Rainn Wilson Denies He Said The Office Was Racist

On a recent episode of the Soul Boom podcast, host Rainn Wilson made some comments on his feelings about the show that made him famous.

The conversation touched on a media moment that clearly stuck with Wilson. He described what happened after he made comments about certain episodes of The Office that he felt would not pass muster today.

“I recently had a thing where I spoke about some office episodes that couldn’t get made today and the headlines were ‘Rainn Wilson: The Office is racist,'” he told guest Josh Radnor. He pushed back on the framing, not on the underlying point. “There were a few moderately racist elements to a few episodes that probably wouldn’t fly today was the conversation, which is absolutely true,” he said.

Wilson also spoke at length about the complicated relationship he has with being identified so closely with Dwight Schrute. While he acknowledged the character’s cultural footprint, he was candid about the ways that footprint has worked against him.

“Since playing Dwight, I’ve been a series regular on two TV shows that no one watched and a whole bunch of movies and dramatic roles and stuff like that,” he pointed out, noting that none of it seemed to register the same way with the public.

The character also creates friction with fans. “People get very disappointed when I’m not like Dwight,” he said. “If I’m talking about spirituality or mental health or politics or climate change or just being different than Dwight, there’s a dissonance there for a lot of fans.”

Wilson was quick to balance these remarks with genuine warmth toward the audience. He reflected on how the characters of The Office became “almost part of their family” for many viewers, and drew a comparison to his own childhood experiences watching shows like Taxi and Cheers. Still, the tension between who he is and who fans expect him to be came through clearly in the conversation.

For Wilson, the honest accounting of a show’s flaws and the genuine affection for what it meant are not in conflict. He holds both at once, even when others prefer to pick just one.

During a previous appearance on The Last Laugh podcast, Wilson pointed to specific moments from the series that, in hindsight, feel more uncomfortable than they did at the time. He singled out the well-known “Benihana Christmas” episode, recalling how Michael and Andy marked one of the women they brought back to the office with a Sharpie to tell them apart.

The scene, he admitted, is “jaw-droppingly, kind of horrific” when viewed through a modern lens. At the same time, Wilson made it clear that the show itself was built around satirizing those kinds of attitudes rather than promoting them.

He described The Office as “a show based around clueless, insensitive, racist, sexist people that kind of mirrors the United States in a lot of ways,” adding that the humor worked because it mocked those flaws.

During the conversation, Wilson also conceded that some material pushed boundaries. “Could it happen today? I think it would have to be very, very different if it were made in this environment,” he said.