to know their land was a haven for creative-types and those too fragile for war, but Dwight is most definitely not “some people.” As it turns out, during the Civil War, Schrute Farms was known for being a place for “dandies and dreamers.” The video revealed that it was sort of the underground railroad for the sensitive and fabulous. This led to a historian schooling Dwight on the battle, which did exist but was actually a code, not a battle. Dwight spent the whole trip arguing with Oscar over his claim that Schrute Farms is the most northern battle of the Civil War.