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Episode file

Season 9, episode 19

273 quotes from 25 characters. Back to Season 9.

Quotes273

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Characters25
Dwight Schrute61
Clark Green37
Andy Bernard31
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Stanley Hudson21
Jim Halpert15
Toby Flenderson15
Nellie Bertram13
Erin Hannon10
Pam Beesly9
Carla8
Oscar Martinez7
Robert California7
Man6
Kevin Malone5
Mrs. Davis5
Phyllis Vance5
Angela Martin4
Creed Bratton2
Crowd2
Everyone2
Meredith Palmer2
Pete Miller2
Todd Packer2
Reporter #11
Reporter #21
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Episode transcript cards

All quotes from season 9, episode 19

273 quotes, ordered by scene.

"Didn't you get the memo? It's Stairmageddon! [claps and opens the door to the stairwell] Come on Stanley! [claps]"

"Dwight is having maintenance done on the elevator today, and he was really on top of it. Weeks ago, he started the Stairmageddon Awareness campaign. The idea was to get us prepared, both mentally and physically, for a day that hopefully comes once in a 100 years. It's a... 'Mageddon!""

"So when something as routine as elevator maintenance happens, and people are forced to expend cardiovascular effort, we have to compare it to the end of time."

"I just got a text from my brother. Scranton Times Tribune.com. There's a review of the documentary!"

"Well, the alert was already set to 'Red... because of Stairmageddon. You think I should set it to 'Double Red...?"

"'The Office: An American Workplace airing on PBS next month is a documentary following the employees of Scranton's own Dunder Mifflin Paper Company!""

"'In this series, which will air starting in May, we get an in-depth look at many interesting local people. There's Kevin Malone, the falstaffian accountant. Dwight Schrute, the head salesman forever chasing a manager position he will never get.""

"'Andy Bernard, the rudderless trust fund child-slash-middle manager, whose incompetence is emblematic of a declining American economy.""

"Now that this documentary is coming out, my days at Dunder Mifflin are probably limited. And you know what? Good. Because this is not what I wanted to do with my life. I wanted to be my generation's Lisa Loeb."

"'Though it mostly focuses on the daily realities of office life, a lurid subplot reveals the hypocrisy of a local public figure embroiled in a gay affair while preaching family values.""

"[walks into the office grunting and wheezing] You own the building. Why can't you fix the elevator in the middle of the night? Who do I look like? Jackie Joyner-Kersee?"

"Well, I did say it would be an inconvenience. You should have called me from downstairs. We could've met in the lobby. It's time to go out on a sale! Here we go."

"The buyer is your sister's friend. This is the printing paper for the entire school district of Lackawanna. You are coming, and that's an order."

"You are not my damn boss and you never will be! Guess what? Never gonna happen! Pete! Iced tea. Three sugars, five creams."

"Oh, your mom's watching the kids tonight. So what are you two up to? [chuckles] Oh, um, Embassy Suites. 'Do Not Disturb... sign on the door. Mommy and Daddy are on the floor."

"No, no, no, no, no. Uh, we're just starting couple's counseling. Uh, which doesn't sound any better."

"Hello, William Morris Agency. I need to speak with your best agent who represents your biggest stars. Yes, I'll hold. I'm sorry. I misunderstood. Goodbye. [hangs up phone]"

"Thank you, Stan. Oh, honey. [Stan'closes limo door]'Look, I just want our life to get back to normal. Ribbon cuttings, charity balls."

"Don't worry. I've scheduled a press conference for later today. We just need to face the camera together. A beloved public servant and his devoted wife. And move on."

"All right, if I have to be the good wife, I'll be the best damn wife there is. Correction. Best darn wife. Sorry, I'm a better wife than that. [sighs]"

"Yeah, come on in. I'm just on hold with another talent agency. It's insane. This promo with me playing banjo has 250 views already. And every time I click, there's more. 251. 252. I can't even keep up!"

"[grunts intensely] I hate people! Why do they never do what you need them to do? Stanley has to go. That's final."

"For five years I've held my instincts in check because I wanted to be made manager. Maybe it's time for me to just let that thought go. It's kind of painful, but it's also freeing in a way. Now it's all about my instincts."

"Don't worry, it's just a bull tranquilizer. Nothing to be alarmed about. It's just a man pointing a bull tranquilizer at a coworker."

"Is he gonna be okay? I mean, weren't those darts intended for an animal, like, two to three times larger than him?"

"Shh. Got about 45 minutes to get him to the client before he comes to. [claps] Grab his feet. [grunts] Let's go!"

"He's like a manatee. Ready? Let's go again. Come on. We can do this. One, two, three! [Stanley's head hits the door frame] Oh, God.... No wonder my elevator cables are under such strain."

"It's 15 feet down, it's at a 45-degree angle. Get set in your haunches, it's like your catching a medicine..."

"Dude, this size of my haunches... [Stanley's body slips down the stairs and his head thumps into a wall]"

"So how does it work? It's like, you know, the action of talking to a third party breaks up the log jam, or..."

"He took this job in Philly without telling me. He bought our house without telling me. At a certain point, he'shouldn't'be rewarded for that."

"I feel like he's always making these decisions for the family, and then I'm left playing catch-up."

"I mean, what's the end date? It must be really hard for her to sign on to be unhappy if she doesn't know when it's gonna end."

"Huh, yeah. [chuckles] I mean, I'm happy Angela's the first one getting famous, but it's a little weird, no? I mean, she can't sing or act, so it's actually kind of insane, if you think about it."

"[on the computer screen] I would just to start by saying that there have been some rumors about my personal life that I would like to settle once and for all. As my long-suffering wife can attest... I am gay."

"I once believed that a gay person could be somewhat straight. It wasn't until my marriage to Angela that I realized how'charmless I find the female body."

"Yes! And I knew it the whole time! I kept the secret. I kept the secret so good. You didn't know, you didn't know, and you didn't freaking know. But I knew! [claps]"

"--with this new self-awareness, I was finally able to find love at long last. With my amazing... Chief of Staff Wesley Silver."

"Are you kidding me? The bubble wrap is the only thing that's stopping his suit from getting wrinkled. These meetings are all about presentation."

"If started by accident as these things tend to do. You know, I was setting down my cat, and I accidently put her on top of my dog, and I was, like, so mad at myself at first. And then I was, like, wait. Wait a second."

"Eh, you know, it really doesn't make sense to name the mice. They're kinda like cannon fodder, you know? You're not one of those PETA guys, are you? [cat jumps off dog] Oh, great."

"Just say 'arms... and 'legs,... okay? That just'that's the vernacular that I'm comfortable with."

"Roll him, roll him, roll him. Good. Good. Okay, careful, he's slouching. Okay, can you'sl-slouch him into the seat. [sighs] Here. Here. Go around and get his seatbelt. [grunts]"

"Okay. We, hey'hey, listen, listen. We are going to go discuss paper contracts for city of Lackawanna public schools, okay?"

"Oh, God, this is bad. Looks like we've got no choice. You, my friend, are going to have to be Stanley Hudson."

"New plan, okay? We get him a cup of coffee and we go back to the old plan. Let's go! Gimme a hand. Here we go. Come on, Stanley! Here we go. Upsie-doozie. There we go. Okay, all right. Come on, big guy. You can walk, right? Yeah. What a pretty smile. Let's go."

"I'm sure Athlead will be a huge success. But I don't want him to do it anymore, and I don't want to give him an ultimatum, but I am not moving our family to Philly."

"Well, if Pam says she won't go, then"[chuckles] we're gonna need a lot more than counseling. Hmph."

"It's a long drive. He was in the backseat. But right now we're talking to Mrs. Davis about the full range of the products that we offer and our competitive rates, right, Stanley?"

"Yeah, maybe I'll never be manager, but I just managed to get our most stubborn salesman to close a sale with one of our biggest clients, and I must say, it's the most pleasant I've ever seen Stanley. I think we should consider injecting him with bull tranquilizer on a daily basis."

"[Australian accent] Well, what can't I do? Right, I can sing, I can dance, I can play the banjo, innit? And if you hadn't noticed, I've got a pretty good British accent."

"Why do you have, uh, a high school musical here on your resume? What are you, like, 40? 45?"

"My exact age is 28 to 34, so basically just send me out on whatever Jake Gyllenhaal's going out on."

"Would you dress up as, say, a birthday clown and go to a kid's party, let 'em throw pies at ya?"

"Whereas that is not why I have entered show business, I do understand that you have to build credibility. [sniffs] I'm all for it."

"You are? Yes! Yes. Are you being for real right now? Oh, man. Ah, yes! I need this so bad. I really think this is what could fix me."

"We are extremely excited to be working with you too, sir. Pay Todd on your way out."

"Most talent agents take 10% of whatever jobs they get you, but with Carla you pay a flat rate of $5,000 up front. And that includes headshots."

"You earned yourself a nice, fat commission and you didn't even know it. I'll go tell Andy the good news. Oh. [chuckles] Silly me. Gotta take the stairs."