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  • THE WEST WING 05
    The West Wing Scripts/Season 1 2008. 10. 31. 09:01

    THE WEST WING
    “THE CRACKPOTS AND THESE WOMEN”
    WRITTEN BY: AARON SORKIN
    DIRECTED BY: ANTHONY DRAZAN
    
    
    TEASER
    
    FADE IN: EXT. BASKETBALL COURT - NIGHT
    In a basketball court outside the White House, we see Bartlet, playing a game of 
    basketball with a few of the White House staffers, including Toby, Josh and Charlie. 
    Surrounding the court are Secret Service Agents. We hear the basketball bouncing.
    
    BARTLET [OS]
    Oh, man. I’m sorry.
    
    Toby takes the President to low post, shoots over him, and makes the shot off the 
    backboard.
    
    JOSH
    Oh yes!
    
    CHARLIE
    That’s how you do it now.
    
    TOBY
    Game point.
    
    CHARLIE
    Mr. President you look a little winded.
    
    The President, with hands on his knees, tries to catch his breath.
    
    BARTLET
    I’m fine.
    
    CHARLIE
    Maybe you want to sit out for a minute, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Why would I want to do that?
    
    JOSH
    Cause people are bound to be pretty upset when they find out we killed the President.
    
    TOBY
    Sit down, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    All right, game point. Let’s go.
    
    JOSH
    Sir...
    
    BARTLET
    I’m playing.
    
    TOBY
    Mr. President, there’s no shame in calling it quits. All you have to do is say, 
    “Toby, you’re the superior athlete,” and slink on off the court.
    
    BARTLET
    Take the ball out, Toby.
    
    TOBY
    You’re really going to keep playing?
    
    BARTLET
    Take the ball out. Let’s go.
    
    TOBY
    Oh, this is perfect, you know that? This is a perfect metaphor. After you’re gone, 
    and the poets write, “The Legend of Josiah Bartlet,” let them write you as a tragic 
    figure, sir. Let the poets write that he had the tools of greatness, but the voices 
    of his better angels was shouted down by his obsessive need to win.
    
    BARTLET
    You want to play or write my eulogy?
    
    TOBY
    Can I be honest with you, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    Mr. Grant!
    
    Bartlet waves to a car in the sidelines. Toby, Josh, and Charlie looks as a Secret 
    Service Agent opens a side door of the car and out comes a very tall black guy, 
    possibly a professional basketball player. He approaches Bartlet and shakes his hand.
    
    JOSH
    Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Who’s this guy?
    
    BARTLET
    I’m making a substitution.
    
    TOBY
    Who is this guy?
    
    BARTLET
    Mr. Grant’s a new member of my team.
    
    TOBY
    A ringer, perhaps?
    
    BARTLET
    Mr. Grant is a federal employee.
    
    TOBY
    You know the thing about you, Mr. President? It isn’t so much that you cheat. It’s 
    how brazenly bad you are at it.
    
    BARTLET
    I beg your pardon?
    
    JOSH
    Toby’s got a point there sir.
    
    BARTLET
    When have I ever cheated?
    
    TOBY
    Up on Florida, playing mixed doubles with me and C.J. You tried to tell us that your 
    partner worked at the American Consulate in Vienna.
    
    BARTLET
    And she did!
    
    TOBY
    It was Steffi Graf, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Well, I will admit that the woman bore a striking resemblance...
    
    TOBY
    It was Steffi Graf, you crazy lunatic! You think I’m not gonna recognize Steffi Graf 
    when she’s serving a tennis ball at me?
    
    JOSH
    Steffi Graf’s won quite a few championships, sir. We’ve had many opportunities to 
    see photographs.
    
    BARTLET
    Be that as it may, Toby Ziegler, Josh Lyman, Charlie Young. I would like to 
    introduce Mr. Rodney Grant. Mr. Grant is Associate Director of the President’s 
    Council on Physical Fitness. Game point. Your ball. Let’s go!
    
    TOBY
    Whoa, whoa, whoa. 
    
    BARTLET
    What? 
    
    TOBY
    Not so fast.
    
    BARTLET
    What’s the problem?
    
    TOBY
    Mr. Grant, your name sounds awfully familiar... Before you joined up with the 
    President’s Council on Physical Fitness, a council, I might add, the President would 
    do well to avail himself of... Is it possible, that you played some organized ball?
    
    GRANT
    Yeah, I used to play a little with my friends.
    
    TOBY
    And where was that?
    
    GRANT
    I’m sorry?
    
    TOBY
    Where would that be?
    
    GRANT
    Duke.
    
    Toby and Josh laugh out loud, while Charlie looks at Grant.
    
    TOBY
    This guy was in the Final Four!
    
    BARTLET
    Take the ball out, Toby. Game point. Let’s go.
    
    TOBY
    Alright.
    
    BARTLET
    The new man.
    
    TOBY
    [to Grant] I’m taking you to the hole.
    
    Toby dribbles the ball into low post. Grant guards him. Bartlet is guarding Josh on 
    the other end of the court. Toby tries to shoot the ball. 
    
    JOSH
    You got it!
    
    Mr. Grant, with quick reflexes, blocks the ball hard, making it go out of bounds. 
    Toby almost falls down.
    
    TOBY
    Oh!
    
    BARTLET
    Let the poets write about that there, Byron.
    
    TOBY
    Charlie, guard the new guy.
    
    Charlie walks in front of Grant and stares at him.
    SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
    END TEASER
    * * *
    
    ACT ONE
    
    FADE IN: INT. JOSH'S BULLPEN AREA - DAY
    
    Donna comes out of the bullpen while Josh is walking by. Josh, surprised, continues 
    walking down the hallway as the ever loyal Donna walks with him.
    
    DONNA
    You have a staff meeting.
    
    JOSH
    That’s... where I’m going.
    
    DONNA
    I’m just telling you.
    
    JOSH
    Yes, but you see that’s obviously where I’m going, and yet you tell me anyway.
    
    DONNA
    And you don’t find that adorable?
    
    JOSH
    That you seek to control me?
    
    DONNA
    Yeah?
    
    JOSH
    Love it.
    
    DONNA
    Donald hasn’t called me yet.
    
    JOSH
    Who’s Donald?
    
    DONNA
    Donald?
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    From the thing?
    
    JOSH 
    Right. [stops by a side table to get coffee] Can we clear up a few things about my 
    level of interest in the revolving door of local gomers that you see, in the free 
    time you create by not working very hard at your job?
    
    DONNA
    Excuse me?
    
    JOSH
    You work hard at your job.
    
    DONNA
    How hard?
    
    JOSH
    Very hard.
    
    DONNA
    And I am?
    
    JOSH
    Not at all controlling.
    
    DONNA
    Thank you. You have a staff meeting.
    
    JOSH
    On my way.
    
    Josh walks on towards the door, and stops and turns back as he hears Donna’s voice again.
    
    DONNA
    Wait, uh, there’s another thing.
    
    JOSH
    What?
    
    DONNA
    Hang on.
    
    JOSH
    Donna?
    
    DONNA
    Hang on. [takes out a note from a folder] Here it is. Leo wants you to meet someone 
    named Lacey from the National Security Council in his office after staff.
    
    JOSH
    Thank you. [takes the note, continues on his way, and walks out the door]
    
    DONNA
    What do you think it’s about?
    
    JOSH
    I don’t know. But this is the White House, so it’s probably not that important.
    
    C.J. quickly walks past Donna and catches up with Josh.
    
    C.J.
    Josh!
    
    JOSH
    Ma’am.
    
    C.J.
    There’s an article I want you to read in the New Yorker.
    
    JOSH
    What’s it about?
    
    C.J.
    Smallpox.
    
    JOSH
    The disease?
    
    C.J.
    No, the dessert topping, Josh.
    
    JOSH
    Okay.
    
    C.J.
    Yes, the disease.
    
    CUT TO: INT. ROOSEVELT ROOM - CONTINUOUS
    
    We see some of White House staffers seated around the table, including Toby, Mandy, 
    Sam, Cathy and Margaret.
    
    MARGARET
    We do it at the first of every month.
    
    CATHY
    We’ve missed a few months.
    
    SAM
    But, generally speaking, we try to do it on the first of every month.
    
    TOBY
    We’ve done it twice in 12 months.
    
    SAM
    We’re a little behind.
    
    MANDY
    I still don’t know what we’re talking about.
    
    TOBY
    It’s “Throw Open Our Office Doors To People Who Want To Discuss Things That We 
    Could Care Less About... Day”
    
    MANDY
    Well, that sounds goofy, doesn’t it?
    
    SAM
    It’s not so bad. You talk to them for a minute. You give them a souvenir pen with 
    the Presidential seal on it.
    
    MANDY
    This isn’t a waste of time?
    
    MARGARET
    Oh, it’s definitely a waste of time, but it’s one of Leo’s pet office policies.
    
    MANDY
    Why?
    
    LEO
    [walks in] Good morning.
    
    TOBY
    [whispers to Mandy] Sadly you’re about to find out.
    
    LEO
    Andrew Jackson, in the main foyer of his White House had a big block of cheese.
    
    TOBY
    Hmmm.
    
    Some of the White House Staffers giggle lightly.
    
    LEO
    I am making a mental list of those who are snickering, and even as I speak I’m 
    preparing appropriate retribution. [beat] The block of cheese was huge--over two 
    tons. And it was there for any and all who might be hungry.
    
    TOBY
    Leo, wouldn’t this time be better spent plotting a war against a country that can’t 
    possibly defend itself against us?
    
    LEO
    We can do that later, Toby. Right now I’m talking about President Andrew Jackson.
    
    SAM
    Actually, right now, you’re talking about a big block of cheese.
    
    LEO
    And Sam goes on my list!
    
    SAM
    What about Toby?
    
    LEO
    I’m unpredictable. [beat] Jackson wanted the White House to belong to the people, 
    so from time to time, he opened his doors to those who wished an audience.
    
    MANDY
    And then he locked the doors behind them and made them eat two tons of cheese.
    
    LEO
    It is in that spirit...
    
    SAM
    Hang on. Mandy doesn’t go on the list?
    
    LEO
    Mandy’s new.
    
    SAM
    So it’s just me... on the list?
    
    LEO
    Yes. It is in the spirit of Andrew Jackson that I, from time to time, ask senior 
    staff to have face-to-face meetings with those people representing organizations 
    who have a difficult time getting our attention. [beat] I know the more jaded among 
    you, see this as something rather beneath you. But I assure you that listening to the 
    voices of passionate Americans is beneath no one, and surely not the peoples’ servants.
    
    JOSH
    [walks in with C.J.] Sorry, we’re late. Is it “Total Crackpot Day” again?
    
    LEO
    Yes, it is.
    
    SAM
    And let us please note that Josh does not go on the list.
    
    LEO
    [to Josh] Actually you’ve got a thing right now.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, I know. Donna told me.
    
    LEO
    Margaret, hand out those appointments would you?
    
    Josh walks out with Leo from the Roosevelt Room into the HALLWAY.
    
    JOSH
    What’s up?
    
    LEO
    First of all... [smacks Josh in the head]
    
    JOSH
    Ow!
    
    LEO
    That’s for “Total Crackpot Day.”
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, yeah.
    
    They enter LEO’S OFFICE. Standing in the middle of the room is JONATHAN LACEY. Josh 
    offers his hand.
    
    LEO
    Second of all, this is Jonathan Lacey.
    
    JOSH
    Josh Lyman.
    
    LACEY
    Good to meet you. [points at the door] Mr. McGarry, would you mind?
    
    Leo closes the door and stands behind Josh.
    
    LACEY 
    [to Leo] Thanks. [to Josh] I only have a few moments. I know you’re busy too.
    
    JOSH
    What can I do for you?
    
    Lacey opens a folder on the table. In the folder, attached with a paper clip and a 
    cardholder, is a green-colored card. He takes it and gives it to Josh. 
    
    LACEY 
    I’d like you to keep this card on your person at all times. If you keep it in your 
    wallet and you lose your wallet, your first call isn’t to American Express. It’s to us.
    
    JOSH
    [looking at the card] Who’s us?
    
    LACEY
    I’m sorry. I thought you knew. I’m with the N.S.C.
    
    JOSH
    [still looking the card] They told me that a minute... What’s the card do?
    
    LACEY
    Tells you where to go in the event of a nuclear attack.
    
    JOSH
    [swiftly looks up] You’re kidding me.
    
    LACEY
    Obviously, we want to get everyone up on Air Force One or into one of the underground 
    command centers as quickly as possible.
    
    JOSH
    [very distraught] Sure...well,um...Okay, I really, um, I don’t know what to say.
    
    LEO
    [to Lacey] I guess that’s it then?
    
    LACEY
    Should you have any questions, you should feel free to call.
    
    JOSH
    Sure. Sure...and my staff goes with me or do they have separate...?
    
    A long silence fills the room. Lacey looks at Leo, who looks away.
    
    JOSH
    [surprised] Oh, God! Sorry...you know what? I just got it. Sorry...Ok, sure. 
    [takes out wallet] I’m just gonna stick this right here next to my, uh, my video 
    club membership and there’s no reason, I guess, why my staff ever has to know 
    anything about it...So there it is. [puts wallet back in pocket]
    And I think the best thing to do is just forget all about it. I’ll go now.
    
    Leo opens the door. Josh takes a last look at Lacey, walks out and sees White House 
    staffers passing through the hallways. He looks left, looks right, looks left, 
    looks right again, and walks away.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT ONE
    * * *
    
    ACT TWO
    
    FADE IN: INT. BRIEFING ROOM - DAY
    The senior staff are preparing the President for a press conference. Sam, Mandy, and 
    Leo are sitting in the blue chairs in the room, while Toby is walking around in the 
    aisle. Mrs. Landingham carefully watches Bartlet as he walks left and right behind 
    the briefing room’s podium as he looks at a bunch of papers through his glasses.
    
    SAM
    Last week’s rise in the producer’s price index coupled with the increasingly tight 
    labor market have sparked a growing concern over future inflation. Do you share that 
    concern, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    No, Helen, I don’t. The U.S. economy is fundamentally...
    
    SAM
    Ah! I wasn’t Helen there, sir. Actually, I was Sandy King.
    
    BARTLET
    From the... Miami Herald?
    
    SAM
    She moved to The Sun-Times.
    
    BARTLET
    But, your voice sounded the same as when you did Helen.
    
    SAM
    [different accent] Do you share that concern, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    No, not at all. The U.S. economy remains fundamentally strong as the steady decline 
    in unemployment reflects, which I think is cause for satisfaction, not gloom. The 
    solitary aberrant spike in the P.P.I. is not cause for overreaction.
    
    SAM
    You might also want to point out that there’s been no corresponding increase in 
    wholesale prices.
    
    MANDY
    Yeah, so Mr. President, if you could further see clear to not answer that question 
    like an economics professor with a big old stick up his butt, that would be good too.
    
    BARTLET
    I AM an economics professor with a big old stick up my butt, but I’ll do my best for 
    you there, Mandy.
    
    MANDY
    Thank you, sir.
    
    SAM
    [to Toby] That’s it for the economy.
    
    TOBY
    Let’s move to guns.
    
    BARTLET
    We don’t need to do guns.
    
    TOBY
    Sir, they are absolutely gonna ask about guns.
    
    BARTLET
    I’m not saying they’re not gonna ask about them, Toby. I’m saying I’m all set.
    
    TOBY
    How ‘bout one or two questions, Mr. President?
    
    BARTLET
    [looks at watch] Is it time for my 10 a.m. scolding?
    
    LEO
    Are we gonna have this argument, again?
    
    TOBY
    [with hand raised a little] Mr. President...
    
    BARTLET
    Let’s do guns.
    
    TOBY
    Sir...
    
    BARTLET
    Let’s do guns, Sam.
    
    Toby drops his hand, looks at the President and continues to pace the aisle.
    
    SAM
    Mr. President, is there any reason to believe this victory, this weapons ban bill, 
    will have any significant reduction in crime?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes, next question.
    
    TOBY
    Mr. President...
    
    BARTLET
    Ah! Mr. Ziegler from the Coney Island Killjoy. You have a follow up?
    
    Bartlet picks up the cup beside the microphone in the podium, finding it empty, 
    puts it back. Mrs. Landingham gets up from her chair and walks to the podium.
    
    TOBY
    You’re gonna take the question. We’re lucky enough to get the question, you’re 
    gonna take it and blow it off?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Due respect, sir, may I ask why?
    
    Mrs. Landingham takes the cup from the podium and starts to walk out through the 
    back exit.
    
    BARTLET
    ‘Cause I’m weak-willed and stupid.
    
    LEO
    Let’s do this another time.
    
    TOBY
    Four days ago sir, we talked this over.
    
    BARTLET
    Then I talked it over with some other people.
    
    TOBY
    Which people?
    
    BARTLET
    I have lots of other people.
    
    TOBY
    Sir, I believe we are missing a huge opportunity here...
    
    Toby and the President continue to fight in the background. Just outside the BRIEFING 
    ROOM, we see Josh standing by the door staring through space. C.J. walks past him. 
    She notices him and looks back.
    
    C.J.
    What’s going on?
    
    JOSH
    Hmm?
    
    C.J.
    What’s going on?
    
    JOSH
    Oh, we’re doing the thing.
    
    C.J.
    Why aren’t you in there?
    
    JOSH
    I was just going in.
    
    Mrs. Landingham, coming from the Briefing Room, walks behind C.J. with the President’s 
    cup in her hand.
    
    C.J.
    Good morning, Mrs. Landingham. Where are we in the saga of Toby and the President?
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    They seem to be having a disagreement.
    
    C.J.
    A disagreement or a fight?
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Well, it certainly has the potential...
    
    BARTLET [OS]
    [shouts] Oh, for God’s sakes Toby!
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    There we go.
    
    Mrs. Landingham walks out the door. C.J. looks at Josh, who is still staring to space.
    
    C.J.
    [to Josh] Let’s go in. [beat] Josh!
    
    JOSH
    Hmm?
    
    C.J.
    Let’s go in. [walks inside with Josh]
    
    TOBY
    Sir...
    
    BARTLET
    I’m not gonna come out and say the bill we just passed is worthless.
    
    TOBY
    If we could just admit its weaknesses.
    
    MANDY
    Toby?
    
    TOBY
    Why not?
    
    MANDY
    It will infuriate the left, it will energize the right and everyone in the middle 
    will feel they just got yanked around...I’m sorry, Mr. President, did you want to 
    answer that?
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, my answer was gonna be “because I said so,” but you did pretty good.
    
    MANDY
    Say nothing of taking a victory and declaring defeat.
    
    SAM
    Yes.
    
    MANDY
    Look, Toby, by changing some words...
    
    TOBY
    By changing some words, the world can move or not by changing some words.
    
    BARTLET
    What’s your point?
    
    TOBY
    I have many points, sir. I choose not to make them right now.
    
    BARTLET 
    [eating a bagel] Well, on behalf of everybody in the west wing, Toby, let me just 
    say that that’s a relief.
    
    Cathy, standing behind Josh and C.J. has just delivered a message for Sam.
    
    SAM
    Excuse me, Leo.
    
    LEO
    Yes?
    
    SAM
    Cathy tells me my first “cheese” appointment is here, but I think preparing the 
    President for this press conference should be a priority.
    
    C.J.
    I agree.
    
    LEO
    No.
    
    C.J.
    Leo, it...
    
    LEO
    No!
    
    SAM
    But I really need to get...
    
    LEO
    You’re not getting out of these appointments.
    
    C.J.
    This is a very important press conference.
    
    LEO
    This is a thoroughly unimportant press conference.
    
    SAM
    I think this press conference is about our future.
    
    BARTLET
    [still eating] I think this press conference is about we haven’t had a press 
    conference in a while.
    
    LEO
    Sam, go.
    
    CHARLIE
    [walks in] Mr. President? [points at his watch]
    
    BARTLET
    We’re going too.
    
    TOBY
    Sir...
    
    LEO
    [to Toby] We’ll pick this up this afternoon.
    
    CUT TO: INT. SAM’S OFFICE - DAY
    Sam just came in to his office. He sees a nerdy BOB ENGLER sitting in a chair 
    beside the door.
    
    SAM
    So, you are from the United States Space Command?
    
    BOB
    Not a lot of people know about us.
    
    SAM
    This is my first time.
    
    BOB
    We’re a little nerdy, I’ll admit.
    
    SAM
    You camouflage it well with your clothing.
    
    BOB
    I’m used to that, Sam.
    
    SAM
    What can I do for you, Bob?
    
    BOB
    In a nutshell?
    
    SAM
    So to speak.
    
    BOB
    We’d like the White House to pay a little more attention to UFOs.
    
    SAM
    Are we paying any attention at all right now?
    
    BOB
    No.
    
    SAM
    Thank God. Like we don’t have enough trouble with the First Lady and her Ouija board.
    
    BOB
    I would like you to show the President some data we’ve collected on some possible 
    extraterrestrial contact.
    
    SAM
    I really can’t do that.
    
    BOB
    May I ask why not?
    
    SAM
    Because the President will either yell at me or laugh at me. Either way, it won’t 
    work out well for me.
    
    BOB
    This morning at 6:35 a.m. local time, air traffic control in Honolulu picked up an 
    unidentified flying object flying east across the Pacific towards California. Air 
    Force and Naval Jets have been in the area for hours and have been unable to 
    establish visual contact. These things happen and go unexplained. You don’t think 
    this is something you should take to the President?
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    BOB
    Again, may I ask why not?
    
    SAM
    Because there are levels and an order to our air defense command, and to jump from 
    a radar officer to a commander-in-chief would skip several of those levels.
    
    BOB
    Like what?
    
    SAM
    Like the Pentagon, and, you know, perhaps, therapy.
    
    BOB
    Okay, I can see that.
    
    SAM
    Bob, no hard feelings, but I can’t walk into the cabinet room and ask the President 
    to put down the budget surplus because there are flying saucers over Maui.
    
    BOB
    Something’s heading east in the sky over the Pacific. It’s in and out of our radar. 
    We can’t see it, and it’s up there right now. I leave you with that thought.
    
    SAM
    It’s been good meeting with you, and I hope that you don’t feel that you’ve wasted 
    your time... I leave you with this pen. [shows a pen with a Presidential seal on it]
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - DAY
    C.J. walks out of the Press Room. Mandy approaches her. C.J., not looking at Mandy,
    carries and places some papers from different places as she walks.
    
    MANDY
    I know the President’s not wild about Larry Posner’s fund-raiser on the California 
    trip, but I think we can’t pass. And I want to know where you were on this.
    
    C.J.
    You don’t have to worry about me on Hollywood fund-raisers. You have to worry about 
    Toby.
    
    MANDY
    I know. That’s why I’m shoring up support.
    
    C.J.
    I’m in.
    
    C.J. walks in the secretaries’ bullpen. The confused Mandy passes through the bullpen, 
    sees C.J. through the glass, and walks back to enter the bullpen.
    
    MANDY
    They sent pictures of the Malibu place. It’s great.
    
    C.J.
    This wasn’t the one we used during the primary?
    
    MANDY
    No, he bought another place.
    
    C.J.
    Where was the one where Roberto Benigni pushed me into this swimming pool?
    
    MANDY
    That was Larry Posner’s house, but that was the old place. C.J....if it gets a vote 
    then isn’t it worth it?
    
    C.J.
    Which would be fine if Roberto Benigni can vote in our elections, but since he’s 
    Italian, that makes me a six foot wet girl in a Donna Karan dress.
    
    CUT TO: INT. ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    Bartlet and Leo are meeting with distinguished people concerned with economics.
    
    LEO
    I’m the only one in the room who isn’t an economist, but it seems to me that the 
    annual budget for the new fiscal year is found either in balance, in deficit, or 
    in surplus. I don’t know how I can sell congress, to say nothing of people who 
    graduated eighth grade on the idea that there’s anything in between.
    
    BARTLET
    Leo’s not talking about the portion being accounted for as off budget and 
    particularly not the long-term capital outlays.
    
    LEO
    [points at the President] Here’s where you lose me.
    
    BARTLET
    Ten years ago, the federal budget had a deficit of 22 billion dollars but the 
    national debt rose... 
    
    Charlie walks in the door behind the President.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    ...from 5.2 trillion to 5.4 trillion in the same fiscal year.
    
    Charlie gives the President the note in his hand.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    Thank you. That’s a debt increase of 188 million against a 22 billion dollar deficit.
    [reads note] Oh, this is good news.
    
    WOMAN
    [to the President] You knew those numbers in your head?
    
    LEO
    The President’s startlingly freakish that way.
    
    BARTLET
    [to Leo] Zoey’s coming for dinner.
    
    LEO
    She’s in town!
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah. [to everyone in room] My daughter’s starting Georgetown after the first and 
    she’s scouting off-campus housing. Guys, we’re done. I’m sorry, but some of my staff 
    has been waiting and they haven’t had the chance to bother me for a couple of hours. 
    Thanks so much.
    
    Bartlet and Leo come out of the ROOSEVELT ROOM.
    
    BARTLET 
    I’m gonna make chili!
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    BARTLET
    I’ll make it for everybody. Charlie!
    
    LEO
    Sir...
    
    BARTLET
    My friends, my daughter, my beer, and some chili. Yes!
    
    LEO
    And you’re gonna be the one to, you know, cook this food?
    
    They enter THE OVAL OFFICE. Charlie comes from behind them.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    Ah, Charlie. My youngest daughter, Zoey, is down from Hanover. I’m making chili 
    tonight. It’s her favorite.
    
    CHARLIE
    Uh, sir, you know the first lady does not want you to eat...
    
    BARTLET
    The first lady’s in Pakistan. I can eat whatever I want.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    I’m gonna need some ingredients.
    
    CHARLIE
    Like what?
    
    LEO
    Well, he’ll need some chili.
    
    BARTLET
    Don’t ever listen to him. Look, Mrs. Landingham’s got it all written down somewhere. 
    Just tell her to give it to the steward’s office. And send everyone else in.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes, sir. [walks off]
    
    BARTLET
    Thank you, Charlie!
    
    LEO
    How could you possibly remember that ten years ago there was a 188 million dollar 
    debt increase off a 22 billion dollar deficit?
    
    BARTLET
    [hand in chest] God, I was right?
    
    LEO
    Ah, see, that’s what I thought.
    
    Bartlet laughs and LEO smiles. The senior staff walk in.
    
    BARTLET
    Everyone! Come in. Come on in. Hey, listen up everybody. Zoey’s down from Hanover. 
    I’m making chili for everyone tonight.
    
    SENIOR STAFF
    [very weak and uninterested] Great. Okay. Chili.
    
    BARTLET
    [looks at Leo then to his staff] All right...You know what? Let’s do this. Everybody 
    look down at the big seal in the middle of my carpet.
    
    They all look down at the Presidential Seal on the carpet in the middle of the room.
    
    BARTLET
    Now, everybody look back up at me. Zoey’s coming down from Hanover and I’m making 
    chili for everyone tonight.
    
    SENIOR STAFF
    [loud and very excited] That’s great! I love chili! Terrific!
    
    BARTLET
    There, you see how benevolent I can be, when everyone does what I tell them to do. 
    Now sit down. [picks up a newspaper and reads. Everyone else sits down.]
    
    LEO
    I would like this meeting to last no more than three minutes. I will allow it to 
    last no more than five. Speak, Mandy.
    
    MANDY
    We’re going to California in a few weeks.
    
    LEO
    Yes.
    
    MANDY
    Larry Posner would like to host a fundraiser.
    
    TOBY
    Nope.
    
    MANDY
    Why?
    
    TOBY
    ‘Cause 24 hours earlier the President’s gonna give a speech to the entertainment 
    industry on violence in film and television.
    
    SAM
    A speech I don’t think we should be giving.
    
    TOBY
    That’s beside the point.
    
    MANDY
    What’s the point?
    
    TOBY
    Larry Posner’s movies are incredibly violent.
    
    SAM
    So is The Godfather. What you mean to say is Larry Posner’s movies are incredibly bad.
    
    TOBY
    No, actually, what I mean to say is Larry Posner’s movies are indicative of a 
    Hollywood that is excessibly violent, arrogantly violent, and is promoting violence 
    and the disrespect to human life. Either way, I don’t see how we can admonish 
    Hollywood on a Tuesday and cash their check on a Wednesday. How can we do that?
    
    BARTLET
    [still reading] Cause it’s Hollywood. Who gives a damn?
    
    TOBY
    Now, hang on a second, Mr. President, you have me drafting a speech for the 
    entertainment industry, where we more than suggest to come right out and say that 
    much of their product is corruptive. Now are we doing this because we believe that 
    it’s time for them to take moral leadership seriously or are we doing it because 
    nobody ever lost an election attacking Hollywood?
    
    BARTLET
    Why can’t we do both?
    
    TOBY
    [sighs] That’s not hypocritical, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    No.
    
    TOBY
    Why not?
    
    BARTLET
    Because Sam is right. It’s not that Larry Posner’s movies have gratuitous sex and 
    gratuitous violence. It’s that they suck. They’re terrible. But people go to see them 
    because they have gratuitous sex and gratuitous violence. Now, if we could just get 
    people to stop going to see crappy movies, Posner would stop making them. I promise you.
    
    TOBY
    How’s that strategy working for us in the war on drugs, sir?
    
    LEO
    Toby...
    
    TOBY
    We are going to go out there and implore these people to step up to the plate and not 
    be quite so casual with the awesome influence that they have. That’s fantastic. But, 
    sir, every time someone makes headlines by blowing thunder at this ridiculous target, 
    it only serves as a criminal distraction in the pursuit of actual solutions. Now, let 
    me just say one other thing. If I were an actor, a writer, or a director, or a producer 
    in Hollywood and someone would start coming at me with a list of things that were 
    American and un-American, I’d start to think that this was sounding eerily familiar.
    
    BARTLET
    [stares at Toby] Do I look like Joe McCarthy to you, Toby?
    
    TOBY
    No sir. Nobody ever looks like Joe McCarthy. That’s how they get in the door in the 
    first place.
    
    C.J.
    We seem to have wandered off the point a bit.
    
    LEO
    Yeah. And time’s up.
    
    Everyone stands up and walks out the door. Toby touches his head in frustration.
    
    C.J.
    Thank you, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Chili, tonight!
    
    JOSH
    Yes, sir.
    
    MANDY
    Thank you.
    
    Out in the HALLWAY, Sam and Josh walk out of the Oval Office. Sam looks at Josh
    and notices something.
    
    SAM
    You okay?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    ‘Cause you look a little...you know...
    
    JOSH
    No. No.
    
    SAM
    Cathy?
    
    CATHY
    [walks up with mouth full] You know that doughnut sitting on your desk?
    
    SAM
    You ate it.
    
    CATHY
    That was predictable, wasn’t it?
    
    They enter the COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE. Sam whispers something to Cathy.
    
    SAM
    Hey, is there any word yet on the...
    
    CATHY
    The thing’s still out there.
    
    SAM
    [to Josh] Had a guy on my office today. He’d like us to spend a little more time 
    working on UFOs.
    
    JOSH walks into SAM’S OFFICE. Sam follows.
    
    JOSH
    Are we spending any time working on UFOs?
    
    SAM
    That’s what I said.
    
    JOSH
    ‘Cause coming on the heels of Mrs. Bartlet’s Ouija board...
    
    SAM
    I hear you.
    
    JOSH
    I’m closing the door. [looks out and closes the door]
    
    SAM
    The Central Pacific Command’s been picking this thing up on radar all day.
    
    JOSH
    Sam?
    
    SAM
    Right.
    
    JOSH
    Listen, you’re close with Cathy, right?
    
    SAM
    I haven’t seen her naked, if that’s what you’re asking.
    
    JOSH
    [surprised] No, Sam. Well, that’s not what I’m asking.
    
    SAM
    I mean, she’s like my younger sister, but she gets paid, and...
    
    JOSH
    Right.
    
    SAM
    And she frightens me.
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    But I love her.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    It’s like you and Donna.
    
    JOSH
    Right. [beat] When they gave you a card and they told you... that it was just you 
    and not Cathy, how did you... how’d you feel about that?
    
    SAM
    When they gave me what card?
    
    JOSH
    The N.S.C. guy... the card with the directions.
    
    SAM
    The directions to...
    
    JOSH
    You, C.J., Toby. I’m saying when the N.S.C. guy gave you your cards.
    
    A long pause. 
    
    SAM
    Josh... What card?
    
    JOSH
    [very surprised] Nothing... I-I-I was thinking of a different... nothing. Nothing.
    [opens the door and walks away]
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT TWO
    * * *
    
    ACT THREE
    
    FADE IN: INT. ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    A white screen is set for an overhead projector. A woman sitting at the middle of 
    the room controls it. Two men on each side of the screen, starts to talk to C.J., 
    who is sitting at the other end of the table.
    
    MAN 1
    C.J., we’d like to tell you the story of Pluie.
    
    C.J.
    Who’s Pluie?
    
    MAN 1
    I’m glad you asked.
    
    From the projector, a wolf is shown in the screen. C.J.’s face changes.
    
    C.J.
    That’s Pluie.
    
    MAN 1
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Pluie’s a wolf?
    
    MAN 1
    Yeah, she is.
    
    C.J.
    And you’re gonna tell me her story? [smiles]
    
    MAN 1
    Jerry?
    
    MAN 2
    For four years, scientists have tracked Pluie as she made her way from Banff 
    National Park in Alberta up and down the Rockies. In that time, she’s made three 
    round trips between Canada and Wyoming covering 40,000 square miles.
    
    MAN 1
    We thing you’ll admit it was a pretty impressive performance for Pluie especially 
    when you consider the impediments of modern life she had to conquer: highways, 
    housing, forest denuded of trees.
    
    WOMAN
    Not to mention the US-Canadian border.
    
    C.J.
    Sure, ‘cause no photo I.D. [laughs]
    
    WOMAN
    I’m sorry?
    
    C.J.
    That was a joke.
    
    MAN 1
    Why does Pluie make the trek? Because wolves have to breed with many packs in order 
    to keep from becoming extinct.
    
    C.J.
    Really?
    
    MAN 1
    If they breed among themselves, they’ll eventually produce offspring that’s 
    genetically weaker, thus endangering their long-term survival.
    
    C.J.
    That helps explain Buckingham Palace. [laughs]
    
    MAN 2
    May we tell you what we propose?
    
    C.J.
    Sure.
    
    MAN 
    The wolves-only roadway.
    
    C.J.
    [surprised] The wolves-only roadway?
    
    MAN 
    Eighteen hundred miles from Yellowstone to the Yukon Territory complete with 
    highway overpasses and no cattle grazing.
    
    C.J.
    [still surprised] An 1800-mile wolves-only roadway?
    
    WOMAN
    Pluie, you’ll recall, had to...
    
    C.J.
    Hang on. How are you gonna teach wolves to follow road signs?
    
    MAN 2
    Our scientists are working on a plan.
    
    C.J.
    Yeah, but in the meantime, Pluie’s gonna get drunk and wander off the wolves-only 
    road and end up eating my cat.
    
    MAN 1
    [scoffs] We don’t think that’ll happen.
    
    C.J.
    I don’t think this is gonna happen. [indicating the roadway]
    
    JERRY
    Perhaps, if we should...
    
    C.J.
    First of all, ranchers don’t want wolves returned to the West.
    
    MAN 
    Ranchers are killers.
    
    C.J.
    No, they’re not. And anyone who says it should take it back. Ranchers face the 
    following conditions: falling stock prices, rising taxes, prolonged drought, and 
    a country that’s eating less beef. Ranchers want to blame something, and because 
    they’re ranchers, they want to fight something. I’d rather be a wolf than us, so 
    unless Pluie registers to vote...
    
    WOMAN
    Pluie was shot and killed by a rancher in British Columbia last month.
    
    The two men and the woman bow down their heads.
    
    C.J.
    I’m... sorry to hear that.
    
    WOMAN
    I’m not sure you are.
    
    C.J.
    [throat clearing] Just out of curiosity, how much would it cost?
    
    MAN 
    That’s the beauty part. With contributions and corporate sponsorship, the cost of 
    the taxpayer is only 900 million dollars.
    
    C.J.
    [laughs very hard] No, seriously, how much would it cost?
    
    JERRY
    C.J., if we’re gonna do this, why not do it right?
    
    C.J.
    We’re not gonna do it.
    
    MAN 
    Sure, there are other things we could spend the money on.
    
    C.J.
    You think?
    
    WOMAN
    I’d like to hear what you think. What’s a better way to spend this money?
    
    C.J.
    Nine hundred million dollars?
    
    WOMAN
    Another war plane, another S&L Bailout?
    
    C.J.
    How about we build the nine best schools in the world?
    
    MAN 
    Let’s... Let’s move on to the grizzly bear.
    
    C.J. looks as a grizzly bear appears on the screen.
    
    CUT TO: INT. TOBY’S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Mandy knocks at Toby's door. Toby, seated at his couch, looks at her and looks back 
    at the papers he’s reading.
    
    MANDY
    Hi. [leans at door]
    
    TOBY
    Hi.
    
    MANDY
    Can I talk to you?
    
    TOBY
    What’d you get him, a spot on Hollywood Squares?
    
    MANDY
    Posner’s a huge supporter, Toby. I don’t have to tell you that.
    
    TOBY
    No, you don’t.
    
    MANDY
    I came in here to be nice to you, Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Go ahead.
    
    MANDY
    I don’t like going up against you.
    
    TOBY
    I don’t like going up against you.
    
    MANDY
    Okay.
    
    TOBY
    That’s you being nice?
    
    MANDY
    [steps in] I’m glad David Rosen passed on the Communications job. They couldn’t have 
    done better than you.
    
    TOBY
    [surprised] Excuse me?
    
    MANDY
    I’m saying you make a better Communications Director than David Rosen ever would’ve 
    been. That’s me being nice.
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - DAY
    An agitated Toby is walking with C.J.
    
    TOBY
    Remember a month ago when I asked you if I was the President’s first choice?
    
    C.J.
    We’re back to this?
    
    TOBY
    And you called me paranoid?
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    And a nudnik. You called me a paranoid nudnik.
    
    C.J.
    Toby, for the 48th time, you are not the President’s second choice.
    
    TOBY
    What about David Rosen?
    
    C.J.
    What about David Rosen?
    
    TOBY
    Mandy was just in my office, and she said she was happy David Rosen passed on my job.
    
    C.J.
    Carol, we’re gonna start in a few minutes.
    
    CAROL
    [walks by] Should I bring them in?
    
    C.J.
    Give ‘em fair warning.
    
    TOBY
    David Rosen.
    
    C.J.
    I don’t... Toby, I know nothing about David Rosen, and I don’t know where this is 
    coming from.
    
    TOBY
    He’s about to have a press conference. Let me talk to him about the gun thing. 
    We’ll just leave Hollywood for some other time.
    
    C.J.
    Since when do you need help talking to the President?
    
    TOBY
    Since all of a sudden I became the kid in the class with his hand raised that nobody 
    wants the teacher to call on.
    
    C.J.
    That’s silly.
    
    TOBY
    No, it is not.
    
    C.J.
    Toby...
    
    TOBY
    Just help me, please.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. - DAY
    A shot of an office building somewhere in the city.
    
    CUT TO: INT. AN APARTMENT OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Josh is standing in the middle of the room. Bright light from outside the window 
    surrounds him. We see that he’s talking to his psychiatrist, who we’ll know later 
    as STANLEY.
    
    JOSH
    So, like I said, I appreciate you squeezing me in like this.
    
    STANLEY
    I was able to cancel someone when you called.
    
    JOSH
    You shouldn’t have Stan. It’s not a big deal.
    
    STANLEY
    What’s not a big deal?
    
    JOSH
    Uh, I’m out of practice.
    
    STANLEY
    Well, that’s what comes from not coming to see me for ten months.
    
    JOSH
    Well, I think the idea will make some people I work for nervous. [sits]
    
    STANLEY
    Why are you here now?
    
    JOSH 
    Hmm. This is gonna sound silly. [beat] There’s a magazine article... a magazine 
    article came out... and it said that several countries, some of them are enemies, 
    have stored in freezers the smallpox virus.
    
    STANLEY
    Are you afraid you might have smallpox?
    
    JOSH
    No...Don’t laugh. [beat] I can’t get “Ave Maria” out of my head.
    
    STANLEY
    The Schubert?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, I swear it. I’ve been humming it to myself all morning. It’s the strangest 
    thing... Why do you think the “Ave Maria?”
    
    STANLEY
    Why do you think the “Ave Maria?”
    
    JOSH
    I don’t know... My sister used to play it over and over in her room, but that was, 
    I don’t know how many years ago.
    
    STANLEY
    Your sister who died?
    
    JOSH
    Joanie.
    
    STANLEY
    Why did Joanie play the “Ave Maria” in her room?
    
    JOSH
    She liked music... a lot. She liked it a lot. She wanted to be an orchestra conductor. 
    She used to pretend she was conducting the music. Anyway, there’s that. Plus, I have 
    to tell you. I was a little thrown off this morning when they gave me this card. And 
    it turns out that I was the only one who got one. I mean, of my friends. It surprised 
    me... Joanie and Toby and C.J. and Sam.
    
    STANLEY
    Joanie?
    
    JOSH
    What?
    
    STANLEY
    You named Joanie in there. You said you got some kind of card and Joanie didn’t get one.
    
    JOSH
    I meant... No, ‘cause we were just talking about Joanie.
    
    STANLEY
    What kind of card?
    
    JOSH
    It was uh... there really are some things I’m not allowed to talk about. I assure 
    you, I’m not withholding anything I’m supposed to be emotionally available for.
    
    STANLEY
    Okay.
    
    JOSH
    Thanks.
    
    STANLEY
    Can you talk about the card without talking about the card?
    
    JOSH
    I got to go. [stands up]
    
    STANLEY
    Josh?
    
    JOSH
    It’s really not a big deal, Stanley. I’m sorry I had you cancel an appointment.
    
    STANLEY
    But I did cancel. Why don’t you take your coat off and sit down.
    
    JOSH
    It was an impulse. I wasted your time.
    
    STANLEY
    Josh, do you think it’s strange that you’ve never told me how Joanie died?
    
    JOSH
    I’ve told you.
    
    STANLEY
    No, you haven’t.
    
    JOSH
    Sure, I have.
    
    STANLEY
    No.
    
    JOSH
    It’s not a big deal. [thinks it over, sits down] Uh, she was babysitting for me, 
    and there was a fire.
    
    STANLEY
    How’d the fire start?
    
    JOSH
    I honestly... I don’t remember... Something about a popcorn maker.
    
    STANLEY
    The house caught on fire?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    STANLEY
    While your sister Joanie was babysitting for you?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    STANLEY
    Why aren’t you dead?
    
    JOSH
    I ran out of the house.
    
    STANLEY
    You were just a little boy, Josh. That’s what you’re supposed to do.
    
    JOSH
    [staring at nowhere] Yeah.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT THREE
    * * *
    
    ACT FOUR
    
    FADE IN: INT. JOSH’S OFFICE - NIGHT
    Schubert’s “Ave Maria” is playing in the boom box. Josh is sitting in his chair, 
    thinking deeply. From outside, we hear C.J. knocking. Josh doesn’t answer. 
    C.J., carrying a glass of wine, opens the door and walks in.
    
    C.J.
    Josh? I was knocking but you didn’t answer.
    
    JOSH
    I didn’t hear the door.
    
    C.J.
    What are you doing?
    
    JOSH
    I think I’m ready to brief the President on the smallpox article.
    
    C.J.
    Why don’t you forget about that for tonight, and come have some chili? Everyone’s 
    there.
    
    JOSH
    C.J., an N.S.C. staffer gave me a card with instructions on it for what I’m supposed 
    to do in the event of a nuclear attack. They want me up in the plane or down on a 
    bunker. They don’t want you... or Sam, or Toby, for that matter. I didn’t want to be 
    friends with you and have you not know.
    
    C.J.
    Josh, have you been upset about this?
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    You’re very sweet sometimes. You really are.
    
    JOSH
    C.J...
    
    C.J.
    Of course, they don’t want me, Josh. I’m a press secretary. I don’t think they’re 
    gonna be issuing a whole lot of releases. Sam and Toby are communications and my 
    guess is that speech writing won’t be a priority either. Come, have some fun.
    [starts to go to the door]
    
    JOSH
    [points at the boom box] This is a beautiful piece of music. Do you know this?
    
    C.J.
    [turns back] I’m Catholic.
    
    JOSH
    Hang on. Listen. Listen. [goes to the boom box and slowly turns up the volume. 
    A high voice in the choir sings and Josh is moved] There, right there. It’s... 
    miraculous. [beat] Schubert was crazy, you know.
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    JOSH
    Do you think you have to be crazy to create something powerful?
    
    C.J.
    Josh, the cold war is over. There’s not gonna be a nuclear...
    
    JOSH
    God, C.J. It’s not gonna be like that. It’s not gonna be the red phone and nuclear 
    bombs.
    
    C.J.
    What’s it gonna be?
    
    JOSH
    It’s gonna be this. It’s gonna be something like this. Smallpox has been gone for 
    50 years. No one has an acquired immunity. Flies through the air. You get it... 
    you carry a ten foot cloud around with you. One in three people die. If 100 people 
    in New York City got it, you’d have to encircle them with 100 million vaccinated 
    people to contain it. Do you know how many doses of smallpox vaccines exist in the 
    country? Seven. If 100 people in New York City get it, there’s gonna be a global 
    medical emergency that’s gonna make HIV look like cold and flu season. That’s how 
    it’s gonna be, a little test tube with a-a rubber cap that’s deteriorating... A guy 
    steps out of Times Square Station. Pshht... Smashes it on the sidewalk... There is 
    a world war right there.
    
    C.J.
    We’ll make more vaccine. [turns to the door]
    
    JOSH
    You better hurry ‘cause I’m the only one with one of these cards.
    
    C.J.
    Come have chili. The President’s asking for you.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, I’ll be right there in a minute.
    
    C.J.
    You really are very sweet sometimes. [exits]
    
    Josh stares at the door.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE RESIDENCE - NIGHT
    We follow C.J. as she walks by. White House staffers are having a good time in a 
    reception while waiting for the chili. We stop at Bartlet having a conversation about 
    basketball with Sam and Charlie.
    
    BARTLET
    Sam, it’s all about mastering the fundamentals, see? Got to keep your hands up, 
    your feet moving on defense. Pass and get open or find the open man, and follow his 
    shot on offense. See, I am a master of fundamentals, and that is why my team so 
    thoroughly dominated your team.
    
    SAM
    It probably didn’t hurt so much to have a 2 time A.C.C. player of the week on your team.
    
    BARTLET
    [walks away] Leo, kids don’t understand the fundamentals.
    
    LEO
    No appreciation for the game, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Mrs. Landingham, are you drunk?
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    [carrying a bottle of beer] No, sir. Now why would I...
    
    BARTLET
    I just like asking.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    You know, I should tell you...
    
    BARTLET
    Oh, give it up. Where’s Zoey? [takes beer from Mrs. Landingham]
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    [takes back her beer] She’s in the kitchen.
    
    On the OTHER ROOM, C.J. talks with Toby, Cathy, and Donna.
    
    C.J.
    Wolves don’t kill people. That’s a myth.
    
    TOBY
    Where along the way did she turn into a wolf person?
    
    C.J.
    More people get killed getting change out of vending machines than get killed by 
    a wolf attack.
    
    CATHY
    Are you serious?
    
    C.J.
    Number of people killed last year retrieving change from a vending machine: four. 
    Number of people killed by a wolf attack: zero.
    
    TOBY
    [sees the President in the other room] Excuse me. One second.
    
    DONNA
    How do people die from vending machines?
    
    TOBY
    [sits across Bartlet] So, I guess we haven’t been getting along too well lately. 
    Have we, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    No, I guess not.
    
    TOBY
    I’ve been... irritating you?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Was David Rosen your first choice for my job?
    
    BARTLET
    [looks away] Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Well, I’m glad we had this little talk, sir. I feel a lot better. Thank you, sir.
    [laughs]
    
    BARTLET
    We were up all night on that one, Toby. Me and Leo and Josh. They were screaming 
    at me, “Governor, for God’s sakes, it’s got to be Toby. It’s got to be Toby.” When 
    I held my ground, and we went to David Rosen, and Rosen said he wanted to take a 
    partnership at Solomon Brothers, thank God... I couldn’t live without you Toby. 
    I mean it. I’d be in the tall grass. I’d be in the weeds... I know I disappoint you 
    sometimes. I mean I can sense your disappointment. And I only get mad because I know 
    you’re right a lot of the times, but you are not the kid in the class with his hand 
    up and whatever it was you said to C.J. You are a wise and brilliant man, Toby... 
    The other night when we were playing basketball, did you mean what you said? My 
    demons were shouting down the better angels in my brain?
    
    TOBY
    Yes, sir. I did.
    
    BARTLET
    You think that’s what’s stopping me from greatness?
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    BARTLET
    I suppose you’re right.
    
    TOBY
    Tell you what though, sir. In a battle between a President’s demons and his better 
    angels, for the first time in a long while, I think we might just have ourselves a 
    fair fight.
    
    BARTLET
    Thank you, Toby. [beat] Now, go away.
    
    CUT TO: INT. RESIDENCE KITCHEN - NIGHT
    The President's youngest daughter, ZOEY BARTLET, is cooking chili in a big casserole. 
    Behind her, Josh looks at the door window and sneaks in. Zoey, not taking a look, 
    smiles as she realizes that Josh came in. From behind, Josh tries to surprise her.
    
    JOSH
    Drop the spoon!
    
    ZOEY
    I knew it was you.
    
    JOSH
    You look good!
    
    ZOEY
    And, you look like death in a triscuit.
    
    JOSH
    Oh, thanks very much. I’m seeing a new barber.
    
    ZOEY
    I heard you’ve been having a little nutty today.
    
    JOSH
    Mind your own business. [beat] What classes are you taking?
    
    ZOEY
    Mind your own business.
    
    JOSH
    Okay.
    
    CHARLIE
    [enters] Excuse me.
    
    JOSH
    Charlie, you met Zoey Bartlet?
    
    CHARLIE
    No, it’s a pleasure to meet you, ma’am. I’m Charlie Young.
    
    ZOEY
    Hi.
    
    JOSH
    Okay, hang on a second. Let’s take it back a moment and give it another chance. 
    This is a girl, Charlie. You don’t have to call her “ma’am.”
    
    CHARLIE
    I beg your pardon. Did I call you...
    
    ZOEY
    Zoey.
    
    CHARLIE
    I should call you Zoey?
    
    ZOEY
    [smiles] If I can call you Charlie.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes... Um, I have a message for you from the President.
    
    JOSH
    That would be her father.
    
    CHARLIE
    You’re forbidden from adding additional cumin to the chili.
    
    ZOEY
    Charlie, check the door to see if my father’s nearby?
    
    CHARLIE
    Ma’am, I...
    
    JOSH
    Ah, ah, ah. [looks out the door]
    
    CHARLIE
    Zoey, I have certain instructions, and I don’t want to get in trouble...
    
    JOSH
    You’re fine.
    
    ZOEY
    Taste this. [offers Charlie a taste] Doesn’t it need cumin?
    
    CHARLIE
    It needs oregano.
    
    ZOEY
    Well, let’s get to work.
    
    JOSH
    See, you guys. [exits]
    
    CUT TO: INT. RESIDENCE - NIGHT
    We see C.J. still talking about wolves and vending machines, this time with Leo and 
    the President.
    
    C.J.
    I don’t know. I mean, maybe the vending machines fall on them while they’re getting 
    their change.
    
    Bartlet and Leo laugh.
    
    C.J. [cont.]
    My point is, can’t we build schools and protect wildlife at the same time? We must 
    be able to do that.
    
    LEO
    Pluie really got to you, huh?
    
    C.J.
    She really was very sweet, Leo.
    
    Josh joins in the conversation as C.J. leaves.
    
    BARTLET
    Josh! We’ve been looking for you.
    
    C.J.
    [to Leo] I’ll be over here.
    
    BARTLET 
    Look at this, will you?
    
    JOSH
    At what sir?
    
    BARTLET
    I don’t know why, but nothing makes me feel quite so good as the sight of colleagues, 
    enjoying each other outside work.
    
    JOSH
    So, what were you guys talking about?
    
    BARTLET
    We were talking about these women.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah?
    
    LEO
    We can’t get over these women.
    
    BARTLET
    Look at C.J.
    
    We see a glimpse of C.J. laughing and talking to Sam and Donna, while holding a 
    Polaroid.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    She’s like a fifties movie star, so capable, so loving and energetic.
    
    LEO
    Look at Mandy over there.
    
    Mandy, on the other side of the room is fighting with Toby about something.
    
    LEO [cont.]
    Going punch for punch with Toby in a world that tells women to sit down and shut up. 
    Mandy’s already won her battle with the President. The game’s over, but she’s not 
    done. She wants Toby.
    
    BARTLET
    Mrs. Landingham.
    
    Mrs. Landingham is having fun while talking to some staffers.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    Did you guys know she lost two sons in Vietnam? What would make her want to serve her 
    country is beyond me, but in 14 years, she’s not missed a day’s work, not one. [beat]
    There’s Cathy, Donna, and Margaret.
    
    JOSH
    Mr. President, there’s something that’s been bothering me for most of the day, and 
    while I know that this is an inappropriate time...
    
    LEO
    No, what’s on your mind, Josh?
    
    JOSH
    I serve at the pleasure of the President, and it’s a great privilege that I will 
    never forget. [takes out the card from his wallet, a card that has bothered him for 
    the whole day. He shows it to Leo and the President.] I can’t keep this. I think 
    it’s a white flag of surrender. I want to be a comfort to my friends in tragedy. 
    And I want to be able to celebrate with them in triumph. And for all the times in 
    between, I just want to be able to look them in the eye. Leo, it’s not for me. I 
    want to be with my friends, my family, and these women.
    
    Bartlet pats Josh on the back. From the other side, we see Zoey and Charlie come 
    in the room. Charlie signals the President that the chili is done. Bartlet starts 
    to silence the room.
    
    BARTLET
    Uh, excuse me! Thank you. Uh, friends, please... Well, chili’s ready and I hope 
    you all enjoy it. In fact, since I told you you would enjoy it, I’m reasonably 
    certain that you will. 
    
    Laughter.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    You know, of course, the first lady’s in Pakistan. [starts to walk around the room]
    I’m not entirely sure why, but I have learned it’s a pretty good idea not to ask my 
    wife too many questions as it seldom leads to anything but further confusion. I miss 
    her very much, but I’m delighted our beautiful daughter, Zoey is here. You know, 
    she’s starting Georgetown in the spring.
    
    Everyone claps their hand for Zoey.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    This, prior to medical school and a life of celibacy.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, right!
    
    BARTLET
    It’s an incredible adventure you’re starting on, sweetheart. An amazing four years 
    full of people and experiences you haven’t yet dreamed of. And if you will allow me 
    just one minute of business, please. I hope that by the time we’re done with our 
    four years here, we’ll have seen to it that every young person who chooses can go 
    to college and beyond, regardless of their economic status.
    
    Applause.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    I understand that today was another one of Leo’s “big block of cheese” days!
    You all start out so cynical, but it never fails. By the end of the day, there’s 
    always one or two converts, right? And today was no exception. C.J. Cregg is gonna 
    be up all night writing a position paper for the interior department on the 
    necessity of wildlife protection. [C.J. laughs.] C.J., I don’t mind the cost of 
    this wolves-only highway. It’s the segregation. The ACLU is gonna file a petition 
    on behalf of some reindeer and then we’re all screwed.
    
    Everyone laughs.
    
    BARTLET [cont.]
    Sam Seaborn had a guy who spotted a UFO today, am I right? Sam laughed him out of 
    his office, but you’ve been thinking about it ever since. But you can rest assured, 
    Sam. It was not a spaceship from another planet, just another time. A long since 
    abandoned Soviet satellite, one of its booster rockets didn’t fire and it couldn’t 
    escape the earth’s orbit--a sad reminder of a time when two powerful nations 
    challenged each other and then boldly raced into outer space. [beat]
    What will be the next thing that challenges us, Toby? [looks at Toby] That makes 
    us work harder and go farther? You know, when smallpox was eradicated, it was 
    considered the single greatest humanitarian achievement of this century. Surely, 
    we can do it again. As we did in the time when our eyes looked towards the heavens, 
    and with outstretched fingers, we touched the face of God. [beat] Here’s to absent 
    friends, and the ones that are here now. [holds up his glass of wine]
    
    STAFF
    Cheers!
    
    Everyone in the room hold up their glasses in unison.
    
    DISSOLVE TO: END CREDITS.
    FADE TO BLACK.
    
    THE END
    * * *
    
    
    

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