The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Getting lost in ‘ The Office’ helped with isolation

It also made us miss our own workplaces.

- By Autumn Brewington

Is it yet another 2020 twist that a long- retired cringe comedy and its satirical take on office life have become a means for reconnecti­ng with workplaces left empty for months and colleagues now seen on- screen?

The departure of “The Office” from Netflix this week, and NBC’S efforts to highlight that it will stream exclusivel­y on its Peacock platform starting Friday, have put the show back in headlines. But “Office” viewership — already among the highest of any streaming show — began spiking this spring as pandemic lockdowns took hold. In April, rerun ratings on Comedy Central climbed 13 percent f rom pre- covid totals in January through March. Fans binge- watched the show — and flooded social media with memes hypothesiz­ing how beloved characters would handle the coronaviru­s outbreak.

That an office sitcom has resonated during a year when millions of people abruptly lost access to their workplaces is partly because the show’s appeal was never the inner workings of Dunder Mifflin, the fictional paper company where the comedy was set.

Early in its nine seasons, “The Office” was rooted in relatable workplace situations: diversity sensitivit y and sexual harassment training, health coverage angst. But the show transforme­d into a cultural phenomenon — spawning a universe of memes — because beneath its sendup of workplace life ( the pathos of the party- planning committee!), the show is really about people. That i s, the hours upon hours spent with co- workers, the life events experience­d with them, and the affections and aggravatio­ns born of it all.

The resonance of relationsh­ips is not just between sitcom and audience but also viewers and their colleagues. The quality of the writing, the acting and the antics of the Dunder Mifflin crew stitched the sometimes- painful humor into an addictive whole.

If, as one critic observed, the show “flipped the TV- as- a- distractio­n- from- real- life paradigm by setting the action in precisely the type of workplace many people

‘ TV is an incredibly sentimenta­l medium. You have a lot of people not only watching but, like weirdly, experienci­ng this with you.’

John Krasinski

Actor who played Jim Halpert on the TV show “The Office”

long to escape,” covid- 19 has flipped the paradigm back: allowing viewers to blunt their physical isolation by connecting with the familiar workplace setting from which many are distanced.

At a time when the coronaviru­s has curtailed access to typical options for relaxing ( gym workouts, travel), comfort T Visa form of self- care.

A study in four Southeast Asian countries during covid lockdowns this spring found that 25 percent of respondent­s binge- watched television to relieve stress, while nearly 16 percent did so to overcome loneliness. And as one psychologi­st told The Post’s Magazine in June: “Programmin­g that engages people in such mixed emotional experience­s allows viewers to navigate complicate­d, blended feelings vicariousl­y through the characters from the safe distance of fiction.”

Translatio­n: Losing oneself in Dunder Mifflin is a way of coping with pandemic isolation.

“TV is an incredibly senti mental medium ,” John Kr as in ski, who played the every man Jim Halp - ert, said while discussing the series’ conclusion in 2013.“You have a lot of people not only watching but, like weird ly, experienci­ng this with you .” Mass viewing, an echo of a period when everyone had the same ( few) TV options, also threads connection­s at a time of physical separation.

Although some critics, including at The Post, have long advocated moving on from go- to shows to more current shows, audiences have resisted: “The Office” has consistent­ly ranked among Net fl ix’ s mostviewed U.S. programs. Nbcunivers­al agreed to pay $ 500 million for exclusive streaming rights in hopes of drawing those viewers to its platform.

Whether massive audiences follow “The Office” to Peacock — which is touting previously unaired footage to pique interest — the show has provided more than laughs this chaotic year. These familiar characters are reliable.

That’s comforting at a time when so little feels predictabl­e.

The power of connection­s, even on screens, hit home recently when colleagues and I, waiting for a Zoom meeting to start, discussed a fellow editor’s Ins tag ram story about watching " Dinner Party,” a brilliant , dark episode from season four. Mere mention of “The Office” ignited conversati­on: Would a net work greenl i ght the show today, we wondered. Had its recurring joke, # Thatswhats­heSaid, become so ubiquitous that the double entendre no longer pushed boundaries?

The exchange felt like more than enthusiasm for a beloved sitcom. Had our meeting been in The Post’s newsroom, our office, my colleagues and I might have paused in various activities, gathered and then dispersed in different directions.

Over nine months of remote work, however, virtual meetings have tethered us to each other and given shared experience­s greater weight. Laughing or cringing at the show, I never expected“The Office” to make me miss my office.

The series finale, in a nod to the show’s conceit as af aux documentar­y, concludes with the lines, “There’s a lot of beauty in ordinary things. Isn’t that kind of the point?” Arguably, the sentiment applies to rabid devotion to a fictional workplace sitcom, and bonding with real- life colleagues over it.

 ?? NBCUNIVERS­AL ?? “The Office” is moving to NBC’S Peacock streaming platform.
NBCUNIVERS­AL “The Office” is moving to NBC’S Peacock streaming platform.

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