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Dunder-Mifflin : ウィキペディア英語版
Dunder Mifflin

Dunder Mifflin Paper Company, Inc. is a paper sales company featured in the United States television series ''The Office''. It is analogous to Wernham Hogg in the British original of the series, and Papiers Jennings and Cogirep in the French Canadian and French adaptations respectively. Originally, the company was completely fictitious, but recently was launched and began selling its products at Staples and other office supply outlets.
Two websites have been created to support the fictional company.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.dundermifflinpaper.biz ), the main website, and (【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.dundermifflininfinity.com ), the intranet.〕 NBC sells branded merchandise at its NBC Universal Store website.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=NBC's The Office: DVDs, T-shirts, books, mugs and caps )〕 Its logo is prominently displayed in several locations in downtown Scranton, Pennsylvania, where the show is set. Because the show airs in many countries, Dunder Mifflin has become associated with Scranton internationally. In a 2008 St. Patrick's Day speech in the suburb of Dickson City, then-Prime Minister of Ireland Bertie Ahern made a reference to the city's fictional branch office.
==Overview==

A fourth-season episode, "Dunder Mifflin Infinity", said the company was founded in 1949 by Robert Dunder and Robert Mifflin, originally to sell brackets for use in construction. The fifth-season episode "Company Picnic" said that the co-founders met on a tour of Dartmouth College. ''U.S. News and World Report'' likens it to many real companies in its size range: "It is facing an increasingly competitive marketplace. Like many smaller players, it just can't compete with the low prices charged by big-box rivals like Staples, OfficeMax and Office Depot, and it seems to be constantly bleeding corporate customers that are focused on cutting costs themselves." The show's creators share this assessment—"It's basically a Staples, just not as big", says co-producer Kent Zbornak〔 〕—as do some of those companies. "Since Dunder Mifflin could be considered among our competitors", says Chuck Rubin, an Office Depot executive, "I think Michael Scott is actually the perfect person to run their Scranton office."
The company was depicted as based in New York City, with branches in smaller Northeastern cities. Episodes are set in the Scranton branch, but other branches have been mentioned and seen. The now-closed Stamford, Connecticut, branch was seen when Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) transferred there during the first half of the third season. Another episode, "Branch Wars", gave viewers a brief glimpse of the Utica branch, one of several purportedly in upstate New York. Zbornak says that city was on the short list for where to base the show, with some of its writers having ties to Central New York, and that they always intended for at least a branch office to be located there, for reasons of phonetics. "Utica was just such a different-sounding name than Scranton," Zbornak says. But also, "we had done a little research and thought our kind of business could survive in Utica."〔
A Buffalo branch has been mentioned in several episodes, and a Rochester office was also mentioned in the episode titled "Lecture Circuit". The Dunder Mifflin website also lists a Yonkers branch. Albany rounds out the New York locations, which in a deleted scene in "Stress Relief" is revealed to have closed, leaving three other branches in other states: Akron, Ohio; Camden, New Jersey; and Nashua, New Hampshire.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.dundermifflinpaper.biz/about/ )〕 In "Company Picnic", it is announced that the Camden and Yonkers branches have closed, and that the Buffalo branch is about to close. In "Boys and Girls", a Pittsfield branch was mentioned, until Jan shut it down when their warehouse workers unionized. The episode "Turf War" focuses on the closing of the Binghamton branch, and how reps from the Syracuse branch are competing with Scranton employees for Binghamton's old clients.
Business writer Megan Barnett has pointed out parallels between Dunder Mifflin and the real-life W.B. Mason paper company, based near Boston, in Brockton, Massachusetts. It is similarly regional in focus, serving corporate customers in New England and the Mid-Atlantic states. Like Dunder Mifflin, its original product line (rubber stamps) was something other than paper, and it faces stiff competition from national and international chains. It, too, has a branch office in Stamford, but Mason's has remained open. In 2009, it had an accounting scandal that resulted in a $545,000 payment to corporate customers, much as Dunder Mifflin had to deal with the arrest of Ryan Howard for fraud the year before.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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