• “The Paper” premieres on Peacock, offering a bold spinoff from “The Office” with fresh comedic territory.
  • Led by Domhnall Gleeson and featuring standout performance by Sabrina Impacciatore, the show finds its own quirky identity.
  • Critics give a mixed-to-positive reception—promising world, standout characters, but some tonal inconsistency.

NEW YORK, N.Y. (TDR) — Peacock has just dropped “The Paper,” a much-anticipated mockumentary spinoff of The Office, launching its full 10-episode season on September 4. Anchored in the declining newsroom of the Toledo Truth-Teller, the series follows newly appointed editor-in-chief Domhnall Gleeson as he attempts to revive a broken newspaper with a charismatic yet chaotic staff. Sabrina Impacciatore’s portrayal of Esmeralda Grand, the eccentric managing editor, has drawn early praise for bringing sharp comedic vitality to the ensemble (theguardian.com, decider.com, en.wikipedia.org).

Mockumentary With Its Own Voice

The show embraces the familiar documentary-style visuals fans love—talking-heads, well-timed awkward pauses—while redesigning the formula for modern satire. “The Paper” smartly channels its predecessor’s DNA without copying it, embedding commentary on the decline of print journalism into its humor and heart. Critics note the mockumentary is almost self-aware, offering creative new textures to a well-worn genre (decider.com, rogerebert.com).

Performances Anchor the Episodes

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Early reviews spotlight Impacciatore’s Esmeralda and Gleeson’s earnest Ned Sampson for giving the show its emotional core. While some laugh-out-loud moments land—one reviewer calls it “laugh-out-loud funny”—others feel that the absurdist energy occasionally misses depth or cohesion. Still, the show’s willingness to explore journalism’s relevance today, especially through absurd setups like contamination scares and absurd PR stunts, has been commended (thetimes.co.uk, decider.com, nypost.com).

Promise, but Room to Grow

Despite the nostalgia factor, critics and audiences agree that “The Paper” hasn’t yet reached “must-watch” status—but it isn’t far. With a Rotten Tomatoes approval hovering around the mid-80s and a Metacritic score indicating generally favorable reviews, people are curious to see if the next season can hit stride. The show has already been renewed, signaling faith from Peacock that a world-weary newsroom can still spark audience engagement (en.wikipedia.org, editorial.rottentomatoes.com, decider.com).

Will “The Paper” carve out a comedic identity strong enough to stand without “The Office” attachment—and evolve beyond its shaky early foundation?

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