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The Office Season 6 Episode 24

24th episode of the 6th season of The Part

"The Comprehend-Up"
The Office episode
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 24
Directed by Rainn Wilson
Written by
  • Lee Eisenberg
  • Gene Stupnitsky
Cinematography by Randall Einhorn
Editing by Claire Scanlon
Product code 624
Original air date May 6, 2010 (2010-05-06)
Guest appearances
  • Hugh Dane as Hank Tate
  • Amy Pietz equally Donna Newton
  • Zach Forest as Gabe Lewis
Episode chronology
Previous
"Torso Language"
Next →
"The Doormat"
The Office (American season vi)
List of episodes

"The Camouflage" is the twenty-fourth episode of the sixth season of the American comedy serial The Role. It aired on May 6, 2010 on NBC in the United States.

In the episode, Michael suspects Donna is cheating on him, and he pays Dwight $50 plus expenses to investigate. Meanwhile, Darryl pranks Andy into believing he has uncovered a visitor conspiracy.

The episode was written past Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky, their third writing credit of the flavor after "The Lover" and "Scott'south Tots." Information technology was directed past Rainn Wilson, who also portrays Dwight Schrute on the bear witness, marking his boob tube directorial debut.[1]

Plot [edit]

Michael Scott (Steve Carell) is in expert spirits due to his wildly successful relationship with Donna (Amy Pietz). He calls an function coming together solely to go suggestions for their next engagement, but the meeting participants, particularly Ryan Howard (B. J. Novak) and Kelly Kapoor (Mindy Kaling), convince him that she might be cheating on him. Worried, Michael hires Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) to tail her to see if she spends time with anyone else. Dwight follows Donna to her gym and attempts to seduce her. Donna rebukes him and calls security on him, whereby he openly admits he was sent there past Michael to keep tabs on her. An enraged Donna comes to the part to talk to Michael well-nigh the whole state of affairs, and the 2 forgive each other and reconcile by planning a private vacation together.

Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) receives a call from a concerned client that a Sabre printer caught fire during a routine operation. He becomes frustrated when Gabe Lewis (Zach Woods) fails to take his client's complaint seriously. Capitalizing on his fears, Darryl Philbin (Craig Robinson) pranks Andy into believing he has uncovered a conspiracy as revenge for Andy pinning i of his mistakes on the warehouse a few years prior. He pays Creed Bratton (Creed Bratton) to threaten him, and further convinces Andy that the conspirators intend to kill him. Gabe eventually tells Andy that he consulted corporate, who confirmed that only 12 out of 400,000 printers have caught burn down, and gives Andy a $5 gift carte du jour as thanks for bringing the matter to their attention. This assuages Andy's suspicions, but Darryl is still able to convince him that he needs to go public with proof that the printers are faulty. He films Andy testing the printer in normal use. Though Darryl intends to utilise the video to further embarrass Andy, the printer indeed catches burn down and explodes. This confirms Andy'south suspicions, and scares Darryl straight.

While Donna and Michael are planning their trip, Pam Halpert (Jenna Fischer) becomes suspicious when she notices Donna wearing heart-shaped jewelry that Michael did non buy for her. She snoops effectually on Facebook, and finds recent pictures of Donna hugging and kissing some other man. Pam shows Michael the pictures, and he confronts Donna with the evidence. Donna admits to cheating and reveals that it is Michael who is the "other guy"; the photos are of her and her husband.

Production [edit]

The episode was written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky, their third writing credit of the season after "The Lover" and "Scott's Tots." It was directed by Rainn Wilson, who as well portrays Dwight Schrute on the show, marker his television receiver directorial debut.[one] He is the fourth actor of the series to make a directorial debut this season after B. J. Novak, John Krasinski, and Mindy Kaling. Cast members Steve Carell and Paul Lieberstein also directed episodes this season, though they had previously directed for the serial. This episode was defended to the retentivity of Larry Einhorn, whose son, Randall Einhorn, had directed 11 previous episodes of the series, served as this episode'southward consultant and cinematographer, and went on to straight other episodes including the next episode.

Reception [edit]

In its original American circulate, "The Cover-up" was watched by half-dozen.84 one thousand thousand viewers with a 3.five rating and a 10 share in the 18–49 demographic.[2]

Cindy White of IGN gave the episode an viii.0/10, saying it was "Impressive" and "While 'The Cover-up' did manage to move forth two story threads leading upwardly to the cease of the flavour, it wasn't really a standout episode, especially in contrast to last calendar week's. There weren't as many quotable lines or memorable moments as I usually look from The Office."[iii] Leonard Pierce of The A.V. Gild gave the episode an A−, writing "It's an extremely adept episode, skillfully blending its themes with a solid structure and tons of good jokes in a way that this season has rarely accomplished", but said the episode wasn't every bit skillful as the other NBC Comedy Night Done Right shows, Community and Parks and Recreation.[4] Darren Franich of Entertainment Weekly said "The episode was chosen 'The Encompass-Up,' and even if it didn't quite follow through on the promise of that opening scene, it was a practiced little ditty."[5] James Poniewozik of Fourth dimension gave the episode a positive review writing "Credit to the show for setting that upwards (Michael realizing he is a mistress), though it eluded me and, I suppose, everyone else not versed in the undercover signals of heart-shaped jewelry.[6]

Steve Carell submitted this episode for Emmy voting when he was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a One-act Series.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The Office: The Camouflage, 6.24". vi May 2010.
  2. ^ Seidman, Robert (May seven, 2010). "Thursday Finals: Survivor, Bones, Adjusted Upwardly; 30 Stone Adapted Downwardly". Television set by the Numbers . Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  3. ^ White, Cindy (May 7, 2010). "The Function: "The Cover-Up" Review". IGN . Retrieved Feb 28, 2020.
  4. ^ Pierce, Leonard (May 6, 2010). "The Office: "The Encompass-Up"". TV Club . Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  5. ^ Franich, Darren (May 7, 2010). "'The Office' epitomize: Exploding printers last all summertime long". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  6. ^ "The Function, 'The Cover-Up'". Fourth dimension. May 6, 2010. Archived from the original on May 11, 2010. Retrieved February half-dozen, 2017.

External links [edit]

  • "The Cover-Up" at NBC.com
  • "The Camouflage" at IMDb

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cover-Up_%28The_Office%29

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