It Happened Last Night

'The Office' - 'Koi Pond': Something's fishy

By Rick Porter

   |  

October 29, 2009 11:22 PM

stevecarell_theoffice_s5_290.jpg"Jim is my enemy. But it appears that Jim is also his own worst enemy. And the enemy of my enemy is my friend, so Jim is actually my friend. But he's his own worst enemy, and the enemy of my friend is my enemy, so he's my enemy. But ..." - Dwight

Leaving Dwight's circular logic aside, the first part of his talking head near the end of "The Office" this week is dead-on. Jim so far is showing himself to be not really at all up to the task of managing people. I'm glad that the show is committed to the bit, but I'm starting almost to feel sorry for the guy -- it's like he's turning into a somewhat more well-adjusted version of Michael right before our eyes.

What Jim's discomfort with his new job means for the future is a question for another time, though, because "Koi Pond" was one of the show's better efforts this season. I really enjoyed the slow unfolding of the story behind Michael coming back to the office soaked -- no joke was rushed, and consequently  several of the show's usual complement of throwaway lines really landed.

The whole episode was an example of how the show can use the documentary conceit to its advantage. Because a crew was following Pam and Andy as they went cold-calling, the cameras couldn't also be with Michael and Jim on their call (which seems pretty consistent with the show's usual practice; I can't immediately recall any instance of there being two locations filmed at the same time).

And because neither of them really wanted to talk about what happened when they got back, we got the story in bits and pieces, which only served to make it funnier. Had we seen the footage as it happened, or had Jim just walked in and announced, "Holy crap, you guys, Michael fell into a koi pond," I don't think it would have worked as well.

In those cases, we wouldn't have had Erin popping her head in the conference room to tell Michael about the koi Michael stepped on ("It did not suffer"), or Stanley mocking Michael with his wordplay, or Meredith putting "Sex with a terrorist" on the Do Not Mock board. Nor would it have built as effectively to the revelation that Jim, either consciously or not, let Michael fall into the pond. Jim's overly compassionate defense of Michael had me wondering if he didn't actually push his co-manager in out of frustration for not getting to make the sales call solo, but at least for now, his self-sabotaging streak isn't that wide.

And yeah, maybe we don't need any more evidence that Michael Scott has always been a pathetic figure. But Steve Carell plays Michael's vulnerable moments so well that this latest recitation of his past woes (in the name of self-deprecation and defusing the koi pond jokes made at his expense) didn't feel old.

Oh, and if you want to see the full tape of Michael going for a swim, you can do so right here, courtesy of this deleted scene.



Other thoughts on "Koi Pond":

  • Andy and Pam's not so excellent cold-calling adventure didn't all work for me, mostly because I don't quite get why everyone would assume that because Pam's pregnant and they're making a sales call together that they're married. That said, Andy's overshare about having already scouted birthing coaches and being so very sick of the single life was a great moment from Ed Helms. And even though Pam does not get Erin at all, it was nice to see her do Andy a solid by talking him up to her at the end of the episode.
  • I also kept thinking during the Pam-Andy story that man, is she gonna be bummed out when she hears what happened back at the office.
  • The Halloween opening was great, but it played more like a formality in service to NBC's themed comedy night -- sort of like when the lights came on for a half-hour during "Seinfeld" on NBC's Blackout Night stunt in the mid-'90s. Loved Michael's two-years-too-late costume, Jim's minimalist "Bookface" and especially Darryl's bored and way too literal description of everyone's getup ("No one told me what y'all were going to be, so label yourself or take what you get").
  • Ellie Kemper got maybe her biggest showcase since joining the series (though maybe not as big as "Male Prima Donna" is sure to become), and she handled it well. Erin is becoming a more specific character week by week, and I'm loving the weird little quirks she's displaying, like having Pam turn a document upside down so she wouldn't accidentally read it.
  • One more Erin moment -- this exchange with Michael: "Erin, do we have any of those clips that hold paper together?" "Staples?"
  • Creed Bratton moment of the night, after Michael balked at the cost of replacing the dead koi and said he could get a fish with a five-cent worm: "You're paying way too much for worms, man. Who's your worm guy?" Creed, if you're reading this, we'd love to have a drink with you sometime.
  • Because I'm writing this recap, I probably won't get around to watching "30 Rock" till Friday. But "Community" and "Parks and Recreation" both put on very good Halloween episodes earlier in the night. Feel free to discuss Abed's turn as Batman or Leslie's teenage nemesis in the comments.

What did you think of "The Office" this week?

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24 Comments

I tried to find the the full tape of Michael going for a swim but wasn't able to find it.

i found it on http://joozly.com/download0046732 .

They make you feel a stupid survey but well its worth it .


Instance when they show two places at once: In the job fair episode, where Jim and Andy and Kevin are at a golf course while Pam and Darryl and Michael are at the high school job fair, they switch back and forth between the two, which are at the same time.


I was thinking of that exact same episode, Lucy.

There have been several instances where two locations were filmed simultaneously on the show.

*Whenever Michael went to NY for corporate meetings, while everyone else was still at the office.
*The episode where Dwight and Michael went out for a night on the town with Ryan and the rest of the Dunder-Miflinites stayed late to work (and got locked in).
*Michael and Pam's road trip to various D-M offices, while the rest of the staff stayed back in Scranton.
* Plus, one of my favorites, Office Olympics, while Michael bought his house.


Good episode. I like the developments with Jim and Michael's friendship/co-manager storyline.

I like Andy and Pam scenes and that was a cool solid to do for Erin.

I still haven't gotten into Erin's character but Andy's crush is sweet.


The episode of "The office" was not so interesting but the "Koi Pond" is effective and will definitely help to lift up this season.


They have filmed in two locations many times, but never more than two. In this episode, I understood that one camera was in the office, and the other was following Pam and Andy. There have been instances where the cameras can't follow, and I assumed Michael and Jim's conversation about how formal this customer was, was an explanation for why the camera couldn't go along.


Am I the only one who thinks they're making too big a deal of Jim not trying to save Michael? After watching the footage again, I might have reacted the same way. Jim didn't push him in. It looks like he wasn't even paying attention to Michael until he fell in. Then when Michael did fall in, why try to save him? Jim would have just fallen in with him. I really don't blame Jim.


They have filmed multiple locations...not just two. The sales episode where they all went out to do sales showed Phyllis and Karen, Jim and Dwight, Stanley and Ryan?, Michael and Andy at the same time.


When everyone went out and did sales calls in pairs, they filmed in multiple places at once.


Forgot about the sales-call episode - thanks. Still, it seems like the usual practice is one camera crew at the branch and another one following whoever's out in the field, right?

It's also possible that Jim and Michael didn't want to have the cameras with them for what sounded like a fairly important meeting. Whatever the reason, I still think not having them there enhanced the comedy.


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