Diversity Day

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Diversity Day
The Office episode

Michael takes a question from Dwight on "Diversity Day".
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 2
Written by B.J. Novak
Directed by Ken Kwapis
Guest stars Larry Wilmore
Production no. R1101
Original airdate March 29, 2005
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"Pilot" "Health Care
  1. Pilot
  2. Diversity Day
  3. Health Care
  4. The Alliance
  5. Basketball
  6. Hot Girl"
List of The Office (U.S. TV series) episodes

"Diversity Day" is the second episode of the first season of the American version of The Office. Written by B.J. Novak and directed by Ken Kwapis, it first aired in the United States on March 29, 2005, on NBC. The episode guest stars Office consulting producer Larry Wilmore as Mr. Brown, the corporate consultant sent by Dunder Mifflin in response to a racially derogative impersonation made by Michael. In an attempt to upstage Mr. Brown, Michael decides to create his own racial tolerance seminar. During one of Michael's impersonations, a racial expletive spoken by Michael had to be censored by the producers for NBC.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Manager Michael Scott's controversial imitation of a Chris Rock routine forces the staff to undergo a racial diversity seminar. Michael refuses to allow Mr. Brown to control the seminar, instead attempting to assist him in teaching, much to Brown's chagrin. However, when confidentially informed by Brown that the seminar was not meant for the staff, but instead only for Michael, he decides to create his own seminar.

Under the name Diversity Tomorrow, Michael attempts to work out the staff's racial issues in his own way. To try to connect with his staff, Michael informs them of his heritage, stating that he is 2/15 Native American, and to inform the staff about racism, he assigns each staff member an index card with a different race on it, causing tempers to slowly simmer until they finally snap.

Salesman Jim Halpert desperately tries to close on an important annual sale that makes up about 25% of his commission. In the chaos of the day, it is Dwight Schrute, another salesman, who rings up the sale for himself. Nevertheless, when Jim's love interest falls asleep on his shoulder at the end of the meeting, he concludes that it was "not a bad day."

[edit] Production

Wilmore, who plays the sensitivity trainer Mr. Brown, is a writer for the show. At the table-read for this episode, they had not cast the part yet and Daniels had Wilmore read for the role to fill in. After the read, producer Greg Daniels thought he was perfect for the role.[2] However, because of stipulations with the Screen Actors Guild, producers still had to have Wilmore formally audition with other actors for the role.[3] Daniels was also not sure where to use Mindy Kaling on screen in the series until the point came in this episode's script when Michael needed to be slapped by a minority. Her character in this episode, however, is far from the bubbly chatty character that Kelly later becomes.[4][5] The second episode of the series was the first to feature predominantly original writing, as the "Pilot" contained many jokes from the British series pilot.[6]

[edit] Reception

While the Pilot episode garnered over eleven million viewers,[7] the second episode lost over half its viewing audience from the previous episode.[8][9] Entertainment Weekly gave the episode positive reviews, stating that "Think of the toss-off racism of the original, plopped into a PC-gone-wrong showcase that might be entitled The Accidental Bigot. As when the African-American diversity trainer introduces himself as Mr. Brown, and Scott assures him, 'I will not call you that.'"[10] Ricky Gervais, who was the lead in the British series, stated that, in comparison to the British version, "It is as good. I love the fact that, apart from the first one, the scripts are all original. You've gone back to the blueprint of what the characters are and you've started from there, as opposed to copying anything."[11] The episode was nominated for the 2006 Writers Guild of America Television and Radio Awards for Outstanding Achievement in Writing for a Comedy Series.[12]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Daniels, Greg (Executive Producer). 2005. "Diversity Day" [Commentary track], The Office Season One (US/NBC Version) [DVD], Los Angeles, CA: Universal.
  2. ^ Carell, Steve (Actor). 2005. "Diversity Day" [Commentary track], The Office Season One (US/NBC Version) [DVD], Los Angeles, CA: Universal.
  3. ^ Daniels, Greg (Producer). 2005. "Diversity Day" [Commentary track], The Office Season One (US/NBC Version) [DVD], Los Angeles, CA: Universal.
  4. ^ Wolk, Josh. "The Drudge Report: A Visit With 7 More 'Office' Mates." Entertainment Weekly February 24, 2006: 24-25.
  5. ^ "'Office' promotions pay off in a big way", Chicago Tribune, retrieved February 11, 2008
  6. ^ It's not as warped as the original, but The Office is painfully funny The Boston Globe, retrieved February 11, 2008
  7. ^ Strong showing for Office remake BBC News, retrieved February 11, 2008
  8. ^ Stunning tumble for NBC's 'The Office' Media Life, retrieved February 11, 2008
  9. ^ US remake of The Office loses half its audience Media Guardian, retrieved February 11, 2008
  10. ^ The Office Entertainment Weekly, retrieved February 11, 2008
  11. ^ Ricky Gervais Defends American Office Celebrity Spider, retrieved February 11 ,2008
  12. ^ 2006 Writers Guild Awards Television and Radio Nominees Announced Writers Guild of America, retrieved February 12, 2008

[edit] External links