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"The Delivery" is a two-part episode of the sixth season of the American comedy series The Office. The episode aired on NBC on March 4, 2010. Since it is an hour-long episode, it is considered to be the 17th and 18th episodes in the season's episode count. It is the 117th and 118th episode overall. [1]
The episode also became the lowest-rated episode of the series to air on Thursday. [13] The episode finished third in its time slot, being beaten by Grey's Anatomy which received a 3.6 rating/9% share and the CBS drama Person of Interest which received a 3.3 rating/9% share in the 18–49 demographic. [ 13 ]
The Office is an American television series based on the British television comedy of the same name.The format of the series is a parody of the fly on the wall documentary technique that intersperses traditional situation comedy segments with mock interviews with the show's characters, provides the audience access to the ongoing interior monologues for all of the main characters, as well as ...
In this category, the show was viewed by an estimated 4.376 million viewers per episode and received a 3.42 rating/9 percent share among adults between 18 and 49. This means that, on average, the season was viewed by 3.42 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds, and 9 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds watching television at the time of the broadcast.
"Pam's Replacement" is the seventh episode of the eighth season of the American comedy television series The Office, and the show's 159th episode overall. The episode aired on NBC in the United States on November 10, 2011. It was written by Allison Silverman and was directed by Matt Sohn.
In the cold open, an Asian man arrives at the office and sits at Jim Halpert's desk, saying good morning to Dwight. Dwight Schrute, not knowing the man, asks who he is.The man claims to be the real Jim, and offers proof: he is able to recall his last sales, he knows his voicemail password, he kisses Pam Halpert, and he has a picture of Pam and himself and their two half-Asian children.
Triplets Janie, Wright and Luke Hilbert found out their birth order on their 18th birthday in a moment shared on TikTok. Their parents explain to TODAY.com why they waited to tell them.
Jim Halpert convinces regional manager Dwight Schrute that he needs to choose someone to act as an Assistant to the Assistant to the Regional Manager (A.A.R.M.). Jim designs several Dwight-oriented challenges as tryouts for the position, and it is inevitably found that Dwight is the most qualified.