The Client - The Office (Season 2, Episode 7)
Original Air Date: November 8, 2005
The episode begins with Jan and Michael discussing and planning for their big meeting. The meeting
is with, Christian, the representative from Lackawanna County. If the meeting is successful and Dunder-
Mifflin can get their business, no downsizing will occur.
Obviously, knowing Michael, Jan is concerned and continues to request that only she do the talking.
During the introduction at Chili's (the big meeting) Michael learns Jan is divorced and is intrigued
by what happened openly embarrassing Jan.
Here's how the meeting goes:
Jan and Christian begin discussing the needs of the county and Michael begins discussing the Awesome
Bloosom.
Michael then proceeds to tell a joke. Jan stops him and says he can only tell one joke. Wanting to
make the most of his one joke, he calls Pam and they go over choices from his many joke books.See Joke
After the joke, Jan orders a vodka tonic
The next thing we see is Michael and Christian laughing over Michael's mouth tie. Everybody is drinking
margaritas and Jan can no longer get the meeting under control.
The table orders baby back ribs and Michael & Christian sing the famous song.
They are then playing Truth or Dare and Christian is telling about his sick mother.
Jan's turn and she is pressured into telling about her divorce.
Michael and Christian talk about where they grew up over beers and Jan is miserable believing the night
could not be worse.
Michael segways from growing up in Lackawanna County and knowing its needs to closing the deal. Jan is
completely surprised and very drunk and very intrigued with Michael.
Back at the office, while Pam is putting away the joke books, she finds a movie screenplay that Michael
has written. She immediately gives it to Jim and the Dunder-Mifflin employees begin to act out the movie around
the conference table.
Roy comes to pick Pam up but she decides to stay and finish the movie reading.
Dwight is upset to learn that the movie's sidekick was originally named Dwight but was changed to Samuel L. Chang.
So he quits reading the script and goes downstairs to set off the fireworks his uncle gave him.
Jim prepares grilled cheese sandwiches and Pam gets the drinks. They go to the roof to watch the fireworks.
(Jim broke a date to be with Pam)
After the meeting at Chili's, in the parking lot, very excited about the deal, Jan & Michael kiss and then
leave to go get more intimate somewhere else.
The next morning several employees notice Jan's car is still in the parking lot and assumptions are made about what
happend between the two.
Michael claims the two did not actually have sex.
Jan immediately regrets what happened.
Best Funny Quotes From The Office - The Client
| entering office Hey, have they left for the big meeting yet? I’ve got Michael’s lucky tie. | |
| No. They’re in the conference room. | |
| Good. | |
| Wait, are those Michael’s Levis? | |
| Yeah, who dry-cleans jeans? | |
| Michael and his jeans. He gets in them, and I’m not exactly sure what happens. But I can tell you, he loves the way he looks in those jeans. I know that’s why he started casual Fridays. | |
| to Ryan I’ll take those. Thanks. throws jeans under her desk | |
| This is a projection of the county’s needs… | |
| Wow, graphs and charts, somebody’s really been doing their homework. Looks like USA Today. | |
| Thirteen schools, uh, two hospitals… | |
| So this possible client they’re talking about, actually a big deal. It’s Lackawanna County. Our whole county. And if we get this, they may not have to downsize our branch. And I could work here for years. And years. groan Years. | |
| So when we get to the Radisson, I’d like to, um- | |
| I changed it. To Chili’s. | |
| Excuse me? | |
| Radisson just gives out this vibe, “Oh, I’m doing business at the Radisson”. It’s kind of snooty. So. | |
| You had no right to do that, Michael. | |
| Here’s the thing. Chili’s is the new golf course. It’s where business happens. Small Businessman Magazine. | |
| It said that. | |
| It will. I sent it in. Letter to the editor. | |
| Alright. But you will let me run this meeting. | |
| Uh huh, uh huh. under his breath Power trip. | |
| What? | |
| She had done a background check on me, she had it printed out. | |
| No… | |
| Yeah. And she was asking me about stuff, line by line, while we were having dinner. | |
| That is unbelievable. | |
| What is going on? | |
| We are doing worst first dates. | |
| Oh my God, I win! Ok, it was a minor league hockey game. He brought his brother, and when I went to the bathroom, the game ended and they forgot about me. | |
| Ok, that’s a joke. | |
| No, they had to come back for me. | |
| Wait, when was this? | |
| Umm… it was not that long ago. | |
| Wait, not Roy. Say it’s not your fiance. laughs | |
| I always knew Pam has refused to go to sports games with Roy, but I never knew why. Interesting. | |
| Ok, let’s do this thing. to Pam Wish us luck. | |
| Good luck, Michael. Good luck, Jan. | |
| Thank you. | |
| under his breath Kiss ass. Ok, probably going to go late tonight. Burning the midnight tequila. So, I think you could all just take off now. | |
| Michael, shouldn’t take more than an hour. | |
| Well… | |
| Do you always shut down the entire office when you leave for an hour? | |
| No, no. That would not be efficient. Actually, they just don’t get very much work done when I’m not here. Jan stares at Michael That’s not true. I know how to delegate, and they do more work done when I’m not here. Not more. The same amount of work is done, whether I am here or not. another Jan stare Hey, everybody, listen up. This is what we’re gonna do. You sit tight, until I return. Sound good? Doesn’t matter, it’s an order. Follow it blindly, mwahahaha, ok? Alright, ciao. to Oscar Adios! | |
| So which way is Chili’s? | |
| Uh, I’ll drive. | |
| Oh, no, that’s alright. I wanna leave straight from there. | |
| It’s just a couple blocks away, so… boy, you really don’t know Scranton, do you? | |
| I know Scranton. | |
| At all! | |
| Alright. | |
| You ever been to Scranton, Jan? Dar de- | |
| If it’s a couple blocks away- | |
| Dar de dar. | |
| Ok. | |
| Jan Levinson-Gould. Jan is cold. If she was sitting across from you on a train and she wasn’t moving, you might think she was dead. | |
| We should come up with a signal of some sort. | |
| Why would we need a signal? | |
| Well, in case one of us gets into trouble, the other one can signal- | |
| What kinda trouble are you planning on getting in, Michael? | |
| Well, I… it could be either of us. | |
| You’re gonna let me do the talking, we agreed on that. | |
| Yeees. | |
| Hello? Christian? | |
| Yes. | |
| Thought that was you. Hi. Michael Scott. This is Jan Levinson-Gould. | |
| Just Jan Levinson. | |
| No Gould? | |
| No. To Christian Thank you very much for meeting with us. Have you been waiting long? | |
| No, not long. | |
| Uh, Jan, what happened? | |
| Michael. | |
| Is Gould dead? What uh- | |
| Michael, we got divorced, ok? to Christian I’m so sorry. Excuse me. | |
| Wow, you’re kidding me! Do you wanna talk about? | |
| Michael. to hostess Uh, could we have a table for three, please? | |
| When did this happen? | |
| We’re in a meeting. | |
| Ok. | |
| Christian. | |
| Alright, after you. | |
| Thank you. | |
| mouths “Wow” to the camera | |
| I thought we could start by going over the needs of the county. | |
| Right. Well, Lackawanna County has not been immune to the slow economic growth over the past five years. So for us, the name of the game is budget reduction- | |
| Awesome blossom. | |
| What? | |
| to Christian I think we should share an Awesome Blossom, what do you say? They are awesome. Want to, Christian, blossom? | |
| Sure. | |
| Ok, it’s done. Actually, turns around Megan, may we have an Awesome Blossom, please, extra awesome? Now it’s done. | |
| So- | |
| I heard a- | |
| If you have a- | |
| Very very funny joke the other day. Wanna hear it? | |
| Christian, you don’t have to listen to this. | |
| It’s ok, I like jokes. | |
| Ok. | |
| Just the one. | |
| Just one joke. Ok. Well, if it’s just gonna be one, I will think of a different joke. Umm… let’s see… choo choo choo. | |
| Dunder-Mifflin, this is Pam. | |
| Pam, it’s Michael. I need you to go into my office and check some data for me. | |
| to Michael on speakerphone Ok, you want me to read ’em? | |
| Yes. | |
| Ok. Um, a fisherman is walking down Fifth Avenue walking an animal behind him- | |
| No. | |
| When- | |
| Nope. Told it. Not as good as you think. Pick another one. | |
| Ok. There’s a transcript between a naval ship- | |
| Oh ho ho, yea! Bingo! And a lighthouse. Yes. That is hysterical. Could you start that one from the beginning? | |
| Sure. There’s a transcript between a naval ship and a lighthouse. | |
| Is this real? Pam dumps Michael’s screenplay on Jim’s desk | |
| It is a screenplay. Starring himself. | |
| Agent Michael Scarn. | |
| Of the FBI. | |
| How long is this? flips through pages Oh, Pam. Good work! Oop, wait, stop. Drawings. | |
| What is that? | |
| Oh, those are drawings. In case the writing didn’t really put a picture in your head. And there he is, in the flesh, Agent Michael Scarn. Now we know what he looks like. | |
| First guy says “Well, I’m an astronaut, so I drive a Saturn”. And the second guy says, “Well, I am a pimp, so I drive a cheap Escort”. And the third guy says “I gotcha both beat, I’m a proctologist, so I drive a brown Probe”. | |
| Ohhh no! laughs Oh my God, that’s funny! I almost had Awesome Blossom coming out of my nose! | |
| to waitress Excuse me, could I have a vodka tonic, please? | |
| Do we all have our copy of “Threat Level: Midnight”, by Michael Scott? | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| Alright, let’s get this started. I’m gonna be reading the action descriptions, and Phyllis, I would like you to play Catherine Zeta Jones. | |
| That’s the character’s name? | |
| Oh yeah- | |
| Ok, you guys should not be doing this. | |
| Why not, Dwight? This is a movie. I mean, this is for all of America to enjoy. | |
| You took something that doesn’t belong to you. | |
| Dwight- | |
| Brought it in here- | |
| Do you want to play- | |
| Made copies of it- | |
| The lead role of Agent Michael Scarn? | |
| making the mouth on his tie talk Yum! Yum yum yum! Christian laughs That’s delicious! I love it! | |
| We would probably be upset with ourselves if we went this whole night without talking business, so, Dunder-Mifflin can provide a level of personal service to the county that the warehouse chains just can’t match. | |
| Well, we are out to save money. | |
| What’s the bottom line? | |
| Bop! Be blah bop, be boo boo bop. | |
| That’s why I wanted a signal, between us, so that I wouldn’t have to just shout non-sense words. That’s her fault. | |
| Did somebody say “baby back ribs”? Hmmm? Hmmmmm? | |
| I don’t think Christian has time for that. | |
| I have time. | |
| singing I want my baby back, baby back, baby back Christian laughs | |
| singing I want my baby back, baby back, baby back- | Michael and Christian |
| singing Chili’s baby back ribs… | |
| reading the screenplay Inside the FBI, Agent Michael Scarn sits with his feet up on his desk. Catherine Zeta Jones enters. | |
| Sir, you have some messages. | |
| Not now! | |
| They’re important. | |
| Ok, what are they? | |
| First message is: “I love you”. That’s from me. | |
| Not in a thousand years, Catherine. We work together. And get off my desk! | |
| Yes, I have acted before. I was in a production of “Oklahoma” in the seventh grade. I played the part of Mutey the Mailman. They had too many kids, so they made up roles like that. I was good. | |
| If it isn’t my old partner, Samuel L. Chang. | |
| Agent Michael Scarn, you lost some weight. | |
| Thank you for noticing. Now keep me company for one more mission. Pam gets up to talk to Roy | |
| Hey, uh, I have to work late. | |
| looks around conference room You’re joking right? | |
| Michael Scarn takes out a nine-millimeter gun and shoots the- | |
| Pow! Pow! Pow! | |
| Hahaha, Agent Michael Scarn, you so funny. Word. | |
| Michael’s movie? Two thumbs down. Smiles Heh. | |
| A man sitting several seats down, who has a gold face, turns to Michael Scarn. out of character Uh… Ooh, Oscar, you wanna play Goldenface? | |
| Mr. Scarn, perhaps you would be more comfortable in my private jet? | |
| Yes, perhaps I would, Goldenface. Sam, get my luggage. | |
| I forget it, brutha. | |
| Samuel, you are such an idiot, you are the worst assistant ever. And you’re disgusting, Dwigt. out of character Wait, who’s Dwigt? | |
| Here’s what we think happened. Michael’s sidekick, who all through the movie is this complete idiot who’s causing the downfall of the United States, was originally named Dwight. But then Michael changed it to Samuel L. Chang using a search and replace, but that doesn’t work on misspelled words, leaving behind one Dwigt. And Dwight figured it out. Oops. | |
| D-W-I-G-H-T. | |
| Ok, you know what? I am done with this. That’s it, the end. | |
| Well, some of us wanna keep reading, so- | |
| Uh, you don’t speak for everyone, Jim. Ok, announcement. My uncle bought me some fireworks. Anyone who wants to see a real show, come with me outside now. | |
| That’s actually a good idea. We’ll all take a brief intermission. To Pam Hey, are you hungry? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah? | |
| So after watching my mom go through so much pain, I decided to keep that promise, that I made to her, and take care of her. | |
| Woo, well, this brings us to Jan. Truth or Dare? Tell us about your divorce. Ohh, ohh. | |
| Oh no, Michael, Michael, please. No, really. | |
| Oh, so you’re not gonna play? She’s not playing. | |
| It’s not fair. | |
| She’s not playing the game. | |
| We’d been fighting for a while- | |
| Check please. | |
| He didn’t want kids, but I knew that going into it. But he also knew that I did. I guess I thought that he would change his mind; he thought that I would change mine. | |
| You didn’t. | |
| I was stupid. | |
| No, you were not stupid. Gould was stupid. Right? | |
| That’s right. | |
| You know? | |
| You were really brave! You, you put your arms out there, you slit your wrists. | |
| It’s true. | |
| You said “World, this is my blood! It’s red, just like yours. So love me!” | |
| I had plans to meet a friend tonight. Which I had to cancel. But this is cool, too. I’m not a complainer. | |
| Pam lights a candle Wow. | |
| For the bugs. | |
| Nice. That’s excellent, because bugs love my famous grilled cheese sandwich. | |
| Yes… nice! I can’t remember the last time someone made me dinner. | |
| Right down the street? | |
| Uh huh, Kenneth Road, born and raised. Spent my whole life right here in Lackawanna County and I do not intend on movin’. I know this place. I know how many hospitals we have, I know how many schools we have. It’s home, you know? I know the challenges this county’s up against. Here’s the thing about those discount suppliers. They don’t care. They come in, they undercut everything, and they run us out of business, and then, once we’re all gone, they jack up the prices. | |
| I know. | |
| It’s bad. | |
| It’s terrible. | |
| It, you know what, it really is. | |
| Uh- Michael signals for her to shh | |
| I don’t know. I guess I could give you guys our business, but you have to meet me half way, ok, because they’re expecting me to make cuts. | |
| Well, corporate’s gonna go ballistic, but, uh, you think we could Jan? | |
| So, I guess I’ll see you in looks at watch ten hours. | |
| What are you going to do with your time off? | |
| Travel. I’ve been looking forward to it. It’s gonna be… really nice. Gonna find myself. | |
| points to Jim’s iPod You have new music? | |
| Yeah. Pam puts her hand out for an earbud Definitely. | |
| waving to Christian See ya. | |
| Bye… thanks. pumps fist Yes! | |
| We did it! | |
| We got it! | |
| Nailed it. Nailed it! Come here. | |
| I am really- Michael kisses Jan Thrilled. Michael and Jan kiss again Let’s go. | |
| What!? | |
| Let’s go. | |
| Goin’. Ok. Where we goin’? Doesn’t matter. Goin’ to the go go. nervous laugh Oh-ok. | |
| waking up on office couch Michael? Michael? goes into Michael’s office Michael? looks out Michael’s window His car’s not in the parking lot. I should check the accident reports. taxi pulls into Dunder-Mifflin parking lot Who’s this? Jan? | |
| Morning, Pam. Hey. | |
| No, nothing happened. I-I swear, nothing happened. What, I’m, totally being serious. A gentleman does not kiss and tell, and neither do I. laughs No, seriously, guys, I’m not, I don’t want to go into it at all. It’s off limits. Fine, I took her back to her hotel and we made out for a little while. It was great. I mean she told me about her divorce, we talked for about five hours, she fell asleep on my arm. So. | |
| Hello, Dwight. | |
| Did you do her? | |
| Who. | |
| Jan Levinson-Gould. | |
| Uh, no, no, no Gould. | |
| Did you do her? | |
| This is none of your affair because she is your boss- | |
| And she is your boss. | |
| And she is a woman. She is a strong, soft, thoughtful, sexy woman. And you know what? I don’t think that I can sit here and let you talk about her that way without me defending her honor. to camera Jan, I defend your honor. to Dwight Is that all? | |
| Jan didn’t come back for her car last night. | |
| What!? | |
| Could it be that Agent Michael Scarn has finally found his Catherine Zeta? | |
| Oh, I don’t know… Jim laughs, phone rings Oh my God. This is Jan’s cell. | |
| No way. | |
| Dunder-Mifflin, this is Pam. | |
| I know we have to register as a consensual sexual relationship with HR. My question: do I do it as the man? Does she do it as my superior? I don’t know. That leads to other issues that we may have in our relationship. It’s, uh, phone rings Excuse me. Hello? Hi! Just talking about you. The camera? No. Uh huh. How’s traffic? I miss you. What. Ok. Well, if it was a mistake, it was a wonderful mistake. No. to camera Would you excuse me? to Jan No, I did not intentionally get you drunk. Um hmm. No, no. goes under his desk This is just a fight. This is just a first fight of many fights we’re gonna have. Right. No. Wha-so-I don’t understand, you wanna see other people. Only other people. Wh-why, ok, I think you’re still a little bit drunk to camera which is now under desk Excuse me? Excuse me?! to Jan I think you’re, yes, why don’t you just come back here, go to the hotel, have a few drinks and-no, no. I didn’t slip you something! | |
| Some might even say that we had our first date last night. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Really. | |
| Why might some say that? | |
| Cause there was dinner, by candlelight. | |
| Uh hmm. | |
| Dinner and a show, if you include Michael’s movie. Pam nods reluctantly And there was dancing and fireworks. Pretty good date. | |
| We didn’t dance. | |
| You’re right, we didn’t dance. It was more like, swaying. But still romantic. | |
| Swaying isn’t dancing. | |
| Least I didn’t leave you at a high school hockey game. | |
| I have some faxes to get out. | |
| Oh, come on, Pam. I- | |
| Ok, we didn’t dance. I was totally joking anyway. I mean, it’s not really a date if the girl goes home to her fiance. Right? | |