RandBall Q&A: Michael Schur of “The Office” and FJM
Posted on May 9th, 2008 – 11:37 AMBy Michael Rand
Michael Schur writes for “The Office” and has also appeared on episodes of the program as Dwight Schrute’s cousin brother, Mose. He also writes for a (primarily) baseball blog called Fire Joe Morgan. The Office. Baseball. Yeah, it sounded like he would be right up the alley for a RandBall Q&A. We promised to keep the questions plenty bizarre and mostly about baseball. But we couldn’t help but slip in a few references to his television program. He was kind enough to answer our questions; four of the questions were at least partially written by either Stu or Fasolamatt (hence the “RB” is really a collective in this case), which is the second part of the fun here. If you can guess all four, you win a special prize. The main part of the fun, though, is that Schur is hilarious. We hope you enjoy:
RandBall: You’re stranded on a desert island and only have room for VORP or OPS+. Which do you keep?
Michael Schur: VORP is a better stat. But I might take OPS+ so I can easily compare Juan Pierre’s 2003 with Tim Raines’s 1985 and have a nice laugh.
RB: A ghost runner of Michael Schur is on first base when a young Joe Morgan hits a double into the gap that rolls to the wall. Two outs, crack of the bat, you’re off. Do you follow the rules of ghost runners and stop at third when the entire free world knows you could have scored? Is your answer somehow influenced by the batter?
MS: Well, I haven’t really seen enough Ghost Baseball to know one way or the other. The thing about Ghost Mike Schur is he needs to be consistent with his baserunning. There really aren’t very many great Ghost Teams anymore. To be a great Ghost Team you have to be Ghost Consistent. The 1975 Ghost Reds were a great Ghost Team because they could do it all — run, hit, ghost hit, hit for power, field, ghost field, ghost pitch, scare people, haunt houses, stack chairs on top of tables when people’s backs were turned, make scary noises, slime people, and sneak into ladies’ locker rooms. So I would say that Ghost Mike Schur would try to score, because you have to be aggressive.
RB: Two outs, bottom of the ninth, the Yankees are down by a run. Derek Jeter draws a walk, followed by an Alex Rodriguez home run. Which one is more “clutch?”
MS: Are you kidding? Jeter. Because what you didn’t see is that Jeter pumped his fist after turning a routine DP in the 4th inning, which inspired ARod to hit the home run. Jeter’s walk is a direct result of his leadership and calm eyes. ARod is lucky that he gets to play with Jeter every day.
RB: Your father-in-law appeared in “The Bad News Bears Go to Japan.” Why?
MS: If you’re telling me that anyone would turn down the chance to be in a “Bad News Bears movie you’re nuts.” I would trade most of my career to have played the guy who loses to Kelly Leak in air hockey before Tatum O’Neal walks into the arcade.
RB: Rainn Wilson graduated from New Trier (Ill.) High School, as did Liz Phair, Donald Rumsfeld, and John Castino, the 1979 AL Rookie of the Year with the Minnesota Twins. What do you imagine would be a good icebreaker at an all-class reunion attended by each of those four? And would you personally show up to point out that Castino was only a co-winner with Alfredo Griffin?
MS: It would probably go something like this:
Wilson: Hey — you’re Liz Phair. I’m a big fan of your music.
Phair: Oh, thank you. “The Office” is one of my favorite shows.
Rumsfeld: Holy $&*%$& — that’s 1979 AL Co-Rookie of the Year John Castino!!!!
(They swarm Castino and trample him to death.)
RB: More gratifying: The Office’s critical and commercial success or the fact that Joe Morgan thinks Billy Beane wrote Moneyball?
MS: The Office’s success is more gratifying. The fact that Mr. Morgan thinks Mr. Beane wrote “Moneyball” is funnier than anything I could ever write.
RB: Which current Major League manager fills out a lineup card in a manner that most closely resembles the way Michael Scott would do it? Defend your answer.
MS: Maybe Dusty Baker. He hits Corey Patterson leadoff when Ryan Freel doesn’t play, seemingly just because Freel usually hits leadoff. CF = leadoff hitter. That’s a very Michael Scott philosophy. Plus, he delivers roughly as many malapropisms as Michael does, like when he was trying to talk about how much Edwin Encarnacion cares about winning and he said “the guy bleeds internally.”
RB: You get to pick the TV play-by-play and color guy for each of the four divisional playoff series. Who do you want, and why?
MS: I’ll take Don Orsillo and Jerry Remy out of pure homerism. I love Gary Thorne, so let’s pair him with Rick Sutcliffe, since you never know what’s coming out of that guy’s mouth, and it might be entertaining. Mike Tirico is very good, so I’ll match him with Al Leiter, who I think does a great job when he’s in the booth. And then let’s have one series called by Hawk Harrelson, Ed Farmer, John Kruk, Steve Phillips, Joe Morgan and Tim McCarver. It’s getting harder and harder to find material for our blog, and that should keep us posting for years.
RB: Your words are heard by countless people when you write for TV. Why start a sports blog? And why ditch the cloak of anonymity?
MS: Because I love baseball, and I’m a comedy writer, and baseball reporting provides ample opportunities for comedy writing. The anonymity provided a way to keep our professional worlds from being conflated with our silly sports metacritical world, but when push came to shove, we felt like we should stand behind what we write. The accused have a right to face their accusers.
RB: Wade Boggs reportedly ate chicken before every game — a ludicrous idiosyncrasy that nonetheless paved the way for 3,000 hits and a Hall of Fame career because he thought it helped him. Can you envision the creation of a statistical tool that would measure such factors for various players, and if so what would you call it?
MS: I would call it the “Jeter.” It would measure the importance of personality traits and behaviors that have nothing at all to do with baseball, and their impact on baseball. Every player would get a perfect score of 0.00.
32 Responses to "RandBall Q&A: Michael Schur of “The Office” and FJM"
Stu/Fasolamatt Questions:
1.The High School Reunion
2. Ghost runner
3. Bad News Bears vs. Regis Philbin
4. Wade Boggs.
Excellent work! (But you better change brother Mose to cousin Mose quick, or you’ll lose all Office credibility.)
FYI, they’re running the Dunder Mifflin Rabies 5k episode Sunday - I thought it might inspire you for your marathon trianing.
I would guess the Jeter/A-rod, Bad News Bears, high school reunion, and Wade Boggs questions had the Stulamatt influences.
And this interview was full of win, btw.
I thought the Office brought it last night. I also watched my first 30 Rock this season and thought it was hilarious. I sure did write a good post. (The backdoor is the new front door)
And yes the backdoor comment is expecting some disturbing responses by a certain nemesis of Batman.
I would call it the “Jeter.” It would measure the importance of personality traits and behaviors that have nothing at all to do with baseball, and their impact on baseball. Every player would get a perfect score of 0.00.
Except Mauer, who has no discernible personality. He would have a 1.000 Jeter score.
Oh yeah, and Ghost Guzman would be mispronounced consistently during the Ghost Twins playoff series with the Ghost Yankees…
Dave
Don’t pick on my twin brother like that. He is as emotional as watching paint grow.
Rand, I don’t know what info you’ve got on people, but the guests you’ve been landing for Q&A sessions are damn impressive. Nice work!
Brandon’s man-crush:Schur::Schur’s man-crush: Tom Brady. Yeah, it’s that deep.
My favorite except from FJM, a response to a journalist writing that Eckstein could play third base: “David Eckstein playing third base would be amazing. I would love to see that. If Jacoby Ellsbury hit a ball down the line to David Eckstein and Eck had to backhand it and throw from foul territory, by the time the ball landed in the first baseman’s glove Ellsbury would be sitting on the bench after his inside-the-park little-league HR and Kevin Youkilis would be at the plate with a count of 2-0.”
I agree with Shoes. Rand you are getting some nice side action from somebody. How long before we see a Q&A with Hillary Clinton?
jama
You called down the thunder (anyone?). I’ll just be nice enough to stick with the theme today and stick with “That’s what she said”
Well played, sir. My Jeter score is on par with Jackie Earle Haley’s.
I’ve never seen The Office (two small kids, no TV). People keep telling me it’s the one show I should watch, not least because this guy was best man in both of my weddings.
And if I start watching the office, is there something else I should watch, too (like 30 Rock?).
30 Rock is better than the Office.
So watch them both.
30 Rock would be a welcome addition to anyone’s entertainment lineup.
Prediction: RandBall, in the next year, will get so entertaining that the Proprietor ditches us all for greener pastures. Except for Stu and roughkat, who will go with, the rest of us will be stuck arguing about who should hit fifth for the Twins on Howard Sinker’s blog.
Joker - Thunder line is from Tombstone, and also borrowed for Mallrats.
Jon
I think you are giving some of us, including me, too much credit. We aren’t even good enough for Howard’s blog. We will be fighting about T-JAX SUXS PLAY BOOTYSHAKER over at AV.
And by greener pastures I hope you don’t mean mowing greens over at Edina CC.
Jon - I think he’d take one of the MN brothers, too. Probably Steve.
I cannot recommend 30 Rock highly enough. I’m still laughing about Cooter Burger. And Godfinger. And Dennis looking at the camera. And the menstrual effects of evaporated bull semen. And “It’s a guaranteed disaster. Like eating a burrito before sex.”
Also, Matt, you can watch it and 30 Rock on hulu.com for free and legally.
That burrito before sex thing is totally true, unless you want her to get up and leave right after…
Dangit, I am now regretting turning the TV off after The Office last night.
Does that hulu service work pretty well?
Broderick was pretty good on last nights episode. “I wasn’t even eating a burger, it was a sandwich…”
We don’t need Fasola Matt and Stu to have a party. We will always have PPP to keep us company in the winter!
It’s pretty amazing that Rand get’s to interview one of the writers of the Office, yet everyone talks about how much better 30 Rock is than than the Office…which is totally true.
@ Joker- Totally true.
I think The Office has largely thrived because of the first season. It’s still good, but 30 Rock wins.
I’m getting kind of sick of Michael’s schtick. I’ll take Jim messing with Dwight 9 times out of 10 over more of Michael being a clueless dolt. Less Andy = better as well.
More Cowbell would be good too.
Joker: it does seem a bit unfair. Like S.U. Perrookie said, watch ‘em both. And read Fire Joe Morgan, too. I think Rand should add it to the blogroll.
done.
The Office is good, but it reminds me of the Simpsons in the early years. It focuses too much on Michael just like the Simpsons had too much Bart and it got tired. They switched the main guy to Homer and it’s still on. Similarly, the Office needs more Dwight. But I love it anyway, and what do I know.
