Posted on August 26, 2008 by Kathy McManus in All, Films, Relationships, Workplace Comments (0)
Hot Seat
Every office has its offenders.
The slacker.
The loud-mouth in the adjacent cubicle.
The person who leaves the paper jam in the photo copier.
And then there are the rest of us, who like to think of ourselves as responsible.
Except when it comes to a certain chair.
Hot Seat takes us on a hilarious comic roll with the wobbly, broken, reject chair that seems to inhabit every office, clandestinely dumped from the last annoyed worker onto the next unsuspecting colleague, in an endless orbit of not-my-responsibility.
The animated office in Hot Seat is populated by whimsical, bustling rabbits, working away in a warren of cubicles. All is well until the dreaded wobbler chair—lopsided and tipping because of a missing wheel—starts lurking like a land shark, unloaded by one sneaky rabbit onto another and then another.
As the chair gets passed, so too does the buck. Is it no one’s responsibility? Is it everyone’s? Switched and ditched throughout the office, the broken chair logs more miles than a frequent flier, until the situation reaches crisis proportions.
Only when the fur flies do the rabbits realize how far off track the broken chair has taken them, and what they must do to glide back to their tranquil four-wheeling environment.
Pull up a chair—if you dare—for Hot Seat and see how true office chair-ity begins in every cubicle.
