ABOUT ME

-

Today
-
Yesterday
-
Total
-
  • THE WEST WING 16
    The West Wing Scripts/Season 1 2008. 10. 31. 09:20
    THE WEST WING
    “20 HOURS IN L.A.”
    WRITTEN BY: AARON SORKIN
    DIRECTED BY: ALAN TAYLOR
    
    
    TEASER
    
    FADE IN: EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. - NIGHT
    2:38 A.M. EST
    
    CUT TO: INT. BARTLET’S LIMOUSINE - CONTINUOUS
    Bartlet and Leo are inside the limousine. It’s headed for the airport.
    
    BARTLET
    I don't like putting him in this position.
    
    LEO
    I know.
    
    BARTLET
    I just don't want you to think that I'm getting any pleasure in putting him in this 
    position.
    
    LEO
    Well, he knew the vote was going to be tight.
    
    BARTLET
    It's ironic.
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    BARTLET
    I mean it's ironic that it all comes down to a vote on the ethanol tax credit.
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    BARTLET
    50-50 tie.
    
    LEO
    I understand the irony.
    
    BARTLET
    Are you being brusque with me?
    
    LEO
    It's 3 o'clock in the morning.
    
    BARTLET
    I'm just saying you can't blame me. It's what you get from having an even number 
    of senators.
    
    LEO
    Yeah, you should blame the constitution.
    
    BARTLET
    That's what I usually do.
    
    LEO
    Yep.
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Ron in front]
    Ron, am I going to meet her on the plane?
    
    RON
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Leo]
    Zoey got a new agent on her detail.
    
    LEO
    I heard.
    
    BARTLET
    Have you seen these new agents?
    
    LEO
    I've seen them.
    
    BARTLET
    They've got the hair, the backpacks, the clothes. Walking around campus strapped to a 
    44 magnum.
    
    LEO
    They really blend in, huh?
    
    BARTLET
    Let me tell you something, when it's your kid, you don't want them blending in. You 
    want them wearing a sign that says, "I'm carrying a loaded gun, and the safety's off."
    
    LEO
    [pause] Can I say this one last time?
    
    BARTLET
    No.
    
    LEO
    If you get tired--
    
    BARTLET
    Leo.
    
    LEO
    Stay at the hotel for the night.
    
    BARTLET
    I won't get tired.
    
    LEO
    You're not going to sleep on the plane, you're going to be running around all day, 
    and then you've got the fundraiser to do at night.
    
    BARTLET
    I want to come home after the fundraiser.
    
    LEO
    That's a full day and night. Round trip, D.C. to L.A. in 24 hours. It's really no 
    good for you.
    
    BARTLET
    It'll be fine.
    
    LEO
    [beat] Be that way.
    
    BARTLET
    Your impersonation of my mother is getting sharper and sharper, you know that?
    
    LEO
    Thank you.
    
    CUT TO: INT. ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE - NIGHT
    The limo pulls up to the Air Force One on the tarmac. Bartlet and Leo step out.
    
    LEO
    Have a good flight, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    I'll see you tomorrow. 
    
    He sees C.J. and Charlie, who are walking up to the limo. They join him in walking up 
    the stairs to the plane. 
    
    BARTLET
    C.J.! Charlie! My flying companions!
    
    C.J.
    Good morning, Mr. President.
    
    CHARLIE
    Good morning, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Is everybody on board?
    
    C.J.
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Press in a good mood?
    
    C.J.
    No, Mr. President, I wouldn't say they were.
    
    BARTLET
    Why not?
    
    C.J.
    Well, they're not wild about taking off at 3 0'clock in the morning, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Oh, it's going to be great. We're going to race the sun to the pacific horizon!
    
    C.J.
    I'll be sure to tell them that, sir. I'm sure it'll pick them right up.
    
    CUT TO: INT. AIR FORCE ONE - CONTINUOUS
    Bartlet, followed by C.J. and Charlie, enters Air Force One, walking down the aisle 
    as he talks to people.
    
    BARTLET
    Morning, Everyone. Sam, it's going to be 50-50 on the ethanol tax credit.
    
    SAM
    I can still make a couple of calls.
    
    BARTLET
    Make all the calls you want, it's going to be 50-50.
    
    Josh and Toby join Bartlet as he walks down the aisle.
    
    TOBY
    Sir, Josh and I would at least like the opportunity to talk about the Al Kiefer 
    meeting.
    
    BARTLET
    You two are so freaked out about this Al Kiefer meeting.
    
    JOSH
    Sir.
    
    Bartlet stops and picks up the intercom phone on the wall of the plane.
    
    BARTLET 
    We'll listen to him, Josh.
    
    JOSH
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    You two want to see the best part about having my job? 
    [into the Intercom] Colonel, this is the president. I'm ready to go.
    
    The engines fire up as Bartlet hangs up the phone.
    
    SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
    END TEASER
    * * *
    
    ACT ONE
    
    FADE IN: INT. AIR FORCE ONE - NIGHT
    3:45 AM EST
    C.J. and Donna chat in their seats, camera slowly pans to see Josh, Toby and Sam 
    sitting next and across from them, Josh and Sam hunkered in and eyes shut, but not
    necessarily asleep.
    
    DONNA
    It's fantastic. It's Clinique's city block oil for daily face protector.
    
    C.J.
    SPF-15?
    
    DONNA
    I brought the SPF-15 and the SPF-30.
    
    C.J.
    Have you tried the Lancome high-protection sunstick for face and lips?
    
    DONNA
    No, did you bring it?
    
    C.J.
    Plus the Elizabeth Arden modern skin care daily moisturizer.
    
    TOBY
    The two of you understand that we're going to be in California for one day?
    
    C.J.
    There's tanning time between 2 and 4.
    
    DONNA
    And I have sensitive alabaster skin.
    
    C.J.
    Me too.
    
    JOSH
    Cameron’s going to introduce a bill tomorrow.
    
    SAM 
    [eyes still shut] Gays in the military?
    
    JOSH
    Yup.
    
    C.J.
    It's Cameron. Who cares?
    
    JOSH
    I have a feeling Ted Marcus might care.
    
    SAM
    He's not going to know.
    
    JOSH
    He might.
    
    TOBY
    You've been in the air all night, you don't know anything, you'll get back to him.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Plus, it's Cameron. So, who cares?
    
    JOSH
    Marcus is going to care.
    
    CHARLIE 
    [walking up] C.J., you wanted me to let you know when it looked like he was heading 
    for the cockpit?
    
    C.J.
    Thank you. [getting up] This man has got to be stopped!
    
    CUT TO: INT. AIR FORCE ONE - NIGHT
    Zoey is reading on a couch. Charlie sits down next to her.
    
    CHARLIE
    How you doing?
    
    ZOEY
    Hi.
    
    CHARLIE
    Listen, uh, I don't know if I'm going to be able to be as attentive on this trip as 
    you would like.
    
    ZOEY
    That's okay. You’re working.
    
    CHARLIE
    Well, I've been trying to listen to some of the many lessons you've been giving me on 
    how to be a better boyfriend and I know that attentiveness--
    
    ZOEY
    No, this is one of the times when it's okay.
    
    CHARLIE
    Okay. It's hard to tell the difference between those times and the other times.
    
    ZOEY
    I know. Doesn't that suck for you?
    
    CHARLIE
    A little bit, yeah.
    
    CUT TO: INT. AIR FORCE ONE - NIGHT
    Ron Butterfield is escorting a woman to Bartlet's cabin.
    
    RON
    Don't be nervous.
    
    WOMAN
    Yeah.
    
    Ron knocks on the door.
    
    BARTLET [OS]
    Come on in.
    
    Inside THE PRESIDENT’S ROOM, Bartlet is sitting at his desk as Ron and the woman, 
    Special Agent GINA TOSCANO, enter.
    
    RON
    Mr. President, this is special agent Gina Toscano.
    
    BARTLET 
    [shaking her hand] How do you do?
    
    GINA TOSCANO
    How do you do, Mr. President?
    
    RON
    I'll step out, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Thank you, Ron.
    
    Ron exits.
    
    BARTLET
    [to Gina] I'm sorry we haven't had a chance to meet before now. You've been with 
    Zoey's detail, what?
    
    GINA
    Two weeks today, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    You were in the army?
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    How did you get there?
    
    GINA
    I was Army ROTC.
    
    BARTLET
    Where?
    
    GINA
    University of Virginia.
    
    BARTLET
    You were a Mountaineer.
    
    GINA
    That's West Virginia, Mr. President. I'm a Cavalier.
    
    BARTLET
    With a degree in?
    
    GINA
    Criminology, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    So, you were commissioned a second lieutenant?
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir, with military police.
    
    BARTLET
    How old are you?
    
    GINA
    I'm 27, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    How long have you trained for this assignment?
    
    GINA
    A year and a half, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    What, were you the first one to sign up?
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    All right.
    
    Gina sits down.
    
    BARTLET
    You know Zoey's dating my body man, Charlie Young, right?
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    You know about the letters?
    
    GINA
    Of course, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Are they white supremacists?
    
    GINA
    I can't tell you for sure, Mr. President. We've been working fairly closely with the 
    Southern Poverty Law Center and their database.
    
    BARTLET
    You don't have an artist's sketch, or psychological profiles, or anything?
    
    GINA
    Not much of either one, Mr. President, but I know what I'm looking for in a crowd if 
    that's what you're asking me, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    It is.
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Okay. Zoey's 19 and she wants to be a teenager. She wants a college experience, and 
    I can't blame her. I loved college. So did my other daughters. I want Zoey to be 
    comfortable with her protection, I don't want her to try and give you the slip. It's 
    not your job to tell me she wants to cut English Lit, it's not your job to tell me if 
    she's dying her hair blue, or going to a strip club, or whatever it is she's doing 
    with her friends. You know what your job is.
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    Thank you.
    
    GINA
    [gets up and shakes his hand] Thank you, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Gina?
    
    GINA
    Yes, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    If she's cutting English Lit, I want to know about it.
    
    GINA
    No deal, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    Okay.
    
    Bartlet smiles as Gina exits.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. THE WHITE HOUSE - DAY
    We see a long view of the White House down 17th Street.
    WASHINGTON, D.C.
    6:30 AM EST
    
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
    Larry and Ed are following Leo to his office.
    
    LEO [VO]
    We didn't say it enough.
    
    LARRY
    We agree.
    
    LEO
    Ethanol accounts for 20 percent of Iowa's corn crop.
    
    ED
    Which doesn't mean a lot outside of Iowa. 
    
    LARRY
    But still. 
    
    ED
    The Ethanol tax credit created... 
    
    LARRY
    It created 16,000 new jobs.
    
    LEO
    That's what we never said enough.
    
    LARRY
    We agree. Is it over?
    
    LEO
    Sam's been calling senators from the plane for the past hour and a half. The next time 
    my phone rings, it's going to be him telling me it's over.
    
    ED
    At least we're going to win. 
    
    LEO
    Yeah. 
    
    Margaret enters the LEO'S OFFICE as Larry and Ed exit. 
    
    LEO
    Good morning. 
    
    MARGARET
    Good morning, Leo. You need to sign this. 
    
    LEO 
    [signs] Okay.
    
    MARGARET
    And this. 
    
    LEO 
    [signs] Okay. 
    
    MARGARET
    Where it says your name, Leo. You're not the Belgian Foreign Minister. 
    
    LEO
    Look, I said I was sorry. 
    
    MARGARET
    I'm not upset. 
    
    LEO
    I had to stay behind for this. 
    
    MARGARET
    Of course. 
    
    LEO
    There will be other trips, Margaret. 
    
    MARGARET
    I know. [Leo looks at her] There will be other trips. 
    
    LEO
    Good. 
    
    MARGARET
    Just not to California. 
    
    LEO
    Yes, to California. 
    
    MARGARET
    When? 
    
    LEO
    They've got 54 electoral votes out there. Something tells me that we're not going to 
    be strangers. 
    
    The phone rings. Margaret answers.
    
    MARGARET 
    Leo McGarry's office. [hands the phone to Leo] It's Sam. [heads for the door]
    
    LEO 
    [to Margaret] Get the Vice President over here. [to Sam] Yeah. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. AIR FORCE ONE 
    5:40 AM PST
    In the Press section of Air Force One the reporters are sleeping. C.J. walks up the aisle. 
    
    C.J.
    You guys? Everyone? Sorry, but we're landing in a few minutes, and I just wanted to brief 
    everyone on the President's schedule. The President will be greeted at the airport by 
    Congressmen Hark and Jennsen, the Mayor and various City Council Members. It's photos 
    only, no formal remarks. We will depart the airport at 6:20 and head for the hotel, at 
    which point I predict that we will no longer be on schedule. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. AIRPORT - DAY
    The Air Force One is pulling up on the tarmac. 
    
    C.J. [VO]
    At that time, the President will get his morning security briefing, followed by 2 hours 
    of personal staff time. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. LOS ANGELES AREA - DAY
    The motorcade is making its way down Sepulveda Boulevard. 
    
    C.J. [VO]
    At 10 am, we leave for Orange County, where the President has a meeting with civil leaders 
    to hear discussion on the current proposal to amend the Constitution to prohibit burning 
    the flag. At 3pm, we head out to a church in South Central for a town hall meeting on 
    school vouchers. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE SHERATON HOTEL - DAY
    The press vans are pulling up to the Sheraton Universal. 
    
    C.J. [VO]
    That takes us to tonight and the event you've all been waiting for, the fundraiser at the 
    home of Theodore Marcus. The press will wear coats and ties, and you will stay in the 
    roped-off area outside, unless you've got $50,000 a couple to take a look at the good 
    stuff. Welcome to Los Angeles, where the local time is 5:40 AM, and the temperature is... 
    ooh, a balmy 73 degrees. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. HOTEL HALLWAY - DAY
    Josh is trying to get his door open at the hotel. Donna walks up as he's struggling with 
    his card key. 
    
    DONNA
    Josh. 
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. 
    
    DONNA
    Need any help with your luggage, there? 
    
    JOSH
    No, you're fine. 
    
    Donna arrives with a few small paper slips, while Josh struggles with the door handle. 
    
    DONNA
    There were messages for you at the desk. 
    
    JOSH
    I've spent half the nights in my life in hotel rooms, and I still cannot... 
    
    DONNA
    Dave Levy. 
    
    JOSH
    Later. You sure this isn't for your room? 
    
    DONNA
    It's for your room. Mandy? 
    
    JOSH
    Ugh, later. You sure? 
    
    DONNA
    It's for your room. The deputy whip? 
    
    JOSH
    Later. You know, there used to be keys... 
    
    DONNA
    Hold on. [takes the card from him and sticks it in the door.] 
    
    JOSH
    You stuck it in, you turned it, you... 
    
    Donna opens the door easily.
    
    JOSH
    I loosened it for you. 
    
    Inside the HOTEL ROOM, Josh gets settled in. 
    
    DONNA
    Ron Dreyfuss from political affairs. 
    
    JOSH
    Later. 
    
    DONNA
    Joey Lucas. 
    
    JOSH
    Really? 
    
    DONNA
    Yeah. 
    
    JOSH
    She called? 
    
    DONNA
    Yes. 
    
    JOSH
    She's here. 
    
    DONNA
    In this hotel. 
    
    JOSH
    She's here in this hotel. 
    
    DONNA
    Yes. She's at the fundraiser tonight. 
    
    JOSH
    Really. 
    
    DONNA
    Yes. 
    
    JOSH
    Why did she call? 
    
    DONNA
    To tell you that she's here in this hotel and she's coming to the fundraiser tonight. 
    
    JOSH
    Really. 
    
    DONNA
    Yes. 
    
    JOSH
    Huh. 
    
    DONNA
    Josh, you've got a crush on Joey Lucas, and I really think you should do something about 
    it, because you're starting to bother me. 
    
    JOSH
    Well, that's something I really care about. 
    
    DONNA
    Call her right now. 
    
    JOSH
    I'll see her tonight. 
    
    DONNA
    Gather ye rosebuds while ye may, Josh. Do you know what that means? It means you should 
    take this time to gather rosebuds, because later on you might not be able to. 
    
    JOSH
    Interpreting the classics with Poet Laureate Donnatella Moss. 
    
    DONNA
    I'm just saying, call her and stop bugging me. 
    
    JOSH
    So, let's call her.
    
    DONNA
    Really?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. Let's do it. Call her, and then we'll do everyone else. 
    
    DONNA
    I have alabaster skin, you know. 
    
    JOSH
    Dial the phone. 
    
    DONNA
    I'm just saying. Also, Ted Marcus called. 
    
    JOSH
    What? 
    
    DONNA
    Ted Marcus called. 
    
    JOSH
    Hang on. [beat] I'd better call him first. 
    
    FADE OUT. 
    END ACT ONE
    * * *
    
    ACT TWO
    
    FADE IN: EXT. TED MARCUS' MANSION - DAY
    8:05 AM, PST
    A taxi pulls up to a large mansion in Bel Air. Josh gets out the taxi as TED MARCUS 
    walks down the long flight of stairs and exits the house to greet him. 
    
    JOSH
    Good morning. You beat me to the door. 
    
    Josh extends his hand. MARCUS ignores it, and turns to go back into the house. Josh 
    follows him, looking around in wonder. 
    
    TED MARCUS
    Cameron introduced his resolution on the floor this morning. 
    
    JOSH
    I didn't know that. 
    
    MARCUS
    House Resolution 973. 
    
    JOSH
    This is a beautiful house. 
    
    MARCUS
    Banning gays in the military. 
    
    JOSH
    I've been on a plane all night. 
    
    MARCUS
    He introduced it on the floor this morning.
    
    JOSH
    Seriously, Studio Chairman -- nice work if you can get it. 
    
    MARCUS
    Josh, let's not talk about my house.
    
    JOSH
    What do you want to talk about? 
    
    MARCUS
    What do I want to talk about? 
    
    JOSH
    Ted, I checked into my hotel room 15 minutes ago, what did you haul my ass out here for? 
    
    MARCUS
    I think you'd better watch your general tone with me, I'm sending you home tomorrow with 
    two and a half million dollars. 
    
    They reach the back of the house, where workers are preparing for the evening fundraiser.
    
    JOSH
    Cameron's bill is a joke.
    
    MARCUS
    Not to me. 
    
    JOSH
    It's the House. It's procedure. Do you know how many bills get introduced every day that 
    never get a hearing, let alone a vote? 
    
    MARCUS
    That's it? 
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. 
    
    MARCUS
    You came to me with that? 
    
    JOSH
    I came to you because you told me to, now I've got a cab waiting outside... 
    
    MARCUS
    Yeah, you're right. 
    
    JOSH
    Don't worry about it. 
    
    MARCUS
    I'm being silly. 
    
    JOSH
    You're worried about nothing. I'll see you later. The President's looking forward to 
    the party this evening. 
    
    MARCUS
    Excellent. 
    
    Josh turns to leave.
    
    MARCUS
    [to workers] Fellas, you can pack it up, the party's off. 
    
    JOSH
    Ted. Ted? 
    
    MARCUS
    Everybody, Carmine, I'm afraid it's not going to happen. 
    
    CARMINE
    The food, the flowers? 
    
    MARCUS
    Give 'em out to the guys. 
    
    JOSH
    You're a rotten bluffer, Ted. 
    
    MARCUS
    You're right, that's why I never do it. 
    
    JOSH
    You're not going to cancel the fundraiser. 
    
    MARCUS
    In fact, I already did. 
    
    JOSH
    This is the President. 
    
    MARCUS
    The President is going to be eating room service tonight. 
    
    JOSH
    Ted. 
    
    MARCUS
    You've got a cab waiting. 
    
    JOSH
    That was abrupt. I apologize. 
    
    MARCUS
    Your apology is accepted. 
    
    JOSH
    You can't cancel the fundraiser. 
    
    MARCUS
    Yet, witness the loading of the trucks. 
    
    JOSH
    This is ridiculous. You're going to be a joke to our people. 
    
    MARCUS
    Disrespected by the Democratic Party? Whatever will I do? 
    
    JOSH
    Ted. 
    
    MARCUS
    Particularly with my 3 billion dollars. 
    
    JOSH
    Ted, no one is going to pass a bill banning gays in the military. And if the House ever 
    passed such a bill, if the Senate every passed such a bill, the President would never 
    sign such a bill. 
    
    MARCUS
    Fantastic. 
    
    JOSH
    Okay? 
    
    MARCUS
    Fantabulous. 
    
    JOSH
    So, you're not going to flake on me. 
    
    MARCUS
    We're fine. 
    
    JOSH
    So, the party's still on? 
    
    MARCUS
    You bet. 
    
    JOSH
    Good. 
    
    MARCUS
    As soon as I hear the President say what you just said to me. 
    
    JOSH
    Look-- 
    
    MARCUS
    Give me a call and let me know what time I should be tuned to my television to hear 
    him say what you just said. 
    
    JOSH
    That's not going to happen, and you know it. 
    
    MARCUS
    Then we've got a problem. Don't screw around with me, Josh. I've been President a lot 
    longer than he has. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE - LEO'S OFFICE - DAY
    Leo is in his office, looking over papers. Margaret enters. 
    
    MARGARET
    Leo. 
    
    LEO
    Yeah. 
    
    MARGARET
    The Vice President. 
    
    HOYNES
    [enters] Morning, Leo. 
    
    LEO
    Good morning, Mr. Vice President. 
    
    HOYNES
    Still 50-50, huh? 
    
    LEO
    That's the way it's going to stay. 
    
    HOYNES
    Did you talk to Huntington? 
    
    LEO
    We talked to Huntington. We talked to Gianelli. We talked to Kelly, and Martinson, 
    and Rathburn. 
    
    HOYNES
    Recently? 
    
    LEO
    This morning. Nobody's moving. 
    
    HOYNES
    Well, it kind of looked like it was going to turn out that way. 
    
    LEO
    Not to me. I was surprised. 
    
    HOYNES
    Well, I was in the Senate with 94 of these guys. 
    
    LEO
    Anyway. 
    
    HOYNES
    Yeah. 
    
    LEO
    The President needs you to go down there and fulfill one of your two constitutional 
    responsibilities and vote for the ethanol tax credit. We need you to break the tie. 
    He also wanted me to tell you that he regrets putting you in this position. 
    
    HOYNES
    You got to get me off the hook, Leo. You can't ask me to do this. 
    
    LEO
    John, I know exactly how you feel. 
    
    HOYNES
    No, Leo, I don't think you do. 
    
    LEO
    I know... 
    
    HOYNES
    I spent 8 years in the Senate voting against this exact tax credit. I was right, by the 
    way, and I'm still right, but the point is... 
    
    LEO
    16,000 new jobs. 4 billion dollars invested in plants and equipment, because the tax 
    credit made it economical. 
    
    HOYNES
    Leo, the ethanol tax credit has accomplished exactly none of its goals. Production is 
    close to nothing. It will never be large enough to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. 
    And it requires substantial energy to produce, which totally washes out any overall 
    conservation effect. 
    
    LEO
    John? 
    
    HOYNES
    But that's not the point. 
    
    LEO
    What's the point? 
    
    HOYNES
    The Republicans will make me eat it for dinner when my time comes. And you know that. 
    So let's get serious. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. A HOTEL CONFERENCE ROOM - DAY
    In a conference room in Orange County, a gray-haired man speaks from the head of the 
    table. They are having the discussion about the flag burning amendment. 
    
    MAN 1
    Mr. President, I rise today to say that the American flag is probably the most recognized 
    symbol in the world. Wherever it stands, it represents freedom. Millions of American 
    citizens, who have served our nation in war, have carried that flag into battle. They 
    have been killed just for wearing it on their uniforms, because it represents the most 
    feared deterrent to tyranny. And that is liberty. 
    
    Bartlet and others clap. 
    
    MAN 2 
    [stands] Mr. President, This is not a perfect nation, but to the world outside, it 
    represents what is right. And to Americans, it represents what Chief Justice Charles 
    Evans Hughes... [Josh, Toby and Sam walk out the door to a courtyard.] ...referred to 
    as our national unity, our national endeavor. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. COURTYARD - CONTINUOUS
    Josh, Toby and Sam stand by the fence. 
    
    JOSH
    I just came from Ted Marcus's. 
    
    TOBY
    What did he want? 
    
    JOSH
    He's threatening to cancel tonight unless the President comes out publicly against 973. 
    
    SAM
    This is one of Cameron's... 
    
    TOBY
    It's not going anywhere. 
    
    JOSH
    I explained that. 
    
    SAM
    And what did he say? 
    
    JOSH
    He takes it seriously for obvious reasons, and he is distressed by the President's silence 
    on the subject, and he feels that it's a betrayal of the gay community for him to be so 
    publicly supportive of the President. 
    
    TOBY
    All right. It is not in the interest of his cause for the President to make a public 
    statement today. It'll give credibility and attention... 
    
    JOSH
    Right. 
    
    SAM
    And use all those words when you talk to him. Tell him that surely a man of his media 
    savvy will understand that the President can't be quite so publicly blackmailed! 
    
    TOBY
    And, should the President choose to stay in his hotel room tonight and not kowtow to the 
    Hollywood blah, blah, blah, it will only serve to solidify his public reputation with the 
    electorate as a man of character. 
    
    SAM
    Frankly, that buys us more than 2 and a half million dollars worth of support, anyway. 
    
    TOBY
    Use those words, and tell him if he goes ahead with the party, he gets 10 minutes alone 
    in a room with the President. 
    
    JOSH
    All right, I can sell that. 
    
    SAM
    Let's go back. 
    
    JOSH
    How's he doing in there? 
    
    SAM
    Oh, he's got that look on his face like he's thinking about ways to kill himself. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. CONFERENCE ROOM - CONTINUOUS
    Bartlet has that exact look on his face as a woman speaks. 
    
    WOMAN
    It is disgraceful that some individuals would desecrate the flag that our nation's 
    veterans fought so valiantly to protect. [More applause as she sits.]
    
    MAN 3
    Mr. President, it is imperative that we enact legal protections... [Charlie walks over 
    to Bartlet and whispers in his ear] ...for our flag, and I rise in strong support for 
    the flag desecration constitutional amendment. 
    
    BARTLET
    I'm sorry. I've actually been told that I have to go now. This is a debate that is 
    obviously going to continue in town halls, city halls, state legislatures, and the U.S. 
    House of Representatives. There is a population in this country that seems to focus so 
    much time and energy into this conversation, so much so that I am forced to ask this 
    question -- is there an epidemic of flag burning going on that I'm not aware of? 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE THE CONFERENCE ROOM - DAY
    Secret Service Agents open the doors as Bartlet and his staff walk outside to the limos. 
    
    BARTLET
    I mean it, man, is there an emergency-level outbreak of flag desecration no one's kept 
    me posted on? 
    
    TOBY
    There is not, so let's blow off the Kiefer meeting. 
    
    BARTLET
    Toby, there is no reason for you to feel threatened by Al Kiefer. 
    
    TOBY
    I don't. 
    
    BARTLET
    Excellent. Because we're doing it over lunch. 
    
    JOSH
    I have to eat with Al Kiefer? 
    
    BARTLET
    Back at the Hotel. 
    
    JOSH
    Sir. 
    
    BARTLET
    Better, yet, Charlie, where is Zoey having lunch? 
    
    CHARLIE
    A place in Santa Monica called the Playa Cantina?
    
    BARTLET
    Why? 
    
    CHARLIE
    She wanted an L.A. experience, Mr. President. 
    
    BARTLET
    That supposed to be a good place, Sam? 
    
    SAM
    Uh, they make guacamole right in front of you. 
    
    BARTLET
    Is that an L.A. experience? 
    
    CHARLIE
    I think she meant the people. 
    
    BARTLET
    Well, there aren't going to be any people today. 
    
    CHARLIE
    Will you be joining her, sir? 
    
    BARTLET
    Sounds like fun, doesn't it? 
    
    CHARLIE
    Sir, wouldn't it be easier back at the hotel? 
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, but the hotel wouldn't make the guacamole right in front of me. 
    
    CHARLIE
    How much do you want to bet they would? 
    
    JOSH
    Sir, I need a minute to talk about Ted Marcus. 
    
    BARTLET
    We can do it in the car. Who's talking to Leo? 
    
    SAM
    He's with the Vice President now, sir. 
    
    BARTLET
    You come in the car, too. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE THE BUILDING - CONTINUOUS
    BARTLET, his staff and his agents come out of the building. Outside are a few screaming, 
    cheering people holding signs. 
    
    TOBY
    Sir, this lunch with Al Kiefer? 
    
    BARTLET 
    [looks at a group across the street] Those people over there don't like me too much. 
    
    JOSH
    Well, they just haven't taken the time to get to know you like we have, sir. 
    
    BARTLET
    You would honestly think there was an epidemic of flag burning going on, endangering 
    countless lives in this country. 
    
    TOBY
    Don't put too much stock in what he has to say. 
    
    BARTLET
    I'm having lunch with my daughter, Toby. You guys are going to sit with Kiefer, and 
    let me know what's worth listening to. 
    
    TOBY
    Yes, sir. 
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Toby] We'll see you there. 
    
    TOBY
    What, I'm not coming in the car? 
    
    BARTLET
    No, and you know why? Because you made fun of the guacamole. 
    
    TOBY
    I didn't! 
    
    BARTLET
    I could tell you were thinking it. 
    
    TOBY
    Fair enough. 
    
    BARTLET
    Good. 
    
    Toby walks away as Bartlet and the others get into the limousine.
    
    FADE OUT. 
    END ACT TWO 
    * * *
    
    ACT THREE
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE PLAYA CANTINA - DAY
    1:20 PM, PST
    The restaurant is empty except for the staff and Secret Service Agents. Sam, Toby, Josh 
    and C.J. sit at one table with AL KIEFER. Bartlet and Zoey sit alone at a table nearby. 
    
    ZOEY
    Dad, I can't believe you did this. 
    
    BARTLET
    Surprised you for lunch, I know, I'm the best. 
    
    ZOEY
    Dad, I wanted to have lunch in Los Angeles-- 
    
    BARTLET
    You are. 
    
    ZOEY
    With people, with L.A. people. I wanted the atmosphere. And they've cleared out the place. 
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, but on the other hand, the guy made guacamole right in front of us. 
    
    ZOEY
    Dad!
    
    BARTLET
    This is father/daughter fun time. 
    
    ZOEY
    I was having fun. And then you come within 100 meters of me, and my protection, like, 
    quadruples. 
    
    BARTLET
    Oh, you know, I hadn't thought about that. [looks around] Now that you mention it, yeah, 
    I think you're right. 
    
    ZOEY
    What, is someone after me in California? 
    
    BARTLET
    All kinds of things in California, Zoey. You've got your smog, your freeway shootings, 
    brush fires, mudslides. Plus, apparently, there's a mad rash of flag burning going on, 
    and you don't want a piece of that. 
    
    ZOEY
    See, you think you're funny. 
    
    BARTLET
    Right there, right in front of me, they made the guacamole. Now, how about that? 
    
    A MOVING SHOT to the table next to them. Al Kiefer speaks.
    
    AL KIEFER
    On the flag burning, the bottom line couldn't be clearer. If he says nothing, he takes 
    a hit, but not a fatal one. If he stands in opposition to the amendment, you can all 
    start updating your resumes. 
    
    SAM
    I don't buy that. 
    
    TOBY
    Me, neither. 
    
    C.J.
    People respect a President who stands by the courage of his convictions. 
    
    JOSH
    Al. 
    
    AL
    You are looking at this exactly the wrong way. You don't have to play defense. You 
    could lead the charge. 
    
    TOBY
    You just said that we couldn't. 
    
    AL
    No, I didn't. 
    
    SAM
    You just said that if we were vocal in our opposition to flag burning, then we'd take 
    a fatal hit. 
    
    AL
    That's right. And I'm saying don't stay quiet, and don't oppose it. Lead the charge 
    the other way. 
    
    C.J. 
    [laughing] What? 
    
    BARTLET
    C.J., has Al said something that I should listen to, yet? 
    
    C.J.
    We'll let you know, sir. 
    
    AL
    Mr. President, do you want to sew up reelection right now? Do you want a lock on your 
    second term right here, right now in this room? 
    
    BARTLET
    What do you got? 
    
    JOSH
    Why do you encourage him? 
    
    BARTLET
    What do you got, Al? 
    
    AL
    A truckload of voters, Mr. President, about 47%. Overwhelmingly white men, pool and 
    patio types. Who voted against you by 20 plus points? [suddenly moves over to Bartlet's 
    table.] They share an affinity towards authority, a President. And they see you as 
    smart and having vision, so why didn't they vote for you? Because they also see you 
    as a wimp. Two-thirds of them on a thermometer place you as some degree of weak. 
    
    JOSH
    We've heard these numbers before. 
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, but I never get tired of hearing them, you know. Especially in front of my 
    daughter. 
    
    AL
    Look, I get that this is not the most popular idea in the room. But I got numbers, 
    and I know numbers, and I trust numbers. And the reason you're all looking a little 
    pale right now is so do you. This is not theoretical. The flag burning amendment 
    made it through the House with 20 votes over the required two-thirds. It hasn't made 
    it through the Senate yet, but that day will come, that day will come, that day will 
    come soon. Laws against flag burning are favored overwhelmingly in the polls, and a 
    constitutional amendment won't be subject to a Presidential veto, or overturning by 
    the Supreme Court. 
    
    TOBY
    Look... 
    
    AL
    This all adds up to one thing, Mr. President. It's over! The game's been played and 
    won. But because of guys like me, you get the results before anyone else does, so you 
    get to pick which side you're on. And not only do we get to be on the winning team, 
    we get to lead the winning team. 
    
    Josh's phone rings. He walks away from the table.
    
    JOSH
    Excuse me. 
    
    AL
    Toby, you're smiling. 
    
    TOBY
    I just figured out who you were.
    
    AL
    He's going to say Satan. 
    
    TOBY
    No. You're the guy that runs into 7-Eleven to get Satan a pack of cigarettes. 
    
    CHARLIE
    Mr. President. 
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah, Charlie. [to the others] We'll talk about this later. [tightens his tie and 
    gets up] 
    
    TOBY
    We will? 
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah. 
    
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE THE PLAYA CANTINA - CONTINUOUS
    Bartlet and his staff are leaving the restaurant, via more screaming, cheering crowds. 
    
    JOSH
    Mr. President. 
    
    BARTLET
    Men with pools and patios think I'm weak. 
    
    JOSH
    I don't want to mention the 49 times we asked you not to take this meeting. 
    
    BARTLET
    Was that Marcus on the phone? 
    
    JOSH
    Speaking of natives, we sold him on 10 minutes in a room alone with you, tonight. 
    
    BARTLET
    No way I can get out of it? 
    
    JOSH
    Ten minutes. 
    
    BARTLET
    I used to like parties, you know that? 
    
    As Bartlet gets in his car, Gina and Zoey are just leaving the restaurant. 
    
    ZOEY
    I just wanted a regular lunch, you know? In a restaurant, with people? My father sees 
    danger behind the curtains. 
    
    Gina spots two skinhead boys watching them. 
    
    GINA
    Hey, Zoey, do me a favor and walk on the other side of me, would you? 
    
    ZOEY
    Gina... 
    
    GINA
    Let's get in the car, okay? 
    
    Gina, one hand on her gun, escorts Zoey into the car, and then knocks on the roof 
    once she's in.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. TED MARCUS'S MANSION - NIGHT
    The fundraiser has started. Secret Service agents with dogs comb the lower lawn, 
    while people party between light strings and flowers. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. INSIDE THE MANSION - CONTINUOUS
    Violinists play at the top of the stairwell. C.J. and Toby are at the bottom. 
    
    C.J.
    Look at this house! 
    
    TOBY
    Yeah. 
    
    C.J.
    I mean, look at this house! 
    
    TOBY
    It's a nice house. 
    
    C.J.
    You know, you haven't said anything about my dress. 
    
    TOBY
    You look very nice. 
    
    C.J.
    You're not even looking. 
    
    TOBY
    I'm looking at the house. 
    
    A Hollywood-type man, MARK MILLER, walks up to them. 
    
    MARK MILLER
    Excuse me, I wanted to introduce myself. I'm Mark Miller. I'm head of new development 
    at Paragon. 
    
    C.J.
    C.J. Cregg. 
    
    TOBY
    Toby Ziegler. 
    
    MARK
    Oh, it's good to meet you both. C.J., I was wondering if my money buys me a few words 
    alone with you. 
    
    TOBY
    Throw in a box of chocolates and a pair of nylons, get you a lot more than that. 
    
    C.J.
    Sure. 
    
    C.J. and Mark start to walk off. 
    
    TOBY
    I'll be over at the bar, drinking a lot, if anyone wants me. 
    
    C.J.
    Nobody will.
    
    Toby holds up his glass as Mark and C.J. walk through the house. 
    
    MARK
    I'll come right out and say it, C.J. I'm a big fan. 
    
    C.J.
    Thank you. 
    
    MARK
    Yeah. And I think that there's a place for you in our company. 
    
    C.J.
    Doing what? 
    
    MARK
    Development. 
    
    C.J.
    Of what? 
    
    MARK
    Development of projects. 
    
    C.J.
    What's that mean? 
    
    MARK
    You'd be developing feature projects. 
    
    C.J.
    Movies. 
    
    MARK
    Yeah. 
    
    C.J.
    You know what? You want Toby or Sam. I'm not a writer. 
    
    MARK
    Oh, no, we have writers. 
    
    C.J.
    Well, I certainly can't direct or act. 
    
    MARK
    No, you'd just be in development. 
    
    C.J.
    And what's that? 
    
    MARK
    Shepherding projects - developing them. 
    
    C.J.
    I thought a guy writes a movie, and a guy directs a movie. 
    
    MARK
    Sure. 
    
    C.J.
    And in between there are designers and technicians and actors. 
    
    MARK
    Yes. 
    
    C.J.
    So, tell me what I do again? 
    
    MARK
    Development. 
    
    C.J.
    Okay. Well, at the moment I have a pretty good job and I understand what it is, so, 
    uh, I sure appreciate... [spots Sam walking past] Sam! [to Mark] I appreciate it, Mark, 
    I'm sorry, I've got to talk to Sam about a thing the President wants me to... [She 
    walks away with Sam.] Pretend you're talking to me. 
    
    SAM
    I am talking to you. 
    
    C.J.
    Walk me outside. 
    
    SAM
    Did he offer you a development...?
    
    C.J.
    Yes! 
    
    SAM
    Me, too. Do you know what it is? 
    
    C.J.
    No. 
    
    SAM
    Me, neither. 
    
    Sam and C.J. move out of camera range as they walk past DAVID HASSELHOFF, talking to 
    Donna and Josh near the pool. 
    
    DAVID HASSELHOFF
    "I think there's a basic bedrock principle behind the first amendment. That the 
    government cannot prohibit the expression of an idea just because it's disagreeable." 
    Justice William Brennan, writing for the majority. 
    
    DONNA
    I'm a real big fan, David, not just a Johnny-come-lately. It's not just Baywatch and 
    Knight Rider with me. 
    
    DAVID
    Well, thank you very much. My point is... 
    
    DONNA
    I mean, Nick Fury, Panic at Malibu Pier, the Cartier Affair. Pleasure Cove, for crying 
    out loud. 
    
    JOSH 
    [dragging Donna away] Excuse us. 
    
    DONNA 
    [to Josh, about David] He's so into me. 
    
    JOSH
    You're frightening the guests. 
    
    DONNA
    David Hasselhoff, I'm just saying. 
    
    JOSH
    He's married. 
    
    DONNA
    This is California, Josh. A girl can dream. 
    
    JOSH 
    [taking her glass] Stop drinking now. 
    
    DONNA
    Matt Perry, right there, goodbye. [wanders off.]
    
    CUT TO: INT. TED MARCUS'S MANSION - NIGHT
    Josh is waking along the pool, amidst the people, as a man calls him from behind. 
    
    MAN
    Josh! 
    
    JOSH
    I know that voice. 
    
    Josh turns around to see Joey and her interpreter, Kenny. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    How long was it going to take for you to say hello to me? 
    
    JOSH
    I got your phone message this morning, but I've been kind of running around. I didn't 
    see you until now. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I saw you. 
    
    JOSH
    Well, then you should have said hello to me. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    You looked like you were absorbed in high-level conversations. 
    
    JOSH
    I can assure you, I was not. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    Well, then. 
    
    JOSH
    Well then, what? 
    
    JOEY
    Hello? 
    
    JOSH
    Hello! [chuckles] Look, uh, we're just here for the day... 
    
    TOBY 
    [walking past] Josh! 
    
    JOSH
    Uh, yeah. [to Joey] Can you not, uh, not, uh, just don't leave the party, okay? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    Okay. 
    
    Josh gives her a thumbs up, and follows Toby.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. - NIGHT
    Leo escorts Hoynes to his car out front of a building. 
    
    LEO
    John, I know we've had our ups and downs, but let me be your guy here for a second. 
    You can't be thinking about being the first vice president in history to break a tie 
    going the other way. 
    
    HOYNES
    I'm not looking to make history. 
    
    LEO
    Then what are you looking for, John? You're going to get ink either way. 
    
    HOYNES
    Leo. 
    
    LEO
    I know that it eats at you that there is friction between you and my staff. You think 
    they don't respect you. And they do. They just don't trust you. And frankly, neither 
    does the President. 
    
    HOYNES
    Well... 
    
    LEO
    I mean I know that's tough. But God, John, I'm the one that convinced him to put you 
    on the ticket. And I'm going to be the one standing here when you make history, whether 
    you're going to or not. 
    
    HOYNES
    Leo, one of these days you're going to have to allow for the possibility that my motives 
    might not always be sinister. You are your staff are remarkably smug, and frankly so is 
    the President. And the fact that you think I give a damn that there is some friction 
    between me and your staff is certainly proof enough of that. 
    
    LEO
    John, you will not be able to set foot in the West Wing. You will not be on the ticket 
    in three years. 
    
    HOYNES
    Leo, I think you guys set me up. 
    
    LEO
    You think the President of the United States can arrange for a 50-50 tie in the Senate? 
    
    HOYNES
    I think the President of the United States can do pretty much whatever he wants. 
    
    LEO
    You're wrong. 
    
    HOYNES
    Well. Where's the President right now? 
    
    LEO
    At Ted Marcus's fundraiser. 
    
    HOYNES
    I think it's time for you to call him. [gets inside his limousine]
    
    FADE OUT
    END ACT THREE
    * * *
    
    ACT FOUR
    
    FADE IN: INT. PRIVATE AREA IN THE MANSION - NIGHT
    11:05PM EST 
    Leo and Bartlet are talking on the phone. Leo is alone in his office in the White 
    House, while Bartlet is in a private room at the party with Josh, Toby and Sam, who 
    is holding the receiver so he can talk to Leo.
    
    BARTLET
    We're running out of reasons not to fire him, Leo. 
    
    LEO
    Well, when you run out of reasons, the last reason is that you can't fire the Vice 
    President. 
    
    BARTLET
    I can ask for his resignation, and don't be a smart ass. 
    
    LEO
    Mr. President, I got to tell you something and you won't like the sound of it. 
    
    BARTLET
    What? 
    
    LEO
    He's right, and we're wrong. 
    
    BARTLET
    About what? 
    
    LEO
    About the ethanol tax credit. 
    
    SAM
    Mr. President, Leo's right. 
    
    BARTLET
    Sam's weighing in. 
    
    SAM
    Sir, I put Cambridge, Aiello and Dane in a headlock to vote our way, let's send them 
    back. We'll lose 53-47 and we can take the Vice President off the hook. 
    
    BARTLET
    All right, let's do what Sam said. 
    
    LEO
    Yes, sir. 
    
    BARTLET
    I'm not done with Hoynes, but dump it. 
    
    LEO
    Sir, the thing about the Vice President in this situation... 
    
    BARTLET
    I'll call him from the plane. [hangs up] Christ, will this damn day never end? 
    
    CUT TO: INT. A PATIO IN THE MANSION - NIGHT
    VERONICA WEBB and JAY LENO are talking on the patio. 
    
    VERONICA
    Jay, you can't drive all those cars you have! 
    
    JAY
    Well, no, not all at once. 
    
    VERONICA
    I know not all at once, baby, but you have - 
    
    C.J. walks up to them. 
    
    JAY
    Claudia Jean, this is Veronica Webb. 
    
    C.J.
    C.J. Cregg. 
    
    VERONICA
    Well, hi. Nice to meet you. 
    
    C.J.
    Nice to meet you, too. Jay, can I talk to you for a second? 
    
    JAY
    Uh, sure. 
    
    VERONICA
    Sure. 
    
    C.J. and Jay walk and talk. 
    
    C.J.
    Uh, Jay, the President appreciates your laying off Leo McGarry the past few months. 
    It hasn't gone unnoticed. 
    
    JAY
    Hey, you guys give me monologue material every night, you know. 
    
    C.J.
    Well, if there's anything I can do for you... 
    
    JAY
    You know what would be great? If you could get the President to drive his bike into 
    a tree again. See, that's my bread and butter. That's what I live on. 
    
    C.J. 
    [laughing] You're a very funny boy, Jay. [looks over at another woman] How does she 
    look like that? 
    
    JAY
    Uh, clean living. Prayer. 
    
    WOMAN'S VOICE [OS]
    C.J.? C.J.! 
    
    C.J. 
    [to Jay] I got to go. 
    
    A woman walks up to C.J. Sam is right in front of her.
    
    C.J.
    [to the woman] Sorry, there's thing I've got to talk to Sam about... [takes Sam's 
    arm and leads him away] Just pretend that you're talking to me again. 
    
    SAM
    Okay. This time, let's use code names. 
    
    C.J.
    Where's Josh? 
    
    SAM
    He's over there talking to that woman. 
    
    C.J.
    Interesting. 
    
    SAM
    Of course, it's just possible that they could just be pretending to be talking. 
    
    C.J.
    Indeed. 
    
    Josh is sitting with Joey and Kenny at a table on the other side of the pool.
    
    JOSH
    So, you want to know what we did for lunch today? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    What? 
    
    JOSH
    We had a meeting with a democratic pollster who told us that we could sew up 
    reelection if the President led the charge in favor a flag burning amendment. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I heard. 
    
    JOSH
    How'd you hear? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I hear everything. [on Josh's quizzical look] It was a stupid joke. But I don't 
    even get a sympathy laugh? 
    
    JOSH 
    [chuckling] Seriously... this guy had some pretty scary numbers. 
    
    Sam, Toby and C.J. stop at their table. 
    
    C.J.
    Josh, I think I just made a three-picture deal. 
    
    JOSH
    Three-picture deal doing what? 
    
    C.J.
    It doesn't seem to matter. 
    
    JOSH
    This is Joey Lucas. This is her assistant Kenny. 
    
    SAM
    You're running O'Dwyer's campaign in the 46th. 
    
    JOEY
    Yes. 
    
    SAM
    Sam Seaborn. 
    
    JOEY
    Hi. 
    
    TOBY
    Toby Ziegler. 
    
    JOEY
    Hello. 
    
    C.J.
    C.J. Cregg. 
    
    JOEY
    Hi. I know who you all are. 
    
    JOSH
    I was just telling her about Kiefer's numbers. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I've seen those numbers. We shared the California polling data. 
    
    TOBY
    And? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    Kiefer asked the wrong questions. His polls said that 80% of the people, when asked 
    if they'd support an amendment prohibiting flag burning said yes, which is roughly 
    the same amount of people that say they support sending litterbugs to prison. He never 
    asked them how much they care. 
    
    TOBY
    Please, please say that you did. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    How good am I looking to you right now? 
    
    TOBY
    That depends on the California numbers. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    37%, or less than half of those who said they'd favor the amendment, rated the issue 
    fairly or very important. 12%, or less than a third of that group, said that the issue 
    would swing their vote. The only place that this war is being fought is in Washington. 
    
    TOBY
    You're looking very good to me right now. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I thought so. 
    
    TOBY
    Good to meet you. [gets up, and is followed by C.J. and Sam.] 
    
    C.J.
    Nice meeting you. 
    
    JOSH 
    [to Joey] Do you have any idea how big you scored with Toby and Sam right now? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    Yes. Still. I think if you're going to have the President stand up and say something 
    about flag burning, I think he should say that people shouldn't do it. I think he 
    should say that it's a form of protest that a lot of people find terribly troubling. 
    
    JOSH
    Your polls say that? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I said that. So do a lot of people. "Vox populi, Vox dei." 
    
    JOSH
    "The voice of the people is the voice of a dog"? 
    
    JOEY
    The voice of God, Joshua! 
    
    JOSH
    God! Yes. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY] 
    [beat] I came here with someone. 
    
    JOSH
    I'm... I'm sorry? 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    I came here with someone. 
    
    JOSH
    Okay, um. I should go. I have to go. 
    
    JOEY [KENNY]
    Wait, will you call me some time, next time you come out here? 
    
    JOSH
    Absolutely. I will call in advance of my coming. 
    
    JOEY
    It was really good to see you. 
    
    JOSH
    You, too.
    
    CUT TO: INT. A DARK STUDY ROOM - NIGHT
    Bartlet and Ted Marcus are talking in a study room in the mansion. 
    
    MARCUS
    Mr. President, I don't need to tell you that I've got a large microphone at my disposal, 
    and I'm going to demand that you publicly announce that you're going to veto Cameron's 
    bill if it passes. 
    
    BARTLET
    It's not going to pass, Ted. It's not going to get voted on. 
    
    MARCUS
    No, I'm saying as a gesture, as a symbol. 
    
    BARTLET
    And I'm saying as a gesture, as a symbol, you make that public demand, Ted, and you're 
    going to be Cameron's best friend. 
    
    MARCUS
    The people in my house want this. And they're complaining to me that you take their 
    money and run, without listening. 
    
    BARTLET
    Oh, God, Ted! Give me the name of one person who's complaining to you, and I'll call 
    them personally and tell them I will never sign a law like that. 
    
    MARCUS
    Well, then why won't you... 
    
    BARTLET
    Ted. 
    
    MARCUS
    Why won't you say that publicly? 
    
    BARTLET 
    [yells] Because I know what I'm doing, Ted! Because I live in the world of professional 
    politics, and you live in the world of adolescent tantrum! [beat] Don't you ever slap 
    Josh Lyman around again. That guy is the White House Deputy Chief of Staff. He's not 
    one of your associate producers. 
    
    MARCUS
    You're right. 
    
    BARTLET
    Don't screw around with me now, Ted. I'm really not in the mood. 
    
    MARCUS
    I mean it. You're right. 
    
    BARTLET
    Right now, right this second, the worst thing that could possibly happen to gay rights 
    in this country is for me to put that thing on the debating table, which is happens 
    the minute I open my mouth. Do you get that? I'm a human starting gun, Ted. You got 
    to trust me! I know what I'm doing. 
    
    MARCUS
    I trust you, Mr. President. 
    
    BARTLET
    Do you? 
    
    MARCUS
    Yes, I do. And I like you, too. 
    
    BARTLET
    Thank you. 
    
    MARCUS
    Have you enjoyed yourself tonight? 
    
    BARTLET
    No. 
    
    MARCUS
    Me, neither. If you don't mind my saying so, Mr. President, you look more tired than 
    you did when I saw you a couple of months ago. 
    
    BARTLET
    Imagine how tired I'm going to look when you see me a couple of months from now. 
    [beat] I haven't slept well, lately. Kept everyone up on the plane as we flew out. 
    You know, we left at 3 in the morning? I really want to try to sleep on the way back. 
    
    CUT TO: INT. JOSH'S HOTEL ROOM - NIGHT
    The fundraiser is over. Josh is packing, while Donna is lying on the bed. 
    
    DONNA
    That was it? 
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. 
    
    DONNA
    Just because she said she was with somebody? 
    
    JOSH
    She said she was with somebody. 
    
    DONNA
    Oh, Josh! 
    
    JOSH
    Donna, she's with somebody! 
    
    DONNA
    She could have just been saying that. 
    
    JOSH
    Why would she just be saying that? 
    
    DONNA
    For the allure. 
    
    JOSH
    Oh. 
    
    DONNA
    Go see her before we leave. 
    
    JOSH
    It's one in the morning. 
    
    DONNA
    Go knock on her door. 
    
    JOSH
    I'm not going to knock on her door at one in the morning. 
    
    DONNA
    Yes! Because you're whisking away to Washington, and you had to see her one more time 
    before you left, because God knows what fate awaits you when once you get there. 
    
    JOSH
    Are you okay? 
    
    DONNA
    Gather ye rosebuds, Josh. 
    
    JOSH
    Donna, I am not going to knock on her door
    
    Donna starts clucking like a chicken.
    
    JOSH
    Were you just clucking like a chicken, is that what that was?
    
    DONNA
    Yes.
    
    JOSH
    I couldn't knock on her door if I wanted to, I don't have her room number.
    
    DONNA 
    [picks up phone message] Yes, you do. 
    
    She waves the message, and in a sing-song voice--
    
    DONNA
    Phone Message! Phone message!
    
    JOSH
    Okay, first of all, don't do that thing anymore with the phone message! Phone message!
    
    DONNA
    And?
    
    JOSH
    Tell them I'll be down in one minute. Wait, how's she going to know I'm knocking on 
    the door?
    
    DONNA
    There's a button outside, a light flashes.
    
    JOSH
    [opening door] Tell them I'll be there in a minute.
    
    CUT TO: INT. HOTEL HALLWAY - OUTSIDE JOEY’S DOOR - NIGHT
    Josh arrives at the door and pushes the button repeatedly. The door is finally opened 
    by... Al Kiefer, dressed in a white robe.
    
    AL
    Josh.
    
    JOSH
    Al!
    
    AL
    What can I do for you?
    
    JOSH
    You know I got the wrong room.
    
    AL
    I don't think so. You're looking for Joey?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    AL
    She's right here.
    
    JOSH
    No! I'm not. I-I-I was just stopping to say a quick goodbye, don't bother.
    
    JOEY [OS]
    Who's out there? 
    
    She comes out of the bathroom, also dressed in a white robe. She is clearly shocked 
    to see Josh at the door.
    
    JOSH
    I wanted to say a quick goodbye. We’re taking off. And, uh, thank you for talking to 
    us tonight. That was helpful.
    
    Joey signs something at him.
    
    AL
    She said goodbye.
    
    JOSH
    I know. 
    
    Joeey gives him a really sweet smile.
    
    JOSH
    Goodbye.
    
    Josh walks away as Al closes the door.
    
    CUT TO: INT. AIR FORCE ONE - NIGHT
    Everyone in the plane is asleep, except Bartlet. He’s inside his office, 
    talking on the phone to Vice President Hoynes.
    
    BARTLET 
    [into phone] Anyway, Mr. Vice President, it's taken care of, we can put it to rest.
    
    HOYNES [VO]
    Thank you, sir.
    
    BARTLET
    You're welcome. Bye.
    
    HOYNES [VO]
    Good night.
    
    BARTLET
    Wait. John?
    
    HOYNES [VO]
    Yes, sir?
    
    BARTLET
    I want to tell you, a couple of years ago in Iowa, I really admired the way you hung 
    in there on the ethanol tax credit. You went out to Iowa and said the same things 
    you'd been saying in the Senate for eight years, event though you knew it wasn't going 
    to play. My confession is, you and I agree on ethanol, but you were the only one to 
    say it. You stood in there even though you knew you were going to lose Iowa and who 
    knows what after that. Anyway, I just wanted to say you had a good day today, John.
    
    HOYNES [VO]
    Thank you, Mr. President.
    
    BARTLET
    I'm going to try to go to sleep now.
    
    HOYNES [VO]
    Good night, Mr. President. See you in the morning.
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah.
    
    Bartlet slowly hangs up phone and closes his eyes. As the camera closes in, his eyes 
    slowly, and sadly, open again.
    
    DISSOLVE TO: END CREDITS.
    FADE TO BLACK.
    THE END
    * * *
    

     

    'The West Wing Scripts > Season 1' 카테고리의 다른 글

    THE WEST WING 17  (0) 2008.10.31
    THE WEST WING 15  (0) 2008.10.31
    THE WEST WING 14  (0) 2008.10.31
사고전서의 옳게 치우치기