Diversity Day
- El episodio se emitió el 16 mar 2005
- TV-14
- 22min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,1/10
12 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El comentario subido de tono de Michael pone a un entrenador de sensibilidad en la oficina para una presentación, lo que lleva a Michael a crear la suya propia.El comentario subido de tono de Michael pone a un entrenador de sensibilidad en la oficina para una presentación, lo que lleva a Michael a crear la suya propia.El comentario subido de tono de Michael pone a un entrenador de sensibilidad en la oficina para una presentación, lo que lleva a Michael a crear la suya propia.
- Director/a
- Guionistas
- Estrellas
Oscar Nuñez
- Oscar Martinez
- (as Oscar Nunez)
Creed Bratton
- Creed Bratton
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
After following the British template almost slavishly in the pilot episode, the American version of The Office goes its own way already in the second show, the painfully hilarious Diversity Day (although, truth be told, it does occasionally remind of the first episode of the original's second season).
Shockingly, the fun derives from Michael trying to fix something: after one of his employees told a subtly racist joke, a Diversity Day is organized. What Michael doesn't know is that the spokesperson in charge of the event, Mr. Brown (Larry Wilmore), is actually there because of numerous complaints about his behavior, not someone else's. That the boss thinks Mr . Brown is a made-up name - due to the person's skin color - isn't very helpful, either. Soon everyone in the office is involved in a series of increasingly ridiculous tolerance games that undermine everything Diversity Day is meant to stand for.
From Michael's lame attempt at (mis)quoting Abraham Lincoln to Dwight's twisted mentality (when given a clue to find out what race he is representing as part of a test, he says: "Aw man, what am I, a woman?"), this episode is a good example of the show's ability to pull off the same kind of awkward humor as the original version whilst adapting it to the American way of life. It's considerably lighter (the British one's gag about over-sized genitalia would never have made it past the idea stage), but that doesn't mean it's any less entertaining.
Shockingly, the fun derives from Michael trying to fix something: after one of his employees told a subtly racist joke, a Diversity Day is organized. What Michael doesn't know is that the spokesperson in charge of the event, Mr. Brown (Larry Wilmore), is actually there because of numerous complaints about his behavior, not someone else's. That the boss thinks Mr . Brown is a made-up name - due to the person's skin color - isn't very helpful, either. Soon everyone in the office is involved in a series of increasingly ridiculous tolerance games that undermine everything Diversity Day is meant to stand for.
From Michael's lame attempt at (mis)quoting Abraham Lincoln to Dwight's twisted mentality (when given a clue to find out what race he is representing as part of a test, he says: "Aw man, what am I, a woman?"), this episode is a good example of the show's ability to pull off the same kind of awkward humor as the original version whilst adapting it to the American way of life. It's considerably lighter (the British one's gag about over-sized genitalia would never have made it past the idea stage), but that doesn't mean it's any less entertaining.
Diversity Day is one of the best episodes of The Office and is my favorite episode of Season 1. The writers quickly found the right tone of the show and began writing brilliant episodes starting with this one. Michael seems much more like-able here, and the other characters all got their moment to shine when Michael held his own diversity seminar. Diversity Day is the first great episode of a great show!
Most people can't be "laid back" enough to see this as a brilliant form of entertainment that it is. Jokes are abundant, Michael is hillarious, the topics are still very fresh and the writing is perfect. If you don'f laugh a few times here, this show isn't for you. One of the best episodes of The Office and one of thw funniest TV episodes of all time. You can choose to get offended or just see this as a hillarious parody of todays' social structure. The Office is amazing and this episode and the direction it took is a big part in the shows approach overall later on. They toned it down a bit afterwards, something I consider to be a mistake longterm. I loved this episode.
The network that shows South Park apparently doesn't have the stomach to show "Diversity Day." The shows are generally shown in order, and CC has skipped this episode for the past year.
"Diversity Day" was really another level of comedy, it has every element of comedy that makes it fun to watch, a cast that you can instantly understand who they are and their personality, and an absolutely amazing concept for an episode.
It has sharp and offensive comedy, whether it's from Michael himself or it just being the humor of the situation, it's an episode that will go down in history as something truly worth watching and probably single-handedly brought hundreds of people to watch The Office.
The character of Michael, wanting to be a respected and inclusive boss failing is just hilarious. A character which is trying very hard to be against racism, managing to just make himself look even more racist is just amazing writing.
Another thing that makes this episode so special is just the quick jokes that are so frequent, such as Michael refusing to call the spokesperson "Mr. Brown" and Dwight saying "Ahh, am I a woman?" to Pam telling him he's bad at driving. Or Michael saying that he thought adding Arab's would be "Too explosive.", this is really a groundbreaking episode, hitting the hammer on the nail perfectly.
It has sharp and offensive comedy, whether it's from Michael himself or it just being the humor of the situation, it's an episode that will go down in history as something truly worth watching and probably single-handedly brought hundreds of people to watch The Office.
The character of Michael, wanting to be a respected and inclusive boss failing is just hilarious. A character which is trying very hard to be against racism, managing to just make himself look even more racist is just amazing writing.
Another thing that makes this episode so special is just the quick jokes that are so frequent, such as Michael refusing to call the spokesperson "Mr. Brown" and Dwight saying "Ahh, am I a woman?" to Pam telling him he's bad at driving. Or Michael saying that he thought adding Arab's would be "Too explosive.", this is really a groundbreaking episode, hitting the hammer on the nail perfectly.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesNBC webcasted this episode on March 16, 2005 on MySpace to promote the show's then-upcoming premiere. This was NBC's first-ever online debut of a complete episode of a network series, and also included a trimmed-down webisode version of the episode for on-demand viewing on MySpace the following day.
- PifiasWhen Michael rips up his signed pledge, Jim is chewing on a pencil. When the camera shows Jim again, he is chewing on a pen.
- Versiones alternativasThis episode has an extended cut version released under The Office: Superfan Episodes.
- ConexionesFeatured in TV Guide's Top 100 Episodes of All Time (2009)
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