Human Beings Have This Miraculous Gift: Creed in The Grass Roots

Creed The Office Grass Roots Band
I have been watching the U.S. version of The Office since it first premiered, and I was sad tonight to see the series end. Finishing a good book or ending a long-running T.V. series can do something that movies cannot accomplish by making you feel like you are losing a life-long friend. There will be plenty of articles critiquing The Office finale and comparing it to other series’ final episodes. I might think about those questions at some point, but tonight I just enjoyed seeing the characters one last time. Right now, though, what amazes me is that I watched the series all these years and did not know that the character Creed Bratton, played by Creed Bratton, had been in the Grass Roots. How did I miss that?

The final episode noted that the character Creed had been in the Grass Roots. And then when he sang at the end while playing guitar, it made me realize that they were not joking.

After searching for the lyrics (along the lines of “I saw a friend today . . . we forgot each other’s names” and “all the faces that I know have that same familiar glow”), I found that it is indeed a Creed Bratton song, “All the Faces.” Here is a live version of Creed singing the song he sang on The Office finale. Nice.

Creed Bratton joined the Grass Roots in 1967 and played guitar on songs like the classic, “Let’s Live for Today.” Creed is the guy in this video in the striped shirt on your left.

Bratton quit the band two years later, and his life did not go so well. By the nineties he was doing catering jobs, but then he got a big break when he got a job in 2005 on The Office playing someone with the same name as him.

During the run of the series, the real-life Bratton continued to work on his music. At least in one deleted scence from The Office, his character even got to jam out at least one time. In a deleted scene from the “Booze Cruise” episode, he picked up a guitar and even revealed his Grass Roots past. I am not sure why they saved the reveal about his past for so long. Viewers would have assumed it was a joke, but it did make a beautiful touch to the final episode.

Creed is releasing new music with Tell Me About It, a three-part “audio biography.” Check out “Faded Spats.”

Two members of the Grass Roots — Rob Grill and Ricky Coonce — have passed away. In addition to Creed, Warren Entner is still alive. The two are still good friends.

In tonight’s episode of The Office, near the end, the character Creed talked about how life is “arbitrary” in the way things happen in one’s life. But, he explains, no matter where one ends up, “human beings have this miraculous gift” to make a place their home.

With a life of ups and downs, the real Creed Bratton found a home on The Office and now is using that home to go on to other things. Although he will always be that odd guy on The Office to me, he is of course much more than that.  It looks like we haven’t heard the last of Creed Bratton.


What is your favorite Creed moment on The Office? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “First” Interracial Kiss on TV

    Interracial Kiss

    The first interracial kiss on broadcast television is often cited as having occurred in a Star Trek episode “Plato’s Stepchildren.” The episode featured a kiss between Nichelle Nichols as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura and William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk.

    Maybe they were able to break this new ground because the alien Platonians used their telekinetic powers to force the two to kiss. This scene aired on television on November 22, 1968.

    In this video, Nichols explains how the kiss caused some controversy on set and how Shatner becomes a hero of the story. While making the episode, NBC forced the actors to do the scene again without the kiss so they would have options in what they used. Shatner, however, ensured the kiss would be used by intentionally screwing up other takes without the kiss.

    Was it really the first interracial kiss on television? Other sources cite an interracial kiss on a British television show in 1964 between the characters Dr. Mahler (Joan Hooley) and Dr Farmer (John White) on the show Emergency Ward 10. Some also note that Our Gang segments had played on TV where the character Buckwheat, played by Billie Thomas, had kissed white girls.

    But even if Star Trek was not the first in the world, it was groundbreaking at the time, as was the role of Lt. Uhura. Even Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at one point told Nichols that she played an important role as an officer where her race and gender were not an issue.

    What is your favorite rule-breaking scene from Star Trek? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Two Spocks and an Audi

    Spock Nimoy Commercial

    This funny new Audi commercial features the new Star Trek Spock Zachary Quinto and the original Spock Leonard Nimoy as the two challenge each other in a race to the golf course. The ad, featuring the the Audi S7, includes several Star Trek references, of course. But there’s also a Hobbit reference as Nimoy belts out part of his classic recording, “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins.” Check it out.



    What is your favorite part of the Spock versus Spock commercial? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Todd Packer Looks Back on “The Office”

    Todd Packer The Office

    While The Office continues its march to its final episode, this week’s episode “Livin’ the Dream” featured Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) singing a surprisingly touching “I Will Remember You” to say goodbye to his friends at Dunder Mifflin, although the emotion of the moment is later countered by Andy taking a dump on David Wallace’s car. For a limited time, you can capture the full episode on NBC (Andy’s song starts around the 34-minute mark). Otherwise, you can catch the original “I Will Remember You” by Sarah McLachlan on YouTube. Maybe Andy’s song moved me because anytime I hear a Sarah McLachlin song I now thing of poor suffering animals.

    Anyway, the special hour-long The Office episode had some touching moments that seem to be setting up the end of the series on May 16. While I could speculate and make predictions, as a long-time fan I just want to enjoy the final ride. But we do now know that Michael Scott (Steve Carell) will not return for the finale (May 5, 2013 Update: Maybe we don’t know, as TVLine is now reporting Carell will make a cameo in the finale).

    In past episodes, one character we could be sure would not give us a touching moment was Michael Scott’s friend Todd Packer, who has two thumbs and was the subject of another episode that featured excrement. As we noted in an earlier post, NBC’s website is featuring short videos of former regular guest stars on The Office looking back on their time on the show. In this video, David Koechner, who played the obnoxious Todd Packer, talks about the fun he had on the show: “It is a play, so let us play.”

    [December 2014 Update: The NBC interview video is no longer available for embedding, but you may watch it on YouTube or instead below you may watch one of Koechner’s classic appearances on The Office.]

    Like many of the characters in the American version of the The Office, Packer is based on a character from the original British version of the series, Chris Finch, who was played by Ralph Ineson.

    What is your favorite Todd Packer moment on “The Office”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Pull Down Your Pants and Slide on the Ice

    Sidney Freedman For twelve M*A*S*H episodes from 1973 through the series finale in 1983, actor Allan Arbus created one of the great recurring character roles in television history. Arbus, who played the psychiatrist Major Sidney Freedman, passed away recently due to complications of congestive heart failure. He was 95.

    Anytime I am flipping around the TV channels and come across a M*A*S*H episode with Arbus, I stop and watch it because I know it is something special. Arbus’ portrayal of Major Sidney Theodore Freedman provided part of the heart and soul of the series. The psychiatrist even allowed the long-running heart of M*A*S*H, Alan Alda as Hawkeye Pierce, to digress into troubled waters while Dr. Freeman assumed the role of providing some sanity in insane circumstances.

    Arbus, whose first wife was photographer Diane Arbus, went on to other TV and movie roles. But he was so good as Dr. Freedman, that Alan Alda claimed that he had assumed that Arbus had psychiatric training. While Arbus did not have such training, he had served in the Army as a photographer. When Arbus first appeared during the second season of the series, Dr. Freedman’s first name was “Milton,” but in subsequent appearances his name was changed to Sydney, possibly in a nod to the initials of Sigmund Freud.

    Reportedly, Arbus was offered a more regular role after Gary Burghoff (Radar O’Reilly) left the series, but he preferred his occasional appearances. Yet he still managed to make a memorable impact on the show with only twelve appearances. Below is a collection of some clips of Arbus on M*A*S*H (and a summaries of his episodes are available here).

    On the final episode “Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen,” after caring for a troubled Hawkeye, Dr. Freedman exited by repeating advice he had earlier given to the members of the 4077th: “Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.” Remembering Arbus and his passing today, it is still good advice in our insane world to take a moment to enjoy the good things in life. Thank you Dr. Freedman.

    What is your favorite episode of M*A*S*H with Allan Arbus? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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