Fabula
S1E2 · Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc

Ryder Cup Snub — Joke Becomes Political Fallout

A light, character-setting exchange with Mrs. Landingham and Toby collapses into a full-staff scramble when C.J. announces the Ryder Cup team has declined the White House invitation. The room quickly pivots from banter—Josh's swaggering triumph, Sam's curiosity—to damage control as C.J. pins the rebuff squarely on the President's offhand joke. Bartlet reacts with an intellectual dodge, invoking 'post hoc, ergo propter hoc,' while the team protests and jockeys for blame. The scene crystallizes the administration's panic over avoidable PR wounds and establishes accountability tensions that will escalate into graver consequences.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

C.J. announces the Ryder Cup team's rejection of the White House invitation due to Bartlet's joke, confirming the joke's damaging fallout.

casual to concerned

Josh enters boasting about his victory, contrasting the team's mounting PR crisis with his personal triumph.

triumph to confusion

Bartlet and Leo enter discussing trade policy, momentarily shifting focus before the team updates them on the Ryder Cup rejection.

policy focus to PR crisis ['Oval Office']

Bartlet dismisses the connection between his 'big hats' joke and losing Texas, lecturing on the logical fallacy 'post hoc, ergo propter hoc'.

frustration to lecturing

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7
C.J. Cregg
primary

Frustrated determination laced with exasperation

C.J. bursts in announcing the press release and Ryder Cup decline, pins it squarely on the joke, fields Bartlet's schedule deflection, and presses on Texas losses, her urgent delivery catalyzing the room's defensive frenzy.

Goals in this moment
  • Force accountability for avoidable PR hit
  • Advocate for humor restraint in public remarks
Active beliefs
  • Jokes directly cause political fallout
  • Repeated patterns demand behavioral change
Character traits
Assertive Direct Persistent
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey
Donna Moss
primary

Amused tolerance for Josh's ego

Donna hovers at the Outer Oval door, briefing C.J. on Josh's 'keg of glory' mood with wry sarcasm, then recedes as the group surges into crisis mode.

Goals in this moment
  • Manage Josh's triumphant entry optics
  • Provide quick intel to C.J.
Active beliefs
  • Josh's highs precede inevitable crashes
  • Humor diffuses staff tensions
Character traits
Witty Loyal Observant
Follow Donna Moss's journey

Amused deflection hiding mild irritation

Bartlet enters from portico mid-trade talk, absorbs Ryder Cup news with feigned surprise, consults schedule to deflect C.J.'s humor critique, then masterfully deploys 'post hoc' logic to dismantle blame, schooling the room.

Goals in this moment
  • Neutralize staff criticism via logic
  • Reassert intellectual command
Active beliefs
  • Correlation rarely proves causation
  • Humor's fallout is overstated fallacy
Character traits
Intellectual Witty Authoritative
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Calm exterior veiling rising professional anxiety

Toby lingers awkwardly holding the cookie jar lid after banter, absorbing C.J.'s Ryder Cup announcement with stoic silence before identifying prior Texas gaffe, his body language shifting from casual to alert amid the escalating staff scrum.

Goals in this moment
  • Contain emerging PR damage through message discipline
  • Redirect blame by contextualizing past incidents
Active beliefs
  • Presidential humor carries inherent risks in public optics
  • Staff accountability requires precise historical recall
Character traits
Stoic Observant Professionally restrained
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Controlled surprise yielding to operational focus

Leo strides in with Bartlet on trade surplus, reacts with disbelief to Ryder Cup snub, clarifies Latin for Josh, and caps the exchange by pivoting to 'What else?', steering back to agenda.

Goals in this moment
  • Verify crisis scope
  • Reset briefing rhythm post-tangent
Active beliefs
  • Logical fallacies undermine valid critique
  • Crisis triage precedes deep dives
Character traits
Pragmatic Procedural Supportive
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Euphoric swagger punctured by dawning defensiveness

Josh swaggers in high on Bill 443 glory, queries the invitation snub repeatedly, stumbles humorously on Latin, and inserts self-credit claim, his bravado clashing with the sobering news shift.

Goals in this moment
  • Claim victory credit amid bad news
  • Minimize personal exposure to blame
Active beliefs
  • Political wins buffer PR losses
  • Causation debates deflect direct responsibility
Character traits
Cocky Sarcastic Defensive
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey

Steadfast poise amid sudden crisis

Mrs. Landingham seamlessly transitions from denying Toby a cookie to handing Bartlet his daily schedule mid-C.J.'s Ryder Cup revelation, her maternal efficiency anchoring the chaos with quiet authority as the group crowds the Oval.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain presidential schedule continuity
  • Provide unobtrusive support during staff confrontation
Active beliefs
  • Routine logistics ground high-stakes drama
  • Subtle gestures sustain Oval harmony
Character traits
Efficient Maternal Imperturbable
Follow Mrs. Landingham's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
President Bartlet's Daily Schedule (paper on Oval Office desk)

Mrs. Landingham hands the President his daily schedule during the commotion, reminding the group of immediate substantive obligations (intelligence, security, budget meetings). The schedule shifts attention back to presidential duties and conflicts with the timing of a roast about his humor.

Before: On Mrs. Landingham's desk as she manages access …
After: Given to President Bartlet as he enters, briefly …
Before: On Mrs. Landingham's desk as she manages access to the President.
After: Given to President Bartlet as he enters, briefly redirecting his focus to scheduled briefings.
Presidential Cereal Bowl (Cheerios)

The bowl of Cheerios functions as an offstage but narratively significant prop: Mrs. Landingham reports the President is in the residence eating Cheerios and watching daytime television, humanizing him and setting a private/public contrast that intensifies the embarrassment of the rebuff.

Before: In the Presidential residence, being eaten by the …
After: Unchanged in physical state in the residence; serves …
Before: In the Presidential residence, being eaten by the President.
After: Unchanged in physical state in the residence; serves as a reminder of the President's private detachment while staff handle public fallout.
Commerce Bill (Bill 443) (administration trade/commerce bill, S01E02 & S01E06)

Bill 443 is mentioned by Josh as a political talking point and bargaining chip; its postponement or committee delay figures into Josh's attempt to redirect the discussion toward credit and policy wins rather than PR losses.

Before: Referenced in the staff conversation as staying in …
After: Still in committee; its political capital is invoked …
Before: Referenced in the staff conversation as staying in committee; physically presumed in staff files.
After: Still in committee; its political capital is invoked rhetorically but not physically acted upon during the event.
Mrs. Landingham's Cookie Jar (Outer Oval Office)

The cookie jar lid is physically lifted and held by Toby during the opening banter; it punctuates the domestic exchange and then remains a small, absurd counterpoint as C.J. announces the PR crisis, visually underscoring the tonal shift from private warmth to professional alarm.

Before: On top of the cookie jar on Mrs. …
After: Held briefly by Toby and then presumably replaced …
Before: On top of the cookie jar on Mrs. Landingham's desk.
After: Held briefly by Toby and then presumably replaced as staff move into the Oval; remains on the desk.
Ryder Cup Response Press Release

Referenced by C.J. as the immediate tactical instrument: a press release that will be issued to explain or respond to the Ryder Cup team's public decline. The press release is the hinge between private staffing panic and public statement; it represents the team's first formal attempt to shape the story.

Before: In preparation or being drafted by the Communications …
After: In active circulation or queued for release as …
Before: In preparation or being drafted by the Communications operation (C.J. announces they are issuing it).
After: In active circulation or queued for release as staff mobilize for defensive messaging.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The portico is the arrival threshold through which Bartlet and Leo enter, physically marking the transition from external motion (arrival) to the concentrated briefing and decision space. Its mention frames the entrance of authority into the emergent crisis.

Atmosphere Calm, transitional — a brief pause before the Oval's concentrated energy.
Function Transitional entry point that signals movement from informal chatter to formal presidential presence.
Symbolism Acts as a liminal zone where personal routine meets institutional authority.
Access Public-facing approach but controlled; only authorized staff enter to meet the President.
Colonnaded threshold Sound of footsteps and shifting staff positions Visual cue of Bartlet and Leo entering the scene
Texas (U.S. state)

Texas is referenced verbally as an electorally dangerous terrain; its invocation converts a private joke into measurable political consequence and anchors the team's fear that small gaffes produce electoral losses.

Atmosphere Absent physically but heavy in subtext — the specter of electoral failure darkens the conversation.
Function Referent that calibrates stakes and explains why the staff treats the Ryder Cup refusal as …
Symbolism Symbolizes past vulnerability and the tangible cost of perceived tone-deafness.
Mention of past losses and campaigning Serves as a rhetorical battleground rather than a physical place

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2
Escalation

"The initial dismissal of the joke's impact escalates to a full-blown military crisis, shifting the narrative from domestic political drama to international conflict."

Leo Seizes the Moment — Rapid Strike Readiness and Josh Shut Out
S1E2 · Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc
Escalation

"The initial dismissal of the joke's impact escalates to a full-blown military crisis, shifting the narrative from domestic political drama to international conflict."

Summoned to the President — Leo Cuts the Briefing Short
S1E2 · Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc

Key Dialogue

"C.J.: "They're issuing a press release. We're gonna be playing defense all day.""
"C.J.: "It's because of the joke.""
"BARTLET: "Post hoc, ergo propter hoc.""