Ratings "Here Comes Treble" originally aired on NBC on October 25, 2012. The episode was viewed by 4 million viewers and received a 1.9 rating/5% share among adults between the ages of 18 and 49. This means that it was seen by 1.9 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds, and 5 percent of all 18- to 49-year-olds watching television at the time of the broadcast. This made "Here Comes Treble", at the time of its airing, the lowest-rated episode of
The Office, beating the eighth season entry "Fundraiser", which was viewed by 4.17 million viewers.
The Office finished third in its time slot, being beaten by an episode of the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) series ''
Grey's Anatomy which received a 3.0/8 percent rating and an entry of the CBS drama Person of Interest'', which received a 2.9/8 percent rating Dan Forcella of TV Fanatic awarded the episode three-and-a-half stars out of five and called it "a nice enough holiday episode". He was critical of the episode's Jim and Pam subplot, saying that it could have "been left on the cutting room floor."
IGN reviewer Cindy White awarded the episode a 7.9 rating, denoting a "good" episode. She wrote that while the story had its limitations, "Little lines and bits ... helped elevate 'Here Comes Treble. Michael Tedder of
New York felt that the main story was weak and that the "plot line might have made more sense last year, with Andy trying to take his mind off troubles with Erin or
Robert California by trying to regress to his college days without it working, but these days Andy is the boss and has the girl." He did, however, compliment the appearance of Colbert, writing that "it was still nice to see the two
Daily Show alums sparring again." He was also complimentary towards the "little tidbits", such as Dwight's subplot. Bonnie Stiergnberg of
Paste felt that the episode was too rushed and that the storylines did not have a chance to naturally play out. She wrote that, "Each thread provided some interesting character development or set up future storylines, but, crammed together in the same 21 minutes, they made for a slightly disjointed-feeling episode." WhatCulture! reviewer Joseph Kratzer gave the episode two-and-a-half stars out of five and called it the "first dud of the ninth season". He criticized the story, saying that "the plot's failure [is due to the fact that] the goal of the story was not met by the means the writers chose to employ; there was no sense of grand scope or deep-rooted history, just Andy being petty and refusing to let go of the past as he's challenged by his old friend." Kratzer called Dwight and Nellie's subplot the "most successful story" in the episode. The manner in which Stephen Colbert appeared received mixed reviews. Adams compared Colbert's cameo to former lead actor
Steve Carell's appearance in the first series of the
BBC Two sitcom ''
Life's Too Short'', calling it "an unfortunate echo". White wrote that his cameo was not "quite the sublime experience I was hoping for" largely due to the amount of anticipation that was put into his appearance. Kratzer called the underuse of Colbert "borderline criminal". ==References==