That's vulgar and sexually offensive to her entire gender. You should never call a woman a hot period.
It's like they threw everything into a "TV Pilot Madlib" and that's what was generated. People we've never heard about show up in a hilarious fashion, fall in love with what they had, and against all odds stay together to work in a hilarious fashion.
I hope it's the end of that subplot, so they can focus on other things. The whole thing smacked of "we need to create tension in the relationship" and was one of my least favorite storylines leading up to the finale. Last night's episode was pretty good. I've been re-watching season 2 recently and it's clear that even good episodes these past few seasons are way far behind in quality to even the average episodes from seasons 2 through early 4.
After I posted my comment, I realized how much I didn't like the Andy sub-plot. I had repressed it, completely. It really seems like they dusted off a discarded idea for Michael Scott's exit from the show, and applied it to Andy. Much of Andy's behavior reminded me more of Michael than Andy.
That's been a recurring problem with the Andy character, especially after Helms came back from the first "Hangover." Some arcs he's a villainous character, some arcs he's been a nice guy everyman, and some arcs he's Michael Scott II.
^ Don't forget the arcs where he's a complete moron. I liked the beginning of last season, when they office banded around him. Of course, his relationship with Erin and the choices he made that led to it and to it's ending really destroyed any sympathy I had for the character.
The Jim and Pam scene at the end didn't really ring true to me. How nice that the problems in their marriage are neatly solved by suddenly having a flashback to their wedding vows...except not. It did not seem realistic. I actually appreciated the tension in their storyline this season because that did seem realistic to me, that a young married couple would actually be having such issues. I don't really know how they could end the whole show with complete satisfaction. I guess the thing to hope for at this point for The Office finale is something heartfelt and genuine.
Well, yes, obviously. But it just tied up the story way too neatly, instead of being emotional it just made me roll my eyes.
I generally lump those into the "Michael Scott II" arcs, insofar as the writers sometimes made Michael too stupid as well. But the whole "Andy is a moron" thing is especially grating because they keep playing up that he graduated from Cornell. Yes, I understand that he is supposed to be a legacy who got in through daddy's connections but Cornell is well known as a high pressure place once people do get in (some even consider it the suicide capitol of the Ivy League) they don't stay in if they can't hack it. They could have written around this (and they seemed to a little back in the "villain Andy" days) by portraying him as book smart and common sense stupid but, again, they never seemed to get a handle on the character for more than part of season at a time.