Narrative Web

Banana Banter and the Drawer: Bartlet Shelves the Sex‑Ed Report

A brief, domestic spat with Mrs. Landingham — who denies the President a banana because he was 'snippy' earlier — slides immediately into a consequential Oval Office decision. The playful intimacy of the exchange masks a harder choice: Bartlet tells C.J. to put the incendiary sex‑education report in a drawer until after the midterms. C.J. presses the moral duty to publish; Bartlet insists the political calculus is to protect Leo and the administration. The scene is a turning point that sacrifices principle for personnel and exposes the personal cost of political survival.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Bartlet playfully confronts Mrs. Landingham about being denied a banana, revealing their familiar, slightly contentious dynamic.

playful frustration to resigned acceptance ['Outer Oval Office']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3
C.J. Cregg
primary

Torn and frustrated: professionally dutiful but morally aggrieved; she masks anger with civility as she negotiates the President's order.

C.J. enters assertively, presses the ethical obligation to publish the commissioned report, lays out its scientific findings, and reluctantly accepts the President's directive while registering private disappointment and moral unease.

Goals in this moment
  • Advance the administration's commitment to truth and the report's publication
  • Use the White House pulpit to educate and influence public behavior
  • Preserve her professional integrity while maintaining access and influence
Active beliefs
  • The public deserves the factual findings the administration commissioned
  • Withholding scientific information for political reasons is ethically problematic
  • The White House has both a platform and responsibility to lead on public health
Character traits
principled persistent professional diplomatic under tension
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Calm, pragmatic exterior with an undercurrent of regret — resolute in the political choice but aware of its moral cost.

President Bartlet moves from a light, domestic exchange into solemn executive calculation: he crosses into the Oval, sits at his desk, weighs C.J.'s moral argument, and orders the report be put away to protect personnel and political viability.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect Leo McGarry and the administration from political damage
  • Preserve presidential and party standing through the midterms
  • Control the timing and tone of sensitive disclosures
Active beliefs
  • Immediate disclosure of the report will cause political harm that outweighs short‑term transparency
  • Personnel and institutional stability are worth tactical compromises
  • The White House must manage facts for strategic advantage
Character traits
pragmatic protective of staff authoritative mildly rueful
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Matter‑of‑fact and slightly amused; she is neither sentimental nor indulgent, exercising household authority with plainness rather than malice.

Mrs. Landingham performs a brisk, domestic corrective: she withholds a banana as a small sanction for the President's earlier snippiness, delivering a maternal rebuke that punctures formality and sets a surprisingly moralized tone for the ensuing political decision.

Goals in this moment
  • Correct the President's behavior when he is 'snippy'
  • Maintain household/orderly decorum around the President
  • Signal consequences for temperament even within intimate staff relationships
Active beliefs
  • Small domestic discipline can check the President's behavior
  • Staff have a duty to call out the President when necessary
  • Personal behavior matters and should be met with practical consequence
Character traits
forthright maternal disciplinary practical
Follow Mrs. Landingham's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
President Josiah 'Jed' Bartlet's Metal-Rim Reading Glasses

President Bartlet's metal‑rim reading glasses serve as a small but meaningful beat: he removes them at the end of the exchange, a tactile punctuation that signals reflection, the emotional weight of the decision, and a shift from conversational banter to somber resolve.

Before: Worn by the President while conversing and reviewing …
After: Removed and held or set down as Bartlet …
Before: Worn by the President while conversing and reviewing the issue.
After: Removed and held or set down as Bartlet looks pensive, marking a private moment of contemplation after issuing the directive.
Sex‑Ed Report (Printed Disclosure Packet — Leo's Office)

The printed sex‑education report functions as the catalytic object of the scene: its findings force a moral-versus-political decision. Bartlet labels it 'incendiary,' C.J. pleads for its publication, and Bartlet orders it effectively mothballed (put in a drawer and rhetorically 'thrown out with the trash'), turning paper into a pawn in personnel protection.

Before: Completed report in administration possession, known to staff …
After: Shelved/withheld from public release and effectively placed in …
Before: Completed report in administration possession, known to staff and the press (returned to the White House and under review).
After: Shelved/withheld from public release and effectively placed in a drawer — officially acknowledged but not publicized or acted upon until after the midterms.
C.J.'s Press Office Salad

C.J.'s Desk Salad is a quiet domestic prop that frames the late-hour, human quality of the staff's work life; it underscores that ordinary, petty moments (like a withheld banana) coexist with grave policy choices, adding texture and normalcy to the Oval's drama.

Before: Sitting on C.J.'s desk or nearby, untouched amid …
After: Remains untouched; functions as background detail rather than …
Before: Sitting on C.J.'s desk or nearby, untouched amid briefing materials.
After: Remains untouched; functions as background detail rather than active evidence or communicative tool.
Metaphorical 'Trash' (rhetorical device for discarding news items)

The 'Metaphorical Trash' is invoked when Bartlet instructs staff to 'throw it out with the trash.' It operates as a rhetorical object: a verbal container for discarding the story publicly while retaining it privately, signaling an administrative choice to minimize attention rather than fully transparent disclosure.

Before: Not applied; the report is under consideration and …
After: Activated as the chosen rhetorical tactic — the …
Before: Not applied; the report is under consideration and the metaphor is not yet used.
After: Activated as the chosen rhetorical tactic — the administration will downplay and rhetorically discard the report for the time being.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The Oval Office is the decision battleground: lamplight and desk produce a concentrated, ceremonial space where the President converts staff arguments and political constraints into an executive communication choice. The room's gravitas turns an ethical argument into an institutional decision with national consequence.

Atmosphere Quietly tense and authoritative — intimate counsel infused with the weight of public consequence.
Function Primary decision chamber where policy timing and messaging are determined.
Symbolism Embodies institutional power and the loneliness of executive choice; the site where private loyalties override …
Access Restricted to senior staff and designated aides; closed-door counsel implied.
Lamplight pooling over the presidential desk Scattered papers and the presidential seal anchoring the room A closed door that creates a private conferring space distinct from the Outer Oval
Outer Oval Office

The Outer Oval Office acts as the domestic threshold where Landingham exerts maternal authority and the President receives small personal corrections. It stages the switch from private household dynamics to formal presidential business, compressing banter and reprimand before the policy confrontation.

Atmosphere Tight, domestic, with a clipped, intimate tension — informal gatekeeping overlaying imminent work.
Function Entrance and staging area; a buffer where personal admonition and access control occur before entering …
Symbolism Symbolizes the thin membrane between private behavior and public responsibility; domestic norms policing institutional leaders.
Access Effectively limited to senior staff and household personnel; Landingham enforces decorum and access.
Close walls and small desk with stacked papers Landingham holding court with brisk, familiar authority Footsteps and low staff chatter transitioning to formal Oval business

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 10
Causal

"The sex-ed report's controversial findings lead directly to the decision to shelve it for political expediency."

Scripted Optics Break Under Grief and Policy Bombshell
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Causal

"The sex-ed report's controversial findings lead directly to the decision to shelve it for political expediency."

Report on 'Abstinence‑Plus' Drops on C.J.'s Desk
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Causal

"Bruno's political threat directly results in the report being shelved to protect Leo."

Bruno's Ultimatum — 'So, what happened?'
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's protective loyalty to Leo remains consistent across both moments."

C.J. Assigned the Lydells; Bartlet Postpones Sex‑Ed Decision
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's protective loyalty to Leo remains consistent across both moments."

Setting the Pace: Bartlet Cuts In, Protects Leo, and Sets the Day
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's protective loyalty to Leo remains consistent across both moments."

Preempt the Hearing — Bartlet's Line in the Sand for Leo
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Symbolic Parallel medium

"The 'Take Out The Trash' strategy becomes literally enacted with the sex-ed report."

Burnt Hamburger Ritual & the Friday Dump
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Symbolic Parallel medium

"The 'Take Out The Trash' strategy becomes literally enacted with the sex-ed report."

Take-Out-the-Trash: Friday Damage Control
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Thematic Parallel

"Both moments force C.J. to choose between morality and political necessity."

Hallway Clash: Principle vs. Press
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day
Thematic Parallel

"Both moments force C.J. to choose between morality and political necessity."

The Lydell Confrontation — Public Fury vs. Press Control
S1E13 · Take Out The Trash Day

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: You're not going to believe this but I think I'd actually like a banana."
"C.J.: We commissioned this report, Mr. President. These people are doctors; we asked them a question. How can we put it in a drawer just cause we don't think people are going to like the answer?"
"BARTLET: I needed to get Leo off the hook, C.J."
"C.J.: Mr. President? We could all be better teachers."