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Episode file

Season 3, episode 16

255 quotes from 26 characters. Back to Season 3.

Quotes255

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Characters26
Michael Scott65
Pam Beesly29
Dwight Schrute25
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Jim Halpert20
Ryan Howard16
Meredith Palmer12
Kelly Kapoor11
Oscar Martinez9
Creed Bratton8
Roy Anderson8
Kevin Malone7
Karen Filippelli6
Angela Martin5
Student 25
Business Student #14
Gil4
Woman4
Business Student #23
Kenny3
Toby Flenderson3
Business Student #32
Stanley Hudson2
Artist1
College Student1
Student 11
Student 31
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Episode transcript cards

All quotes from season 3, episode 16

255 quotes, ordered by scene.

"Today's a special day, because I am being honored as a... visiting... professor, special lecturer, emeritus... how did you, how did you..."

"If you bring your boss to class, it automatically bumps you up a full letter grade. So... I'd be stupid"

"A boss is like a teacher. And I am like the cool teacher. Like Mr. Handell. Mr. Handell would hang out with us, and he would tell us awesome jokes. And he actually hooked up with one of the students. Um... and then like twelve other kids came forward. It was in all the papers.... Really ruined eighth grade for us."

"Here we go. College Roadshow. Gotta bring our... A game. What was the most inspiring thing I've ever said to you?"

"Whenever I'm about to do something, I think, 'Would an idiot do that?' And if they would, I do not do that thing."

"A lot of times, at a... school, or naval academy, after a rousing speech, the crowd would throw its hats high into the air."

"Yeah, I know, I know. I'm just saying if they did throw their hats I've got a great line for that: 'May your hats fly as high as your dreams.'... That was a pretty good line."

"I'm really happy to be back with Roy. I think it shows maturity. Maturity and dignity.... Is that braggy? I don't mean it to be braggy."

"Campus. Brings back so many memories.... That I would have made. Hey. Frisbee. Check that out. Aww! What do you say we get our Fris on before class? [runs over, throws frisbee] Whoo!"

"Solving a mystery, if that's quite alright with you. [opens ceiling tile] Come to Papa. Okay, ladies and gentlemen, what we have here is a bird that has been trapped in a vent. Fortunately I have found it befo--BAT! BAAAT! BAT!"

"...Dunder-Mifflin can't compete with the modern chains, and management is unwilling, or unable, to adapt. Their customers are dying off..."

"At Six?! No, that is unacceptable. Okay, Jim, you are the number two in this office. You need to step up and show some leadership."

"The bat, I mean, I know I felt it bite me, but look. There's no mark. I feel so... tingly... so strangely powerful... [shrugs] Oh well."

"And now, without further ado, I present the regional manager of Dunder Mifflin, Scranton, Michael Scott."

"Hello everyone, I am Michael Scott. And I would like to start today by inspiring you. May I borrow someone's textbook, please? Thank you. What have we here? Ooh. Economics. Very, very interesting. [rips pages out of book] You cannot learn from books. Replace these pages with life lessons, and then, you will have... a book... that is worth its weight in gold. [gives book back] I know these are expensive, um, but the lesson is priceless. Good. Alright. I think you're inspired. Shall we proceed? There are four kinds of business: Tourism. Food service. Railroads, and sales. And hospitals slash manufacturing. And air travel."

"If a vampire bat was in the U.S., it would make sense for it to come to a 'sylvania.' Like PENN-sylvania. Now that doesn't mean that Jim is going to become a vampire. Only that he carries the vampiric germ."

"So, you wanna start a business. How do you start? What do you need? Well, first of all, you need a building. And secondly, you need supply. You need something to sell. Now this could be anything. It could be... a... thingamajig. Or a... a whosi-whatsi. Or... [pulls out a candy bar] a Whatchamacallit [throws bar]. Now, you need to sell those in order to have a PayDay [takes out a PayDay, throws it]. And, if you sell enough of them, you will make a 100 Grand [throws 100 Grand bar]. [pulls out a Snickers] Satisfied?"

"Oh, this looks great. I'd, I'd love to be there, but my daughter's play is tonight.... Damnit! You know, one of the other parents will probably videotape it."

"Okay, I'm seeing some confused... faces out there. Let me slow down a little bit. Break this down. Okay. The more stickers you sell, the more profit, fancy word for money, you have to buy PlayStations and Beanie Babies."

"Well... okay, I was just kind of getting it going. Um, alright. Well, okay, we can do questions. Okay. Very good. First hand up."

"Sir, as a company that primary distributes paper, how have you adapted your business model to function in an increasingly paperless world?"

"We can't overestimate the value of computers. Yes, they are great for playing games and forwarding funny emails. But real business is done on paper, okay? Write that down. [everyone types on their laptops]"

"I don't have a lot of experience with vampires, but I have hunted werewolves. I shot one once. But by the time I got to it, it had turned back into my neighbor's dog."

"Yeah sure, you know business, sitting up here in your ivory tower. And your ebony tower. You know what? Tell you one thing, Dunder-Mifflin is here to stay."

"Yeah, yeah. You know what else is facing five Goliaths? America. Al-Qaeda, global warming, sex predators... mercury poisoning. So do we just give up? Is that what we're learning in business school?"

"Dunder-Mifflin is the big picture! Can't you understand that? No, you can't. You're too young. Ryan... has never made a sale. And he started a fire trying to make a cheesy pita. And everybody thinks he's a tease. Well you know what? He doesn't know anything, and neither do you. [walks out] SO SUCK ON THAT!"

"Business is always personal. It's the most personal thing in the world. When we get back to the office, pack your things."

"Cool. Okay. I'm gonna go home and lie down, draw the shades... there's just so much sun in here... bye Dwight."

"Jim is on a path now. An eternal journey, and I wish him well. But I have a destiny in this realm. Specifically, in the kitchen."

"I still need... you know, my breakthrough, or whatever. [Woman leaves, Roy enters] Hey, babe, how are you?"

"How 'bout this, huh? I show up with my brother, and, no one from work is here? That's... pretty cool, huh?"

"Look, I'm sorry, okay? I was just trying to do my presentation, and... of course, I was wrong to suggest that Dunder-Mifflin might ever go out of business. But you don't have to fire me."

"A good manager doesn't fire people. He hires people and inspires people.... People, Ryan. And people will never go out of business."

"Yeah, on Van Gogh's first try, he drew the hands of the peasants."

"Well, yeah. Yeah, we have to have it for the office. I mean, there's my... window, and there's my car! That your car?"

"It is... a message. It is an inspiration, it is... a source of beauty. And without paper, it could not have happened. Unless, you had a camera."

"Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God..."

"I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't, I won't..."

"Well ultimately I went into business to inspire people. They say those who can't do, teach. I can do both. I teach doing."

"OK, here we go... Digest of business terms, CliffsNotes on business economics, and a sales encyclopedia."

"No, it's just mileage mostly, but there's one chapter that I call wisdoms. I'm going to read you a series of statements, and I want you to tell me, on a scale of one to ten, how smart they are."

"I have a lot of big ideas, and the trick is to get it out of my brain and into theirs, in a way that is easy to swallow. Simple... [holds up snickers] Kids love candy bars."

"Lets try a little... Little social experiment here. Raise your hands if you like to buy things. OK, I see some people who like to buy things. You're it, you are the reason this world rolls along, give yourselves a round of applause. Say, say you want to start a business, and business is all about buying and selling, is it not? So say you want to sell lemonade, or stickers. Something you have to keep in mind, you must, and you might want to jot this down, you must sell the stickers for more than you bought the stickers for."

"How have you adopted your business model to function in an increasingly paperless world?"

"Oh, Oh, I take umbrage to that premise...ses. Umm, let me ask you this: How many people exist in the world? Over forty billion. What are they going to be writing on... rocks? Any one else? [points] Yep."

"Do you believe your high fixed cost are warranted given your diminishing market share."

"[Karen sees Pam's art show flyer on the cabinet door, she looks around to make sure no one is looking, then proceeds to rip in down, Oscar comes out of the bathroom, Karen acts like she was just looking at it and then walks out of the kitchen]"

"What is a leader? I asked Jim that, and he said he had never heard the word before. In America, in 2007. He said he knew the word ladder... What an ignoramous."

"So cool you're back with Roy. Maybe we can rent that cabin on the lake again this summer."

"There'll be two of you and only one of me this time, since Denise left me. So I think it's fair I only pay a third."