Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The East Coast version of The Debate has been found!


Those of you who've followed my journey through the entire seven-season run of The West Wing know all about The Debate, which aired live on NBC Sunday, November 6, 2005. In fact, the episode was performed live twice, once at 8 pm Eastern time for the east half of the country, and again at 8 pm Pacific time (11 pm eastern) for the West Coast audience. Since it was shown live, and NBC didn't want it to air at 5 pm in California (8 pm Eastern), the only options would have been to film the live performance (and therefore not actually have it be "live" in the Pacific time zone) or do it twice.

What's also interesting about this, though, is Warner Bros decided the second, West Coast version would henceforth be the only available "official" version of the episode. That's the one they used for reruns during the 2005-06 television season, that's the one they used for syndication on Bravo and HLN and other cable networks that showed The West Wing, that's the one they used for the DVD collections, and that's the one that's been streaming. The East Coast version, the first performance of this script, the one that most of the country saw live that night (including me, in Iowa and the Central time zone) disappeared forever after that one, single, solitary airing at 8 pm Eastern that Sunday night in November 2005.  

Well, not exactly forever. Anybody who recorded that episode on VHS would have had it, at least as long as they didn't record over that videocassette. And as time passed, it was certainly possible that some of those folks might have digitized that recorded episode, for storage on DVDs or computer hard drives or the like. In fact, it's almost certain that at least some West Wing viewers had done that ... but as far as most of the Internet knew, who didn't have any access to those few digitized versions, for all intents and purposes that East Coast version was lost.

Until a Reddit user stepped forward in January 2026 in The West Wing subreddit to say he had a copy, recorded off WCAU-TV in Philadelphia as it happened live in 2005. This user, u/DL757, first told us he was surprised to hear there was any talk about the East Coast version being "lost," and announced he had this episode on his Plex server. He then uploaded it to a Google Drive accessible to the Internet at large.

Folks, this is it. How do I know? Well, again, as you readers probably know, I did a comparison between the transcript of the original, unedited 50-minute West Coast version on the DVDs, the edited-for-more-commercial-breaks syndicated West Coast version that's on streaming, and a transcript of the episode available on westwingtranscripts.com. My side-by-side comparison found considerable differences between the online transcript and the West Coast version, which led me to believe that transcript was made from the first, East Coast version. u/DL757's copy matches up very well with that online transcript (even though it appears there are some minor errors with that transcript, errors which I flagged as differences from the West Coast version that didn't actually exist as differences) - there are certainly enough matches to verify that fact. Especially with lines spoken by moderator Forrest Sawyer.

  

And the biggest proof is the infamous "global warming theories" section, which can appear to show that either Jimmy Smits or Alan Alda blew a line (depending on whether you watched the unedited DVD version or the edited for syndication version) is completely different in this broadcast. Nobody blows a line, Smits doesn't nervously try to laugh off a mistake, the section goes off exactly as it was written; this is clearly a completely different episode from the West Coast one on the DVDs and on streaming services.

Congratulations, u/DL757; you've answered a question many West Wing fans have had for over 20 years now - where is the East Coast version of The Debate? Now we can see it, complete with Ellen DeGeneres as host. 

  

Here is your link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TeVK1qucGqIF_NPOekkSJqd4fanEHM-Q/view?usp=sharing 

Monday, January 12, 2026

THE WEST WING TRANSCRIPT: Liftoff (S6E4)

THE WEST WING
6x4 - “LIFTOFF”
WRITTEN BY DEBORA CAHN
DIRECTED BY ALEX GRAVES

Transcribed by Walking, Talking, And Yelling At Clouds
(kegofglory.blogspot.com)

TEASER

FADE IN: BLACK SCREEN

The title LIFTOFF appears at the bottom of the screen as we hear knocking on a door. FADE IN on shot through a door peephole, showing CJ inside her apartment putting on a shirt. She approaches the door as the knocking continues; we see her eye through the peephole, then she unlocks and opens the door. Two military members are outside.

KELTY
Morning, ma’am, Staff Sergeant Kelty, this is Sergeant Wulitzer.

CJ
Is everything all right?

KELTY
Sure is. May we?

The sergeants push inside past CJ, followed by other security personnel.

CJ
It’s 5:30 …

KELTY
5:26 on mine, I’m gonna use this chair here.

CJ
We couldn’t do this at my office?

KELTY holds a schematic diagram of the White House, pointing to it.

KELTY
According to our logs, you usually exit the building here.

CJ
Right.

KELTY
All right, you may find it’s easier to head out the west gate now, it’s closer for your parking. You’re gonna have to time that, but in the event of a situation, we’ll need you to exit here.

The security personnel are busily going through CJ’s apartment, carrying out computers and other items. CJ is distracted as they move past her.

KELTY
Ms. Cregg?

CJ
I’m listening. What kind of situation?

KELTY
A nuclear attack.

CJ
Are we expecting one?

KELTY
Well, any attack, but nuclear’s gonna top the list. So you’ll exit here -

He brings up a diagram of the interior of a helicopter.

KELTY
- directly to Marine One, you’ll sit at S5, behind the President and left of the NSA, and they’ll evacuate you to your secure location.

CJ (putting on her jacket)
Okay.

KELTY (now holding a different diagram)
If there’s a situation in your home we’ll ask that you make your way with all due haste to this field, off Denville Road. It’s about a mile to the south.

CJ
A field.

KELTY
A pasture, more like.

CJ
I’ll be standing with cows?

KELTY
A couple of horses is all, and they’ll scoot out the way as soon as the copter shows up. It won’t be more than three minutes from code call to liftoff.

There is another knock at the door.

CJ
Excuse me.

She goes to open the door, finding several Secret Service agents standing there.

AGENT
Morning.

CJ
No.

AGENT
Sorry. Agents DeCastro and Shea, they will be your -

CJ
I do not need a Secret Service detail.

AGENT
They’ll give you a wide berth -

The Secret Service agents push past CJ into her apartment.

CJ
Could we please discuss this?

AGENT
Not really. Have you got a spare room or a basement or something?

As CJ closes the door, another person stops it and enters.

AGENT
They’re gonna need a place to sleep.

CJ checks out in the hallway and closes the door.

CUT TO: INT. - WHITE HOUSE RESIDENCE – MORNING

CJ exits the elevator and heads towards the President’s bedroom. CHARLIE is standing there outside the door.

CJ
You’re not waiting, right?

CHARLIE
I just knocked. You okay?

CJ
In the event of an emergency I stand in a field with a cow and wait to be airlifted. 

The door opens and BARTLET emerges.

BARTLET
Hey. 

CHARLIE
Morning, sir.

BARTLET
There she is.

The three begin moving briskly down the hall.

CJ
Good morning, Mr. President.

BARTLET
You excited?

CJ
Absolutely. Berlin’s your first call, they’re angling for a piece of the Baltic shipping deal, we can’t make it happen.

BARTLET
Look at that, hit the ground running.

CUT TO: EXT. - PORTICO – MORNING

BARTLET, CJ, and CHARLIE continue walking towards the Oval Office.

CJ
I won’t be in the security briefing, I’ve got paperwork with the CIA, but NSC will get me up to speed.

BARTLET
Sky is falling, damage estimate to follow.

CJ
Yes, sir.

BARTLET
You’re gonna be great at this.

CJ
Thank you, Mr. President.

They enter the outer Oval Office, where DEBBIE is standing behind her desk. CJ continues on to her office.

BARTLET
She’s gonna be great!

DEBBIE
She nervous?

BARTLET
No, she looks fine.

DEBBIE
That’s good, I’d be apoplectic.

BARTLET and CHARLIE continue into the Oval Office.

BARTLET
Let’s keep it light today. Anything you can, hold til next week.

CHARLIE
Already on it.

BARTLET
Check the hospital, see if Leo’s up to a phone call.

CUT TO: INT. - MARGARET’S DESK – MORNING

A young man is standing with a cart full of binders next to MARGARET. CJ walks up to them.

MARGARET
This is Elroy. He brings the briefing books, you guys are gonna be friends.

CJ (gesturing to cart)
These are this week’s?

MARGARET
These are today’s.

TOBY walks by.

TOBY
Ready?

CJ
I told Josh to be there in case you need backup, he probably forgot, we should -

TOBY
Oh - I don’t need backup.

CJ and TOBY walk down the hallway towards the press briefing room. CAROL joins them.

CJ
Just try to keep tight rein, I’m not the story, Leo’s not the story -

TOBY
I know. Camp David’s the story. Stop worrying.

CJ takes a document from CAROL and hands it to TOBY. She takes a bottle of water from TOBY.

CJ
Let me have that.

CJ drinks from the bottle, hands it to CAROL, then walks into the press briefing room. She walks to podium and takes in the reporters as cameras flash.

CJ
Good morning.

The reporters respond.

CJ
This will be my last briefing as White House Press Secretary. Toby Ziegler will be filling in until the President names a replacement. I’ll ask you to please be kind to him, and if you can’t be kind at least speak slowly. 

Someone hands CAROL a note, and she quickly passes it on to CJ’s podium.

CJ
These past six years working for this exceptional group of journalists -

CJ reads the note.

CJ
I’m sorry, um – thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States.

The reporters all stand as BARTLET enters the room and goes behind the podium.

BARTLET
Thank you. After bypass surgery at Bethesda Naval Hospital 36 hours ago, I’m relieved to announce that Leo McGarry is in stable condition, and headed for a full recovery. Though he will always be a very valuable part of this administration, he will not be returning to his post. I am therefore pleased and terribly proud to announce that, effective immediately, the position of White House Chief of Staff will be filled by Claudia Jean Cregg.

CJ has a small smile.

BARTLET
Congratulations.

BARTLET begins to applaud. The reporters gradually follow suit, standing and clapping for  CJ.

SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
END TEASER.
***

ACT ONE

FADE IN: INT. - WHITE HOUSE HALLWAY – DAY

CAROL, MARGARET and CJ are walking quickly through the halls. CAROL hands CJ a piece of paper.

CAROL
Marburg Fever.

CJ
Then it’s a virus?

CAROL
Six cases so far, AP heard it on the ground in Ecuador.

MARGARET
You’re telling her this as Press Secretary or Chief of Staff?

CAROL
I think both.

CJ
We’ll have something by the end of the day, ask AP to wait.

MARGARET
That was Press Secretary.

CJ
Yes.

MARGARET
CDC.

CJ
Call CDC, immigration, DOH, give them what you have, set up a conference call for me.

MARGARET takes notes and walks away.

CAROL
Great. CJ … do you want me in? I’m not sure where to sit.

CJ
Oh, God, right. Toby’s gonna need you.

CAROL
That’s fine.

CJ
Just for the next couple of days.

They head opposite directions down the hall.

CUT TO: INT. - MARGARET’S DESK – DAY

CJ walks up to MARGARET’s desk and sees an arrangement of flowers there. She bends down to smell them.

CJ
Wow! Oh, people shouldn’t be sending me flowers!

MARGARET
They’re for Leo.

CJ stands, looks at MARGARET, then goes into her office. It’s dark and cluttered, with an array of flowers and a cacophony of voices from the TVs there. MARGARET enters, carrying a large binder.

MARGARET
I’m … sorry about the stuff, uh -

CJ
Don’t worry about it.

MARGARET
You need coffee or anything?

CJ
I’m fine. Let’s do it.

MARGARET
CIA briefer’s on his way. Security’ll be by for a palm print and an eye scan. President’s got Treasury in 10 minutes, you’re on the call. EPA’s waiting for feedback on the Clean Air markup, Armed Forces is coming to talk about a budget boost for the peacekeeping tour because they forgot to factor in food, for the troops.

CJ
And this gets us to -

MARGARET
8:45.

MARGARET exits as CJ looks at her watch.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

TOBY is giving a briefing to a room full of reporters.

REPORTER
NATO’s expressing reluctance to contribute troops to the peacekeeping effort.

TOBY pops up from behind the podium after picking up some papers he’d dropped. He speaks as he shuffles the loose papers.

TOBY
The Secretary General of NATO, the President is speaking with him, the Secretary General of, uh, NATO, this afternoon -

The reporters clamor to be called on.

CHRIS
There’s verbal support and there’s boots on the ground.

TOBY
I’m not commenting on a, on a negotiation before it happens.

REPORTER
Can we do this without them?

TOBY
I’m not commenting.

CHRIS
If NATO’s out, would the President reconsider UN peacekeepers?

CUT TO: INT. - MARGARET’S DESK – DAY

The press briefing is seen on C-SPAN on a television next to MARGARET’s desk.

TOBY (on TV)
I do not have an answer.

CHRIS (on TV)
Can you point us toward a subject you’re commenting on?

CJ comes out of her office to talk to MARGARET.

CJ
Can you find out where Counsel put the DOD analysis?

CJ sees MARGARET watching the TV with dismay, and she turns to watch it herself. Our point of view shifts back and from the briefing room to CJ and MARGARET watching it on TV.

MARK (on TV)
Will CJ Cregg’s role be the same as Leo McGarry’s?

TOBY (on TV)
Title, parking spot, gym membership -

MARK
She’s not coming into this with any kind of national security experience.

TOBY
The President has a flock of, of national security professionals prepared to address his questions and the Chief of Staff’s.

MARK
But we’re about to stage a military action that would -

TOBY
Yeah, a military incursion into, into the most entrenched conflict on the planet! CJ Cregg’s not the only one working without a net.

MARGARET stands in shock as CJ exclaims her dismay.

CJ
Oh, oh, no, no …

TOBY
- has every confidence -

We see JOSH standing in his bullpen watching the briefing on that TV.

MARK (on TV)
You just said nobody has experience with this kind of military incursion.

TOBY (on TV)
The Pentagon has experience. As do the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the NSC, but in the event they all lose their way, the President can always send CJ Cregg to Ramallah to swat at suicide bombers with her purse.

As the reporters erupt in the briefing room, JOSH dashes away from his bullpen.

MARK
That’s her foreign policy portfolio?

Now we see DEBBIE and CHARLIE watching the meltdown on TV in the outer Oval Office, as JOSH runs by in the background.

DEBBIE
Oh, good Lord.

JOSH continues running past CJ’S office as CJ yells at no one in particular.

CJ
My purse! Page Carol, get him the hell out of there!

Now BARTLET comes out of the Oval behind DEBBIE and CHARLIE and he takes in the disaster on the TV.

TOBY (on TV)
I didn’t say that.

MARK (on TV)
Who has the quote?

CHRIS (on TV)
I got, “The President can send CJ Cregg to Ramallah to swat at suicide bombers with her purse.”

JOSH tries to stop running as he slides past the back door of the press briefing room. CAROL is leading TOBY out of the room.

CAROL
You don’t have to brief. You’re better with the written material. We can flood ‘em with press releases.

JOSH casually walks up to TOBY. They walk down the hall together.

JOSH
How’d it go?

TOBY
Fine.

JOSH
Missed it.

TOBY
Well … there’ll be others.

JOSH
I’m thinking about the substance abuse initiative? … um, what do you say we send CJ to Compton, have her swat at drug lords with her purse.

JOSH and TOBY are outside CJ’s office. MARGARET and CAROL are there as well.

TOBY
It was an ambush. They love an opportunity like this, if they could dance around me with a pig’s head on a pike, they would.

WILL steps up to join them.

WILL
How’s it going?

JOSH
Well. Well.

WILL
Pat Quigley called me, wants to know if either of you is interested in a conversation.

JOSH
From the Policy Institute?

TOBY
It’s a job offer.

JOSH
I’ve gotten five of these already today.

TOBY
Job offers. It’s gonna be that kind of day.

MARGARET
She’s ready.

WILL
She been doing okay?

JOSH
She’s fine. She’s a pro.

WILL
Like a ninja with a Prada clutch.

JOSH, TOBY, and WILL go into CJ’s office for the senior staff meeting.

CJ
Men of valor.

TOBY
It was an ambush.

CJ
I say we move past it.

TOBY
I’ve never seen you sling anything but a briefcase over your arm -

CJ
Don’t mention it.

TOBY
- loaded with 30 pounds of, of legislative detritus, not your lipstick or your hanky -

CJ
Jump right over it?

TOBY
I’m just putting, I’m gonna put it back into the -

CJ
Shut up.

TOBY
Okay.

JOSH (to MARGARET)
Hey, how’s he doing?

MARGARET
Leo? Awake and cranky.

WILL
Sounds about right.

MARGARET (to CJ)
You started senior staff?

CJ
I guess we did. Why don’t we … go ahead and sit.

As the men take their seats, MARGARET speaks quietly to CJ.

MARGARET
The intel estimates, did you … ?

CJ
I’m sure I didn’t.

MARGARET
Leo likes to glance at the top sheets before senior staff, circle anything he’s got questions about, that way NSC can pull material for the afternoon briefing.

CJ
Uh …

JOSH
We can wait. Go ahead.

CJ takes the estimates and sits at her desk. She begins to circle items on the sheet. As she circles more and more, JOSH and TOBY turn around in their seats to watch. Eventually she makes a large circle around most of the sheet and hands it to MARGARET.

MARGARET
Okay. We’ll set aside some extra time.

CJ
Thank you.

MARGARET
We also try and cover the lunch order before senior staff. Leo likes a roast turkey sandwich.

CJ
That’s fine.

MARGARET remains standing next to CJ.

MARGARET
Mayo?

CJ
Please tell me we can talk about this later.

MARGARET exits.

CJ
Hi. Press secretaries.

TOBY
Can I apologize again?

CJ
No, but let’s move finding my replacement from priority three to priority one.

TOBY
Yeah.

CJ
Short list by the end of the day, four or five good choices – and D triple C’s coming in to talk about the election.

TOBY and JOSH spin their seats around to face CJ, who hasn’t moved as she’s started the meeting.

WILL
Vulnerable seats?

CJ
Josh, get an overview and then sit down with Will -

TOBY
I’ll do it. It’s gonna be Merridy -

CJ
Josh can do it.

TOBY
Merridy hates him.

JOSH
Excuse me?

CJ
Toby, Josh is gonna meet with D triple C and then sit with Will, there’s gonna be fundraising trips in this for the VP.

WILL
Well, get to me sooner rather than later. Our campaign office has him double-booked already. 

CJ
Toby, Marburg virus.

TOBY
Not that I know of.

CJ
There’s an outbreak in Ecuador. CDC’s setting up a border screening plan. Try and make sure we don’t seem panicked.

TOBY
Yeah.

CJ
And let me say what would have been best articulated an hour ago: The peacekeeping plan is still vulnerable, this place needs to reek of confidence. Maybe we best avoid any further implications that the President’s in over his head.

JOSH
Working without a net.

CJ
I think that’s it. We’re all working without a net today. Thanks.

Everyone stands as the meeting breaks up.

TOBY
CJ? Wow, this is hard. I couldn’t be happier that you got this gig. But I think it’s, it’s just time for, for me to go. Six years is, uh … 

TOBY pulls a letter out of his pocket and puts it on CJ’s desk.

TOBY
I just think it’s time for me to move on. This is my letter of resignation to the President.

JOSH
I don’t want to pile on, but … working for one of my closest friends is, I think, not gonna bring out my best.

JOSH pulls a letter out of his back pocket and puts it on CJ’s desk.

CJ
Josh …

WILL
Wow.

There’s a knock at the door.

CJ
You can’t -

BARTLET comes in from the Oval Office.

BARTLET
I’m sorry to barge in -

CJ
Mr. President, can I have just a minute -

BARTLET
I’ll make this quick. I don’t know if I’m comfortable working this closely with a woman. Maybe it’s time for me to call it a day. Give the VP a chance to steer the ship.

There is a moment of quiet, then TOBY breaks into a chuckle, followed by JOSH. CJ smiles, realizing she’s been pranked.

BARTLET (to TOBY)
You’re weak. You have a weak will, you should have held it, see if she pulled out the Continuity of Government plan.

WILL
He cracked up at the mere suggestion of the VP.

TOBY (still laughing)
I had a whole thing on, on spending time with my kids, and I, I went up!

CJ
You are bad, bad men.

BARTLET (heading back to the Oval Office)
In the service of a vengeful God.

WILL
On behalf of the Vice President, and myself, and every man who’s ever had a Wonder Woman fantasy, it’s a bright day.

CJ
Get out.

CJ and TOBY share a quick moment as TOBY takes back his letter, then exits.

CJ
Margaret, we behind yet?

MARGARET
Very.

CUT TO: INT. - WHITE HOUSE FOYER – DAY

CAROL comes up to meet JOSH and TOBY walking through the foyer.

CAROL
Toby!

TOBY
We need a list of press secretary candidates, uh, ah, pull some resumes.

CAROL (handing him a thick folder)
This is the list, these are the resumes.

JOSH
You always do that?

CAROL
CJ keeps an “In Case I Get Hit By A Bus” file. You’ve got appointments today with the obvious top choices, spokesmen from State, Interior -

TOBY
A nightmare.

CAROL exits. JOSH helps TOBY sort out some pages as DONNA rolls up in her wheelchair.

JOSH
Here, I’ll help …

DONNA
Haffley’s in your office. Time, time.

JOSH starts to run off, then returns to leave a folder in DONNA’s lap.

JOSH
Here. Donna’ll help.

JOSH exits. TOBY and DONNA look at each other.

DONNA
Nice briefing. 

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

MARGARET is bringing more documents to CJ’s desk.

MARGARET
CJ?

CJ (taking a document)
Thank you.

MARGARET
That was something, everybody pretending to resign.

CJ
Bless their cotton socks.

MARGARET turns away, then stops and returns to CJ.

MARGARET
But … you know I’m actually leaving, right? I mean Leo’s going to be doing something and it’s a long time I’ve worked for him, and I just can’t imagine -

CJ
Margaret?

MARGARET
Sure. Sorry.

MARGARET has one more folder to give to CJ.

MARGARET
Mr. Roman Mendili from the Republic of Georgia in the Roosevelt Room.

CUT TO: INT. - ROOSEVELT ROOM – DAY

CJ enters, greeting a man (ROMAN MENDILI) sitting at the table.

CJ
Good morning.

MENDILI
Thank you. Good morning to you.

MENDILI stands, holding a package and with a briefcase shackled to his wrist.

CJ (shaking hands)
Oh. You okay there?

MENDILI
Would be better on left hand.

They both sit.

MENDILI (gesturing to briefcase)
Important documents.

CJ
Of course.

MENDILI
I wanted to speak with Mr. McGarry. (gesturing to package) This is … gift? I bring for him. Saperavi, from my own vines.

CJ
You’re a, a winemaker?

MENDILI slides the package across the table to CJ.

MENDILI
Former economic adviser to Georgia President Rustaveli. You want taste?

CJ
Oh, no, it’s a little early, I …

CJ stops, considering.

CJ (suspiciously)
Did Josh Lyman put you up to this?

MENDILI
President Rustaveli send me, with important offer, but – I wish to speak it to Mr. McGarry.

CJ
Sadly, Mr. McGarry’s been ill, so I’m afraid you’re going to have to speak it with me.

MENDILI puts the briefcase on the table and prepares to open it.

MENDILI
Most top secret?

CJ nods.

MENDILI
President Rustaveli wants to offer United States gift of … uranium. Highly enriched. To your government.

CJ
Uranium? Like, to make bombs?

MENDILI
We do not wish to make bombs. We give to you, you make what you want.

CJ
Can you excuse me just one moment?

MENDILI
Yes. I, I, I open this, show you maps.

CJ
That’s great.

CJ leaves the Roosevelt Room and quickly walks up to MARGARET, who is dealing with another floral arrangment. JOSH walks up at the same time.

CJ (to MARGARET)
Is this a thing, like the two-weeks notice gang?

JOSH
Hey.

CJ (to JOSH)
Inspector Clouseau in there, was that your idea?

JOSH
What?

CJ
You and Toby didn’t send a guy with a combover to offer me -

JOSH
Did he proposition you?

CJ
No, you lummox, he tried to give me his collection of highly enriched …

CJ stops, realizing the truth.

JOSH
What?

CJ
Oh, my God. This is happening.

JOSH
What?

CJ
Margaret, get the National Security Advisor right away.

JOSH
Is there a problem?

CJ
I’ve got an emissary from the Republic of Georgia offering me a load of wwapons-grade uranium. I’m gonna go with yes.

CJ heads back through her office towards the Roosevelt Room.

FADE OUT.
END ACT ONE.
* * *

ACT TWO

FADE IN: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ is meeting with NANCY McNALLY. NANCY is on the phone.

NANCY (into phone)
Go ahead, I’ll wait.

CJ (handing her some papers)
They’ve got 300 kilgrams of weapons-grade uranium in a research reactor the Soviets left behind when they pulled out. That’s, what?

NANCY
Enough for ten, maybe fifteen bombs.

CJ walks out of her office door as MARGARET, unnoticed, enters behind her. CJ returns, seeing MARGARET already there.

CJ
Margaret? I need a meeting with the Secretary of State, Energy, Defense, the JCS, and CIA first thing tomorrow. (to NANCY) You’ll brief everybody?

NANCY
We tried to take this stuff off their hands in ‘92, they didn’t want to part with it.

CJ
Because?

NANCY
Figured if things got rough, they could always build a nuke.

CJ
Well, they’re not building anything, it’s just sitting there behind what he’s describing as an excellent padlock.

NANCY
It’s a miracle nobody’s boosted it yet.

CJ
The Russians don’t guard this stuff?

NANCY
They gave them the padlock. (into phone) Yeah? Thank you. (she hangs up) Mendili’s been over to the Italian embassy twice in the last three days, we’re not the only ones who got this offer.

CJ
Margaret!

She turns, surprised to see MARGARET standing right next to her.

CJ
That meeting’s gotta be today.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

DONNA and TOBY are sitting in the seats of the briefing room as the door opens and DAN EDMUNDS enters.

DONNA
Hi. Come on in. I’m Donna Moss, this is Toby Ziegler. You’re … Dan, right, from State?

EDMUNDS
Uh, Dan Edmunds.

TOBY
Thanks for coming in.

EDMUNDS
Good to meet you. (indicating the podium) You want me up here?

DONNA
That’d be great.

EDMUNDS steps up behind the podium.

DONNA
Toby’s going to ask you a few questions, just pretend he’s 150 reporters.

TOBY (reading)
The UN seems to have ruled out sending, troops to help us with peacekeeping, what’s the administration gonna do?

EDMUNDS
Well, obviously the North Atlantic Council has made and will continue to make determinations in regard to burden-sharing, and a, great many factors weigh upon those determinations. It would be premature to prejudge what the Council, in its deliberative fashion and fully appropriate to its role as a deliberative body, may or may not have predetermined out of any zeal to ascertain the precise nature of those deliberations.

TOBY (whispering to DONNA)
This is gonna be a long day.

CUT TO: INT. - HALLWAY OUTSIDE CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ walks out of her office carrying a folder. She meets CHARLIE also walking in the hallway.

CHARLIE
We need to do schedule.

CJ
I was just coming to see the President.

CHARLIE
You know you have a door in your office.

CJ (taking the schedule from CHARLIE)
Let me see.

CJ examines the schedule as they continue walking toward the Oval Office.

CJ
Looks good.

CHARLIE
The Chief of Staff clears every item on the President’s schedule. The Chief of Staff knows what happened in every meeting, and gets most of the information the President will get in the meeting before the President gets it.

CJ (referring to the schedule)
In that case, get me briefed on this one, and this, push the 1:45 to next week, and this shouldn’t even exist. Cancel it.

DEBBIE is seen behind CJ and CHARLIE answering a telephone.

DEBBIE (into phone)
Fiderer.

CHARLIE
Better.

DEBBIE (to CJ)
Secretary of Defense for the President – unscheduled.

CHARLIE
The Chief of Staff clears every unscheduled phone call. (to DEBBIE) You know what the call’s about?

CJ (to DEBBIE)
Ask what it’s -

DEBBIE (into phone)
Mr. Secretary, may I ask what it’s in reference to?

DEBBIE shakes her head to CJ.

CJ
Tell him the President’s unavailable, but he should call my office, let me know what it’s about.

CJ turns to CHARLIE, then heads into the Oval Office.

CJ
Thanks for …

CHARLIE
Just today. Tomorrow you’re on your own.

DEBBIE (into phone)
Mr. Secretary, he’s on a call right now, can I direct you to the Chief of Staff?

CJ enters the Oval, seeing BARTLET working behind his desk.

CJ
Mr. President?

BARTLET
That’s what they tell me. 

CJ
We’ve been approached by the Republic of Georgia. They’re looking to unload some highly enriched uranium. We may need to stage an emergency extraction. There’s some concern it could wind up in Iran.

BARTLET
That’s worth avoiding.

CJ
We’re briefing the agencies. I hope to have options for you by the end of the day. 

DEBBIE enters at the doorway.

DEBBIE
Uh, Mr. President -

BARTLET
Yeah.

DEBBIE
- they’re ready for you in the Cabinet Room.

BARTLET
Thank you. (to CJ) You putting together a tiger team?

CJ
Uh – I’m not quite sure what that is.

BARTLET and CJ are on the move out of the Oval.

BARTLET
Four, five agencies on one project, particularly something this complicated, they’ll pass it around like a hot potato - fourteen months from now we’ll wake up having accomplished absolutely nothing. You’re gonna have to spearhead the project yourself.

CJ
Sure, I’ll … tiger team. Grrr!

BARTLET turns back to CJ.

BARTLET
What was that?

CJ
Nothing.

CUT TO: INT. - JOSH’S BULLPEN – DAY

JOSH is leading the DCCC staffers, MERRIDY and SEGAL, into his office.

MERRIDY
He could work with Chuck Horowitz. Hell, he could replace Chuck Horowitz.

JOSH
Guys …

SEGAL
The D triple C’s a great place to work, Josh, we could really use you.

JOSH
I’m not looking.

MERRIDY
You already got something lined up?

JOSH
I’m staying at the White House.

MERRIDY
Wow. Gosh, working for CJ …

SEGAL
Okay, let’s talk about the -

JOSH
Really, anything else. Coffee?

MERRIDY and SEGAL
No.

SEGAL
Thanks and adulations for all the help at the midterms last year, you guys were fantastic.

JOSH
Our pleasure.

SEGAL hands a folder to JOSH, and JOSH looks it over as they continue into his office.

SEGAL
We’re looking at next year, our latest count was seven members of Congress retiring, and we’ve got 12 -

MERRIDY
Maybe 13.

SEGAL
- vulnerable incumbents. We got the Presidential race pulling the spotlight.

MERRIDY
And the money.

SEGAL
So we want to make sure we’re not neglecting these seats.

MERRIDY
The Republicans certainly won’t be.

JOSH (still looking at the folder)
Why is Matthew Santos dropping out?

MERRIDY and SEGAL
He’s done.

JOSH
He’s not done. He’s 42. We just got him on Ways and Means, for God’s sake.

SEGAL
Well, he says that he’s had enough.

JOSH
Uh, he hasn’t. I’ll talk to him. Who else?

MERRIDY
Uh, Wexler in Connecticut’s retiring. Hey … you’re from there. You could run for his seat.

JOSH
I have a job.

CUT TO: INT. - OUTER OVAL OFFICE – DAY

CJ walks up to CHARLIE.

CJ
Can I get in there?

CHARLIE
You know you have your own door - 

CJ
I’ll be quick.

CHARLIE
He’s talking with the Secretary of Defense.

CJ
Hutchinson’s in the Oval?

CHARLIE
He walked the President back from the Cabinet meeting. Weren’t you in there?

CJ
I got pulled out. Hutchinson doesn’t have a meeting.

CHARLIE
They walked in. I thought about taking him down, but it seemed excessive.

CJ picks up a phone.

CJ (into phone)
Margaret, did the Secretary of Defense call for me? (she listens, then half-turns away from CHARLIE) It’s CJ … he didn’t.

CJ hangs up to phone.

CJ
Get him out of there.

CHARLIE
Really?

CJ
Pull the President, take him to the Mural Room, tell him he’s late for his 1:15.

CHARLIE
He doesn’t have a 1:15.

CJ
Make one up! 

CJ starts back to her office as CHARLIE goes to the Oval Office door.

CHARLIE
Excuse me, Mr. President?

CJ hears the door close. She stops, turns, and walks back towards the Oval, meeting SECRETARY HUTCHINSON on his way out.

CJ
Secretary Hutchinson.

HUTCHINSON
Congratulations. Woman of the hour. 

CJ
Thank you.

HUTCHINSON
I wanted to catch you in the Cabinet Room, you’re gonna do a fantastic job.

CJ
Thank you. I know the President had to run and you were speaking, is there anything I can help you with?

HUTCHINSON
No, this Georgian project could be tricky, but we’ll cover it in the meeting. See you in  a few.

HUTCHINSON walks away.

CUT TO: INT. - COMMUNICATIONS BULLPEN – DAY

JOSH is following TOBY into the bullpen, where they sort through a box with lunch orders inside.

JOSH
How come Matt Santos doesn’t want to run again?

TOBY
Well, what makes a man seek public office, Josh? What makes a man abjure the comforts of a private life?

JOSH
Here we go.

TOBY
The decadence, really, of simple breadwinning for the Athenian wrestling mat that is the forum politic?

WILL walks up to join them.

WILL
Hey.

JOSH
Why doesn’t Matt Santos want to run again?

TOBY
‘Cause he’s a tool. We just got him on, on to Ways and Means.

WILL
They love him in Houston, maybe he wants to run for governor.

JOSH
You think?

WILL
Term or two as governor, he could come back here and run for the big chair.

TOBY
Are you high?

WILL
People like him. Ex-Marine -

TOBY
He’s not running for the – no.

JOSH
I’m talking to him. D triple C wants help on 19 races, yours are the ones with the stars.

JOSH hands a folder to WILL.

WILL
Well, the VP’s gonna be fund-raising for himself. I’m just not sure we can double-dip in all these places.

JOSH
I think it falls under the category of, people scratching other people’s backs?

WILL
Indeed.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

MARGARET is working with CJ on her afternoon schedule.

MARGARET
It’s first priority.

CJ
For the day?

MARGARET
For 1:45.

CJ
Three hundred pages on snowmobiles.

MARGARET
The President’s got lunch with Interior tomorrow, Yellowstone’s gonna come up.

CJ
And there’s no one else in the building that can position us?

MARGARET
Toby and the policy shop are split.

CJ (flipping through a binder)
All right, give me the rest of -

MARGARET
We’ve now talked through the snowmobile window. You have to leave.

CJ
Where am I going?

MARGARET
The Georgian thing?

CJ
Where’s the non proliferation … ?

MARGARET
I have one.

CJ
And the uranium repatriation study?

MARGARET
You really have to start walking now.

CUT TO: INT. - WHITE HOUSE STAIRWELL – DAY

CJ and MARGARET are on their way to the meeting.

CJ
It’s downstairs?

MARGARET
At DOD’s request.

MARGARET hands a paper to CJ.

MARGARET
WHO faxed preliminary plans for the Marburg virus.

CJ
It’s – this is – they’re asking for 18 million worth of emergency aid, it doesn’t say how they came up with that number. Does HHS know they’re calling it a global health alert?

CJ and MARGARET have arrived outside the Sitation Room. MARGARET makes a few entries on a  keypad, then turns and grabs CJ’s wrist, pressing her palm against the scanner.

MARGARET
I’ll call them.

MARGARET pats CJ on the shoulder as she leaves and the Situation Room door opens.

CUT TO: INT. - SITUATION ROOM – DAY

CJ stands hesitantly at the door. A Marine guard speaks to her.

MARINE
Ma’am … this way, ma’am.

CJ walks into the room. We hear a “Ten-hut” in the background, then discussions by security advisers, including SECRETARY HUTCHINSON, NANCY McNALLY, and ENERGY SECRETARY DELOIT. CJ slowly moves to her seat and sits during this conversation.

DELOIT
Anybody run this by the Russians?

NANCY
The Georgians don’t want to go to the Russians.

DELOIT
They left the damn uranium there in the first place.

HUTCHINSON
The Russians can’t secure it, their facilities are a joke.

NANCY
It’s gotta come here.

DELOIT
Well, who’s gonna pay for it?

HUTCHINSON
Excellent question.

DELOIT
The Department of Energy’s tapped out -

NANCY
Mr. Secretary, we’re all tapped out.

HUTCHINSON
It’s probably not just enriched uranium, I bet there’s a load of spent fuel along with it, nuclear waste.

DELOIT
And leaking, likely as not, we may be looking at a massive biohazard cleanup -

HUTCHINSON
Which costs - ?

DELOIT
Extraction, maybe five million, cleanup’s easily twenty. Besides which we take foreign-owned nuclear material and dump it in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, every environmental group, every community -

NANCY
We can’t let this go public.

DELOIT
It’ll get out. You’re gonna have a PR nightmare on your hands.

CJ
Isn’t the larger PR crisis one wherein Al-Qaeda steals this stuff and we have to admit it wasn’t under our control because we were too cheap to go get it?

HUTCHINSON
You got a congressional appropriation I don’t know about? … Who pays?

DELOIT
He called it a gift, didn’t he? Your friend.

CJ
Are we considering leaving a stash of uranium unprotected because we can’t scrape up 25 million bucks?

HUTCHINSON
I’m considering this the tip of a very large iceberg.

CJ
Maybe we can look into helping the Russians secure it.

HUTCHINSON
The President isn’t interested in bringing this to the Russians.

DELOIT
He’s not?

HUTCHINSON
Figure out something else.

DELOIT
I didn’t get a copy of the site analysis.

HUTCHINSON
Have we run an independent test on this material?

CJ
Um, I’m not -

NANCY
This just walked in the door.

HUTCHINSON
Before we deploy a fleet of C5s with an extraction team, be nice to know we’re not buying a lump of clay.

DELOIT
We’ll test it.

HUTCHINSON
Get the President your report on domestic storage capacity.

CJ
Hang on, I’m not sure we’re ready to -

HUTCHINSON
He asked me for it. We done?

The meeting breaks up as everyone starts to stand. NANCY watches CJ as she leaves. We see CJ walk up a stairwell and then in her office, where she paces and then tosses a stack of papers across the room in frustration.

FADE OUT.
END ACT TWO.
* * *

ACT THREE

FADE IN: INT. - OVAL OFFICE – DAY

PRESIDENT BARTLET is sitting in a chair, thinking, as CJ enters.

CJ
Mr. President?

BARTLET
What do we have on domestic nuclear storage facilities?

CJ
I’ll get you Energy’s quarterly. Uh, sir, we may be able to get the Russians to help -

BARTLET
Hutchinson wants to keep the Russians out of it. He said we don’t even know if it’s actually uranium. Can you get some documentation they’re not trying to sell us the Brooklyn Bridge?

CJ
We’re looking into that.

BARTLET
You know, I asked for the breakdown on domestic facilities this morning.

CJ
I’ve got it, I just wanted to look it over be-

BARTLET
I didn’t get a copy. You sure Margaret and Charlie are keeping your papers flowing?

CJ
Yes, sir.

BARTLET nods. CJ sits next to BARTLET.

CJ
Sir, your conversation with the Secretary of Defense -

BARTLET
We didn’t talk that much. Charlie high-tailed me into a meeting with an empty chair. I know it’s going to be bumpy til you’re settled in, but I just want to make sure things aren’t being lost in the shuffle.

CJ
Of course.

BARTLET (dismissively)
Thank you.

CJ exits.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

TOBY and DONNA are continuing with the press secretary interviews. CLARE STEIN is behind the podium. She speaks in a direct, emotionless, flat tone. 

TOBY
Sources say NATO’s reluctant to contribute troops to the peacekeeping mission in the Middle East. How’s the President going to address that?

STEIN
The President was aware when he drafted the peacekeeping agreement that the international community wasn’t going to jump in like a pack of eager lemmings.

TOBY
You’re saying it’s a – suicide mission?

STEIN
Not necessarily.

TOBY
The lemmings die at the end of the story.

STEIN makes a face, indicating nothing so much as “oh, well.” CUT TO: TOBY interviewing the next applicant, CHRIS LAKELY. He is smiling and ebullient – perhaps too much so.

TOBY
Sources say NATO’s reluctant to contribute troops to the peacekeeping mission in the Middle East. How’s the President going to address that?

LIKELY
Joanne, marry me! Make me the happiest man in the world!

LIKELY laughs as TOBY and DONNA watch impassively. CUT TO: the next applicant behind the podium, DONALD DONCHICK, who speaks rapidly, without pauses, and in a very quiet tone, practically whispering, as TOBY and DONNA strain to hear.

DONCHICK (whispering)
- NATO has historically shown reluctance to commit troops as a body; individual member nations are still likely -

TOBY
Sorry, um, we can’t hear ya … back here.

DONCHICK stops, clears his throat, takes a moment – then continues exactly as before.

DONCHICK (whispering)
NATO has already agreed to provide tactical support as well as military aid -

DONNA
Thanks.

There’s a montage of TOBY and DONNA dismissing three other unseen candidates. CUT TO: another interview, this time with ALAN ZWICK, who appears confident and capable behind the podium.

TOBY
NATO doesn’t seem to want to pitch in troops to the peacekeeping mission.

ZWICK
The President asked for NATO troops largely as a courtesy. What we really need from our allies is financial support. Logistical support, tactical aid – all of which they’ve enthusiastically pledged.

TOBY
We don’t need their troops?

ZWICK
The President doesn’t want to present the impression that we’re strong-arming the region with an onslaught of European forces marching into Jerusalem under an American flag. This is a process that will be executed by the Palestinian and Israeli governments. We’re just there to help out.

TOBY
What if it turns out to be a bigger job?

ZWICK
It won’t. The President knows exactly what he’s getting into, and he’s crafted a mission he knew could succeed. And it will.

DONNA gives a half smile as she and TOBY look on.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

MARGARET follows CJ into the office.

MARGARET
The governor of Tennessee called. “Georgian package – absolutely not.”

CJ turns to look at MARGARET.

CJ
How did he - ? 

MARGARET shrugs.

CJ
Who the hell leaked it? I cannot have a leak right now, get the governor on the phone please, quickly.

MARGARET spins and heads to the door. CJ stops her.

CJ
Margaret! Once I’m done with him, Nancy McNally needs to call the governor and reiterate that he needs to keep a lid on this and so does State, and … have Charlie put it on the President’s schedule for tomorrow.

As MARGARET exits TOBY comes in to CJ’s office.

TOBY
We got a guy.

CJ
What kind of - ?

TOBY
A Press Secretary. He’s smart, he’s articulate, and – you can hear him, which is more of an issue than one might have thought, and he was like the Great Wall of China up there around the President -

CJ
I thought we were gonna look at a short list.

MARGARET comes to the door.

MARGARET
Governor of Tennessee on one.

CJ picks up a phone.

CJ (into phone)
Mr. Governor. Thank you, sir. I understand you heard … the Secretary of Energy?

TOBY
This is the guy. We’re done.

CJ (covering the phone with her hand)
We’re not done. I’d like a list. Three to five names.

TOBY stands at the door looking at CJ, then walks away as her conversation continues.

CJ (into phone)
Unfortunately, sir, his decision to share that information was premature. The President would appreciate it if you did not go public with this. … No, I’m gonna have to insist.

CUT TO: INT. - MATT SANTOS’ OFFICE – DAY

JOSH enters the door and speaks to the receptionist.

JOSH
Josh Lyman, for the congressman?

We see JOSH sitting in the waiting area as MATT is having a debate with staffers RONNA and NED.

MATT
We’re not in the dream-making business. Why not a cap that says punitive damages stop at five million?

RONNA
Because, in the most egregious cases, you have -

MATT
You invest that money, it’s a good life.

RONNA
For a kid who is paralyzed when he was two?

NED
It’s giving insurers the kind of immunity nobody gets, not auto makers, chemical companies, not me if I mow you down in my car.

MATT
A distinct possibility, I’m told.

RONNA
It’s a societal disincentive.

NED
We run the system into the ground, it’s a societal disaster.

MATT
Josh, are we gonna run the HMO system into the ground?

JOSH leans around the corner, still sitting in his chair. As he speaks he rises and walks into the outer office.

JOSH
HMOs pulled down 8.8 billion in profit last year, we’re not running them into anything.

NED
So that brings us back to the Republicans are greedy bastards.

MATT
Profits are a red herring. And what if the Republicans on the committee aren’t worried about protecting profits? What if they know that the companies’ll do that on their own by boosting premiums and letting costs soar through the roof in an industry that was created to curtail the price of health care?

NED
Then I have to have lunch with Joel Hague again.

MATT
And watch him put ketchup on his mashed potatoes? Bipartisan or bust, my friends. Come on in, Josh.

MATT gestures for JOSH to come into his office.

JOSH (entering MATT’S office)
Patients’ bill of rights.

MATT
The final shuddering gasp of a dying piece of legislation.

JOSH
You’ll bring it back next term.

MATT
I’m not gonna get, like, five minutes of small talk first, you’re not gonna ask me about my kids?

JOSH
How are your kids?

MATT
They don’t recognize me.

JOSH
One more term -

MATT
“Who’s that guy hugging mommy?”

JOSH
We’ll take care of your fundraising, we’ve got committee chairmanships opening up, we can talk about what you’re interested in -

MATT
It’s not gonna happen.

JOSH
Congressman, you’re a strong presence on the floor, your staff’s on fire, how can you walk away from this? Who champions patients’ bill of rights if you’re out of here?

MATT
You.

NED comes into the office and hands MATT a document.

NED
Sir.

JOSH
I’m happy to help, but … you’re the one who’s gotta put his name on the bill.

MATT (writing on the document)
When I was the mayor of Houston, we opened up eight neighborhood health clinics. Each one sees 200 patients a day. I’m gonna go home, and open up 20 more. That’s not a health care agenda, Josh, that’s health care.

JOSH
Aw, it’s appealing. As I’m sure is the governor’s mansion.

MATT
You think I’m gonna go home to run for another office? I’m getting out of the business.

JOSH
What about your 20 clinics?

MATT
Privately funded, that’s all we got left. There’s never gonna be a patients’ bill of rights, Congress won’t do it. Or else they’ll spend five years wrangling over minutiae and come up with a toothless plan -

JOSH
A toothless national plan is not an inconsiderable force, and, uh, well, a little wrangling? That’s the fun part.

MATT
Oh, that’s how you have fun. That’s why you’re here and I’m going home to Texas.

MATT puts on his suit jacket as he prepares to leave.

MATT
I hear, uh, CJ Cregg got Chief of Staff. That’s gotta be a blow.

JOSH
It’s fine, really.

MATT
Everybody likes the look of the next rung up the ladder. But you know what – you couldn’t do the kind of politicking you do behind Leo McGarry’s desk. You’d be making sure the trains run on time. They need you. You love that - fight. And you’re good at it.

MATT pats JOSH on the shoulder and starts out of the office.

MATT
I don’t love it.

JOSH (whispering)
Yeah.

MATT
Go on, get out of my office. Go out there and do what you were born to do.

JOSH
Now, you’re screwing the party a little bit here, it’s not like we got a lot of bench strength in Texas.

MATT
I know. And I’m sorry about that. Ronna? Get Mr. Lyman a copy of the talking points.

RONNA
On?

MATT
Patients’ bill of rights.

MATT walks out of the office as JOSH watches him go.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – NIGHT

CJ is trying to go through the mountain of briefing papers. CAROL enters carrying Gail’s fishbowl. She places it on CJ’s desk.

CJ
Gail!

CAROL
I fed her this morning.

CJ
We’re not in Kansas any more, Gail.

CJ picks up the fishbowl to look at Gail.

CAROL
Greg Brock’s writing an “Is the administration in over its head” story.

CJ
About the peacekeeping mission?

CAROL
He’s trying to get face time with General Alexander.

CJ
Where’d he get -

CAROL
Rumors, speculation …

CJ
Toby’s briefing.

CJ leads CAROL out of her office.

CAROL
First day’s tough.

CJ (to MARGARET)
Is Toby in his office?

MARGARET
I think so, I’ll check.

CJ keeps on going as she heads off to find TOBY.

MARGARET
Traditionally … we call people and they … come to you.

CUT TO: INT. - COMMUNICATIONS BULLPEN – NIGHT

TOBY is going over some folders as DONNA sits in her wheelchair next to him.

DONNA
No, Toby, that’s the wrong file.

TOBY
You want a magazine -?

DONNA
That’s the “not enough experience” file.

TOBY
Yes, indeed.

DONNA
We have people with more ex -

TOBY
We’ve got a guy who was a sheet of bulletproof glass who’s willing to throw himself in front of the press corps like the lone man facing down the tanks in Tiananmen Square … (ruffling through papers) … three, four (handing papers to DONNA) bring me these four tomorrow.

CJ walks into the bullpen, unseen by TOBY and DONNA.

DONNA
Well, I think that’s a waste of time.

TOBY
Yeah, it is a colossal waste of time -

TOBY looks up to see CJ watching them.

TOBY (to DONNA)
These four.

TOBY leads CJ into his office.

CJ
Talk to Greg Brock. Get him to hold the story.

TOBY
He has nothing.

CJ
Then he’ll run nothing next week.

TOBY
I misspoke, okay? No one thinks you can’t handle foreign policy -

CJ
We all think it, had you thought any differently it would have been “she’s been involved in foreign policy decisions for five years,” not “she’ll bounce every question to somebody at NSC,” it never crossed your mind to reject the premise of the statement.

TOBY
So I’m a lousy public speaker -

CJ
Talk to Brock.

CJ turns and walks out of TOBY’s office. TOBY stops her.

TOBY
This thing runs tomorrow, it’s two grafs on page ten, we make him wait a week it’s top left page one.

CJ
It wasn’t a suggestion.

TOBY
It was what? An order?

CJ looks at TOBY, then turns and walks away.

CUT TO: INT. - WHITE HOUSE CORRIDOR – NIGHT.

CJ is walking down the hall towards MARGARET’S desk.

CJ
It’s almost eight, you should get out of here.

CJ continues into her office. As she grabs her jacket and coat, she seems to realize something. He heads back out past MARGARET’S desk.

CJ
I’ll be back.

MARGARET
Where are you going?

CJ doesn’t answer as she keeps walking.

CUT TO: INT. - HOSPITAL ROOM – NIGHT

CJ comes into LEO’S hospital room. She takes in LEO, unconscious in his bed, as monitoring equipment beeps. She pulls up a chair next to LEO. Shaking her head, she speaks haltingly.

CJ
I … (sniffs) I don’t think this is gonna work out.

CJ studies LEO intently, then sits back in her chair, defeated.

FADE OUT.
END ACT THREE.
* * *

ACT FOUR

FADE IN: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – MORNING

CJ is on the sofa, studying a file, as MARGARET sorts out other documents on the table. CJ checks her watch as MARGARET starts to leave.

CJ
Lord … I never wanted a double vodka at 9 am until this week.

MARGARET
They say the first step is admitting you have a problem.

MARGARET turns to go. CJ stops her.

CJ
Margaret? Sit.

MARGARET takes a seat.

CJ
I have a problem.

MARGARET
Wow. I’m not sure I’m the right person -

CJ
Hutchinson’s a son of a bitch, is that just me or - ?

MARGARET
No.

CJ
How did Leo deal with him?

MARGARET
Leo always talked to Tim Crawford first. He’s chief of staff at DOD.

CJ
How about Secretary of Energy?

MARGARET
Leo’s first calls were always sub-Cabinet. Secretaries have agendas, policy wonks have information.

CJ
Right. How many policy wonks work for me?

MARGARET
A bunch!

CUT TO: INT. - ROOSEVELT ROOM – DAY

CJ is handing out binders to a group of staffers as WILL and JOSH enter.

CJ
Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of Energy, all fans of nonproliferation, all doing everything they can to keep their hands off this – they’re the “no” team, you’re the “yes” team.

WILL
Where’s Toby?

JOSH
He had a, a … I don’t know.

CJ
I need a viable plan for funding an emergency uranium extraction from sunny Tbilisi. Keep in mind, we need to secure it, contain it, transport it, and bury it in a manner that will shelter it for upwards of 30,000 years. Resist the temptation to rely on the emergency nonproliferation fund, apparently we’ve already spent it.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

DONNA and TOBY are sitting in the reporter seats, awaiting more auditions.

DONNA
I’m just saying, you knew these four were underqualified when you called them in.

TOBY
He mispronounced, “New York.”

There’s a knock at the door.

TOBY
God help me.

DONNA
Come on in.

ANNABETH SCHOTT enters nervously.

ANNABETH
Is, this - ?

DONNA
Yep, right place. You’re Annabeth Scott?

ANNABETH
Schott.

DONNA
What?

ANNABETH
Schott. Bang bang.

DONNA
Oh, there’s an H. I didn’t see it.

TOBY
She didn’t see it.

DONNA
Go ahead and stand behind the podium there. It’s fun.

ANNABETH
Up there? 

DONNA
Yeah.

ANNABETH
Oh, I’m not going up there.

TOBY (muttering)
Sweet lord in heaven -

ANNABETH
Why would I do that?

DONNA
Much of the job is, you know, briefing the press?

ANNABETH
A deputy?

DONNA
Deputy what?

ANNABETH
Are you the gal I talked to on the phone?

TOBY
Thank you so much for coming in, but we’re gonna move on to somebody who has a clearer understanding of the position.

ANNABETH (realizing)
You’re hiring a press secretary.

TOBY (to DONNA)
Do something.

ANNABETH
To be press secretary.

TOBY
Yes, CJ Cregg, former White House Press Secretary, has been promoted. Big day, all over the news, you should go home and watch.

ANNABETH
I’ve seen the news. The President’s fixing to send CJ Cregg to Ramallah to swat at suicide bombers with her purse. That’s gotta be some purse.

TOBY
I never said “fixing.”

ANNABETH
Why on earth would you try and hire a new press secretary with CJ Cregg only ten minutes out of a job?

TOBY
Did somebody not talk to these people, did nobody tell you why you were coming in?

ANNABETH
Deputy Press Secretary for Media Relations. I sent in my resume six months ago - ?

DONNA
They were looking for somebody to replace Tim Watters, he used to prep for the morning shows.

ANNABETH
Yes.

TOBY
He was irritating.

ANNABETH
He saved your tail on more than one occasion.

TOBY
Okay …

ANNABETH
Did you ever replace him, because – I’d be a fine choice.

TOBY
If you’re very nice, I’m gonna get a dress Marine to walk you out.

ANNABETH
You don’t want a new press secretary. Not yet. Anyone who tries to stand in CJ Cregg’s shoes will be eaten alive.

TOBY
Then who exactly do you think is going to brief the press?

ANNABETH
You. You need someone from inside the administration to get you through this transition period. 

TOBY chuckles.

ANNABETH
Don’t make a face! You were good.

DONNA
I saw it. He really wasn’t.

ANNABETH
You just need a little grooming. I can take care of that. And I’ll help you find a new press secretary. A real search, not some 24-hour emergency rescue mission. Who’s this administration’s most vocal and effective critic?

DONNA
Taylor Reid.

ANNABETH
When I found him he was a bartender with half a novel. He had what you have.

TOBY
What’s that?

ANNABETH
A watchable quality.

TOBY stares at ANNABETH.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

TOBY hands a couple of resumes to CJ.

TOBY
Short list.

CJ
Two.

TOBY
A shorter list than we had discussed.

CJ
Alan Zwick, who you brought me before -

TOBY
Because he was good.

CJ
He has no soul. Of course he sounded good. The man would front for the Gotti family if you asked him to. And Annabeth Schott – the little pixie from the Taylor Reid show?

TOBY
I don’t think we should hire either one of them, I think I should do it.

CJ
Do what?

TOBY
Brief the press. (a pause as CJ and TOBY look at each other) I have a quality. Look, not forever, for a few weeks, until, we’ve, we find somebody. But we do a real search, not in one day and hopefully not with me sitting in there listening to them.

CJ
This is remarkably well thought-out.

TOBY
She came up with it, Marybeth -

CJ
Annabeth.

TOBY
She said we were rushing this, and she’s right. We put a fresh face up there, this week – they’ll be ground beef by sundown.

CJ
She selling herself as your followup act?

TOBY
No, she wanted some media relations – cause she’s irrelevant, the fact is -

CJ
She wants Tim Watters’ job?

TOBY
And she wants to conduct the search for your replacement, again, not the point.

CJ
Not a bad idea.

TOBY
It is, actually, but could we focus on -

CJ
On you as spokesman for the ship of fools? It’s a dream come true.

TOBY
The deputies can handle most of it, I’ll just do the high-profile stuff.

CJ
Like this morning?

TOBY
Yeah. No. Slightly better.

CJ
Did you talk to Greg Brock?

TOBY
He’s not holding the story. (CJ gives him a look) Don’t give me the face.

CJ
This is … I don’t know how this is gonna work, Toby, I really don’t.

TOBY
You’re not his story. “We’re unprepared” is the story, and it’s not coming from here, it’s coming from DOD.

CJ
What are you talking about?

TOBY
Graham Bradley told him they low-balled the troop estimates, we can’t do it with 18,000 men. DOD’s trying to bury the real number ‘cause they know they can’t get that kind of money from Congress, DOD’s in over their heads.

CJ (realizing)
I love you, desperately!

TOBY
I know.

CJ
They low-balled the estimates. Hutchinson’s trying to railroad the Georgia project because he can’t afford it!

CJ plants a kiss on TOBY.

TOBY
I could be good at briefing.

CJ
That’s debateable. Bring her in to do the search, put her in Media Relations.

TOBY
I don’t think that part’s a good idea.

CJ
She’ll be helpful to you, and you … if you want to brief, you should brief. You know why? Because I trust you and … you most certainly have a quality.

CJ exits.

TOBY
I’m watchable.

CUT TO: INT. - MARGARET’S DESK – DAY

CJ approaches MARGARET as she comes out of her office.

CJ
I need the Secretaries of State, Energy, Defense, Nancy, the JCS, and the CIA in the Sit Room right away. Not the Sit Room, my office. This office. Here.

CJ happily heads off.

CUT TO: INT. - OUTER OVAL OFFICE – DAY

CJ strides up to CHARLIE at his desk.

CJ
I need to speak with him.

CHARLIE stands, staring straight ahead. He goes to CJ.

CHARLIE
Come here.

CHARLIE leads CJ out of the outer office, through the hall, back into CJ’s office, and directly to the door that leads into the Oval Office. CHARLIE knocks.

CJ
Right.

BARTLET (from behind the door)
Come in.

CHARLIE opens the door and leaves. CJ enters the Oval Office.

CJ
Good afternoon, Mr. President.

BARTLET
How you doing?

CJ
Fan-dab-tastic. You got the energy quarterly?

BARTLET
Got it right here, thank you.

CJ
I’d like it back.

BARTLET
How ‘bout you get your own copy?

CJ
We’re not ready to assess domestic nuclear storage facilities, sir, the team hasn’t evaluated all the options and I haven’t presented you with complete information.

BARTLET
You don’t think this is a good start?

CJ
I think it’s you doing my job for me. You’re looking at this based on DOD’s call. Their perspective is valid, but it’s only one perspective and until we’ve gathered all the others if you need something to read, I recommend the new Benjamin Franklin bio. It’s a real page turner.

DEBBIE enters with some documents as CJ takes the Energy report from BARTLET’s hands.

CJ
Thank you, Mr. President.

CJ exits into her office.

DEBBIE
What was that?

BARTLET
I just got spanked.

DEBBIE
Mm, sorry I missed it. She still nervous?

BARTLET
I don’t think so, no.

CUT TO: INT. - MARGARET’S DESK – DAY

MARGARET hands CJ a paper as CJ enters.

MARGARET
They’re in there.

CJ
Great.

CJ stops suddenly and turns to MARGARET, bringing her to an abrupt stop.

CJ
You’re an odd woman and I’ve never quite understood you, but you’re extremely capable and you run this office like a Swiss watch and you’re tall, which is reassuring. Leo may need you, and if he does, that’s okay, but if he’s willing to part with you, I hope you’ll stay.

CJ walks into her office, filled with Cabinet secretaries and security advisers.

CJ
Thanks for coming in. These are tentative figures for the extraction.

NANCY
We need to re-jigger the numbers on flight support, but it shouldn’t change the bottom line all that much.

DELOIT
I’d like to sit with the President and -

CJ
Recommendations on the project will flow through this office and I will keep the President up to speed. Let’s look at the breakdown -

HUTCHINSON
I’m sure this is all well thought-out -

CJ
Thank you.

HUTCHINSON
- but, um, the only viable option right now is -

CJ
Mr. Secretary -

HUTCHINSON
- to secure the material where it is -

CJ
Mr. Secretary -

HUTCHINSON
- because operationally and financially we don’t have the resources -

CJ
Miles. (HUTCHINSON stops) We will find the money. You will not. Though DOD will likely be saddled with most of the operational responsibility, you will not be saddled with the cost. You’re about to send 18,000 troops into the Middle East, and we can safely assume that’s just the beginning. You’re overextended, we’ll find the money elsewhere. Let’s look at the breakdown on page three.

HUTCHINSON and the others open their binders to examine the proposal. CJ settles into her seat behind her desk.

CUT TO: INT. - TOBY’S OFFICE – NIGHT

JOSH appears at TOBY’s door.

JOSH
CJ wants us upstairs.

CUT TO: INT. - HALLWAY – NIGHT

JOSH and TOBY are on their way to meet CJ and the others.

JOSH
I had a great meeting with Matt Santos.

TOBY
Good.

JOSH
What do you think about that patients’ bill of rights?

TOBY
Lead balloon.

JOSH
Maybe, I don’t know. I’m gonna take a look at it again.

TOBY
So he’s keeping his seat?

JOSH
No, he’s screwing us. 

TOBY
That’s your idea of a good meeting?

JOSH
Yeah.

CUT TO: INT. - EAST ROOM – NIGHT

A few tables with snacks and drinks are set up in the room as servers set up more chairs and tables. A few staffers are already there, including DONNA in her wheelchair at one table. JOSH and TOBY walk up to her.

JOSH
Look what the elves have done.

DONNA
Hey.

JOSH
Hey.

DONNA
CJ wanted to be here but she got pulled in. Staff’s on their way. She wanted me to give this to you.

DONNA hands a note to JOSH. He reads it.

JOSH
“J and T. Nothing without you.”

WILL walks up to the group.

WILL
Hey.

TOBY tosses a beer to WILL.

WILL
Thanks. Who did this?

TOBY
The boss.

CUT TO: INT. - OVAL OFFICE – NIGHT

CJ enters from her office door.

CJ
Good evening, Mr. President.

BARTLET
Hey. How’d it go with the tiger team?

CJ
We took a vote and elected not to call it a tiger team. Beyond that, I think we’ve isolated the funding. There’s still some concern about the political fallout, if we bring foreign nuclear material onto American soil.

BARTLET
EPA.

CJ
An environmental impact study could take over a year, we don’t have that kind of time. We’re thinking about going to the British, see if they’ll help out.

BARTLET
We talked about nonproliferation at the G8 last year. They said they were willing to get more involved.

CJ
Great. I’ll schedule a call for you and the Prime Minister tomorrow.

CJ turns to leave.

BARTLET
CJ. (She stops) You’re Chief of Staff, you can make the call.

CJ
Right. Thank you, sir.

CJ heads back into her office, closing the door to the Oval. She looks around, taking it in. She picks up Gail’s fishbowl from the coffee table and places it on the desk.

CJ
Margaret?

MARGARET enters at the door.

CJ
Would you please set up a call first thing tomorrow morning with the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom?

MARGARET
Sure. Who’s going to be on the call?

CJ
Me.

MARGARET nods and exits. CJ opens up a huge binder on her desk and starts in on the top folder.

DISSOLVE TO: END TITLES.
FADE TO BLACK.
THE END.
* * *

The West Wing and all its characters are properties of Aaron Sorkin, John Wells Productions, Warner Brothers Television, and NBC. No copyright infringement is intended.

The West Wing Transcript
Episode 6x4 – Liftoff
Original Airdate: November 10, 2004








 

Monday, December 8, 2025

THE WEST WING TRANSCRIPT: Access (S5E18)

THE WEST WING
5x18 - “ACCESS”
WRITTEN BY LAUREN SCHMIDT
DIRECTED BY ALEX GRAVES

Transcribed by Walking, Talking, And Yelling At Clouds
(kegofglory.blogspot.com)

TEASER

FADE IN: TITLE CARD

On the screen appears what seems to be a public television introductory title card, with the word “ACCESS” repeated in the background and the call letters WRQE at the bottom left. As the voiceover reads the list of donors responsible for the program, we see them listed on this screen.

VOICEOVER:
The following program was made possible by a grant from the Kenneth C. and Mary E. Blackburn Foundation, the Samuel Jones Charitable Trust, and individual viewer donations.

FADE OUT.

FADE IN: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ is talking to the interviewer with the documentary crew. We can see her through a camera viewfinder as she is looking through some papers at her desk.

CJ:
Why? That’s the right question. Your bread and butter, huh, having the right questions?

INTERVIEWER
Like having the right answers is yours.

CJ
Did we start?

INTERVIEWER
Nope. Don’t mind them.

The camera moves erratically about CJ’s office, focusing on different areas as the camera operator prepares for the interview to start. We can see a sound man holding a microphone next to her desk.

CJ
Right, right. Why am I letting you tail me, is that what you’re asking me?

INTERVIEWER
Yeah. I mean, I pitch, but I’m always surprised when people accept.

White balance boards and color adjustment panels are seen as the crew continues to prepare to film. CJ starts moving about her office.

CJ
Well, I’ve seen your work …

INTERVIEWER
Well, exactly.

CJ
And, um, you know, I’m not expecting a free ride, I just … I guess I thought your, your concept – a day in the life, a day in my life – is, uh … you know what, before we get into it, I want to reiterate the ground rules.

INTERVIEWER
Um-hmm.

CJ
You want to document this, Chad? Can I have that?

A hand delivers a coffee mug to CJ. She stands in front of the main camera talking to the unseen INTERVIEWER.

CJ
I want to be clear between you and me.

INTERVIEWER
Of course.

CJ
Your access is to me -

INTERVIEWER
And your staff and your co-workers.

CJ
Yes, but if you’re secretly hoping to have lots of time with senior staff or in the Oval, you picked the wrong gal because that’s not what I do all day. I can’t let this project in any way compromise my obligations to the President of the United States. ... That was bragging.

CJ is now sitting in a chair in front of her desk as the interview is about to start. The camera view moves around her office, showing a doughnut on her desk, and then moves back to a side view of CJ.

INTERVIEWER
Let’s get back to why.

CJ
Well, I think, and -

The video rewinds with a squiggly backwards-audio sound.

CUT TO BLACK.

ACCESS

FADE IN: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

The interview has begun. CJ sits in front of her desk.

CJ
After President Bartlet, my face is the one most associated with this administration, yet for all its visibility, it’s not well understood. The public is, is used to seeing me at the podium -

Footage of CJ in the press briefing room is seen, along with background footage of CJ on the phone reacting to something she’s seeing on the TV. We then see her in the press room reporter cubicles talking over something with Greg Brock.

CJ
- confronting an adversarial press, and there’s a, a misconception that I’m here to stymie reporters, or to mislead the public, to -

The visual shifts back to CJ being interviewed.

CJ
- spin, or even hide the truth, when in fact, any good press secretary aims to do just the opposite. (CUT: CJ laughs) This is a terrible idea. I don’t know what I was thinking, this is – let’s, let’s call this off. (CUT) The breakneck pace we live at, the 24-hour news cycle, is this good for the country? Is it inescapable? How do we reflect, get perspective?

CUT TO: FILE FOOTAGE

As the NARRATOR speaks, we begin with newsreel film of President Kennedy speaking to reporters. Next we see a cabinet meeting with President Lyndon Johnson. Then President Nixon signing an agreement with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev.

NARRATOR
Since the advent of television in the middle of the twentieth century, the White House press secretary has been no stranger to Americans. But what about the private aspects of this office? In the current media explosion -

The visuals shift to modern day, with press photographers taking pictures in the Oval Office as CJ speaks to President Bartlet. We also see images of CJ entering the press briefing room and working on files in her office.

NARRATOR
- how is this important job changing? And to what extent does the individual serving as press secretary at any given moment define America’s relationship with the White House? To answer these questions, Access spent a day with White House Press Secretary CJ Cregg.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS ROOM – DAY

CJ walks through the press room peppered with questions from reporters.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

CJ is sitting in one of the press chairs in the briefing room as another part of the interview continues.

CJ
I see my job as making sure the press and, through them, the public, is well-informed. I tell them the truth. (long pause) That’s my goal. 

More background footage of President Bartlet speaking on TV and CJ walking through the press room is seen as the NARRATOR continues. We also see a meeting (including JOSH) in the Oval Office breaking up, more photographers, CJ with President Bartlet as he meets a group of Scouts. There’s a closeup of an online article about President Bartlet’s MS revelation and news footage from some kind of government standoff, as well as more footage of CJ and the press in the White House.

NARRATOR
But our cameras captured a day that was anything but ordinary. In the corridors of the West Wing, Access became part of the modern-day media machine that witnessed a harrowing and historic day for the entire Bartlet administration. Tonight, Access goes behind the podium, and we invite you to come with us.

SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
END TEASER.
***

ACT ONE

An establishing shot of the White House appears first. We next see images from an empty press briefing room, the podium, the nameplates, the microphones, as the NARRATOR continues.

NARRATOR
This program was shot over a two-day period, a year into President Josiah Bartlet’s second term in office. On the first day, Access conducted interviews with press secretary CJ Cregg, her staff, and her co-workers. The following day, we spent over twelve hours backstage in the White House on the heels of the country’s most visible spokesperson. However, for national security purposes, the release of this documentary was prohibited until the administration left office. 

CUT TO: HISTORICAL FILE FOOTAGE

We see a title card reading:

BEHIND THE
SCENES IN THE
WHITE HOUSE
-
PATHE NEWS

This is followed by black-and-white newsreel footage of the White House.

NARRATOR
Before 24-hour cable news and the internet, the White House Press Secretary had a more controlled set of deadlines.

CUT TO: EXT. - WHITE HOUSE – DAY

A group of reporters and photographers are gathered outside the White House entrance.

NARRATOR
Today, the press office feeds a media machine with a round-the-clock appetite.

CUT TO: INT. - WEST WING PRESS OFFICE – DAY

We see a staffer on the phone. A caption reads:

Eric Schaeffer
Staff Assistant
White House Press Office

SCHAEFFER (into phone)
The following is the press schedule for the President for Wednesday, March 31st. Note, this is for news planning only, not for publication or release.

CUT TO: FILE FOOTAGE

We see shots of newspaper front pages and online news articles about President Bartlet. After a short montage, we are back to the exterior of the White House where the President is about to give a briefing to gathered reporters and photographers.

NARRATOR
Sixty-six million Americans subscribe to daily newspapers. An average news website clocks 200 hits a second. And from a camera positioned outside the northwest gate, CNN’s Channel 53 offers constant coverage of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

Another segment of the interview is seen.

CJ
I don’t think it was ever a laid-back job (chuckling), but, um, I like to think that Jim Hagerty, who was Eisenhower’s press secretary, kind of knew what they were getting into when they, they started allowing press conferences to be recorded and edited for broadcast for the first time.

We see file footage of President Eisenhower, with Jim Hagerty, and appearing before the press.

CJ
Giving up control of your message, putting that in the hands of news producers, for those 33 minutes Hagerty stood in the wings of the Indian Treaty Room, I can only imagine what he was feeling.

CUT TO: FILE NEWSREEL FOOTAGE OF PRESIDENT EISENHOWER

EISENHOWER
I see we’re trying a new experiment this morning, I hope it doesn’t prove to be a disturbing influence. 

NARRATOR
Before Eisenhower, the White House press corps was a controllable entity, tucked in the President’s pocket. But in 1955, the whir of cameras leveled the playing field -

More newsreel footage of President Kennedy’s press secretary, Pierre Salinger, appears, followed by President Nixon’s press secretary Ron Ziegler.

NARRATOR
- between the press and the administration. It represented a fundamental shift in power, one still deeply felt by today’s press secretary.

CUT TO: EXT. - WHITE HOUSE GATE – DAY

CJ drives up to the gate to have her credentials checked.

GATE GUARD
Good morning, Ms. Cregg. ID, please.

CJ
Good morning, Lance. How are you doing?

GATE GUARD
Can I get IDs from your crew?

CJ
Sure.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

The recorded interview continues.

CJ
My day starts at home before 5:00, actually. 

There’s a shot of CAROL turning on the light in her office.

CJ
I scan all the major news outlets online before I get dressed, on my way in I try to stay off the phone … um, my commute’s the one time I can be by myself, gather my thoughts.

CUT TO: EXT. - WHITE HOUSE GATE – DAY

CJ
How’s Eden?

GATE GUARD
Oh, she’s great. Thanks for asking.

CJ
Good.

GATE GUARD
Clear. Thank you, have a great day.

A car horn honks behind CJ.

CJ
Thank you, stay dry.

GATE GUARD (gesturing to car behind CJ)
Relax.

More footage of CAROL opening up CJ’s office and CJ walking up to the West Wing entrance.

CJ (voiceover)
I, I arrive usually around 7:00, 7:30 depending, and, it is no cliché, walking through those doors, walking -

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ
- to go to work in the White House … it never gets old.

More background footage of CJ picking up some newspapers, CAROL bringing her coffee mug, press office staffers coordinating.

CJ (voiceover)
Anyway, uh, the, the morning starts with senior staff, and then I have an informal gaggle with the press, and then I meet with my staff and deputies about the events of the day.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS OFFICE – DAY

The staffer Eric Schaeffer is still on the phone.

SCHAEFFER (into phone)
8:30 am, the President meets with House and Senate leadership, Cabinet Room, the White House, pool at top.

CUT TO: INT. - WHITE HOUSE HALLWAY – DAY

CJ is walking down the hallway followed by a camera crew. She is met by CAROL.

CJ
Ia anybody waiting for me?

CAROL
Steve and Chris.

CJ
Is she chatty?

CAROL
Um-hmm.

CJ
That’s trouble. (CJ sees someone in the foyer) Is he on the President’s schedule?

CAROL
Who?

The camera moves to show FBI Director GEORGE ARNOLD.

CJ
The FBI director.

CAROL
I don’t think so.

CUT TO: INT. - CAROL’S OFFICE – DAY

A reporter, STEVE, is in a chair waiting for CJ.

CAROL
Steve’s looking for a quote on tech sector growth. 

CJ
Steve, I beg mercy, don’t make me talk tech growth before coffee.

STEVE
Morning.

CJ
I will say this, though, the tech sector represents six million American jobs.

STEVE
That I can look up.

CJ
Hey, did your daughter hear anything?

STEVE
Accepted at the Annenberg School at Penn.

CJ
That’s wonderful.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

Another reporter, CHRIS, is talking to CJ at her desk and showing her a piece of paper.

CHRIS
Isn’t that great?

CJ
That’s fantastic.

CHRIS
Thank you.

CJ
Waddaya got?

CHRIS
Well, you’re not gonna like it.

CJ
I never expect to.

CHRIS
At last year’s inaugural, the First Lady wore a burgundy Richard Tyler gown, satin, off the shoulder. I have a source that says she accepted that gown as a gift from the, uh, designer, the ethics rules are pretty clear.

CJ
Looks like I’ll be rifling through the First Lady’s closet this afternoon.

CHRIS
Ah, you could get fired for that.

CJ
If I’m lucky.

CAROL brings something in as CHRIS leaves.

CAROL
Today’s schedule, and, it’s time.

CAROL and CJ walk through a press office hallway crowded with desks and computer monitors.

CJ (voiceover)
You can’t afford to ignore what even seems trivial.

CAROL
… and I have a call into the First Lady’s office.

CAROL and CJ walk past SCHAEFFER, who is still relaying the day’s schedule on the phone. Another staffer, JACK SOSA, meets them in the hallway.

SOSA
The minister’s wife has a cold and she can’t make it onto the podium.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

The interview continues.

CJ
Remember the, uh, Bartlet the dog-hater?

INTERVIEWER
Um-hmm.

CJ
That was, that was entirely, my fault. I, I made light of some question about why the Bartlets had never owned a dog, and there were stories for weeks.

CUT TO: FILE FOOTAGE

We see a past C-SPAN image of CJ, with a different hairstyle, in the press briefing room dealing with a crowd of reporters shouting questions.

CJ (on video)
It was a joke, folks, it was my joke and it wasn’t even funny. The President does not dislike dogs, in fact the entire First Family have been longtime supporters of the Humane Society, the ASPCA, to name a few …

CUT TO: INT. - LEO’S OFFICE – DAY

Senior staff, including CJ, JOSH, DONNA, and TOBY, are gathering for a meeting. The onscreen caption reads:

White House Senior Staff Meeting
7:32 AM

NARRATOR
Each morning, the Press Secretary meets with White House senior staff, the President’s closest advisers. Scheduled at 7:30 am, this is the staff’s first opportunity to sift through the day’s impending events and issues. 

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

Back to the interview.

CJ
Your day takes off, you try to keep all the balls in the air, you hope you don’t drop the wrong one.

CUT TO: INT. - LEO’S OFFICE – DAY

Back to the staff meeting.

LEO
What else?

TOBY
Well, while the President’s – greeting the Ugandan delegation, which I guess is gonna happen later, I’ll be, um, briefed by the Surgeon General and the, um, AIDS policy office, they want to make modifications on PAAP.

CJ
Pan-African …?

TOBY
Uh, AIDS prevention policy, uh, then I’m in with the, uh …

CUT TO: INT. - MURAL ROOM – DAY

TOBY is being interviewed for the documentary. The caption reads: 

Toby Ziegler
Communications Director

TOBY
CJ was someone I found during a Senatorial campaign, in New York. Uh, she was doing PR with a New York firm. And, uh, we were, probably, 36 points behind when we got CJ. And, uh, with her help I think we gained two or three points before we lost.

CUT TO: INT. - LEO’S OFFICE – DAY

Back to the staff meeting.

LEO
Anything else?

CJ
Any, uh, progress on the D-Day anniversary?

NARRATOR
The accelerated release of information is a concern of everyone in today’s White House. They all have to consider how the message will play in the press.

CJ
Did the FBI put something on the President’s schedule?

LEO
Who’s asking?

CJ
So far just me.

LEO
No. Thank you.

CUT TO: INT. - MURAL ROOM – DAY

JOSH is being interviewed for the documentary. The caption reads: 

Josh Lyman
Deputy Chief of Staff

JOSH
There have been times where for her own sake in order to do her job, and for her to remain an honest source for reporters -

CUT TO: INT. - LEO’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ is still asking Leo about the FBI director’s visit. 

CJ
Well, you know, if the reporters see the director here they’re going to assume -

LEO
Yeah, he’s just stopping by.

CJ
Okay.

CUT TO: INT. - MURAL ROOM – DAY

Back to Josh.

JOSH
If she were to have information, she would be ethically bound to share it. And I don’t want to put her in that position.

CUT TO : INT. - OFFICE – DAY

An interview with MARTIN SHEFFIELD. The caption reads: 

Martin Sheffield
Former White House Press Secretary

SHEFFIELD
It is a tough job. And it only gets tougher. Now, we have a fraternity of former press secretaries, and we get together as like a sort of a club. Like there’s maybe eight or so guys still kicking, 

We see video of the senior staff meeting breaking up, most people leaving Leo’s office, with a shot of only JOSH and LEO left behind.

SHEFFIELD
But we all know what it’s like to stand out there, taking those bullets, the shrapnel’s flying – while the rest of the President’s staff is back in the bunker, safe and sound, where they should be. You see, there’s a, there’s a loneliness in this job, a certain frontline mentality, that your colleagues in the rear echelon never completely understand.

We see video of CJ and TOBY walking through a door in the hallway.

CUT TO: INT. - CABINET ROOM – DAY
Cabinet Room Pool Spray
8:37 AM

SOSA is ushering photographers into the room as a Cabinet meeting appears to be underway. As the NARRATOR speaks, we see the photographers snapping away in the Cabinet Room; we also get a look at reporters and photographers outside the White House entrance being kept in line by press office staffers.

SOSA
We got stills first, you have thirty seconds -

NARRATOR
The majority of the President’s daily exposure to the press is in photos-only pools; still photographers and news correspondents wait their turn for a prized thirty seconds in the presence of the President. The organized chaos of this flashbulb frenzy is carefully wrangled by the Press Office, a staff of 14 young aides and assistants under CJ Cregg.

As the Cabinet Room footage continues with CJ conferring with the President, we hear the INTERVIEWER asking a question.

INTERVIEWER (voiceover)
So how did you end up working at the White House?

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS OFFICE – DAY

A young staffer, ANDREW WELTZMAN, is being interviewed. The caption reads: 

Andrew Weltzman
Asst. Press Secretary for Foreign Policy
White House Press Office

WELTZMAN
I was going to NYU, I was a journalism major, and, uh, I was interested in politics, and, um, opportunity came up through, uh, some, uh, friends of the family, my father was in the military.

Footage of SOSA working with reporters outside is seen. We then cut to SOSA in the press office being interviewed for the documentary. Eventually the caption reads: 

Jack Sosa
Asst. Press Secretary for Domestic Policy
White House Press Office

SOSA
I actually went to Howard University here, in DC. I wrote for the paper, the student paper there, um, and I was writing articles basically, uh, criticizing the administration really about their issues on gay issues and racial issues, and I, on a lark, kinda wrote this letter to CJ asking if she’d see me because I wasn’t getting really a response from them and I just thought I’d give it a shot, and at the meeting she actually offered me this position that opened up.

We have returned to footage of the press office assistants working with the press outside and at the Cabinet meeting.

SOSA (to photographers)
Thank you very much. All right, that’s it. I’m serious.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS OFFICE – DAY

ERIC SCHAEFFER is seen again, still delivering the schedule on his phone.

SCHAEFFER (into phone)
10:30 am, the President meets with Minister of Health Dr. Fabius – (long pause) M-A-K-A-B-U-A …

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY
White House Communication Meeting
9:00 AM

CJ and CAROL are preparing for the meeting as the rest of the staffers enter.

NARRATOR
Then it’s time for the Press Secretary’s daily meeting with her communications staff, who finalize the day’s press events, and try to anticipate the direction of the news.

WELTZMAN
The Ugandans are on schedule, setup’s begun. It’s a little windy out there, but I spoke to audio and they said the mics on the podiums will be fine.

CJ
The President is not taking questions at that, it’s just a prepared statement.

CAROL
They know that.

CJ
Let’s hope he does.

WELTZMAN
Oh, they might ask you something about Congresswoman Wyatt getting chummy with the Palestinians.

CJ
Okay.

SOSA
And, we’ve had a change in the schedule.

The room erupts in humorous false surprise.

CJ (voiceover, in interview)
You begin every day juggling a very precise schedule, which completely, completely falls apart mid-morning. Guaranteed.

SOSA
You know those Eagle Rangers … they , um, apparently got lost. So we’re gonna have to postpone until 2:00.

CAROL
And there might be a weather thing.

CJ
We like the Rose Garden for this?

SOSA
Yeah, but the satellite service says there’s still only a 30 percent chance of rain, so we might be fine.

CAROL
Have you looked out the window?

CJ
Well, just keep an eye on it and make sure there’s a backup plan. What else?

WELTZMAN
If you’re looking for me, I’ll be with Vatican advance all day, discussing His Eminence’s imminent arrival.

CAROL
I think it’s His Holiness.

CJ
Good thing, Eminence’s imminent, say that three times fast.

The staffers all start repeating the words ‘Eminence’ and ‘imminent.’

CJ
All right, everybody, back to work.

The meeting begins to break up.

CJ
Oh, who’s following breaking crime news for me?

SCHAEFFER
Uh, me, nothing coming in that suggests FBI involvement.

CJ
He’s just keeping Eric on his toes, everybody get back to work, go on.

CAROL is on the phone as CJ comes to the office door.

CAROL
Okay, hold on one second. CJ -

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

Back to CJ’s interview with the filmmakers.

CJ
I am here to articulate the President’s message and to honestly inform the press and, through them, the public, about what is happening on any given day.

Back to CJ and CAROL in the doorway, as DONNA joins them.

DONNA
They need you, in Leo’s, now.

CJ
All of us?

DONNA
Uh … they didn’t say.

CJ
Okay, no big deal. Okay.

DONNA
I’m so sorry.

CJ
It’s all right.

Next we see CJ waiting outside LEO’s office.

INTERVIEWER
You think the, uh, Director of the FBI will let us in this?

CJ
Hard to tell.

INTERVIEWER
I gather he’s a pretty independent guy.

CJ
He is.

INTERVIEWER
And not afraid of the limelight. (pause, as CJ gives the INTERVIEWER a look) So, typical morning so far?

CJ
Yes and no.

INTERVIEWER
Because we’re here?

CJ
I don’t have to tell you about the Heisenberg Principle.

INTERVIEWER
The act of observing a phenomena changes it.

CJ
Yes.

The door opens behind CJ and MARGARET comes out. We see FBI Director ARNOLD inside LEO’s office waving the camera crew in.

CJ
Margaret -

MARGARET
Uh, they, they signed the waivers.

CJ 
They what?

The INTERVIEWER goes past the camera and CJ to greet ARNOLD.

INTERVIEWER
Excuse me.

CJ
Oh, uh, wait a minute -

ARNOLD (to INTERVIEWER)
Good work.

INTERVIEWER (to ARNOLD)
Thank you. It’s nice to meet you.

CJ
Uh, Director Arnold, this is Todd Schumaker, and, um, Agent Casper.

FBI Special Agent MIKE CASPER is in the meeting along with JOSH and LEO.

LEO
Director Arnold has a, a situation unfolding. It’s not for White House comment at this time, in fact we don’t believe you’ll be asked about it, but the Director thought you should be made aware.

CJ
Oh, well, I appreciate that.

ARNOLD
We have, um, six federal agents surrounding a remote cabin on Shaw Island, in the San Juans 20 miles off the coast of Washington state. A man named Jamal Othman, a naturalized Yemeni-American, is inside with his family.

CJ
I’m sorry, is he being brought up on charges, or -?

ARNOLD
Othman was under investigation for arms trafficking. Our agents tracked him to his current location where gunfire was exchanged ninety minutes ago.

CJ
Gunfire?

LEO
The President has been notified, we’ll let you know when it resolves. 

CJ
I’m sorry, but I wa – why do you think I’m not going to be asked questions about this?

JOSH
Shaw Island is only accessible by ferry and by float plane. If the, if this story breaks it’ll take news crews about, you know, 45 minutes, an hour and a half - 

CJ
I’ve got a briefing in half an hour -

ARNOLD
Our Seattle field office media rep is already setting up on site, if it comes to it he’s prepared to handle the press from there.

CJ
But when you say gunfire, I mean -

LEO
Thank you, CJ, we’ll -

CJ
All right.

LEO
Thank you.

CJ
I’m just -

LEO
Thank you.

We see CJ leaving LEO’s office as we hear (and then see) her give the quote we saw her deliver earlier.

CJ
I am here to articulate the President’s message and to honestly inform the press and, through them, the public, about what is happening on any given day.

As the NARRATOR leads us into break, we see SOSA telling CJ, “CJ, they have it;” reporters asking questions in the press briefing room; and a TV screen showing footage of a government standoff with “CASEY CREEK, KY” as the chyron as we hear a news anchor saying, “Is this another Casey Creek?”

NARRATOR
When we return, breaking news turns the White House upside down.

FADE OUT.
END ACT ONE.
* * *

ACT TWO

FADE IN: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY
White House Press Gaggle
9:46 AM

Reporters are talking and laughing with CJ as she sits behind her desk.

CJ (laughing)
You have to calm down, lady!

NARRATOR
Early in the day, before the televised briefing, reporters from the major outlets meet for an informal gaggle with the Press Secretary.

GREG BROCK
Why was the FBI director here today?

CJ
He briefs the President twice a week.

BROCK
Which he did yesterday, so I thought maybe something was up.

CJ
Let me find out.

BROCK
But as far as you know -

CJ
He was briefing the President.

MARK
Is there a danger that the President’s meeting with Dr. Makabula this morning - 

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

CJ continues her interview in the briefing room.

CJ
Do I ever have to lie to the press? Sometimes – lots of times – I withhold information for valid reasons but you can’t lie. You run the risk of damaging your credibility in front of a bunch of really smart people. If they stop trusting you, the system’s broken.

CUT TO: INT. - CAROL’S OFFICE – DAY

CAROL is being interviewed for the film. The caption reads: 

Carol Fitzpatrick
Senior Assistant
White House Press Office

INTERVIEWER
Do you think she ever has to lie to the press?

CAROL
Gosh, that’s a tough question to answer, in front of the camera. (she laughs) Um, no, I don’t think CJ lies, I think that the press secretary must present what’s best for the White House and what’s best for the country, and sometimes those are hard decisions to make.

We see a few more scenes from the press gaggle in CJ’s office.

CJ
- is not over, speaking of which, we need to wrap up -

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

GREG BROCK is being interviewed. The caption reads: 

Greg Brock
White House Correspondent
The New York Times

BROCK
Am I skeptical of what she tells me? Absolutely. It’s my job to be skeptical. Listen, the public relies on me to question their White House. We get to do that in a free society, you could say that’s at the core of our freedom. We get to question power.

CUT TO: INT. - MURAL ROOM – DAY

Back to TOBY’S interview.

TOBY
Yeah, I don’t, uh, I don’t buy into that. I mean, the, the, the truth I know is an elusive idea. But, uh, there is a time and a place for, for when certain facts can be dispensed to the press and to the public.

CUT TO: HOME MOVIE OF CJ AS A CHILD AND HER FAMILY

NARRATOR
What prepares a young girl born and raised in Dayton, Ohio, for a position as spokesperson for the White House and President of the United States? 

CJ (voiceover)
I, well, I got a lot of drive from my father. But, uh, it’s actually my mother who I think about almost every single day I’m here. She was, uh, like a lot of women for better or for worse the communicator in our family.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ continues her thoughts during the interview.

CJ
The go-between … she, um, she told us what, what my dad and grandpa had said, or, or she’d soften what they’d meant to say, she was a natural, she would have understood this job.

CUT TO: INT. - ROOSEVELT ROOM – DAY
Vatican Advance Planning Session
11:14 AM

WELTZMAN and some other aides are meeting with representatives from the Vatican.

WELTZMAN
Uh, the Pope will have the chair that we agreed upon -

CJ (voiceover)
One of the hardest things to learn – there are so many true crises, so many lurking situations that could be dangerous for the President, it’s hard not to get caught up in the adrenaline and make everything lethal.

CJ steps into the Roosevelt Room to watch the negotiations.

VATICAN AIDE
- His Holiness has expressed interest in allowing the President’s audience to be shared with the public.

WELTZMAN
Uh, what does that involve? Uh, shots of the President kissing his ring?

VATICAN AIDE
Are you uncomfortable asking for this adjustment?

WELTZMAN
Well, is the Pope Catholic?

VATICAN AIDE
I’m afraid I don’t -

CJ
Uh, excuse us – I’m sorry, would you excuse us for just a moment, please?

She gestures for WELTZMAN to follow her out of the room. They meet in the hall.

WELTZMAN
He’s gonna chastise the President on birth control, in front of members of -

CJ
Okay, now you’re not listening to me, you need to go back in there and apologize. If President Bartlet doesn’t want his private audience with the Pope to be public, it won’t be, if he doea, that’s a headache way over your pay grade. Okay?

WELTZMAN
Okay.

We hear CJ’s interview continue as WELTZMAN goes back into the Roosevelt Room and apologizes.

CJ (voiceover)
It’s more than, er, picking your battles. Marshalling your energy – uh, it’s about grace under fire. All war metaphors. I guess that’s it – being able to tell when it’s a matter of life or death.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

The interview continues.

INTERVIEWER
Where’s your mother now?

CJ
She died.

INTERVIEWER
Oh, I’m sorry.

CJ
That’s okay.

INTERVIEWER
How about your father?

CJ
He’s, uh, he’s, uh, in Dayton, Ohio. Just -

INTERVIEWER
And how’s he?

CJ
He’s, uh, um, actually, uh, he’s suffering from Alzheimer’s and -

CUT TO: INT. - MURAL ROOM – DAY

Back to the interview with JOSH. His speech is interspersed with video of CJ moving through the West Wing, in her office, talking with TOBY, etc.

JOSH
I know that her, her dad is struggling and I think that’s a perfect example, I mean in any other profession she would have the time, she, she is knowingly not doing what she needs to do to be with her father who is elderly and, uh, struggling, because she has this particular opportunity and, and position, that’s a very difficult choice to make. Uh, I don’t think she has – I think she understands the choice she’s making, and I think it’s also the choice that her father would want her to make. And I think she knows that. But it makes it very difficult.

CUT TO: DONNA’S interview in the Mural Room. For a part of her speech we see a clip of CJ engaging in a bit of physical horseplay with some reporters. The caption reads: 

Donna Moss
Asst. to the Deputy Chief of Staff 

DONNA
I think that she has such great instincts, I think that she is so, um, agile, and her, um, her wit and her charm and, and I think that, the, the people, the press really respect her. And, um, and so that she can keep a very strong but friendly, um, relationship with the press and I think that that’s important, I mean, what do I know, but this is my opinion, you are interviewing me. (she laughs)

CUT TO: INT. - OUTER OVAL OFFICE – DAY

CAROL is working out a scheduling issue with CHARLIE.

CAROL
Three o’clock?

CHARLIE
No.

CAROL
Three fifteen.

CHARLIE
No.

CAROL
Three thirty.

CHARLIE
No.

CAROL
Three forty-five.

CHARLIE
He has a conference call.

CAROL
Four o’clock.

CHARLIE
He has an NEC thing at four o’clock, that can’t push.

CAROL
Well, if the Eagle Troops make it back to civilization, we can move it to the Mural Room and make it a spray.

CHARLIE
What time?

CAROL
Four thirty?

CHARLIE
No.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ is on the phone, watching the upcoming outdoor appearance of President Bartlet and the Ugandan delegation on a TV monitor. This is scene is interspersed with SCHAEFFER outside at the podiums for the appearance.

CJ (into phone)
You hear any buzz out of Seattle? The P-I, the Times, anyone?

CUT TO: EXT. - WHITE HOUSE ENTRANCE – DAY
Ugandan State Visit
10:30 AM

SCHAEFFER (to a technician at a podium)
Are, are you the sound guy? I’m supposed to make sure that the levels aren’t too … high, because last time there was some feedback, and, and, it’s, um … do you need help with that?

Back to CJ at her desk on the phone.

CJ (into phone)
You know why I’m asking? ‘Cause he’s about to head out, and – correction, he is heading out. I told them to wait until – ai, yi, yi, yi, yi, of course I’m nervous, I’ve got him in front of cameras and, and, and, you’re not -

The camera shows us JOSH down the hallway; he’s on the other end of the line with CJ.

JOSH (through phone)
What do you want to hear from me? That, that I’m panicked, too?

CJ (into phone)
You know what? The director said th, this was gonna be settled an hour ago. 

We see on a TV monitor a reporter asking President Bartlet a question about foreign aid.

CJ (into phone)
Are you watching this, he’s, he’s taking – the Ugandans are thinking he’s taking -

CAROL (offscreen)
He’s taking questions!

CJ (into phone)
He’s taking – I know, I’m watching – he’s taking questions.

BARTLET is seen on TV responding to the reporter.

BARTLET (on TV)
Both Secretary Berryhill and myself are deeply troubled by the repeated jailings of political dissidents in Cuba, especially as -

CJ (into phone) 
Oh, boy.

BARTLET (on TV)
- fifteen thousand desperate Cuban citizens -

CJ (into phone)
Oh …

BARTLET
- continue to risk life and limb to reach our shores every year. America looks forward to the day when aid to Cuban citizens will no longer be necessary.

CJ (into phone)
Yeah, yeah yeah yeah. Damn, he never says it exactly the way I would, but, uh, that’s the fun part.

SOSA appears at the door.

SOSA
CJ?

CJ (into phone)
Hold on.

SOSA
They have it.

CJ (into phone)
Wait, I, I, I gotta go. (hangs up phone, to SOSA) Who has what?

SOSA
Someone just called in to a radio drive time from Shaw Island, said federal agents set up a perimeter on the property adjoining his.

CJ
Was gunfire mentioned?

SOSA
Yeah.

CJ
Okay. Umm …

SOSA
What do we do?

CUT TO: SOSA’S press office interview.

SOSA
She’s a great teacher, is what she is. And I think my job, really, is to protect her, to help her protect the President.

CUT TO: CJ’S OFFICE

SOSA
Uh, I, I pulled the records you asked for from Casey Creek, the investigation and the commission report, they’re on your desk, it’s that blue binder.

CJ
The FBI is predicting 45 minutes for cameras to be on the scene, I’m betting there’s aerial coverage in 20.

CJ walks down the hallway outside the communications bullpen and calls out to SOSA.

CJ
Hey, poker face, when it breaks, try to look surprised.

SOSA
Yeah.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS ROOM – DAY

We first see various TV images of coverage from Shaw Island, from MSNBC, from local channels, from CNN and other cable news.

TV NEWSCASTER (voiceover)
We’re showing you live images from Shaw Island, Washington, where …

NARRATOR
Twenty-three minutes later, MSNBC carried the first live helicopter coverage of Shaw Island.

TV NEWSCASTER (voiceover)
… a suspected arms trafficker appears to have sequestered himself in a small cabin in the northwest corner of the island. There has been no official comment on whether Mr. Othman is alone, or whether he has hostages. But, you can see the cabin now where gunfire was exchanged two hours ago. Federal agents have cordoned off the area and -

CUT TO: CJ’S interview. We see repeated a quote from earlier in the episode.

CJ
There’s a, a misconception that I’m here to stymie reporters, or to mislead the public, to, to spin or even hide the truth when in fact any good press secretary aims to do just the opposite.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS CUBICLE ROOM – DAY

CJ is watching TV coverage along with several reporters.

BROCK
So the FBI director?

CJ
I still don’t have it, Greg.

Another reporter, MARK, calls from outside the room.

MARK
CJ?

CJ exits to talk with MARK.

CJ
Mark, I, I don’t have anything yet.

MARK
No comment on the dog? My guy’s got a vet on Shaw Island says the Othman family dog is in his office with an FBI agent’s bullet in her. Is this gonna be another Casey Creek?

CJ
Off the record? I hope not.

CUT TO: MONTAGE

On screen there is a montage of coverage from the Casey Creek standoff from early in President Bartlet’s first term; front pages, TV news coverage, eventually CJ briefing the press.

NARRATOR
Five years earlier, the FBI’s mishandling of a standoff in Casey Creek, Kentucky, which resulted in the shooting death of the suspect’s wife, was a tragedy that haunted the new President’s first term. But if the incident at Casey Creek was a tragedy, the investigation that followed was considered by many to be an extended farce.

ARNOLD (on TV before Congress, in file footage from November 2001)
- instead the FBI will strictly adhere to the guidelines of the department -

TV NEWSCASTER (in file footage)
- the FBI director is still failing to cooperate, and impeding their progress.

NARRATOR
There were calls for the director to step down, and calls for the President to fire him.

CJ (in file footage)
- the FBI has confirmed the tragic loss of Brian Amulletti -

NARRATOR
Casey Creek also haunted President Bartlet’s young press secretary. CJ Cregg’s naivete about the power of her podium led many to question her abilities to deliver the news of the nation. It would be months before she regained the confidence of the White House press corps, and the Bartlet administration.

CHRIS (in file footage)
CJ, did the agent mistake Pamela Chung for her husband when they shot her in the doorway of her home?

CJ (in file footage)
I can’t speak to specifics, I can tell you the Director and the President were in constant contact during the siege.

REPORTER (in file footage)
CJ, when you say constant contact, is that -?

CJ (in file footage)
The President was briefed daily, several times a day, by the Attorney General and the Director of the FBI. 

REPORTER (in file footage)
So the President was aware that snipers were given the green light to use deadly force?

CJ (in file footage)
I, I have no idea.

STEVE (in file footage)
CJ, the FBI rules of engagement specify that no action may be taken unless innocents are in imminent danger, did the Director discuss a suspension of those rules with the President?

CJ (in file footage)
No, though apparently some of the agents on the ground thought the rules had been suspended.

The room erupts. CJ looks taken aback.

REPORTER (in file footage)
So, so, so, CJ, so, there was, there’s a breakdown in communication?

CJ (in file footage)
No, I didn’t say that.

STEVE (in file footage)
CJ, the rules are predicated on the Constitution, are you saying the Director of the FBI suspended the Constitution?

CJ (in file footage)
No, I’m not saying that either -

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

It’s CJ’s interview set in the briefing room. We hear a quote that came earlier in the episode.

CJ
I see my job as making sure the press, and through them the public, is well informed. I tell them the truth. (long pause) That’s my goal.

As the NARRATOR sets up another break, video shows CJ dealing with a chaotic and noisy press corps.

NARRATOR
When we return, will mistakes of the past create a new crisis for the Bartlet administration?

FADE OUT.
END ACT TWO.
* * *

ACT THREE

FADE IN: Live TV news coverage from Shaw Island.

TV NEWS REPORTER
We are about 200 yards from the cabin. Now, we have no answer yet from the FBI about who fired the first shot. The FBI has cleared the airspace here above Shaw Island, and we are told that this is standard procedure -

TV NEWS ANCHOR
- and with reports of a family dog allegedly shot by federal agents, the question on everyone’s mind today is, is this another Casey Creek?

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

JOSH and CJ are watching the TV news coverage, which includes clips of CJ from her Casey Creek briefing five years earlier.

JOSH
Wow. Look how young you look.

CJ
I wonder how old I’m gonna look by this time tomorrow. (pause) Don’t answer that.

JOSH
I’m sorry, uh, we didn’t brief you about the dog, but it wasn’t for comment anyway. The Director wanted to keep you in the loop to extend a show of faith, but -

CJ
It was sure as hell a show of something, but if I’d been truly briefed instead of a PR gesture I could’ve told you this morning this thing wasn’t going away.

JOSH
Well, the Director was confident that this situation was - 

CJ
The Director’s confidence is starting to – okay, did you need me?

JOSH
Before you go to the podium Leo wanted me to remind you -

CJ
Oh, yeah. I know my line.

CJ walks out of her office. JOSH calls after her.

JOSH
I think you look better now.

CJ
I do, too.

JOSH
You do.

CUT TO: PRESS BRIEFING ROOM

A time-lapse of the room shows it slowly filling with reporters.

NARRATOR
Even in the midst of brewing storms, the press briefing is a constant centerpiece of the day; normally the press secretary’s chance to combat speculation, and set the record straight.

CUT TO: INT. - OFFICE – DAY

An interview with an elderly man, HERB MORRIS. During his speech, there’s footage of lines of people outside the White House, reporters moving through the building, President Truman speaking to the press. We also see modern day scenes of reporters working in their cubicles and TV cameramen setting up. The caption reads: 

Herb Morris
Retired Washington Evening Star Reporter 

MORRIS
Up until W W two, even the general public could walk right up to the door of the White House. And the press office, that was born under Teddy Roosevelt. We knew our way around the West Wing. We knew the staff, the President – there was no, uh, press room. So we’d, um, hang out in the lobby and just wait for the news of the day. If Jim had anything for us, we’d gather round with our notebooks. And sometimes he’d just come out and say, “Nothing more today, fellas, go on home.” Hmm. That couldn’t happen now.

CUT TO: INT. - WEST WING HALLWAY – DAY

CJ is moving towards the press briefing room, with staff members and GREG BROCK following along.

BROCK
CJ, did the FBI fire the first shot?

CJ
Oh, just wait til the briefing, okay, give me a break. (she turns to SOSA and WELTZMAN) Is it AWTH-man or OATH-man?

SOSA
OATH-man.

WELTZMAN (simultaneously)
It’s AWTH-man.

CJ
Which one is it?

SOSA
It’s OATH-man.

WELTZMAN
It’s AWTH-man. It’s AWTH-man, I double-checked.

CUT TO: More of the MARTIN SHEFFIELD interview. During his speech, more video of the press briefing room is seen as the staff and reporters prepare for CJ to arrive.

SHEFFIELD
You know, from time to time I look in on the midday briefing … and it all comes back. My heart starts to race. My stomach churns. Then I mix myself a martini, and I thank God it is not me anymore.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – DAY

CJ steps up to the podium, and the reporters shout to be recognized.

CJ
Yeah, Steve.

STEVE
With the current standoff on Shaw Island, what would the President say to those who fear a repeat of Casey Creek?

CJ
The President is aware of the situation and, like all of us, is hopeful there will be a peaceful resolution soon.

MARK
CJ? 

CJ
Yes.

MARK
Have you asked for an explanation of why a dog was shot by agents at the scene?

CJ
The White House is tracking the situation but we do not interfere with ongoing law enforcement efforts.

KATIE
CJ?

CJ
Katie.

KATIE
I’m just following up, there are reports that federal agents fired the first shots, is this true?

CJ
I won’t engage in speculation.

KATIE
But can’t we safely say that Jamal Othman didn’t shoot his own dog?

CJ
Again, the White House doesn’t comment on an ongoing operation.

BROCK
CJ, was the FBI director called to the White House today by the President or did he come on his own?

SOSA rushes in with a message and gives it to CAROL, as cell phones and beepers begin to ring around the room. CAROL passes the message to CJ.

CJ
The Director meets with the President twice a week, as you -

BROCK
So you don’t know if they discussed the standoff at that meeting?

CJ (leaving the podium)
I’m sorry -

CHRIS
CJ, we’re getting word that the FBI is issuing a statement -

CJ
Yeah, I’m just getting that now.

CJ and the reporters gather in front of a bank of televisions, watching the live coverage. An FBI press agent is speaking to reporters on MSNBC.

FBI AGENT (on TV)
I have a statement to read. Our negotiator established telephone contact with Mr. Othman inside the residence, and has learned that one of the Othman children was injured in the initial exchange of gunfire. I have no particulars about the extent of the injuries. Mr. Othman has agreed to allow an ambulance to approach the cabin, and to let at least one other family member help evacuate the injured child to receive medical treatment. I have nothing further at this time.

The reporters shout questions at CJ as she leaves the briefing room and heads back towards JOSH’s office. We hear more TV news coverage as she walks.

TV REPORTER
- the FBI has cleared the airspace here above Shaw Island, and we are told that this is standard procedure.

DONNA stops CJ by her desk.

DONNA
He’s in with Leo.

CJ turns and starts towards LEO’s office.

TV REPORTER 2
- an ambulance passed by us moments ago, and as you can see, has stopped at the turnoff to the lane -

CJ arrives at LEO’s office.

MARGARET
They’re in the Oval.

CJ heads to the outer Oval Office.

CUT TO: More of CJ’s interview in her office.

CJ
The breakneck pace we live at, the 24-hour news cycle, is this good for the country? Is it inescapable? How do we reflect, get perspective?

CUT TO: CJ arrives at the door to the Oval Office, where she is stopped by CHARLIE.

CHARLIE
They’re on a call.

CJ
Where’s the Director?

CHARLIE
I can’t interrupt.

We see JOSH, LEO, ARNOLD, CASPER, and BARTLET inside the Oval. CHARLIE closes the door. CJ paces, waiting.

CJ (softly, to herself)
Okay.

CJ leaves.

CUT TO: MURAL ROOM - TOBY’s interview.

TOBY
Well, there are times when, uh, it’s what’s called a closed hold, when, uh, certain members of the staff, uh, until again all the information is, uh, is ready to go out, some people aren’t included. I mean, that’s happened to me, it’s happened to everybody on the staff at one point or another.

We see footage of CAROL and SOSA working together, then the camera pans to CJ walking down the hallway. She answers a call on her cell phone. As the conversation continues, the camera films her from a distance, but the audio is listening in to her end of the call.

CJ (into phone)
Hello? … What do you mean? … It’s, it’s Claudia Jean, it’s, uh … I, I’m at, I’m at work, I’m at the White House, Daddy … 

More home movies of a young CJ are seen.

CJ (into phone)
Is there a nurse there? … I’m sorry you don’t like it there but I can’t come back right now. … I can’t be there right now, I’m very, very sorry, like, I love you so much but I can’t be there, and I, I … I will be there as soon as I can, hopefully next weekend like we talked about. … All, uh, all right, Daddy. 

CJ hangs up the phone. She takes a moment to compose herself, obviously near tears. She walks out of her office, and the scene shifts to ongoing live TV coverage of the Shaw Island standoff. An overlapping cacophony of reporters and news anchors is hard to understand, but eventually we hear this.

TV HOST DAN BANNON
Now he’s got cowboy Arnold out there shooting up dogs and children. Listen, nobody respects the job our federal agents on the ground do every day more than me, but tell me, where is the leadership?

FEMALE PANELIST (voiceover)
Oh, sure, it’s racial profiling.

CUT TO: MEETING INSIDE THE OVAL OFFICE

President Bartlet is seen in a meeting in the Oval, but the camera is filming from the outside, through windows.

NARRATOR
As tensions mounted in the West Wing, the press secretary was kept at arms-length about the negotiations, and about the condition of the wounded child on Shaw Island.

CUT TO: MARTIN SHEFFIELD INTERVIEW

SHEFFIELD
Of course we’ve got that tradition of the flak jacket, you’ve heard about that. 

INTERVIEWER
No, tell me.

SHEFFIELD
Oh, we got this flak jacket, it goes from one press secretary to the next, we all put little notes in the pockets -

The scene cuts to a bulletproof vest hanging on the back of CJ’s door. The camera zooms in on what appears to be a note in one of the pockets.

SHEFFIELD (voiceover)
- You know, words of wisdom to the next guy on the job.

The scene cuts back to SHEFFIELD.

INTERVIEWER
Like what?

SHEFFIELD
I couldn’t tell you that. Part of the tradition is it remains private.

CUT TO: a quick shot of SCHAEFFER on his phone coordinating schedule changes. The caption reads: 

2:31 PM.

SCHAEFFER (into phone)
The Roadless Rules Conservation Area announcement originally scheduled for 12:00 pm has been moved to 3:00 pm.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CAROL comes to the door.

CAROL
CJ?

CJ
Mm-hmm?

CAROL
Agent Casper’s here.

CJ’s brow furrows with confusion. CASPER enters.

CJ
Agent, um …

CASPER
Hi.

CJ
What? I’m sorry, I’m not sure this is a, a really good idea, the entire fourth estate is camped outside. I, I, seriously, I’m gonna have to kick you out.

CASPER
Well, the President, the Attorney General, and the Director all asked me to stop by, so … I wouldn’t say that’s a good idea.

CJ
You were in the, you were in the Oval.

CASPER
Just left. It’s okay. And, uh, first off, I want to, on behalf of the Director, I want to apologize. The, uh, media rep on Shaw screwed up. He never should have issued a statement without giving you a heads-up.

CJ
Yeah, I’d just appreciate him not doing it while I’m on the air.

CASPER
Agreed. Bad move. Won’t happen again.

CJ
What makes you say that?

CASPER
That I’m not gonna answer until you close that.

CASPER gestures towards CJ’s office door.

CJ
You want the cameras off?

CASPER
Yes, please, I want them out.

CJ
Okay.

CJ closes the door. As the NARRATOR takes us to break, we see more images of reporters frantically calling out or working the phones as CJ runs through the press area.

NARRATOR
When we return, an explosion on Shaw Island threatens the worst for the Bartlet administration.

As the scene fades out, we hear a shouted “No comment! No comment!”

FADE OUT.
END ACT THREE.
* * *

ACT FOUR

FADE IN: INT. - OUTSIDE CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

We begin just before the previous act ends, with CASPER in CJ’s office.

CJ
You want the cameras off?

CASPER
Yes, please, I want them out.

CJ
Okay.

CJ closes the door. We see her office from the outside, blinds drawn, then more footage of TV coverage from Shaw Island.

NARRATOR
CJ Cregg’s closed door was a vivid reminder to the press corps that the press secretary was in control of their feeding time. Their hunger for updated information was only intensified by the continued lull in action on Shaw Island.

We hear a couple of White House reporters on phones working the story.

REPORTER ONE (into phone)
It’s a clear breach of policy -

REPORTER TWO (into phone)
- quote from the vet is, he doesn’t have the bullet, or that the FBI confiscated the bullet?

CHRIS catches CAROL as she is walking down the hallway.

CHRIS
Carol – Um, we know Agent Casper’s in there. Is she being briefed?

CUT TO: CJ’S INTERVIEW IN HER OFFICE

CJ
It’s like being on a debate team. You don’t argue for the other side. There’s, there’s an inherent aspect of spin that’s just human nature. You try to strengthen and clarify your point of view. If you choose not to advertise your vulnerabilities, is that a cover up?

CUT TO: OUTSIDE CJ’S OFFICE

CASPER walks out of the office and departs. CAROL goes inside.

CJ
You know what, could you, just, make sure people don’t walk in and out of here?

CAROL
Yeah, I’m really sorry about that, I just spoke with Eric about it -

CJ
And I don’t, this morning at the gaggle, don’t ever let the press have free rein back here, I want to -

CUT TO: CJ’S INTERVIEW IN HER OFFICE

CJ
This is the answer that’s too long-winded for you to use, but I think my job is public, and yet for all its visibility, it’s not. (cut) There’s a, a, a misconception that I’m here to stymie reporters, or to mislead the public, to, to spin or, or even hide the truth. (cut) Better way to put it – I am here to articulate the President’s message, and to honestly inform the press, and through them the public, about what is happening on any given day.

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ is watching the TV news coverage from Shaw Island.

NEWSCASTER 
… the ATF have surrounded a cabin located deep in the woods on Shaw Island, a remote location off the Washington state coast. What we know is that there was an initial exchange of gunfire -

INTERVIEWER
Yuo waiting for something?

NEWCASTER
- whose last name we only have as Othman. A family member -

CJ
You wanted to see my day, this is my day.

NEWSCASTER
- reportedly a child, was injured. The extent of those injuries is yet to be determined.

CUT TO: OUTSIDE CJ’S OFFICE

We see CJ at her desk, but in the foreground we see CAROL talking with SOSA.

CAROL
I just got a call from Jill at the Times, and she told me that you went on the record with her.

SOSA
I di – I didn’t go on the record with her about anything. I was rescheduling an appointment for CJ, I was just -

CAROL
That is not your job, your job is “no comment.”

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS OFFICE – DAY

CAROL, SCHAEFFER, SOSA, and other staffers are working.

SCHAEFFER (to CAROL)
I have to talk to you.

CAROL (to someone off camera)
- reporters, okay?

OFFSCREEN VOICE
Understood. Understood, I’ll take care of it.

CAROL (to the person offscreen)
All right. (to SCHAEFFER) What’s up?

SCHAEFFER leads CAROL to the end of the room, away from the other staffers.

SCHAEFFER
Research has it that Mrs. Othman isn’t Yemeni-American, she’s the daughter of a, a schoolteacher and autoworker. Born in Detroit.

CAROL
Has it gotten out yet?

SCHAEFFER
Um, no. Not yet.

CAROL
All right, I want you to stay on it. Okay, and be discreet.

SOSA runs through the press office.

SOSA
Hey, hey, they’re moving!

We cut between TV news footage at Shaw Island and CJ and staffers running through the halls of the West Wing.

REPORTER (voiceover)
- have an emergency vehicle on the scene, I’m near the lane, yes, okay, now, now it appears we have the ambulance doors opening -

CJ dashes through the bullpen outside JOSH’S office, calling out, “Carol!”

REPORTER (voiceover)
- and they are, yes, we have a, a stretcher rolling out of the ambulance, I see two EMTs, and they have removed a stretcher and they are heading in the direction of the cabin.

Another REPORTER is heard as CJ enters her office and dials the phone.

REPORTER 2 (on TV)
As a reminder, the new SOP does specify that snipers are not to fire when children are in  harm’s way.

REPORTER 3 (voiceover)
Yes, I, I can see the EMTs approaching. They don’t appear to be going all the way – oh, the door’s opening.

NEWS ANCHOR (on TV)
The door of the cabin is?

REPORTER 3 is seen on camera as a a bang is heard behind him, and he flinches.

REPORTER 3 (on TV)
Okay, we have an explosion, or a flash of some kind near the cabin.

REPORTER 2 (voiceover)
Okay, we do have gunfire coming from the direction of the cabin.

NEWS ANCHOR (voiceover)
What are you seeing now - ?

In her office, CJ turns to CAROL.

CJ
Get me ten minutes in the Oval Office, call over there now.

CAROL
Okay!

REPORTER (voiceover)
It was some kind of an explosion. I can no longer see the EMTs or the children. There’s -  there’s some, someone may be down.

REPORTER 3 (voiceover)
Gunshots are continuing. We see agents now on the move, I see five, six members of SWAT storming towards the cabin.

CAROL is seen in the press office, calling out, “Andrew. Andrew!”

NEWS ANCHOR (voiceover)
A neighbor with a visual on the cabin is reporting that he lost sight of the children as they came out of the cabin. They may be down.

REPORTER 2 (on TV)
We do have more gunfire coming from the direction of the cabin, and from the surrounding woods.

CAROL and the other staffers usher CJ down the hallway past a group of shouting reporters. As they call out, “CJ! CJ!” she stops at a doorway.

CJ
No comment!

CJ walks away. We are left with a silent shot of smoke rising from the woods on Shaw Island.

CUT TO: INT. - OUTER OVAL OFFICE – DAY

CHARLIE is working at his desk. The phone rings. He answers.

CHARLIE
This is Charlie. … Okay. Thanks.

CHARLIE gets up from his desk and exits. Behind him CJ and BARTLET come out of the Oval Office.

CJ
We’ll reschedule the announcement for tomorrow. I know you’ve got the NEC waiting.

BARTLET
Naw, I’ll stick my head in.

CJ
All right, I’ll get on your schedule in the morning for a final prep for questions you might get.

BARTLET
I think we can guess what those questions are going to be.

CJ
Yes, sir.

In the hallway CJ and BARTLET encounter a group of young men in scouting gear heading for the Mural Room.

CJ
They should be – here they are.

BARTLET
Are these our young, wayward adventurers?

CJ
The Eagle Rangers.

BARTLET
Welcome to the White House, fellas.

In the background we see LEO and ARNOLD deep in discussion. A security guard closes the door.

CJ
Hi, come on in.

BARTLET
How you doing? It’s good to see you. Good, good – I’ll have a word with you later. 

CJ and BARTLET are now in the Mural Room with the Rangers.

BARTLET
So, uh, who among you -

CJ (to film crew)
We’re in here.

BARTLET
- objects to staying another night at the Marriott?

NARRATOR
And while the airwaves were filled with conflicting reports of what had just happened on Shaw Island, the Bartlet administration quietly dropped away from the breaking news, and resumed its day. Was there contention within the administration?

As BARTLET continues to visit with the Rangers, in the background we see LEO and ARNOLD come out of the office, still talking.

NARRATOR
Would further departures from standard procedure be revealed? From inside the West Wing, we could only speculate, along with the rest of the country.

BARTLET
Really?

RANGER
That’s right, sir.

BARTLET
Thank you, fellas.

CJ
Thank you all very much, we’ll see you tomorrow at 10 am in the Rose Garden, have a good night. (to BARTLET) Yes, sir?

BARTLET and CJ have a quick private conversation.

BARTLET
You holding up?

CJ
Oh, yes, sir.

CUT TO: CJ’S INTERVIEW IN HER OFFICE

CJ
Yes, I guess I, I, there’s an inherent tension there, I won’t deny it. Conventional wisdom says you can’t serve two masters. I do.

INTERVIEWER
But your first is -

CJ
Or I tell myself I do.

CUT TO: INT. - PRESS BRIEFING ROOM – EVENING
White House Press Briefing
4:51 PM

CJ is at the podium as the reporters gather.

CJ
We’re gonna try to move this along, some of you are up against evening news deadlines, so without further ado we’d like to bring Agent Mike Casper to the podium, he’ll have a statement and then take your questions. Mike?

CASPER
Approximately one hour ago, federal agents apprehended Jamal Othman, who had been holed up with his family in a seven-hour standoff on Shaw Island in Washington state. ATF officials recovered two cases of explosives which had been wired throughout the cabin. Mr. Othman was in control of their detonation. Mr. Othman received a gunshot wound to the left shoulder, his condition is stable. The standoff was initiated when Mr. Othman opened fire this morning and released an attack dog on federal agents who were attempting to serve him with an arrest warrant. 

The scene in the briefing room is intercut with shots of CJ in her office, going to the flak jacket hanging on her door and reading a note left inside a pocket.

CASPER
One agent sustained severe bites to the face and throat. His condition is critical at this time. His name is being withheld until his family can be notified. Uh, the youngest Othman child also sustained injuries in the initial exchange of gunfire. Hoda Othman, age six, was struck by flying glass and went into shock. She and the other five children, as well as Mrs. Othman, have been safely evacuated. The daughter is in stable condition. I’ll take your questions now.

REPORTER
Mr. Casper, Mr. Casper – what are the charges against Mr. Othman?

CASPER
Un, I don’t have all the -

NARRATOR
On the evening news on that March day three years ago, speculations of impropriety were initially overtaken by relief at the positive outcome.

CUT TO: TV SCREEN WITH NEWS ANCHOR REPORTING

NEWS ANCHOR
In a stunning conclusion, agents from the FBI Hostage Rescue and SWAT, using a flashbang as distraction, stormed the cabin moments after an injured child was safely evacuated -

CUT TO: INT. - CJ’S OFFICE – DAY

CJ and CAROL are going over notes from the day.

CJ
Okay, what do you got for me?

CAROL
Lindsey called from the First Lady’s office; the Richard Tyler burgundy gown she wore was donated to the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in January -

CJ
Thank you. Did you, uh -

CAROL
- You’re welcome. I already faxed Chris a copy of the receipt.

CJ
Thank you.

CAROL
Vatican advance team was sorry they didn’t get to say goodbye and look forward to seeing you soon.

CJ
They didn’t seem put off?

CAROL
I don’t think so. That Renata guy asked me out to dinner.

CJ
Ooooh! You gotta go.

CAROL
Oh, I don’t know, he seemed kinda -

CJ
Oh, come on, a guy I dated from the Vatican, you can’t pass that up.

NARRATOR
Within a few hours, the action within the West Wing’s corridors slowed to a steady hum. 

Staffers are seen leaving for the evening, as the pace of activity in the Communications office slows. JACK SOSA says his farewells at CJ’s office door.

SOSA
I’m outta here.

CAROL
Good night.

SOSA
Good night.

CJ
Good night, Jack. Thank you, for everything today.

As SOSA walks down the corridor, we hear (but do not see) ANDREW WELTZMAN at the door.

WELTZMAN (voiceover)
I’ll, uh,  be working so if you need anything, uh, I’ll be … here.

CJ
Okay.

WELTZMAN (voiceover)
Working.

CJ
Thanks, Andrew.

WELTZMAN (voiceover)
All right. Good night.

CJ
I appreciate it. Good night.

CAROL
Bye, Andrew.

CUT TO: CAROL’S INTERVIEW.

INTERVIEWER
Is she a, good boss?

CAROL
She’s the best boss. And, I couldn’t have a better job. Um, I really look at CJ as my mentor.

CAROL’s interview continues over a shot of CJ in the press office, talking with CAROL, SCHAEFFER, WELTZMAN, and SOSA.

CAROL (voiceover)
They say that a mentor’s a wise and trusted guide or friend, I would say that CJ is all of those things.

As the NARRATOR continues, we see LEO walking down the hallway and entering CJ’s office.

NARRATOR
It would be weeks before the full scope of the charges against Mr. Othman would become public knowledge. But at the end of our day with CJ Cregg, Access got a preview of what America would later learn.

LEO
Good day.

CJ
Not bad.

LEO
I counted six rounds you went with the rope-a-dope in that briefing room.

CJ (chuckling)
I started to take pride in it. That – sounds sick. Is there anything I should know for tomorrow?

LEO
The Director wants to wait until he’s sure it’s a clean sweep before announcing all the charges.

CJ
That makes sense.

LEO
The confiscated blueprints are the most damning evidence, of course, but Othman’s contacts with the Ba’ji network have already netted a dozen arrests.

CJ
Wow, this is, uh, this was big for the FBI.

LEO
It was big for all of us.

CJ
Big enough to put Casey Creek in the past?

LEO
We’ll see.

LEO helps CJ put on her coat. As he leaves, CJ says good night to CAROL and shakes hands with one of the documentary crew as the NARRATOR continues. She waves at the camera then starts down the hall.

NARRATOR
The next day, most of the media coverage mentioned the adminstration’s previous debacle at Casey Creek. Over the next nine months, 100 charges were handed down in dozens of arrests connected to the Othman conspiracy. In the end, eleven domestic terrorists were sentenced and convicted in federal courts. Last July, Jamal Othman died of complications from kidney failure in federal prison, where he was serving a life sentence for conspiracy to commit terrorism.

As the camera follows CJ down the hall toward the exit, she looks back and laughs nervously, holding up her hand and saying, “Stop!”

CUT TO: CJ’s OFFICE.

CJ’s interview continues.

CJ
Sometimes you have to just let yourself get beaten up. But sometimes it’s better to be beaten up for 24 hours than beaten up for the long run. Although the long run’s something I have no sense of. You know, when I’m going home at night I’m thinking about the next day’s schedule.

CUT TO: HALLWAY. 

The camera is behind CJ as she walks down the hall to leave the building. Her cell phone rings, and she answers. 

CJ (into phone)
Rain? That’s what they said for today. Keep it in the Rose Garden for now.

She checks out of the building and exits as the camera focuses on the White House Communications Department seal on a glass partition.

NARRATOR
Director Arnold continues to elicit controversy as head of the FBI. And CJ Cregg, who allowed us to share a day with her in the West Wing, remains the only woman to have served two terms as the White House Press Secretary.

DISSOLVE TO: END TITLES.
FADE TO BLACK.
THE END.
* * *