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  • THE WEST WING 06
    The West Wing Scripts/Season 1 2008. 10. 31. 09:03

    THE WEST WING
    “MR. WILLIS OF OHIO”
    WRITTEN BY: AARON SORKIN
    DIRECTED BY: CHRISTOPHER MISIANO
    
    
    TEASER
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE - LEO’S OFFICE - NIGHT
    
    Bartlet and his staff are gathered around a table, playing poker. C.J. is dealing 
    the cards.
    
    C.J.
    Nine, no help. Jack, no help. Eight, possible flush. King, possible flush. Ace, no 
    help. Six, possible straight. Dave of love for the dealer. Ace bets.
    
    MANDY
    Check.
    
    SAM
    Check.
    
    C.J.
    Check.
    
    LEO
    Check.
    
    JOSH
    Check.
    
    TOBY
    [pause] Check.
    
    There’s a long silence.
    
    C.J.
    Mr. President?
    
    BARTLET
    There is one fruit...
    
    The President’s staff groans.
    
    TOBY
    Oh please...
    
    BARTLET
    There is one fruit...
    
    TOBY
    Mr. President, check or bet sir. Those are your choices.
    
    BARTLET
    There is one fruit...
    
    JOSH
    Or you should feel free to give us a quiz on inane trivia.
    
    BARTLET
    There is one fruit whose seeds are on the outside. Name it please.
    
    C.J.
    Is it the kumquat?
    
    BARTLET
    No.
    
    Everyone laughs.
    
    TOBY
    Check or bet sir?
    
    BARTLET
    I bet five.
    
    MANDY
    Call.
    
    SAM
    See it.
    
    C.J.
    Fold.
    
    LEO
    See it.
    
    JOSH
    Call.
    
    TOBY
    I see it. And I raise you five.
    
    EVERYONE
    Oooh...
    
    LEO
    Trouble...
    
    C.J.
    Mr. President?
    
    BARTLET
    It’s the strawberry.
    
    EVERYONE
    Ah.
    
    MANDY
    Oh right.
    
    TOBY
    Well, thank you sir. I just raised your bet.
    
    BARTLET
    Yes you did Toby, and I thought it was a bold move when you consider that Leo’s 
    holding the six you’re looking for.
    
    TOBY
    Do you call the raise sir?
    
    BARTLET
    That depends...
    
    JOSH
    Depends on what?
    
    BARTLET
    There are fourteen punctuation marks in Standard English grammar. Can anyone name 
    them please?
    
    C.J.
    Period.
    
    JOSH
    Comma.
    
    MANDY
    Colon
    
    SAM
    Semi-colon.
    
    JOSH
    Dash.
    
    SAM
    Hyphen.
    
    LEO
    Ah... apostrophe.
    
    BARTLET
    That’s only seven. There are seven more.
    
    TOBY
    Question mark, exclamation point, quotation marks, brackets, parentheses, braces 
    and ellipses.
    
    C.J.
    Ooh.
    
    JOSH
    Wow!
    
    TOBY
    Do you call the raise sir?
    
    BARTLET
    There are three words, and three words only in the English language that begin with 
    the letters DW.
    
    JOSH
    This is a pretty good illustration of why we get nothing done.
    
    All laugh.
    
    BARTLET
    Can anyone name them for me please?
    
    SAM
    Three words that begin with DW?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    Dwindle.
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Dwarf.
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    Everyone mumbles out different words.
    
    TOBY
    [to Sam] C’mon Princeton. We’ve got dwindle, we’ve got dwarf. 
    
    BARTLET
    I see you five and raise you five by the way.
    
    TOBY
    Dwarf... dwindle.
    
    LEO
    Fold.
    
    JOSH
    Fold.
    
    C.J.
    Last card down.
    
    BARTLET
    “Witches brew a magic spell, in an enchanted forest where fairies...”
    
    TOBY
    Dwell! Dwell, dwell! Dwindle, dwarf and dwell!
    
    BARTLET
    Well, the answer’s correct but let’s check with our judges and -- oh no, I’m sorry, 
    time’s expired.
    
    TOBY
    What? What time?
    
    BARTLET
    My time.
    
    JOSH
    You have your own time?
    
    Everyone laughs.
    
    TOBY
    I call.
    
    BARTLET
    Trip nines.
    
    EVERYONE
    Ooh...
    
    TOBY
    Take your money sir. You’d dwell to report that to the I.R.S., report you as I will.
    
    LEO
    All right, I’m done. I’m gonna head home.
    
    BARTLET
    Kiss Jenny for me.
    
    LEO
    Yeah, I will.
    
    The staff begins to leave.
    
    JOSH
    Sam, I’m going back to the office, they’ve got the commerce report ready for me. 
    What are you doing?
    
    SAM
    I was gonna go home.
    
    JOSH
    Sam, I’m going back to the office, they’ve got the commerce report ready for me. 
    What are you doing?
    
    SAM
    I’m going to go back to your office with you and make sure you understand the 
    commerce report.
    
    JOSH
    Thank you.
    
    SAM
    When I get through with you you’re gonna know everything there is to know about 
    standard data versus sampling data in the census.
    
    Bartlet and Leo walk into THE OVAL OFFICE. Charlie is seated on the couch.
    
    BARTLET
    Charlie, I’m headed over to the residence, you’re done for the night.
    
    CHARLIE
    Thank you sir. I’m gonna stay a bit to do some paperwork.
    
    BARTLET
    Don’t stay up too late son.
    
    C.J.
    [to Mandy as they walk in] How’d you do?
    
    MANDY
    84 bucks.
    
    C.J.
    Most of that’s mine.
    
    A door closes somewhere...
    
    MANDY
    What’s that?
    
    Suddenly several Secret Service Agents burst into THE OVAL OFFICE.
    
    AGENT
    Excuse me Mr. President. I’m sorry the building’s not secure. Would everyone stay 
    in the room please?
    
    Sam and Josh are let in by another agent. 
    
    JOSH
    This is happening way too often.
    
    LEO
    It’s pledge week at the fraternities. The kids hop the fence.
    
    AGENT
    Would you mind stepping away from the doors and windows please?
    
    JOSH
    This whole room is doors and windows.
    
    LEO
    Josh.
    
    JOSH
    I’m cooperating. I’m cooperating.
    
    AGENT
    This will be under control in just a minute, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    All right. [long pause] What body of water in South America is formed by the 
    confluence...?
    
    TOBY
    Excuse me Wink Martindale? Do you really think this is the time?
    
    BARTLET
    Not quite up on your South American geography are you my friend?
    
    AGENT
    We’re clear.
    
    BARTLET
    Saved by the bell.
    
    MANDY
    This is exactly the kind of thing that didn’t used to happen at my old job.
    
    SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
    END TEASER
    * * *
    
    ACT ONE
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE - DAY
    Toby walks in. Cathy and Bonnie are in their desks.
    
    TOBY
    Cathy, I need a copy of Article 1, Section 2.
    
    CATHY
    Article 1, Section 2 of what?
    
    TOBY
    The Constitution.
    
    CATHY
    Is that something I’m supposed to have at my desk? 
    
    TOBY
    Does anybody have a copy of the Constitution? [No one responds.] This is discouraging.
    
    CATHY
    Bonnie, would you get Toby a copy of the Constitution?
    
    BONNIE
    Is it still in print?
    
    TOBY
    Oh for crying out loud! Try Amazon.COM. If they don’t have it then just bust into 
    the glass display case at the National Archives!
    
    C.J.
    [comes up from behind] You shouldn’t yell.
    
    TOBY
    Is it still in print, is what my staff would like to know.
    
    C.J.
    I’m here to see Sam.
    
    TOBY
    Go ahead.
    
    C.J.
    It’s not a big deal, I’m just, you know, here to see him about something.
    
    TOBY
    What do I care?
    
    C.J.
    Absolutely no reason that you should.
    
    TOBY
    Okay.
    
    Toby walks into his office as C.J. walks into SAM'S OFFICE. Sam is busy talking 
    on the phone.
    
    SAM
    [into phone] ...And the President’s committed to vetoing any Commerce Bill that 
    prohibits sampling data as a legitimate component of the 2000 Census, and I’m not 
    saber rattling Jill, I’m just giving you a preview of what you’re gonna get later 
    with Toby. Yeah. I’ll see you then. [hangs up and sees C.J.] Hey.
    
    C.J.
    Hey. That was all great... what you just said there. 
    
    SAM
    What’d I just say?
    
    C.J.
    Not so much what you said, but the way you said it. 
    
    SAM
    The census has to be taken seriously.
    
    C.J.
    Tell me about it.
    
    SAM
    You know... It’s not glamorous, but you know.
    
    C.J.
    Sure.
    
    SAM
    You need something?
    
    C.J.
    Did you get a haircut?
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    You look good today.
    
    SAM
    Thank you. You too.
    
    C.J.
    New suit?
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    You look good.
    
    SAM
    What do you need C.J.?
    
    The two start walking from the office to the HALLWAY. 
    
    C.J.
    A tutor.
    
    SAM
    A tutor?
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    What for?
    
    C.J.
    Sam, I read my briefing book last night on the commerce bill regarding the census 
    and there are certain parts of it I don’t understand.
    
    SAM
    I can help you out. Which parts?
    
    C.J.
    Well... all of it.
    
    SAM
    All of it?
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    You don’t understand the census?
    
    C.J.
    I don’t understand certain nuances.
    
    SAM
    Like what?
    
    C.J.
    Like, the census.
    
    SAM
    C.J., we’ve been working on this commerce bill for three weeks, I hear you talk 
    about the census all the time.
    
    C.J.
    Yeah. Yeah.
    
    SAM
    Well...I don’t understand. How could you-?
    
    C.J.
    I’ve been faking it.
    
    SAM
    You’ve been faking it?
    
    C.J.
    I’ve been playing it fast and loose there’s no doubt about it, but sitting in on 
    some of the meetings we’ve been having, and reading the briefing book last night, 
    I have to say that the census is starting to sound to me like it’s, well, important.
    
    SAM
    Ah-ha.
    
    C.J.
    And, I’ve come to the realization that if I’m gonna be talking about it all week, 
    it’s probably best that I understand what I’m saying.
    
    SAM
    When?
    
    C.J.
    When what?
    
    SAM
    When did you come to this realization?
    
    C.J.
    About an hour ago.
    
    SAM
    Okay. Let’s... I tell you what, let’s forget the fact that you’re coming a little 
    late to the party and embrace the fact that you showed up at all.
    
    C.J.
    That’s what I say.
    
    SAM
    Let’s try it at lunch.
    
    C.J.
    Thank you.
    
    SAM
    You’ve been faking it?
    
    C.J.
    Yes.
    
    SAM
    To the President?
    
    C.J.
    I know. I probably shouldn’t do that.
    
    SAM
    You think?
    
    C.J.
    I’ll see you at lunch.
    
    CUT TO: INT. JOSH’S BULLPEN AREA - DAY
    Josh is standing at a file cabinet. Donna comes up from behind him.
    
    DONNA
    Hi.
    
    JOSH
    Hi. [starts walking, Donna following]
    
    DONNA
    Can I ask you a question?
    
    JOSH
    About what?
    
    DONNA
    The budget surplus.
    
    JOSH
    Go ahead.
    
    DONNA
    There’s a 30 billion dollar budget surplus.
    
    JOSH
    It’ll actually shake out to about 32 billion.
    
    DONNA
    Whatever.
    
    JOSH
    Well, you know what they say?
    
    DONNA
    What do they say?
    
    JOSH
    A billion dollars here, a billion dollars there. Sooner or later it starts to add 
    up to real money.
    
    DONNA
    That’s a nifty saying Josh.
    
    JOSH
    I didn’t coin it or anything.
    
    DONNA
    We have a 32 billion dollar surplus for the first time in three decades.
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    Republicans in Congress want to use this money for tax relief right?
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    Essentially what they’re saying is, they wanna give back the money.
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    Why don’t we wanna give back the money?
    
    JOSH
    ‘Cause we’re Democrats.
    
    DONNA
    But it’s not the government’s money!
    
    JOSH
    Sure it is. It’s right there in our bank account. 
    
    DONNA
    That’s only because we collected more money than we ended up needing.
    
    JOSH
    Isn’t it great?
    
    DONNA
    I want my money back.
    
    JOSH
    Sorry.
    
    DONNA
    We’re not done with this.
    
    JOSH
    I didn’t think so.
    
    Josh and Donna enter LEO’S OFFICE. Toby, Cathy, Mandy, Sam and Leo are gathered 
    there. They are reading the Appropriations Bill. 
    
    LEO
    Twelve million dollars to establish an Appalachian transportation institute. 1.5 
    million to study parking facilities at commercial truck stops. Three million dollars 
    to produce a documentary on highway infrastructure. These are just some of today’s 
    additions to the Appropriations Bill. And that’s just in the area of transportation.
    
    MANDY
    Two million dollars for a volcano monitor in Alaska to warn passing airplanes about ash?
    
    LEO
    By the way, the FAA doesn’t know what that is!
    
    TOBY
    550,000 dollars for New York State to restore the home of Susan B. Anthony.
    
    JOSH
    While we’re at it, the tile in my shower could use re-grouting.
    
    MANDY
    Could somebody please remind me what’s in this for us?
    
    TOBY
    Power zones, US rail, and Federal funding for 100,000 new public school teachers.
    
    MANDY
    Thank you.
    
    LEO
    How’s this working?
    
    MANDY
    We have a meeting with Gladman and Skinner, and they represent two of the three swing 
    votes on the Commerce Committee. 
    
    LEO
    Swing votes in terms of the census?
    
    MANDY
    Yes. And if they agree to drop the sampling prohibition, the Appropriations Bill 
    could pass without a problem.
    
    LEO
    Who’s the third?
    
    MANDY
    The third?
    
    LEO
    You said three swing votes... Gladman, Skinner...
    
    TOBY
    Janice Willis’ husband.
    
    LEO
    Right.
    
    TOBY
    Presumably he’s gonna do what he’s told.
    
    MANDY
    We’re fine.
    
    LEO
    You sure?
    
    TOBY
    Tomorrow’s the start of a three-day weekend and 435 congressmen want to make their 
    flights home in the morning.
    
    LEO
    You think that’ll do it?
    
    TOBY
    Oh, I know that’ll do it.
    
    LEO
    What time’s the meeting?
    
    TOBY
    11 o’clock.
    
    LEO
    Just don’t do anything to screw up or in any way embarrass me okay?
    
    JOSH
    Leo. Knute Rockne. Sometimes I get them mixed up. 
    
    LEO
    Go.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE OVAL OFFICE - DAY
    Bartlet and the head of the Secret Service, RON BUTTERFIELD, are seated on the couch.
    
    RON BUTTERFIELD
    If they hop the fence, they’re going to jail. What they do once we get to them is 
    what’s gonna determine for how long.
    
    BARTLET
    What tripped the alarm?
    
    RON
    Well, there are alarms in the ground. [pointing to a map on the coffee table]
    Here, here, here here, here, here, and here. She tripped it here.
    
    BARTLET
    She?
    
    RON
    Yes sir.
    
    BARTLET
    It wasn’t a fraternity stunt?
    
    RON
    No sir. It was a mentally unbalanced woman in her forties.
    
    BARTLET
    Well, you know, just trying to kill me isn’t necessarily evidence of being mentally 
    unbalanced!
    
    RON
    Sir, it appears from her statement...you weren’t the target.
    
    BARTLET
    I wasn’t?
    
    RON
    No sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Who was?
    
    RON
    Your daughter.
    
    BARTLET
    Zoey?
    
    RON
    Yes sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Leo.
    
    LEO
    [enters] Good morning Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    You know Ron Butterfield?
    
    LEO
    Sure.
    
    BARTLET
    He says it was a woman!
    
    LEO
    We spoke last night.
    
    RON
    We’re still reviewing the frame-by-frame, Leo. 
    
    LEO
    I’ll get a report first thing?
    
    RON
    Yes sir. Mr. President, if I could excuse myself to the outer office I could make 
    a call and see...
    
    BARTLET
    Of course. [to Leo] This woman was after Zoey?
    
    Ron leaves.
    
    LEO
    There were eight security checks between where the woman was and Zoey’s bedroom.
    
    BARTLET
    There’s no need for Zoey to know about this right? 
    
    LEO
    No.
    
    BARTLET
    What do you need?
    
    LEO
    This may be the wrong time Mr. President, but I wanted to speak to you about...
    As the game was breaking up last night, you mentioned I should say hello to Jenny.
    
    Ron Butterfield walks back into the room.
    
    BARTLET
    Hang on a second. What’ve you got Ron?
    
    RON
    You’ll be happy to know our security system worked exactly the way our security 
    system’s supposed to work.
    
    BARTLET
    Well, I guess that’s something.
    
    RON
    Yes sir.
    
    LEO
    You’ll send the full report?
    
    RON
    About two hours.
    
    BARTLET
    [to Leo] You were saying?
    
    LEO
    It can wait.
    
    BARTLET
    You sure?
    
    LEO
    Yeah. Good seeing you Ron.
    
    RON
    Thank you.
    
    LEO
    I’ll see you in an hour sir.
    
    BARTLET
    [to Leo] All right, thanks. [to Butterfield] I guess we’re done too.
    
    Leo leaves.
    
    RON
    I wouldn’t lose a lot of sleep over it sir. 
    
    BARTLET
    No, no.
    
    RON
    Good seeing you Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    You too. [pause] Ron?
    
    RON
    Yes sir?
    
    BARTLET
    Did she have a gun?
    
    RON
    Yes sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Okay. Thank you.
    
    Ron Butterfield leaves.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    Mandy and Josh are seated inside pouring coffee. Congressmen GLADMAN, SKINNER and 
    JOE WILLIS walk in.
    
    GLADMAN
    Josh, good to see you.
    
    JOSH
    Congressman.
    
    SKINNER
    Morning.
    
    JOSH
    Morning.
    
    GLADMAN
    Mandy, if I’d known you were going to be here I would have brought my sword and shield.
    
    MANDY
    Champagne and flowers would’ve done the trick.
    
    GLADMAN
    Have you met Joe Willis?
    
    JOSH
    No, we haven’t.
    
    WILLIS
    My wife was Janice Willis.
    
    JOSH
    I know.
    
    WILLIS
    She passed away last month, so I’ve taken over her seat in Congress.
    
    MANDY
    Yes sir, we know. We’re so sorry for your loss.
    
    WILLIS
    The White House sent flowers and the President wrote a very beautiful note. I wonder 
    if you could pass along my thanks. 
    
    JOSH
    We sure will, congressman.
    
    WILLIS
    Please, no, I’m not a congressman. I teach 8th grade social studies. This is only 
    temporary so...
    
    Toby enters with entourage. Cathy and two other staffers are with him. They have 
    with them a bunch of copies of the Appropriations Bill.
    
    TOBY
    Morning. Everyone got fruit. Everyone got bagels. Good, good. Christopher, Anthony, 
    would you mind putting my copy of the Appropriations Bill on the table please. 
    Thank you Christopher, thank you Anthony, and thank you Cathy. Gentlemen, why don’t 
    we take our seats? Congressman Skinner, welcome. Congressman Gladman, always good 
    to have you here, sir. Congressman Willis, I was a great fan of your late wife.
    
    WILLIS
    Thank you.
    
    TOBY
    This represents the latest draft of the House Appropriations Bill. It is 7,000 pages 
    long, and weighs over 55 pounds. It includes 1.2 million dollars for a lettuce 
    geneticist in Salinas, California and 1.7 million dollars for manure handling in 
    Starkville, Mississippi.
    
    GLADMAN
    Toby, you know that’s what happens.
    
    TOBY
    Eight states will divide 5 million dollars to research the uses of wood.
    
    SKINNER
    Yeah we saw that one!
    
    TOBY
    I’m thinking of some uses for it right now.
    
    GLADMAN
    I thought we were here to talk about the census? 
    
    JOSH
    We are. The White House just wanted to take this opportunity to point out that you’re 
    criminals and despots.
    
    GLADMAN
    Thank you.
    
    JOSH
    No problem.
    
    GLADMAN
    But that’s not going to stop the President from signing the bill into law?
    
    JOSH
    No, sadly it won’t. What will stop the President from signing the bill is the amendment 
    your committee is offering on the census.
    
    MANDY
    The three of you represent the swing vote on the Commerce Committee. You drop the 
    census amendment and the Appropriations Bill goes through without a hitch. Insist on 
    the law prohibiting sampling and you can count on a long floor fight followed by an 
    almost certain veto.
    
    TOBY
    I would like to emphasize the long floor fight of it all, and remind you that I have 
    absolutely no conscience when it comes to exploiting the fact that you have non-
    refundable airline tickets for the weekend. With that in mind...
    
    WILLIS
    Ah excuse me.
    
    TOBY
    Yes sir?
    
    WILLIS
    I’m not leaving town.
    
    TOBY
    I’m sorry?
    
    WILLIS
    I’m not leaving town this weekend. I was gonna stay and see some of Janice’s friends. 
    So, there’s no need to rush on my account. You can take as much time as you like.
    
    TOBY
    [long pause] Good, then. Let’s talk.
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - DAY
    C.J. and Sam are walking towards her office.
    
    C.J.
    And you’re gonna go slowly right?
    
    SAM
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Pretend for the purposes of this conversation that I’m dumb.
    
    SAM
    Let me try to conjure an image of you as a stupid person.
    
    C.J.
    You’re cracking wise. I’m coming to you exposed and vulnerable.
    
    SAM
    This is your office. I’m coming to you.
    
    C.J.
    I meant symbolically.
    
    SAM
    Ah.
    
    They enter C.J.’S OFFICE and both sit.
    
    C.J.
    I’m a person saying there’s something I do not know, will you teach me. It’s hard 
    to admit you don’t know something. That makes me submissive.
    
    SAM
    What is it exactly that you’re asking me to do?
    
    C.J.
    I’m admitting to you that there are things I do not know.
    
    SAM
    And I’m telling you that I don’t think anybody would have any trouble imagining that 
    there are things you do not know.
    
    C.J.
    Explain it to me.
    
    SAM
    The Constitution mandates that every ten years we count everybody.
    
    C.J.
    Why?
    
    SAM
    Because representation at the various levels of the government, federal, state and 
    municipal, is based on population. The only way to find out how many congressmen 
    California gets is to count the people in California. Got it?
    
    C.J.
    Can I just say that if the briefing book had been written that clearly, I would have 
    easily understood?
    
    SAM
    We’re not through yet.
    
    C.J.
    Okay.
    
    SAM
    The decennial census has always been done by a door-to-door head count. Some 950,000 
    professionals are hired. The process costs approximately 6.9 billion dollars. The 
    process is also very inaccurate. It tends to be significantly disadvantageous to 
    inner city populations, recent immigrant populations, and of course the homeless.
    
    C.J.
    You are a very good teacher, Sam. I want you to know that in this...
    
    SAM
    Your time of vulnerability?
    
    C.J.
    Yes. I appreciate it.
    
    SAM
    We’re not done yet.
    
    C.J.
    Okay.
    
    CUT TO: INT. LEO’S OFFICE - DAY
    Leo walks in to find Mallory there.
    
    LEO
    Oh! Hey, baby!
    
    MALLORY
    Hi, Daddy. [embraces him]
    
    LEO
    Can you stay long?
    
    MALLORY
    No. I just wanted to bring you some stuff from home.
    
    LEO
    Oh, you didn’t have to do that.
    
    MALLORY
    I wanted you to have some stuff that you like. 
    
    LEO
    I’m really fine Mal.
    
    MALLORY
    You’re okay at the hotel?
    
    LEO
    I wanted Mom to have the house.
    
    MALLORY
    But you’re gonna look for a place right? I can help you out on the weekends.
    
    LEO
    Mallory, this thing with your mother and me... it’ll blow over.
    
    MALLORY
    No, it won’t Dad. You understand that right?
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    Toby, Josh, Mandy, and the three congressmen are still discussing the census.
    
    MANDY
    This is a one-time experiment.
    
    GLADMAN
    This is a purely partisan issue Mandy. The Democrats want to win back the house!
    
    MANDY
    I’m not gonna deny that there’s something for us to gain.
    
    Donna comes in and whispers something to Josh.
    
    SKINNER
    No, no, no. It’s like you lost the battle but now you want to win. 
    
    Skinner’s voice fades out as Donna and Josh leave the room to the HALLWAY. Donna 
    and Josh begin another walk and talk.
    
    JOSH
    Did he say what it was about?
    
    DONNA
    No. What’s wrong with me getting my money back?
    
    JOSH
    You won’t spend it right.
    
    DONNA
    What do you mean?
    
    JOSH
    Let’s say your cut of the surplus is $700. I want to take your money, combine it 
    with everyone else’s money and use it to pay down the debt and further endow social 
    security. What do you want to do with it?
    
    DONNA
    Buy a DVD player.
    
    JOSH
    See?
    
    DONNA
    But my $700 is helping to employ the people who manufacture and sell DVD players, 
    not to mention the people who manufacture and sell DVDs. It’s the natural evolution 
    of the market economy.
    
    JOSH
    The problem is, the DVD player you buy might be made in Japan.
    
    DONNA
    I’ll buy an American one.
    
    JOSH
    We don’t trust you.
    
    DONNA
    Why not?
    
    JOSH
    We’re Democrats.
    
    DONNA
    I want my money back!
    
    JOSH
    You shouldn’t have voted for us.
    
    Donna walks away, and Josh walks inside the OUTER OVAL OFFICE. He sees Charlie and
    Mrs. Landingham.
    
    JOSH
    Hey Charlie.
    
    CHARLIE
    What’s up Josh?
    
    JOSH
    Mrs. Landingham, I got a message he needed to see me? 
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Yeah, go on in.
    
    Josh walks into THE OVAL OFFICE. Several people are in the room. 
    Bartlet is on the phone. 
    
    BARTLET
    [to the phone] Yes. Yes. Of course. [to Josh] I’m on a conference call with the 
    postmaster general.
    
    JOSH
    What’s it about?
    
    BARTLET
    I honestly couldn’t tell you.
    
    JOSH
    Ah.
    
    BARTLET
    Look, I want you to do me a favor.
    
    JOSH
    Of course.
    
    BARTLET
    Take Charlie out for a beer tonight.
    
    JOSH
    Take him out for a beer?
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah. The kid has no life. You’re the only guy around here he knows at all. Take him 
    out for a couple of beers, you guys come back, we’ll all watch the vote in Leo’s office.
    
    JOSH
    Sure.
    
    BARTLET
    Good, thanks. Let me give you some cash.
    
    JOSH
    No sir, I don’t need-
    
    BARTLET
    [puts hand in pocket] Don’t be silly.
    
    JOSH
    I have money Mr. President. I’m fine.
    
    BARTLET
    You sure?
    
    JOSH
    Yes sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Truth be known, I don’t have any cash on me.
    
    JOSH
    It’s fine.
    
    BARTLET
    I don’t carry cash anymore. I don’t carry keys either.
    
    JOSH
    Well, I wouldn’t think you’d need them sir.
    
    BARTLET
    How’s it going in there?
    
    JOSH
    We’ll see.
    
    BARTLET
    I appreciate it.
    
    JOSH
    Yes sir. [walks back out to the OUTER OVAL OFFICE and turns to Charlie] Charlie?
    
    CHARLIE
    Yes?
    
    JOSH
    You got plans tonight?
    
    CHARLIE
    No.
    
    JOSH
    You don’t have to sit with your sister?
    
    CHARLIE
    She’s having a sleepover at a girlfriend’s. What do you want me to do?
    
    JOSH
    Have a beer with me.
    
    CHARLIE
    What do you mean?
    
    JOSH
    Tonight. We’ll go to a bar in Georgetown. We’ll speak as men do.
    
    CHARLIE
    We will?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    CHARLIE
    Um... What kind of bar is this Josh?
    
    JOSH
    No... It’s fine.
    
    CHARLIE
    Okay.
    
    JOSH
    Great.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Josh, aren’t you a little old to be leering at college coeds?
    
    JOSH
    I’m a Fulbright scholar Mrs. Landingham. I don’t leer. Also, there’ll be plenty of 
    grad students there.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Oh well. Good then.
    
    JOSH
    So I’ll come get you?
    
    CHARLIE
    Okay.
    
    JOSH
    Great.
    
    Josh walks out into the HALLWAY. Mallory and Zoey come up from behind.
    
    ZOEY
    Josh!
    
    JOSH
    Hey.
    
    MALLORY
    Hey.
    
    ZOEY
    Take us with you.
    
    JOSH
    Where?
    
    MALLORY
    Out tonight.
    
    ZOEY
    Your plans with Charlie.
    
    JOSH
    How do you know I’m going out with Charlie?
    
    ZOEY
    My Dad just told us.
    
    MALLORY
    He said you should take us with you.
    
    JOSH
    The man is like a camp counselor.
    
    MALLORY
    Take us with you, Josh. Take us with you.
    
    JOSH
    Nope.
    
    ZOEY
    Why?
    
    JOSH
    These are plans among men.
    
    MALLORY
    We don’t care if you flirt with the coeds.
    
    JOSH
    There’s gonna be grad students there, can we keep that in mind?
    
    ZOEY
    Sounded kinda like an order Josh?
    
    JOSH
    Fine.
    
    MALLORY
    Bring Sam Seaborn.
    
    JOSH
    Sam’s got enough going on in his life right now without you making a booty call.
    
    MALLORY
    I’m not making a booty call. We had an interesting conversation that got interrupted, 
    and I’d like to finish it with him.
    
    JOSH
    Whatever.
    
    ZOEY
    This is gonna be fun.
    
    Mallory and Zoey leave when Josh reaches his office.
    
    JOSH
    The President’s daughter, Chief of Staff’s daughter, a Georgetown bar and Sam. 
    What could possibly go wrong? [walks in]
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT TWO
    * * *
    
    ACT THREE
    
    FADE IN: INT. BRIEFING ROOM - DAY
    
    C.J. and Sam are alone in the press briefing room.
    
    C.J.
    What’s the problem with a straight head count?
    
    SAM
    Head counts have proven staggeringly inaccurate.
    
    C.J.
    Why?
    
    SAM
    How’re you gonna count the homeless? There’s a large and growing population of 
    people who don’t speak English. And there are plenty of people, particularly in 
    the inner city, who don’t want to answer questions when you knock on their door. 
    Plus it’s always been hard. Sampling, statisticians have told us, is a much more 
    effective way of getting a good census.
    
    C.J.
    And what’s the legal argument?
    
    SAM
    The legal argument is it’s unconstitutional. The legal argument is it’s law.
    
    C.J.
    But if sampling’s really against the law, why would congress be trying to pass 
    legislation saying sampling’s against the law?
    
    SAM
    You see how good it feels to understand what you’re talking about?
    
    C.J.
    And you see I’m able to do it without being patronizing?
    
    SAM
    What happened to “You look good today?”
    
    C.J.
    I got over it.
    
    JOSH
    [comes in] Sam?
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    JOSH
    I’m taking Charlie for a beer tonight before the vote. Zoey and Mallory are coming.
    
    SAM
    Sounds good.
    
    C.J.
    I like beer.
    
    JOSH
    If you want to come... I guess that’d be okay.
    
    C.J.
    Why, Josh, you’ve swept me off my feet.
    
    JOSH
    Whatever. I’ll see you later. [leaves]
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - DAY
    Toby, Mandy, Gladman, Skinner and Willis are still discussing the amendment.
    
    MANDY
    In the last census, 8 million people, mostly black, weren’t counted. And in the 
    same census, 4 million people, mostly white, were counted twice.
    
    TOBY
    Sampling will give a count that bears a much greater relationship to reality and 
    will do it to the tune of 4 billion dollars less than a door-to-door head count.
    
    MANDY
    Sampling will cost 2.7 billion. And an inaccurate head count will cost 6.9.
    
    TOBY
    Every single expert, including the census bureau itself, which is a bipartisan 
    commission, has said sampling is better. 
    
    GLADMAN
    We’ve heard these arguments many times, but in this country we have a constitution.
    
    TOBY
    We are aware of that.
    
    SKINNER
    The Constitution’s very clear on this.
    
    TOBY
    I don’t think it is.
    
    SKINNER
    Until a court rules that sampling is Constitutional-
    
    TOBY
    The article is arcane.
    
    SKINNER
    Come on, Toby. The article is not arcane.
    
    TOBY
    Let’s take a look at it.
    
    SKINNER
    No. No. We don’t have time-
    
    TOBY
    Let’s take a look at it!
    
    GLADMAN
    Toby! None of us is a Constitutional scholar. And we honestly don’t-
    
    MANDY
    It’s not gonna take long!
    
    TOBY
    My staff managed to unearth a copy.
    
    SKINNER
    Toby, come on, we’ve been here for six-
    
    TOBY
    Mandy, would you read please from Article 1 Section 2?
    
    GLADMAN
    This is silly!
    
    TOBY
    Still, in all it is the owner’s manual and we should read what it has to say!
    
    MANDY
    [reading] “Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several 
    states, which may be included within this union according to their respective numbers. 
    Which shall be determined by adding the whole number of persons including those bound 
    to service for a term of years.”
    
    SKINNER
    Well you said it right there. It says which shall be determined by the whole number 
    of persons. The whole number of persons! Not the end of an equation that some 
    statistician got off a computer. It says so right there!
    
    TOBY
    Actually that’s not what it says.
    
    SKINNER
    What do you mean?
    
    TOBY
    Mandy left out a few words. Didn’t she Mr. Willis? 
    
    WILLIS
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Mr. Willis teaches 8th grade social studies, and Mr. Willis knows very well what the 
    article says. It says which shall be determined by adding the whole number of free 
    persons. And three fifths of all other persons. Three fifths of all other persons. 
    They meant you Mr. Willis. Didn’t they?
    
    WILLIS
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    Mr. Willis, you are asking to enact a law, which will limit the ability of those 
    people who need to be counted the most, to be counted as people at all. And they’re 
    only refuge is the argument that Article 1, Section 2 is not arcane.
    
    GLADMAN
    Well, I think we’re through here. I can report back to the Chairman of my committee, 
    but I really don’t think either he or the leadership is going to allow any one of us 
    to change our vote.
    
    TOBY
    Congressman, you are talking about tying up an Appropriations Bill-
    
    SKINNER
    We don’t need you to tell us what we’re talking about, Toby. And waiting until the 
    11th hour to call this...
    
    MANDY
    Excuse me! What is this, the 4th time we’ve arranged this meeting? And by the way 
    it’s not...
    
    WILLIS
    I will.
    
    TOBY
    What sir?
    
    WILLIS
    I think we should drop it.
    
    GLADMAN
    Joe?
    
    WILLIS
    That’s my choice right?
    
    SKINNER
    Joe, Joe...The chairman of our committee recommends that we-
    
    WILLIS
    No. I saw what he recommended, and I appreciate his help. But it’s still my choice,
    right?
    
    TOBY
    Absolutely sir. It is your choice.
    
    WILLIS
    Well, then I change my mind. I think we should drop the census amendment and let the 
    Appropriations Bill go through as is.
    
    GLADMAN
    Joe...
    
    WILLIS
    Until a court rules on whether sampling is constitutional.
    
    MANDY
    Well... then... excellent.
    
    SKINNER
    Well, looks like you snuck one in the back door eh, Toby?
    
    TOBY
    It got through whatever door was open to me.
    
    GLADMAN
    Well, we’re gonna have to revisit this.
    
    MANDY
    Yes.
    
    GLADMAN
    Mr. Willis, do you need any help to find your way out?
    
    WILLIS
    No thank you. I think I can manage.
    
    TOBY
    Thank you gentlemen. Have a good weekend.
    
    Gladman and Skinner leave.
    
    MANDY
    [to Willis] Thank you.
    
    TOBY
    [to Mandy] Go tell Leo. 
    
    Mandy leaves.
    
    TOBY
    Mr. Willis?
    
    WILLIS
    You can call me Joe.
    
    TOBY
    If you don’t mind me asking sir, what changed your mind?
    
    WILLIS
    What do you mean?
    
    TOBY
    Well, I know it wasn’t expediency sir. I was wondering what changed your mind?
    
    WILLIS
    You did. I thought you made a very strong argument. 
    
    TOBY
    Well thank you. [laughs] I’m smiling because, well, around here the merits of a 
    particular argument generally take a back seat to political tactics.
    
    WILLIS
    I can imagine.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    WILLIS
    It worked on me.
    
    TOBY
    I was taking advantage of you sir.
    
    WILLIS
    I know.
    
    TOBY
    There are some things I did not mention. First of all, it is partisan. Second of all, 
    I’m not wild about the precedent. 
    
    WILLIS
    You mean?
    
    TOBY
    What’s to stop us from saying we don’t need elections, we’ll just use polling data. 
    1150 people with the sampling error of plus or minus three will decide who runs the 
    country.
    
    WILLIS
    I thought about that.
    
    TOBY
    And?
    
    WILLIS
    It’s okay by me. As long as it’s not the same people who decide what’s on television. 
    Toby, I’m not nearly as smart as my wife was. I went to night school cause I went to 
    work pretty young. And I tried to understand the things Janice brought home from the 
    office, but I wasn’t in her league. I never understood what she wanted with a dummy 
    like me. [pause] I think the problems that we’re going to face in the new century 
    are far beyond the Wisdom of Solomon, let alone me. But I think the right place to 
    start is to say - fair is fair. This is who we are. These are our numbers.
    
    TOBY
    I’m sorry I never got to know your wife sir.
    
    WILLIS
    She would have liked you.
    
    TOBY
    Thank you. Thank you.
    
    WILLIS
    I’ve got a roll call.
    
    TOBY
    Nothing to it. They call your name, you vote yea. 
    
    WILLIS
    Well, this is my first, and likely my only vote in the House of Representatives.
    
    TOBY
    Well good luck congressman.
    
    WILLIS
    Thank you.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE OVAL OFFICE - NIGHT
    Bartlet is getting ready to leave for the residence. Mrs. Landingham and Nancy are 
    helping him.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    You wanted to read these with dinner. 
    
    BARTLET
    Thanks.
    
    NANCY
    Would you like the Tokyo Exchange sent to your bedroom?
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah. Sure.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    And the call from the secretary?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes?
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Would you like it during the dining room? 
    
    BARTLET
    I’ll take the call wherever I am when he calls, I guess.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    There’s no need to adopt a tone Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    I’m not adopting a tone. I’m just trying to get out of here.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Would there be anything else sir?
    
    BARTLET
    I’m saying no. I just want to go home.
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    And there’s that tone again.
    
    LEO
    [walks in] Mr. President?
    
    MRS. LANDINGHAM
    Goodnight, sir. [exits]
    
    BARTLET
    Goodnight Mrs. Landingham. [to Leo] I heard it’s done?
    
    LEO
    Yeah. Commerce will leave the census amendment in committee. Appropriations will 
    pass, no problem.
    
    BARTLET
    Good. I’m headed over to the residence.
    
    LEO
    I needed to speak to you about something.
    
    BARTLET
    Sure.
    
    LEO
    I should have told you earlier but... I moved out of the house. Jenny’s asking me 
    for a divorce.
    
    BARTLET
    You’re kidding me?
    
    LEO
    No.
    
    BARTLET
    Leo, you’re kidding me?!
    
    LEO
    No!
    
    BARTLET
    What happened?
    
    LEO
    Nothing happened, Mr. President. It’s just one of those...
    
    BARTLET
    Don’t tell me nothing happened, Leo. I know you. I know Jenny. Married couples 
    like you don’t just get divorced. Not cause nothing happened!
    
    LEO
    Nothing happened! It’s not like that.
    
    BARTLET
    I want to talk to Jenny.
    
    LEO
    Feel free.
    
    BARTLET
    I don’t understand how this happened Leo. You and Jenny were happy!
    
    LEO
    Jenny was not happy.
    
    BARTLET
    Because you weren’t spending enough time with her? 
    
    LEO
    Yes, but that’s not the...
    
    BARTLET
    Marriage needs attention Leo. It can’t run on autopilot. Come on. It’s not your 
    prom date we’re talking about here. We’re talking about your family!
    
    LEO
    Well, Mr. President thank you for pointing that out. I tried to squeeze in as much 
    time as I could between my wine-tasting club and running your White House.
    
    BARTLET
    You can’t blame this on me.
    
    LEO
    I’m not blaming you for it sir. I’m not blaming anyone for it. It just happened, 
    these things happen.
    
    BARTLET
    When did it happen?
    
    LEO
    Two weeks ago.
    
    BARTLET
    And you’re just now telling me?
    
    LEO
    Honestly, I know how you feel about Jenny. I thought you’d think that somehow you 
    were responsible for it, and you’d turn that guilt into an inappropriate anger 
    toward me, which frankly, I can live without right now. [under his breath]
    I can’t imagine what made me think all that...
    
    BARTLET
    [walks over to the door] Fix this, Leo.
    
    LEO
    It’s not as simple as that.
    
    BARTLET
    It IS as simple as that. You’re the man. Fix it. 
    
    LEO
    Mr. President...
    
    BARTLET
    Fix it.
    
    LEO
    [angrily] Goodnight sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Goodnight Leo.
    
    Bartlet opens the door and heads toward the residence. Leo just stares at him and 
    stands still.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT THREE
    * * *
    
    ACT FOUR
    
    FADE IN: INT. GEORGETOWN BAR - NIGHT
    C.J., Sam, Josh, Zoey, Charlie and Mallory are gathered around a table at a bar. 
    There’s a lot of people around.
    
    MALLORY
    [to Sam] So, your friend couldn’t come tonight? 
    
    SAM
    My friend, of course you’re talking about...?
    
    MALLORY
    Your special friend.
    
    JOSH
    Sam does she know...?
    
    SAM
    My special friend.
    
    C.J.
    What special friend?
    
    JOSH
    [to C.J.] His special friend that Zoey can’t know about. 
    
    ZOEY
    The hooker!
    
    SAM
    [pause] Okay...She’s not a hooker. She’s a call girl. And how do you know about this?
    
    ZOEY
    Mallory told me.
    
    C.J.
    How does Mallory know about that?
    
    SAM
    I told her.
    
    C.J.
    You told our boss’ daughter that you slept with a call girl?
    
    SAM
    I didn’t know she was Leo’s daughter at the time. I thought she was a schoolteacher 
    who came in with her class.
    
    JOSH
    So you thought you were telling a complete stranger that you slept with a call girl?
    
    SAM
    [quickly] Accidentally slept with a call girl. Mallory, does your father know?
    
    MALLORY
    No.
    
    SAM
    Zoey, does your father know?
    
    ZOEY
    Not yet.
    
    SAM
    So this is gonna be a thing!
    
    MALLORY
    Zoey and I have decided that it’s time we start collecting IOU’s.
    
    SAM
    Ah...
    
    The waitress places some drinks on the table.
    
    C.J.
    She didn’t bring my grasshopper.
    
    JOSH
    She didn’t?
    
    C.J.
    No.
    
    JOSH
    Maybe she just felt really stupid ordering it.
    
    C.J.
    The grasshopper is a perfectly respectable...
    
    ZOEY
    [standing] I’ll get it.
    
    C.J.
    I’ll get it.
    
    ZOEY
    [quickly] I want to see them make it. [to Josh] Could you hold these?
    
    JOSH
    What?
    
    ZOEY
    Just lipstick and stuff. My panic button. Ruins the line of my outfit.
    
    JOSH
    Got it.
    
    ZOEY
    It’s called a grasshopper?
    
    C.J.
    Straight up.
    
    JOSH
    Make sure they make it extra thick and green.
    
    Zoey walks to the bar.
    
    CHARLIE
    What is a panic button?
    
    MALLORY
    Oh, you don’t want to know. I’ve seen it in action.
    
    C.J.
    The President is a very protective father.
    
    JOSH
    [to Charlie] So, you having a good time tonight?
    
    CHARLIE
    Yeah. I appreciate it.
    
    JOSH
    Seems like you’re not really having a good time.
    
    C.J.
    He’s having a good time!
    
    JOSH
    Well...
    
    CHARLIE
    Do you think they know I don’t go to college?
    
    MALLORY
    Who?
    
    CHARLIE
    All these people.
    
    C.J.
    Charlie, you’re twice as smart as anyone in the room. 
    
    CHARLIE
    Yeah, but I don’t go to college.
    
    JOSH
    Relax!
    
    C.J.
    See, you keep telling him to relax with this sense of urgency...
    
    JOSH
    I just want to make sure he’s having a good time tonight.
    
    C.J.
    He’s having a good time! You relax!
    
    JOSH
    I’m not being urgent.
    
    Meanwhile... Zoey is at the bar when three guys come up behind her, basically 
    surrounding her.
    
    GUY 1
    Hey.
    
    ZOEY
    Hey.
    
    GUY 1
    Hi. Um...What’s your name?
    
    ZOEY
    What?
    
    GUY 1
    I said what’s your name?
    
    ZOEY
    You’re kidding right?
    
    GUY 3
    Hey, he’s just asking for your name.
    
    ZOEY
    I’m...
    
    GUY 1
    Wait. Wait. Why don’t we guess your name? All right? 
    
    ZOEY
    Sure.
    
    GUY 2
    All right, all right. Cause I bet we can guess it.
    
    Back at the table...
    
    JOSH
    I wouldn’t say that there was urgency in my voice. I was simply asking if he was 
    having a good time, and suggesting that if he relaxed...
    
    C.J.
    Well, maybe if you stopped pestering him like you were his great Aunt Ida...
    
    CHARLIE
    Excuse me one second. [stands and walks to the bar]
    
    C.J.
    Do you see what I’m saying?
    
    Back at the bar...
    
    ZOEY
    It’s Cassandra!
    
    GUYS
    Cassandra! We were gonna guess. You ruined it.
    
    CHARLIE
    [coming up] Is everything all right, Zoey?
    
    GUY 2
    Hey. He just called her Zoey.
    
    CHARLIE
    Come on, let’s go back to the table.
    
    GUY 1
    Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. What’s up Sammy?
    
    CHARLIE
    Zoey?
    
    Zoey moves towards Charlie and the guys block her.
    
    GUY 1
    Excuse me. Excuse me. We’re just trying to buy the girl a drink man.
    
    CHARLIE
    She’s 19 years old man. You’d have to take her to Maryland.
    
    GUY 3
    Check out super fly.
    
    ZOEY
    Hey!
    
    CHARLIE
    Let’s go.
    
    GUY 1
    No. Why don’t you go? Alright?
    
    CHARLIE
    Look guys. You don’t know who this is. You don’t want any trouble. Just be cool 
    alright?
    
    GUY 1
    Be cool.
    
    CHARLIE
    Yeah. I’m just saying, I’m looking out for you. 
    
    GUY 1
    I understand what you’re saying. You just want me to be cool alright?
    
    CHARLIE
    Can I buy you guys a round?
    
    GUY 3
    Like LL Cool J man, like Ice Tea.
    
    GUY 2
    Ice cube, Ice tray man.
    
    Back at the table...
    
    JOSH
    Why must you mock a perfectly natural brotherly instinct...?
    
    C.J.
    I’m not mocking it Josh, I’m saying maybe if you left the young man alone...
    
    Sam has been watching the bar and suddenly heads for it. 
    
    C.J.
    [standing] Josh?
    
    JOSH
    [standing] I know. [picks up the panic button and heads towards the bar]
    
    GUY 1
    Why don’t you do some of that hip-hop for us G-Funk? 
    
    GUY 2
    Dr. Huffy Puffy dread man, Dr Dolittle Man?
    
    CHARLIE
    Would you let us by please?
    
    GUY 1
    No. What are you doing here with this girl? Huh? Huh? Cause you know what, to me 
    you look to be Dr. Faggot!
    
    SAM
    [coming up from behind] Hey! What the hell is going on around here?
    
    GUY 1
    Who the hell are you?
    
    SAM
    Kiss my ass. Zoey?
    
    ZOEY
    I’m fine.
    
    GUY 1
    Kiss your what fairy poppins?
    
    SAM
    Charlie?
    
    CHARLIE
    Everything’s fine.
    
    GUY 1
    Hey, you want to go?
    
    SAM
    What?
    
    GUY 1
    You want to go? Let’s do it. Right now. Come on.
    
    JOSH
    [coming up from behind Charlie] How’s everybody doin’?
    
    GUY 1
    Oh good, more fairy boys.
    
    JOSH
    Excuse me?
    
    GUY 1
    I said, more fairy boys.
    
    JOSH
    Oh, this is too good to be true.
    
    Mallory and C.J. come up behind Josh and Sam.
    
    GUY 2
    [indicating Josh] Hey, I recognize this guy. 
    [indicating Zoey] And she looks familiar too.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. You guys don’t realize it, but you’re having a pretty bad night.
    
    GUY 1
    Oh really, and who’s gonna give it to us huh?
    
    AGENT
    Federal Agents!
    
    As Secret Service Agents pour through the door, Josh and Sam raise their arms and 
    point at the three guys near the bar.
    
    SAM and JOSH
    Right here!
    
    The agents push the three guys against the bar as another agent ushers Zoey out.
    
    AGENT
    Shut up! I swear to God I’ll blow your head off. Everybody stand back.
    
    GUY 1
    [to Charlie] Hey, I ain’t done with you Sammy.
    
    CHARLIE
    My name is Charlie Young, jackass. And if that bulge in your pocket’s an 8-ball, 
    you’ll blow your splendid Spring Break in a Federal Prison.
    
    The agents take the guys out of the bar.
    
    CHARLIE
    [to Josh] NOW I’m having a good time.
    
    JOSH
    [tossing the panic button in the air] Well, my work here is done.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE MURAL ROOM - NIGHT
    Zoey is sitting on a couch in the White House. Bartlet is standing.
    
    BARTLET
    What happened?
    
    ZOEY
    They told you what happened.
    
    BARTLET
    Did you do anything at all to provoke these guys? 
    
    ZOEY
    Like what?
    
    BARTLET
    Were you flirting with them?
    
    ZOEY
    Dad!
    
    BARTLET
    Zoey, you flirt with guys.
    
    ZOEY
    Yes Dad, I am 19 years old. I was not flirting with these guys. And even if I was 
    it certainly wasn’t justification for their behavior.
    
    BARTLET
    So what were you doing?
    
    ZOEY
    I went to the bar to get a drink.
    
    BARTLET
    What the hell were you doing drinking?
    
    ZOEY
    I was getting a drink for C.J.!
    
    BARTLET
    I’m gonna up your protection.
    
    ZOEY
    No.
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    ZOEY
    Dad?!
    
    BARTLET
    Starting tomorrow.
    
    ZOEY
    I’m starting college in a month!
    
    BARTLET
    Well you’ll have plenty of friends to walk you to class.
    
    ZOEY
    I don’t want this Dad.
    
    BARTLET
    Zoey!
    
    ZOEY
    We talked about this. I’m entitled to this part of my life.
    
    BARTLET
    You’re getting this part of your life.
    
    ZOEY
    I’m entitled to a normal...
    
    BARTLET
    Oh please.
    
    ZOEY
    Don’t “oh please” me.
    
    BARTLET
    Look, the Secret Service...
    
    ZOEY
    The Secret Service should worry about you getting shot.
    
    BARTLET
    They are worried about me getting shot. I’m worried about me getting shot. But that 
    is nothing compared to how terrified we are of you. You scare the hell out of the 
    Secret Service Zoey, and you scare the hell out of me too. My getting killed would 
    be bad enough, but that is not the nightmare scenario. The nightmare scenario, 
    sweetheart, is YOU getting kidnapped. You go out to a bar or a party in some club, 
    and you get up to go to the restroom, somebody comes up from behind, puts their 
    hand across your mouth, and whisks you out the back door. You’re so petrified, you 
    don’t even notice the bodies of two secret service agents lying on the ground with 
    bullet holes in their heads. Then you’re whisked away in a car. It’s a big party 
    with lots of noise, and lots of people coming and going. And It’s a half hour 
    before someone says, “Hey where’s Zoey?” Another 15 minutes before the first phone 
    call. Another hour and a half before anyone even THINKS to shut down all the 
    airports. Now we’re off to the races. You’re tied to a chair in a cargo shack, 
    somewhere in the middle of Uganda. And I’m told that I have 72 hours to get Israel 
    to free 460 terrorist prisoners. So I’m on the phone pleading with Benjamin and 
    he’s saying, “I’m sorry Mr. President, but Israel simply does not negotiate with 
    terrorists, period. It’s the only way we can survive.” So now we’ve got a new 
    problem, because this country no longer has a commander in chief, it has a father 
    who’s out of his mind because his little girl is in a shack somewhere in Uganda 
    with a gun to her head. DO YOU GET IT?!
    
    ZOEY
    Yes.
    
    BARTLET
    [long pause] I’m sorry I yelled sweetheart. Forgive me. Honey, I want you to have 
    your freedom and your youth. I want you to have common everyday experiences with 
    girls your own age. But don’t ever forget - this is a privilege, and it is an 
    experience that must be cherished beyond measure. And proper protection and 
    security, though at times I admit, it’s a drag, is never too high a price to pay.
    
    ZOEY
    You’re right, I’m sorry.
    
    BARTLET
    It’s alright sweetheart. It’s alright.
    
    They embrace. Bartlet kisses Zoey’s forehead.
    
    ZOEY
    Goodnight.
    
    BARTLET
    Goodnight, sweetheart. I love you.
    
    ZOEY
    I love you too.
    
    CUT TO: INT. LEO’S OFFICE - NIGHT
    Leo is sitting on the couch in his office when Bartlet enters.
    
    BARTLET
    Don’t get up!
    
    LEO
    Good evening Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Hi. Before, when I was being an idiot, there was something I forgot to say.
    
    LEO
    What?
    
    BARTLET
    I’m sorry.
    
    LEO
    Thank you.
    
    BARTLET
    I would like unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks.
    
    LEO
    Without objection.
    
    BARTLET
    I don’t know what the hell was the matter with me, Leo. If there’s anything I can 
    do to help, anything?
    
    LEO
    Thanks.
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE ROOSEVELT ROOM - NIGHT
    Josh, Charlie, and Sam are sitting around the table.
    
    JOSH
    Let me tell you something, I could have taken the two guys on the left.
    
    SAM
    Those were my guys.
    
    JOSH
    Which guys?
    
    SAM
    The guys on the left.
    
    JOSH
    The guys on the left as you’re facing the bar?
    
    SAM
    Yeah. No. No. So you’re me, and facing toward the bar? 
    
    JOSH
    Right.
    
    DONNA
    [enters with a box] Sandwiches.
    
    JOSH
    Thank you, Donna. Defending virtue is hungry work.
    
    DONNA
    I’ll be at my desk.
    
    JOSH
    Ah, Donna?
    
    DONNA
    Yes?
    
    JOSH
    How much were the sandwiches?
    
    DONNA
    $12.95.
    
    JOSH
    I gave you a twenty!
    
    DONNA
    Yes. As it turns out you actually gave me more money than I needed to buy what 
    you asked for. However, knowing you as I do, I’m afraid I can’t trust you to spend 
    the change wisely. I’ve decided to invest it for you.
    
    JOSH
    That was nice. That was a little parable.
    
    DONNA
    I want my money back. [leaves]
    
    SAM
    Yeah, so those were my guys.
    
    JOSH
    Okay, there’s the one guy with the blonde hair?
    
    SAM
    Facing away from the bar?
    
    CHARLIE
    There were no two guys that either one of you could have taken.
    
    Josh and Sam look at Charlie. Bartlet opens a door and calls.
    
    BARTLET
    Josh?
    
    JOSH
    Yes sir.
    
    Josh stands and goes into LEO’S OFFICE.
    
    BARTLET
    What were you doing taking my daughter out to a bar? 
    
    JOSH
    [pause] You told me to sir.
    
    BARTLET
    I told you to take Charlie. When Zoey said she was going I just assumed you were 
    gonna go have malteds or something.
    
    JOSH
    Malteds, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes.
    
    JOSH
    What is this? 'Our Town'?
    
    BARTLET
    Well anyway. Thank you for doing whatever it was you did.
    
    JOSH
    As a matter of fact, I didn’t do anything. But for what it’s worth I should tell 
    you that Charlie didn’t blink before he put his body between danger and Zoey.
    
    BARTLET
    [opens the door] Charlie? Sam, you come too please.
    
    BARTLET
    [to Josh] You know, I once played the stage manager in a production of Our Town.
    
    Charlie and Sam enter the office.
    
    BARTLET
    Charlie, you a good poker player?
    
    CHARLIE
    No sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Excellent, get your money out and take a seat.
    
    C.J.
    [enters] Is Josh being punished?
    
    BARTLET
    Punished? No.
    
    C.J.
    May I ask why not?
    
    BARTLET
    Because I said so.
    
    Mandy and Toby enter.
    
    BARTLET
    Good evening.
    
    TOBY and MANDY
    Good evening, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Good work both of you. You bought us some time.
    
    MANDY
    Thank you, sir.
    
    TOBY
    I understand you all had a very interesting evening. 
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    TOBY
    So did I.
    
    JOSH
    What happened?
    
    TOBY
    I met an unusual man.
    
    BARTLET
    C.J., deal the cards.
    
    TOBY
    He didn’t walk into the room with a political agenda. He didn’t walk in with his 
    mind made up. He genuinely wanted to do what he thought was best. He didn’t mind 
    saying the words I don’t know.
    
    C.J.
    I said I don’t know to Sam just this morning and I’d like to say I’m a better person 
    for it. By the way, I now know everything there is to know about the census. Go ahead,
    you can ask me anything.
    
    BARTLET
    How many people live in the United States?
    
    C.J. could not respond.
    
    SAM
    There’s some material we haven’t covered yet.
    
    Everyone is now seated at the table except Toby, who is watching the T.V. in the 
    corner of the office.
    
    JOSH
    Come on, Toby. Sit down.
    
    TOBY
    I just want to watch this.
    
    LEO
    We won it 40 votes ago.
    
    TOBY
    I just want to hear this one.
    
    ROLL CALL [on T.V.]
    Mr. Widen. Mr. Widen of Pennsylvania votes yea... Mr. Wilder. Mr. Wilder of South 
    Carolina votes yea... Mr. Willis. Mr. Willis of Ohio votes yea.
     
    Toby lets out a sigh of relief as the roll call continues.
    
    ROLL CALL [cont.]
    Mr. Zantowski. Mr. Zantowski of....
    
    DISSOLVE TO: END CREDITS.
    FADE TO BLACK.
    THE END
    * * *
    
    
    

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