Dwight's Speech

Dwight's Speech
"Dwight's Speech"
The Office episode
TheOffice-DwightsSpeech.jpg
Dwight delivers his passionate speech.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 17
Directed by Charles McDougall
Written by Paul Lieberstein
Production code 216
Original air date March 2, 2006
Episode chronology
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"Valentine's Day"
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"Take Your Daughter to Work Day"
List of The Office (U.S. TV series) episodes

"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.

In the episode, Michael helps Dwight with an important speech that he is going to give. Meanwhile, Jim plans a vacation to avoid Pam's wedding. "Dwight's Speech" was watched by 8.4 million viewers.[1]

Contents

Synopsis

Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) is named Northeastern Pennsylvania Salesman of the Year and must make a speech at an association meeting at the Radisson Lackawanna Station Hotel, getting some assistance from Michael Scott (Steve Carell). Before he leaves, Jim Halpert (John Krasinski), in retaliation for Dwight's cocky attitude, gives him tips on how to give public speeches. Unknown to Dwight, Jim's tips are taken from a speech by Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. When Michael and Dwight make it to the convention, Dwight gets cold feet and Michael goes up and tries to relive his glory days of winning Salesman of the Year two years in a row, but ends up bombing. Dwight finally works up the nerve to give his speech and, using Jim's advice, wins over the crowd with a passionate yet unorthodox speech (which Angela videotapes from the back). Michael ends up leaving the convention room and later entertains Dwight with his tales at the bar.

Meanwhile, back in the office, Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) begins to write invitations for her approaching wedding. Jim makes plans for a vacation anywhere away from Scranton. While that is going on, the other employees subtly duel over the thermostat. At the end of the episode, Jim tells Pam that he will be going to Australia and unfortunately, he will be missing her wedding because of it.

Production

This episode was the second episode of the series directed by Charles McDougall. McDougall had previously directed the second season episode "Christmas Party". "Dwight's Speech" was written by Paul Lieberstein, who plays human resources director Toby Flenderson.[2]

During the earlier scenes when Dwight is in Michael's office, Pam can be seen in the background talking to Meredith. According to actress Jenna Fischer, she and Kate Flannery stayed in character and acted out mundane talking scenes. Although they were not recorded, the dialogue was very detailed. Fischer described one scene in which Pam and Meredith discussed "the problems with the new quality-assurance computer-input program. It doesn't accept both alpha and numeric characters, which is very frustrating as we have a backlog of receipts dating to 2001. Dunder-Mifflin changed to all-numeric product codes in 2004 and the computer system does not allow for the earlier records."[2] The speech scene employed over 500 extras, which is unusual for The Office, and was hectic for the crew to organize.[2]

The Mussolini quote "Blood alone moves the wheels of history", with which Dwight begins his speech, is from a speech given by Mussolini in Parma on 13 December 1914, advocating Italian entry into World War I.[3]

Reception

"Dwight's Speech" received 4.4/10 in the ages 18–49 demographic in the Nielsen ratings. This means that 4.4 percent of all households with an 18 to 49 year old living in it watched the episode, and ten percent had their television tuned to the channel at any point. "Dwight's Speech" was watched by 8.4 million viewers.[1]

"Dwight's Speech" received mostly positive reviews. Michael Sciannamea of TV Squad wrote that he wonders if the Jim-Pam "will reach some sort of resolution or become a season-ending cliffhanger". Sciannamea also noted that "you know you're living in a Bizarro World when Dwight wins Dunder Mifflin's salesman of the year award."[4] "M. Giant" of TelevisionWithoutPity.com graded the episode with an A-.[5] IGN ranked the scene with Dwight making his speech as its third best moment in the first two seasons,[6] Rolling Stone has the same scene as the 18th funniest in The Office's first three seasons.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Tan, Jeannie. "The Office Nielsen Ratings". OfficeTally. http://www.officetally.com/the-office-nielsen-ratings/3/. Retrieved 2008-07-06. 
  2. ^ a b c Fischer, Jenna (2006-03-02). "The Office Presents: "Dwight's Speech"". TV Guide. http://www.tvguide.com/News-Views/Interviews-Features/Article/default.aspx?posting={A4297FDC-0F5B-4E71-AD55-2E2C62CE8EB3}. Retrieved 2008-08-04. [dead link]
  3. ^ Mussolini speech
  4. ^ Sciannamea, Michael (2006-03-03). "The Office: Dwight's Speech". TV Squad. http://www.tvsquad.com/2006/03/03/the-office-dwights-speech/. Retrieved 2008-08-04. 
  5. ^ Giant, M. (2006-03-02). "DWIGHT'S SPEECH". TelevisionWithoutPity.com. http://www.televisionwithoutpity.com/show/the_office/dwights_speech.php. Retrieved 2008-08-04. 
  6. ^ Goldman, Eric & Zoromski, Brian (September 20, 2006) The Top 10 Moments from The Office IGN, Retrieved June 16, 2008
  7. ^ Thomas, Lindsey (October 17, 2007) The 25 Greatest Moments from The Office Rolling Stone, Retrieved June 16, 2008 Archived June 22, 2008 at the Wayback Machine

External links


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