The Paper, a spinoff born from The Office, now has its first official poster out. At the center is Oscar Martinez, back in frame after years off the set. The style is instantly familiar: mockumentary, handheld framing, that casual camera presence. The difference lies in the backdrop. The Truth-Teller, a long-running local paper in Toledo, Ohio, is where the lens is pointed this time. Entertainment media and production-linked sources confirmed both the image and the return of the character.
The reveal comes early in the promotional cycle. It sits alongside previous updates about casting and the release plan. News sites have already circulated the image widely, so the single still has become the first fixed impression for many viewers. Even without motion, it carries enough to hint at tone and pace.

The image
Oscar Martinez, played by Oscar Nuñez, is seated in a standard office chair. Dark suit, patterned tie. Behind him: shelving, a filing cabinet, hints of a busy newsroom. A boom mic dips into the shot, deliberately left there. Text printed on the poster reads Head Accountant / Arts & Leisure Beat. This confirms the positions the character holds inside the paper.
The composition is plain, almost understated. A level shot, clean lighting. These choices resemble the way characters were often framed in The Office. There is no official link made between the two styles, but the similarity is easy to notice. Viewers familiar with the earlier series will likely see it straight away.

The Paper setting
Production notes place the story entirely within The Truth-Teller. The paper has a long history, though its strongest days are in the past. The city is Toledo. Within that, the show follows the working day, tasks, conversations, and the natural rhythm of the office floor.
The mockumentary approach remains intact. Cameras follow characters in real time, capturing exchanges without hiding the filming process. The boom mic visible in the poster signals that. This method was central to the original show and now continues in the new one. Keeping Oscar Martinez in the cast links the two worlds directly, bridging the old and the new.
Cast and production
At this stage, Oscar Martinez is the sole returning character from The Office confirmed for the spinoff. Every other role is filled by new actors, portraying reporters, editors, and other newsroom staff. The Paper is produced for Peacock, the platform that also streams The Office in the United States.
During the official announcement, it was made clear that the intention is not to recreate Dunder Mifflin’s setup. Instead, the series brings in a separate workplace with its own characters, while holding on to the observational humor and pacing that shaped the original.

Release
The Paper is scheduled to debut on Peacock on September 4, 2025. On that date, four episodes will drop at once. Afterward, two more episodes will arrive weekly until September 25. This schedule was outlined from the start and gives audiences an initial block of content before shifting into a shorter weekly run.
Early attention
The image has been picked up quickly by entertainment outlets that covered The Office and those tracking Peacock originals. The poster confirms key details already known: Oscar Nuñez returns as Oscar Martinez, the shift to a newsroom setting, and the continued use of the mockumentary style.
Current official information centers on the newsroom itself. It describes relationships between staff, the layout of their work, and the pressure of keeping a local paper going. Bringing back one familiar face while introducing an entirely new set of characters offers a connection point without making the show dependent on past material.
A newsroom also opens the door to stories connected with local reporting and the day-to-day operations of a smaller publication. This direction matches the premise as shared by the production. Specific storylines will only be confirmed once episodes are released.

Closing
The Paper enters as a continuation of a known universe, but with a fresh base. The mockumentary style remains. The promotional image featuring Oscar Martinez ties the project back to The Office while establishing The Truth-Teller as the main stage.
With its premiere set for September 2025, the show carries the task of honoring a successful predecessor and developing its own identity. How it handles that balance will be clear after launch. For now, the poster stands as the primary visual marker, setting expectations for the next workplace to come under the mockumentary lens.