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"Producer's Cut" To Be Web-Exclusive Event On NBC.com On November 9th
BURBANK, Calif. – November 6, 2006 – NBC's Emmy-winning comedy "The
Office" (Thursdays, 8:30 – 9:00pm ET/PT) will offer fans a first-ever,
web-exclusive "producer's cut" on November 9th. The episode will
include additional scenes and extra footage not shown in the broadcast
version. Viewers can log onto NBC.com at 9:00pm (PT) on November 9th to
see the web-exclusive event.
The announcement was made today by Vivi Zigler, executive vice president NBC digital entertainment and new media.
"This is a first-of-its-kind and a real bonus for fans of 'The
Office,'" said Zigler. "It's also a natural for this show which has
continually pushed the envelope in the digital landscape. We're seeing
an incredible audience reaction to the evolving digital extensions of
our programming and anticipate this being one of their favorites."
In the pivotal November 9th episode, Jan (Melora Hardin) tells
Michael (Steve Carell) that the Scranton Branch will be shutting down
and Michael strives to keep his staff's spirits up. Meanwhile, everyone
privately begins to envision how their lives will change in the
aftermath. Rainn Wilson, Jenna Fischer, John Krasinski, B.J. Novak,
David Denman, Leslie David Baker, Brian Baumgartner, Kate Flannery,
Angela Kinsey, Phyllis Smith, Paul Lieberstein and Mindy Kaling also
star, and Ed Helms ("The Daily Show"), Rashida Jones ("Wanted") and
Charles Esten ("Whose Line Is It Anyway?") guest-star.
Through October 29, "The Office" has averaged a 4.0 rating, 10
share in adults 18-49 and 8.5 million viewers overall, making it this
Fall's #3 half-hour comedy on any network in adults 18-49. "The Office"
is also primetime's most upscale comedy, with the highest concentration
of homes with $100,000-plus incomes and highest median income for its
18-49 audience among network comedies. "The Office" has improved the
Thursday 8:30pm half-hour for NBC by 14 percent versus the network's
18-49 average at this point last season. "The Office" has matched or
improved upon its adult 18-49 lead-in from "My Name is Earl" with every
first-run telecast this Fall.
"The Office" takes a painfully funny look at the interactions of
the desk jockeys at Dunder Mifflin paper-supply company in Scranton,
Pennsylvania. Golden Globe winner Steve Carell ("The 40-Year-Old
Virgin") stars as unctuous regional manager Michael Scott who hosts the
documentary crew on a tour of the workplace. Jenna Fischer ("Miss
Match"), John Krasinski ("Jarhead," "Kinsey"), Rainn Wilson ("Six Feet
Under"), and B.J. Novak ("Punk'd") star as the employees who tolerate
Michael's inappropriate behavior only because he signs their paychecks.
Also starring are Melora Hardin as Jan Levinson, David Denman as Roy,
Leslie David Baker as Stanley Hudson, Brian Baumgartner as Kevin
Malone, Kate Flannery as Meredith Palmer, Angela Kinsey as Angela
Martin, Oscar Nunez as Oscar Martinez and Phyllis Smith as Phyllis
Lapin. "The Office" is executive-produced by Ben Silverman, Greg
Daniels, who developed the series for American television, Ricky
Gervais, Stephen Merchant and Howard Klein.
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