Michael Scott is really gone. Technically, that's been true since a few episodes before the end of THE OFFICE's last season, but with tonight's season premiere, Office 2.0, the most well-publicized reboot of the new season, began to tell us what it's going to be.
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On the other extreme is the actual inheritor of Michael's job, Ed Helms' Andy Bernard, who seemed for most of the episode like an ineffectual speed-bump to California's Humvee (he was on the new boss' Losers list), but who stood up for his employees at the end and won them the half-day before Columbus Day weekend that, well, they'd already always had. Andy is a very sane kind of loony, without Michael's brand of crazy, secretly terrifed self-confidence; as likable as Andy is, at this point, it's not clear how well his diffidence will wear on center stage.
The Office is still a superior TV comedy (there were funny bits tonight about planking, and the dueling pregnancies of Pam and Angela--although making pregnant Pam weepily hormonal was a less inspired idea), but right now the show is still searching for its Michael-less voice. Paired with the unappetizing Whitney, this isn't the best time for it to start fumbling the lead.
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