How "Office Space" Changed the Supply Closet
It has nothing to do with TPS reports.
This is a rerun from 2016, and I share it in real life all the time, because Office Space is one of my all-time favorite movies. I’ve been told I’m not fun to watch it with, though, because I tend to say all the lines aloud. — Dan
How "Office Space" Changed the Supply Closet
The 1999 movie Office Space is a cult classic which, if you haven’t seen, is something you really need to rectify in the near future. Despite the fact that it’s more than twenty years old (oy), the comedy is still a biting critique of white-collar corporate America and the general ineptitude of office printers. The protagonist, a software developer named Peter Gibbons, hates his job, hates his boss, and probably doesn’t like his girlfriend either, but still plays the role of corporate drone without much question.
The same is true for Peter’s coworker, a mumbling wallflower named Milton Waddams, pictured above. While not a core character, Milton is key to the plot — which, as fans of the movie will attest, can also be said for his red Swingline stapler, also pictured above. Toward the beginning of the movie, Milton is on the phone (watch the clip here), muttering about the time the company switched from Swingline staplers to Boston-brand ones, to his disapproval. He responded by keeping his red Swingline, which on occasion goes missing because it’s superior to the other staplers. Milton makes further reference to the stapler at various other points throughout the film (here’s an example). The red Swingline stapler is as important as a stapler can possibly be. Nowadays, the red Swingline stapler is pretty popular. It’s one of the bestsellers in Amazon’s “desk staplers” category, despite the fact that it runs about twice that of other staplers. It’s sometimes suggested as a gift idea by the online retail giant, as seen in this screenshot. And as of this writing, the most popular version of the red Swingline has more than 19,000 reviews on Amazon and averages 4.7 stars, and is the #1 best seller in the “Electric & Battery Office Staplers” category. It’s become a premium item.
But this isn’t the tale of a wildly successful product placement. Per the Wall Street Journal, Mike Judge, the writer and director of the movie, approached Swingline about a sponsorship, but the stapler giant turned him down:
Swingline executives didn’t even recognize the marketing opportunity when the movie’s producers approached them back in 1999. The company figured its mainstay customers were unlikely to trade up and declined the pitch. “Bright-red staplers aren’t typically marketed in bulk to big companies,” says Bill Carvell, a vice president at ACCO Brands Inc., the parent of Swingline and a unit of Fortune Brands Inc., of Lincolnshire, Ill. “Compared to black and platinum, it wouldn’t have sold.”
Judge decided to go ahead with the red stapler gag anyway.
But sales of the red stapler didn’t shoot through the roof right away, for a very good reason: Swingline didn’t make them yet. The movie gave rise to such overwhelming popularity, though, that in April of 2002, Swingline began selling its first red stapler — an office product which, if it weren’t for Office Space, would have never existed.
So, what did Milton really own? It was a black Swingline stapler, spray-painted red. And it was indeed special — in fact, it was one-of-a-kind.
Today’s Bonus fact: Peter Gibbons’ love interest in Office Space is a waitress named Joanna; she works at a fictional family restaurant called Chotchkie’s, a clear parody of TGI Friday’s. Joanna is reprimanded by her boss for not wearing enough buttons with snappy slogans (pieces of flair) on her uniform despite the fact that she had the minimum number of pieces of flair required by the company. (Here’s the clip.) TGI Friday’s apparently didn’t like being the target of that joke; according to Cinema Blend, Friday’s got rid of the pieces of flair from their employee dress code in response to the joke.
From the Archives: Camp AOL: It’s about software developers and office space. (That’s in lower case because it’s not about the movie.)
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And thanks! — Dan