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"Dwight's Speech" is the seventeenth episode of the second season of the American comedy television series The Office and the show's twenty-third episode overall. Written by Paul Lieberstein and directed by Charles McDougall , the episode first aired in the United States on March 2, 2006 on NBC .
Wally Amos is invited to give a speech on proper business building, but everyone is distracted by the cookies he brought, and Nellie cuts off his speech. In Scranton, the office is left without a receptionist. Not wanting to get roped into being receptionist again, Pam Halpert defies Andy Bernard's orders to answer the phone. With the rest of ...
Annoyed that none of his co-workers paid attention to the fire safety seminar he gave last week, Dwight Schrute decides to get revenge by simulating a fire. Setting a fire in a trash can, Dwight calmly explains the proper safety procedures as the panicked employees try to flee, only for Dwight to have made the "fire" non-survivable by sealing the office exits shut and cutting the phone lines.
14th episode of the 3rd season of The Office "The Return" The Office episode Episode no. Season 3 Episode 14 Directed by Greg Daniels Written by Michael Schur Lee Eisenberg Gene Stupnitsky Featured music "Up Where We Belong" by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes Cinematography by Randall Einhorn Editing by Dean Holland Production code 313 Original air date January 18, 2007 (2007-01-18) Running ...
"Initiation" is the fifth episode of the third season of the American version of The Office and the show's 33rd overall. In the episode, Ryan Howard (B. J. Novak) is taken by Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) on what he believes is a sales call, but instead is brought to Dwight's beet farm for an "initiation."
Dwight Schrute informs the office that his Aunt Shirley has died. The only co-worker he invites to the funeral is Oscar Martinez, who flees when Dwight begins shooting the corpse with a shotgun to ensure it is really dead. At the funeral, Dwight's family gathers: his cousins Mose and Zeke, his brother Jeb, his sister Fannie, his nephew Cammy ...
The original script called for the entire office cast to come down to the parking lot from the Dunder Mifflin office to try to stop Dwight and Andy from fighting. However, the staging proved awkward during filming, so John Krasinski suggested that only Jim go down to the parking lot while the others stayed behind, and the change was eventually ...
[16] She again expressed her dislike for Karen, but thought it "was a fun episode for my two favorite Dunder Mifflin couples: Ryan & Kelly and Dwight & Angela." [16] Entertainment Weekly columnist Abby West enjoyed the Dwight-Angela scenes, asserting that "some of the best moments on screen are when those two let their freak flags fly."