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I’ve never thought Gabe was a bad character, but he’s an utterly pointless one.
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In the show’s universe, someone should have gotten him away from his aimless flirtation to try to handle the situation with Dwight. What is the point of Gabe? Technically, he is the corporate liaison, but I don’t think he’s personally interacted with Robert California once. Turns out, she won’t date him because she refuses to date the people with whom she works. The show has also decided to make Gabe the artsy weird guy who enjoys drinking wine in cemeteries, apparently.Įlsewhere, Gabe attends a warehouse safety-training seminar because he has a crush on a warehouse worker. Dwight relents and ends the episode with an “I can’t believe I have to continue working with these guys (but I really love them, so don’t tell anyone, okay?)” voiceover. Kevin, Andy, Erin, and Pam go to Shrute Farm where they act chummy with Dwight to butter him up and convince him not to send the e-mail. It’s a scheme that seems too zany for Jim to go along with, and it is made even more unrealistic with Jim taking Robert’s cell phone out of his bag in plain sight (he is so obvious that Robert even comments on Jim playing with his phone). If the show is trying to push Andy as the lead of the series, which I believe it is (and has been for several years), he needs to have more to him than super likeability and being uncomfortably pleasant.īack to the story, Dwight goes home so Andy enlists Jim to find Robert California (who is playing squash), stick by him, and delete the e-mail. Andy asking Robert his favorite Iron Chef instead of listening to information about accounting errors does not make him cute, it makes him a bad leader. Yes, he might rule via fear and tyranny, but at least that’s some leadership style instead of Andy’s meekness. They aren’t expected to score 100%, but they shouldn’t get offended when someone gets mad at them for carelessness.Īnother element brought up by this episode is that Dwight is a better character and leader than Andy.
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But acting like the bad guys are the people who want the company to run properly is ridiculous. I would have no problem if they were bad at their job or didn’t care about how they performed if they at least owned up to it, as Jim formerly did. Now, I’m not saying that everyone on the show should be perfect little worker bees, but this episode made it incredibly difficult to side with the lazy failures that make up Dunder Mifflin, Scranton.
SHEETCAM NESTING CRACK
When the gang is huddled by a computer trying to crack Dwight’s password, and Dwight says that if they put this amount of effort into their real jobs they wouldn’t need to worry about the program, he makes a valid point. Constantly burying one’s head in the sand does not make a hero. If the boss refuses to even listen to valid complaints about how he’s running his ship, then he’s not a good leader. If the office screws up, someone should be held accountable. In this case, his concerns are valid and he has the documentation to prove it. I complained about this concept in my recap of the season premiere where the show painted him to be the bad guy because he said some people were winners and some people were losers. The problem with this storyline is that Robert California is right. After being convinced that the program is real, the office mates work, try to hack into Dwight’s computer to turn off the device, and scream at him when they make their inevitable five mistakes. If the office makes five mistakes in one day, the program will send an e-mail to Robert at 5:00 pm containing a consultant’s report from last year that said the branch should be closed (Dwight is probably not referring to that clip show episode from two years ago, but that was the most recent on-screen consultant I can think of) and every negative e-mail that the group had ever written about him. Andy then turns to his number 2, Dwight, who installs an “Accountability Booster” (described by Jim as a “Doomsday Device”). All Robert wants is for Andy to fix the problem. Instead of discussing the situation, Andy smiles nervously and tries to change the subject to anything but the matter at hand.
SHEETCAM NESTING FREE
In Doomsday, Robert California complains to Andy about his “error prone office” whose sloppiness had caused a client to receive a free order one week prior. The question I have to ask after tonight’s installment of The Office is…are we supposed to cheer on incompetence? Robert tries to force Andy to face hard truths.
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