Sunday, January 08th, 2012 | Author:
6215243299 20a8112bde m watch the office episodesAny good sites to watch early office episodes?

These are useful and collceted by I!

watch the office episodes: Any good sites to watch early office episodes?
I know this has been asked, but the links on all of those answers go to bad sites or are dead. I know about Hulu.com and nbc.com but I’d like to see some of the episodes other than the last five of season five icon smile watch the office episodesAny good sites to watch early office episodes? Does anyone know of a currently working site?

The following is the answer: (Hint: The correct answer provided by the users, does not guarantee the right.)

Answer by semoyr but
surfthechannel.com
this site has TV shows and movies
i use it all the time and my computer is fine.

Answer by ♥Paulies Girl♥
tvshack.net

Answer by Yaari Jatt dee B
u can watch here.

http://www.tvshowservers.com/_414

Answer by TheQuestion
http://theofficefree.com/ is the absolute best site to watch ALL of the office episodes for free online, including the newest and the older episodes.

There are also no annoying adds or pop ups.

Answer by Andrew
http://www.justin.tv/schrute_farms – 24/7 channel showing the office (US) with bloopers, deleted scenes, bot trivia, in theme design/mods and a full network (www.justin.tv/networks/schrute_farms)

Add your own answer in the comments!
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These are useful and collceted by I!

Beautiful:

Seaman Hall. Abandoned City Methodist Church in Gary, Indiana. HDR
5890491950 4d769f4a1a watch the office episodesAny good sites to watch early office episodes?


slworking2
Watch a video I shot of this church – nine minutes long – on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_twF8luodI

This church was featured in an episode of the TV show Life After People.

The city of Gary, Indiana was founded as a booming steel city as the twentieth century passed, and areas downtown saw the construction of several impressive buildings during these prosperous early years. In 1925, a cornerstone ceremony took place at 577 Washington St. to commemorate the construction of a Gothic Revival church called City Methodist. It was completed 21 months later, at the cost of one million dollars – 5,000 of which was contributed by the United States Steel Corp. (which also founded the city). Elbert Gary, the chairman of U.S. Steel and origin of the city’s name, donated a Skinner organ as well. The Bedford limestone structure consisted of a 50-foot tall sanctuary nave and elaborate stonework, and was able to seat 950 worshipers; City Methodist had a congregation of nearly 3,000 members in its heyday. The building was also home to Seaman Hall – a 1,000 seat auditorium, and a gymnasium with a full size basketball court. Storefronts were built into the building, with hopes that the income would offset the enormous maintenance costs.

During the 1920s, Pastor William Seaman rallied against the power of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana, and welcomed black worshipers into City Methodist during a time when African Americans were not permitted in "white churches."

Gary entered a downward spiral during the 1960s, like many other industrial cities during the period. As U.S. Steel employment dwindled, the residents of Gary moved to nearby suburbs; then as jobs left downtown, city many residents moved out altogether while crime and poverty rose. By 1973 the church’s congregation had only 300 members and by 1975 the Methodists moved out of the structure. A second congregation occupied the building until they left in the early 1980s; some storefronts and office space was utilized for a while but soon the entire campus was completely abandoned.

City Methodist was burned in the Great Gary Arson of 1997, resulting in a large portion of the roof collapsed or missing. It is now owned by the city of Gary, and its future remains unclear.

In 2009, parts of a remake of the movie A Nightmare On Elm Street were filmed at the church.

In 2010, scenes from the movie Transformers 3 were filmed here.

www.opacity.us/site104_city_methodist_church_gary.htm

www.faithfabric.com/tbh/gary/67directory.htm

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I edited the following
Good video!Office Office – Episode 37 – Full Episode

Mussadi Lal suffers from cataract, and so is overjoyed to find that the govt. hospital is organizing a special cataract removal drive. Dr. Patel is not your conventional doctor, though, nor is this hospital what you would expect a normal hospital to be. Will Mussadi be cured, or will his condition be made worse than what it is? Watch as the cruel irony enfolds in this episode. A show with a difference. In a nutshell ek dilchasp, rip-roaring, rib tickling comedy rather, satire on the everyday trials of the common man and our rather handicapped system. The conniving, cutthroat and lackadaisical attitude of our system is represented in an extremely humorous manner. The system is represented by a group of actors who are constantly highlighting the pathetic mindset of our junior level officers. They say, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Pankaj Kapoor, leaves no stone unturned in his portrayal of the system beaten man. The very obvious strength of this show is its pathos driven satire. Well crafted by the writers and effectively portrayed by the actors, this show is one of its kinds.

My edited the following

Beautiful:

Seaman Hall. Abandoned City Methodist Church in Gary, Indiana. HDR
5890468492 6c1fbf877a watch the office episodesAny good sites to watch early office episodes?


slworking2
Watch a video I shot of this church – nine minutes long – on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_twF8luodI

This church was featured in an episode of the TV show Life After People.

The city of Gary, Indiana was founded as a booming steel city as the twentieth century passed, and areas downtown saw the construction of several impressive buildings during these prosperous early years. In 1925, a cornerstone ceremony took place at 577 Washington St. to commemorate the construction of a Gothic Revival church called City Methodist. It was completed 21 months later, at the cost of one million dollars – 5,000 of which was contributed by the United States Steel Corp. (which also founded the city). Elbert Gary, the chairman of U.S. Steel and origin of the city’s name, donated a Skinner organ as well. The Bedford limestone structure consisted of a 50-foot tall sanctuary nave and elaborate stonework, and was able to seat 950 worshipers; City Methodist had a congregation of nearly 3,000 members in its heyday. The building was also home to Seaman Hall – a 1,000 seat auditorium, and a gymnasium with a full size basketball court. Storefronts were built into the building, with hopes that the income would offset the enormous maintenance costs.

During the 1920s, Pastor William Seaman rallied against the power of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana, and welcomed black worshipers into City Methodist during a time when African Americans were not permitted in "white churches."

Gary entered a downward spiral during the 1960s, like many other industrial cities during the period. As U.S. Steel employment dwindled, the residents of Gary moved to nearby suburbs; then as jobs left downtown, city many residents moved out altogether while crime and poverty rose. By 1973 the church’s congregation had only 300 members and by 1975 the Methodists moved out of the structure. A second congregation occupied the building until they left in the early 1980s; some storefronts and office space was utilized for a while but soon the entire campus was completely abandoned.

City Methodist was burned in the Great Gary Arson of 1997, resulting in a large portion of the roof collapsed or missing. It is now owned by the city of Gary, and its future remains unclear.

In 2009, parts of a remake of the movie A Nightmare On Elm Street were filmed at the church.

In 2010, scenes from the movie Transformers 3 were filmed here.

www.opacity.us/site104_city_methodist_church_gary.htm

www.faithfabric.com/tbh/gary/67directory.htm

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