Narrative Web

9:00 PM Returns — New Hampshire Projection and Office Jubilation

At precisely 9:00 P.M. the communications office erupts: an early cascade of returns suddenly favors the administration and the room's exhausted tension flips into loud, nervous celebration. C.J. slips away, meets Leo, and they carry the most consequential line into the Oval — “You’re going to win New Hampshire.” Bartlet receives the news with wry restraint; staffers move into the Mural Room to applaud while TV reporters read tentative state tallies. The beat functions as a tonal pivot: a morale boost that steadies the team and shifts posture, even though the outcome remains provisional.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

The staff celebrates as the clock hits 9:00 P.M., marking a pivotal moment in the election night coverage.

anticipation to excitement ['Communications Office']

The group moves to the Mural Room where they are applauded, and TV reporters begin announcing early state results.

relief to celebration ['Mural Room']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7
Josh Lyman
primary

Cautiously excited — outwardly assertive while internally holding onto skepticism about premature calls.

Standing in the Communications Office watching live returns, Josh reads the pattern aloud ('It's on. You can see it.'), shifting from anxious focus to brittle optimism and prompting others' attention.

Goals in this moment
  • Confirm whether trends are reliable enough to change messaging
  • Signal momentum to staff to shape morale and operational focus
Active beliefs
  • Patterns in early returns can indicate durable advantage if replicated
  • Staff morale and rapid coordination hinge on authoritative cues
Character traits
decisive impatient data-driven wryly hopeful
Follow Josh Lyman's journey

Controlled relief — relieved enough to act confidently but intent on preserving composure and message discipline.

Answers a phone, ends the call, leaves the Communications Office, walks the news into the hallway and the Oval, fixes a drink for the President, and delivers the measured declaration 'We've got some news.' She controls the tone and hand-off.

Goals in this moment
  • Deliver the projection to the President cleanly and preserve his framing options
  • Manage optics and protect staff from premature jubilation
Active beliefs
  • The President should receive consolidated, controlled information
  • How news is presented affects subsequent decisions and public perception
Character traits
commanding composed professional protective
Follow Claudia Jean …'s journey
Carolers
primary

Alert and energized — acting as the operational heart that turns information into coordinated action.

Running communications logistics in the bullpen: calls out to C.J., times the 9:00 pivot and shouts '9:00!' to trigger the team's synchronized reaction.

Goals in this moment
  • Keep lines open and direct staff actions
  • Provide temporal cues to align team responses
Active beliefs
  • Precise timing matters for coordinated communications
  • Staff rely on logistical signals to know when to act
Character traits
efficient attentive procedural
Follow Carolers's journey

Tense and cautious — relieved by patterns but actively suppressing visible elation to avoid premature signaling.

Standing near monitors offering a guarded analytic read ('Union households are beating non-unions...'), trying not to visibly celebrate while processing returns' implications.

Goals in this moment
  • Interpret vote patterns for strategic messaging
  • Prevent over-eager public or internal reactions until confirmation
Active beliefs
  • Early returns are informative but volatile
  • Messaging must be disciplined even when hope rises
Character traits
analytical guarded dry-humored
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Pleased but guarded — privately gratified and outwardly controlling the tone to avoid undue celebration.

Receives C.J. and Leo, notices C.J. fixing a drink, responds with wry, measured commentary and accepts the glass while processing the New Hampshire projection.

Goals in this moment
  • Absorb the projection while maintaining presidential composure
  • Signal calm confidence to staff and control the narrative
Active beliefs
  • Momentary projections are morale-changing but not final
  • His public demeanor will shape staff and media response
Character traits
wry self-aware restrained
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey

Neutral, procedural — focused on conveying results without editorializing.

On-screen CBS reporter provides the outward authoritative cue — ready to declare Delaware — that catalyzes the room's reaction and supplies journalistic legitimacy to early calls.

Goals in this moment
  • Communicate network's read of the returns accurately
  • Serve as an authoritative source for viewers and political actors
Active beliefs
  • Network calls matter for political decision-makers
  • Clear, timely reporting is essential on election night
Character traits
professional detached authoritative
Follow CBS TV …'s journey

Joyful, nervously celebratory — relief mixed with awareness that results are provisional.

A roomful of communications staff erupt in cheers at the 9:00 signal and on-screen projections, transmitting relief and collective energy through applause and forward movement into the Mural Room.

Goals in this moment
  • Express relief and lift team morale
  • Pivot quickly from monitoring to preparing media and talking points
Active beliefs
  • Network projections shape public perception and campaign momentum
  • Unified, immediate reaction helps set the narrative
Character traits
collective relieved responsive
Follow Communications Office …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
C.J.'s Cell Phone

C.J.'s cell phone rings and she uses it to field and end a strategic call ('This is C.J. Thanks.'), then pockets or sets it aside before leaving to brief the President. The phone is the literal trigger that begins her hallway run and the hand-off of information.

Before: Ringing in the Communications Office, in C.J.'s hand …
After: Disconnected and stowed after she ends the call …
Before: Ringing in the Communications Office, in C.J.'s hand or on her desk as she answers.
After: Disconnected and stowed after she ends the call and leaves to brief the President.
C.J.'s Drink for Bartlet

C.J. fixes a drink behind the Oval Office bar and hands it to President Bartlet during the news hand-off; it functions as a calming prop, a courtesy ritual that underlines the intimacy and gravity of the information exchange.

Before: Prepared at the Oval Office bar, chilled and …
After: In Bartlet's hand as he absorbs the projection …
Before: Prepared at the Oval Office bar, chilled and ready on the counter.
After: In Bartlet's hand as he absorbs the projection and steps toward the Mural Room applause.
C.J.'s Office Television Sets

Television sets in the Communications Office broadcast network reports, supplying the raw stimuli (CBS/NBC calls and state tallies) that trigger the 9:00 cheer. The screens are both information source and dramatic catalyst for staff action.

Before: On and tuned to network election coverage, displaying …
After: Continuing to broadcast projections and state tallies as …
Before: On and tuned to network election coverage, displaying incremental returns and graphics.
After: Continuing to broadcast projections and state tallies as staff react and move to the Mural Room.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Mural Room

The Mural Room is where staff gather to applaud the President after Leo and C.J. walk in with the projection; it acts as the immediate celebration space and a theatrical platform to display renewed team unity and momentum.

Atmosphere Warm, congratulatory, briefly euphoric — applause fills a room usually used for formal briefings.
Function Celebration/assembly space for staff recognition and morale reinforcement.
Symbolism Embodies institutional affirmation and public-facing confidence after a stressful night.
Access Populated by senior staff and invited aides; not open to press in this moment.
Applause upon Bartlet's entrance. Historic murals lining the walls lending ceremonial weight.
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The Hallway functions as the transit artery linking the Communications Office to the Oval — where C.J. moves quickly to meet Leo and carry the projection in to the President, making the hallway the literal bridge between operational reaction and executive knowledge.

Atmosphere Hushed formality with brisk footsteps; charged with the urgency of a quick information relay.
Function Transit corridor for delivering consolidated news to the Oval Office.
Symbolism A liminal space between public operations and executive decision-making.
Access Generally restricted to staff and senior aides during the late-night operations.
Footsteps and hurried movement. A quick hand-off between C.J. and Leo en route to the Oval.
Communications Office

The Communications Office serves as the central hub where staff monitor TV returns, field calls, and execute the 9:00 pivot; it is the emotional epicenter where exhaustion turns into a collective, nervous celebration that propels the narrative forward.

Atmosphere Tension-filled then abruptly elated — noisy, fluorescent-lit, crowded with monitors and ringing phones.
Function Meeting point and operations center for real-time responses to election returns.
Symbolism Represents the campaign's nervous, operational heart where raw data becomes narrative and morale.
Access Staffed and occupied by Communications team and campaign advisers; not public.
Multiple television screens showing network returns. Phones ringing and quick, clipped conversations. A sudden eruption of cheers and applause at 9:00.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
CBS

CBS, via its on-screen reporter, provides the authoritative early projection (Delaware) that helps tip the Communications Office into celebration; the network's call functions as a catalyst that validates internal readings and energizes staff action.

Representation Through on-air reporter and network projection graphics on the television monitors.
Power Dynamics Informational authority over campaign operatives in the room; its calls shape perceptions and immediate responses.
Impact Network calls alter political actors' behavior in real time, demonstrating how media institutions shape campaign …
Internal Dynamics Editorial processes (confidence thresholds for calls) implicitly govern the timing and force of the projection, …
Deliver timely, authoritative election coverage Maintain credibility and viewership through decisive projections Reputation and perceived journalistic authority Broadcast reach into decision-making centers like the White House
MSNBC

NBC contributes a corroborating projection (placing Maryland in the President's column) that reinforces the impression of a favorable night and compounds the Communications Office's decision to pivot from defensive monitoring to public-facing optimism.

Representation Via on-air anchors/reporters and the network's electoral graphics displayed on office televisions.
Power Dynamics Acts as a parallel authoritative source whose agreement with other networks strengthens campaign confidence.
Impact NBC's shipment of information contributes to the rapid formation of a narrative favorable to the …
Internal Dynamics Reliance on internal vote models and closing precinct data to time pronouncements; implicit editorial caution …
Provide authoritative, up-to-date election returns Retain audience trust through accurate, timely reporting Cross-network corroboration (consensus among outlets) Broadcast authority that drives political actors' real-time choices

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Key Dialogue

"JOSH: "It's on. You can see it.""
"C.J.: "You'll see in a minute.""
"LEO: "You're going to win New Hampshire.""