Year: 2006 (Page 4 of 228)

The Office: “A Benihana Christmas”

What could be better than an hour-long episode of “The Office”? How about an hour-long episode that involves competing Christmas parties, Asian waitresses and lots and lots of drinking?

The episode got off to a great start when Dwight brought in a dead bird (was it a goose?) that he happened to hit with his car. How cool did he look in that orange stocking cap? It was a great exchange between him and Toby, where Dwight begs Toby to allow him to clean and cook the bird at the office.

Moments later, Michael sets up the rest of the episode when he announces that he intends to take his girlfriend to a resort on an all-inclusive vacation. His rendition of Eddie Money’s “Two Tickets to Paradise” was priceless. His girlfriend shows up and breaks up with him because he photoshopped himself into a picture she had from a vacation (with her ex-husband) two years earlier, and sent it out as his Christmas card. (I’m sure his awkward marriage proposal last week didn’t help matters, either.)

Jim: “It’s a bold move to photoshop yourself into a photo of your girlfriend and her kids on a ski trip with her ex-husband, but Michael is a bold guy. Is ‘bold’ the right word?”

Michael’s jovial mood quickly turns to depression, which manifests itself as he plays a sappy song clip over and over on his computer. I didn’t recognize the song, but it sounded like James Blunt (or some such crooner). Dwight asks, “Why don’t you just buy the song?”

Meanwhile, Pam extends an olive branch to Karen and the two become quick friends.

Jim: “Yep, it looks like the Scranton people and the Stamford people are finally coming together. And that’s what you want, right?”

Based on your delivery of that line, Jim, not so much.

Angela’s domineering attitude in the party-planning meeting gives Pam and Karen the idea to have their own (more enjoyable) party. The scene where the two opposing committees posted their flyers was great and Jenna Fischer’s comedic timing was on full display. Later, when Karen is asked if they are taking the party war too far, she responds, “I don’t think we’re taking this far enough.” She looks over to Pam, who says, “I just got goose bumps.”

Andy, who is trying to take residence up Michael’s ass, offers to take him to lunch, and Dwight and Jim go along. “Bro’s before ho’s,” Michael reasons. So it’s off to Benihanas, where they drink a lot of saki and egg nogs before returning to work (with two Asian waitresses).

Here are a few of the better moments from the two parties:

– Kelly’s karaoke, where she sang, “We belong together…Ryan!” while Ryan is pounding a margarita.

– Michael losing track of which waitress is “his,” and wisely marks her arm with permanent marker.

– Angela restricting Kevin’s intake of brownies. “You’ve got to be kidding!” Kevin exclaims. Angela responds, pointing at his belly, “You’ve got to be kidding!

– Meredith swaying back and forth with a bottle of vodka in her hand while Kevin sings karaoke.

– Angela suddenly “discovering” the power cord to the karaoke machine, hidden in a nearby planter. She’s a wily one, that Angela.

It looks like Jim is starting to realize that he’s still in love with Pam. His little speech to Michael about rebound relationships implies that he’s realizing that Karen was just a rebound for him. This happened more quickly than I expected, but I have a feeling that Pam will get back with Roy before Jim finally decides to make his move. However, I’m sure he’ll burn bridges with Karen first, ruining that relationship for good.

If I were him, I’d stick with Karen, at least for a while. She’s got a sick sense of humor, she’s hot, but mostly, she’s willing to admit she likes him. Pam’s great, but she’s too timid in the art of love.

And, at the end, who agreed to go on vacation with Michael? It has to be Jan, right?

Rosie on the other end of it

What goes around comes around, right? So it would seem. You may recall that Rosie O’Donnell recently got into a scrap with Kelly Ripa over the latter’s reaction when Clay Aiken put his hand over her mouth on TV. Well now O’Donnell is taking flak for mocking spoken Chinese on “The View.” It went a little something like this:

In a Dec. 5 segment, O’Donnell joked about how Danny DeVito’s recent — and seemingly drunken — appearance on the ABC daytime talk show had become international news.

“You know, you can imagine in China it’s like `ching chong, ching chong chong, Danny DeVito, ching chong chong chong, drunk, “The View,” ching chong,'” the 44-year-old comedian said.

Apparently this did not go over well. When informed of this, O’Donnell replied,

“To say ching chong to someone is very offensive, and some Asian people have told me it’s as bad as the n-word. Which I was like, `Really? I didn’t know that.'”

Ah, Rosie, what will you do next? Nothing could be as patently offensive to the brain cells as your performance in Riding on the Bus with My Sister. Let’s all remember that now, shall we?

“Firefly” will live on…online

Santa has delivered an early Christmas present to Browncoats the world over: a shiny new “Firefly” experience in the form of a massively multiplayer online role-playing game, or MMORPG:

Multiverse, maker of a free MMO-creation platform, plans to announce Friday morning that it’s struck a deal with Fox Licensing to turn the show into an MMORPG in the fashion of Star Wars Galaxies or Eve Online.

The “Browncoats,” as Firefly’s most devoted fans are known, have been campaigning to bring the show back almost since the moment it was canceled in late 2002. Now they’ll get their wish, albeit in a new form.

“We see virtual worlds as an extraordinarily promising new entertainment medium,” said Adam Kline, Fox Licensing’s vice president of media enterprises in an e-mail. “We believe Multiverse can deliver an experience that will remain true to the original series, while enabling a whole new level of personal involvement for fans.”

The game is still very much in the development stages…which should give you plenty of time to decide whether you want to play as a Reaver; a preferred client of Inara and her fellow Companions; or both.

“The Lost Room” worth a look

I’m almost through the first of three two-hour installments of the Sci-Fi miniseries “The Lost Room,” which stars Peter Krause (“Six Feet Under”) as a detective investigating a mysterious hotel key. It turns out that the motel key can open any door in the world, but first leads the user to a motel room where something “very bad” happened.

I don’t want to give anything else away, but suffice to say, anyone who likes a good sci-fi tale will probably enjoy the first two hours. It looks like Sci-Fi is going to air all three installments in a row on Sunday (12/17) night.

I’ve witnessed a few bad Sci-Fi movies in the past, but this isn’t one of them, which is probably why Krause and Juliana Margulies (“ER”) signed on. I’m really starting to dig original cable programming…”Battlestar Galactica,” “Nip/Tuck,” “The Shield,” “Rescue Me,” “The Closer” and “Eureka,” just to name a few. These are good (to great) shows that wouldn’t survive on regular broadcast television.

Showtime’s “Sleeper Cell” is good TV

I just mowed through the first four episodes (on DVD) of Showtime’s original series, “Sleeper Cell,” and I have to say, I’m very impressed. It follows an undercover FBI agent (Michael Ealy) as he infiltrates an Al-Qaeda-esque terrorist cell operating in Los Angeles. The antagonist is the cell leader (Oded Fehr) who constantly keeps the undercover agent on his toes as he plans an attack on the city that he calls “Judgment Day.”

It feels like “The Shield” and a more realistic version of “24.” The first season is out on DVD and Showtime is currently showing the second season on consecutive nights.

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