In the New Yorker, Tad Friend meditates on the differences between the British and American versions of The Office: The Paper Chase: Office life in two worlds: “The challenge that faced the American “Office” was to honor the spirit of the original while tweaking the workplace dynamics so that audiences would want to watch more than twelve episodes. The British scabrousness and barely suppressed violence is gone, and the Scranton office—brighter and noisier, with more posters, parties, and pep—is Slough on Zoloft.”
The difference in tone between the two was very obvious in “The Convict,” the first US episode penned by Ricky Gervais and Steven Marchant. The tone of the episode was more cringeworthy than usual for Scranton. While Steve Carrell and Ricky Gervais are the focal points of their respective shows, Mchael Scott is not David Brent and the jokes that work with one don’t necessarily work with the other. Friend explores the distinction in the New Yorker with both depth and elegance.

Devin Davis released one of my favorite albums of 2005 with “Lonely People of the World, Unite!”
I can’t say how much I enjoy this album. Some of the high points include the badass squonky sax solo on “Iron Woman,” the sheer joy of glam-stomper “Moon Over Shark City,” the swagger of riff heavy “Transcendental Sports Anthem,” and the twisted tale of driving down the road with Willie Nelson in “Cannons at the Courthouse.” It’s hard to resist the charms of “Giant Spiders,” when the song shifts from the catchy chorus to screaming with reckless abandon “we’ll be fine if we can survive the giant spiders!” (You can hear the exclamation point in the singing.) With quirky lyrics, solid songwriting chops, and everything but the kitchen sink instrumentation, this album is just a lot of fun.
Iron Woman
Turtle and the Flightless Bird
No, it’s not a new album, but it’s still a heck of a lot of fun. Davis is in the midst of recording his follow-up for a 2007 release.
Buy Lonely People of the World, Unite!
Sixeyes: Devin Davis Interview

Jon Pareles rounds up CMJ in the Times: The CMJ Big Break? Not Such a Big Deal: “Bands aren’t waiting for their big break anymore. Or if they are, they’re keeping mighty busy in the meantime. That was the gist of this year’s CMJ Music Marathon, the showcase for independent music that expanded to five days this year, presenting music day and night from last Tuesday through Saturday.”
This is more of a broader overview of the trends and implications of the entire festival than the detailed micro-level reviews in the blogs.
Also in the Times today, The Bowery Presents is showing that they have a good PR person, with another article about their purchase of Northsix and the club’s impending transformation into the Williamsburg Music Hall: Polishing the Grunge: “Williamsburg is not losing a rock club, then, but gaining one that may be more suited to its current state of gentrification, to the 40-story condos being planned along the East River nearby. Where Northsix has distressed, paint-caked wood floors and rudimentary high-school-style risers, the Music Hall will have balconies and a big-city gloss.”

Newsday: How iTunes saved ‘The Office’: iTunes has saved ‘The Office.’ A year ago, the show was about to suffer the fate of a hundred thousand other shows that labored under the tyranny of Nielsen: It was about to get the ax.”
The NY Post has the latest scoop on BSG spinoff, “Caprica”: The Ring Cylon: “The story, Moore says, ‘centers around two families, one of whom owns an enormous corporation, à la Microsoft, and it builds the first Cylons; then the other family is Adama’s father, who’s a lawyer at the time and starts to become an opponent of what they’re trying to do.'”
Finally, TV Squad finds Michael Cera’s (George Michael Bluth on Arrested Development) new band. No, he’s not playing cowbell in Dr. Funke’s 100% Natural Good-Time Family Band Solution, but is playing guitar in The Long Goodbye. Michael Cera Brings the Indie Rock