Fabula
S2E5 · And It's Surely To Their Credit

Bartlet Grants Barrie Meet the Press Freedom and Rushes to Abbey

Fresh from his triumphant radio address exalting overlooked women in history, President Bartlet shares flirtatious banter with Abbey, who urges him upstairs for intimacy. CJ interrupts with concerns about General Barrie; Bartlet swiftly overrules her, honoring the general's Vietnam service by allowing his unfiltered Meet the Press appearance despite prior criticisms. Eagerly dismissing CJ, Bartlet bolts from the Oval, prioritizing personal reconnection amid political resolution—a payoff to CJ's earlier skirmish that reveals his military reverence and human vulnerabilities.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Bartlet grants General Barrie permission to speak freely on Meet the Press, honoring the veteran's combat service despite political disagreements.

resistance to respect

Bartlet eagerly dismisses C.J. to finally reunite with Abbey after resolving official business.

duty to anticipation

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Playfully affectionate with seductive intent

Watches Bartlet's address approvingly from across the room, offers warm praise, engages in playful coded flirtation about 'sweet knees' and urges him upstairs twice, exits coyly invoking a 'special garment' after failed interruption block.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure intimate time with Bartlet post-duty
  • Deflect CJ's intrusion to preserve their moment
Active beliefs
  • Jed merits personal respite after public service
  • Their marriage thrives on stolen intimacies
Character traits
affectionate playful protective poised
Follow Abigail Bartlet's journey
Technician
primary

Calmly procedural

Stands at technical station, crisply announcing the radio address conclusion with 'We're out,' efficiently wrapping the broadcast amid the room's shift to personal banter.

Goals in this moment
  • Finalize the recording session flawlessly
  • Signal readiness for post-broadcast activities
Active beliefs
  • Technical precision ensures institutional reliability
  • Presidential addresses demand seamless execution
Character traits
precise professional unflappable
Follow Technician's journey

triumphant, flirtatious, and authoritative

delivering triumphant radio address on overlooked women in history, engaging in flirtatious banter with Abbey, overruling C.J. to grant Ed Barrie Meet the Press freedom honoring his Vietnam service, then rushing to leave for personal time

Goals in this moment
  • reconnect intimately with Abbey
  • honor General Ed Barrie's Vietnam service by allowing his unfiltered Meet the Press appearance as political resolution to C.J.'s prior confrontation
Character traits
protective resolute self-aware principled
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey
Ed
primary

Empowered by presidential reprieve (inferred)

Absent but pivotally invoked by CJ's query and Bartlet's monologue, positioned as the freed critic whose Vietnam valor earns unfiltered airtime despite administration tensions.

Goals in this moment
  • Voice unvarnished critiques publicly
  • Leverage service for platform access
Active beliefs
  • Military honor outweighs political loyalty
  • Personal experience justifies bold speech
Character traits
veteran contentious
Follow Ed's journey
C.J. Cregg
primary

Urgently concerned yet swiftly adaptive

Enters the Oval purposefully, acknowledges Abbey's deflection but presses on with Barrie concerns, seeks presidential guidance, accepts the override decision crisply with 'Yes, sir,' confirming no further issues before Bartlet departs.

Goals in this moment
  • Resolve the Barrie media crisis decisively
  • Align staff response with presidential directive
Active beliefs
  • Presidential authority supersedes staff strategy
  • Veterans' sacrifices demand respect despite disagreements
Character traits
dutiful professional resilient deferential
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Bartlet's Oval Office Radio Microphone

Serves as the conduit for Bartlet's just-concluded radio paean to women like Ellen Swallow Richards and Maria Mitchell, now silenced post-'We're out,' its grille lingers as a symbol of public duty yielding to private flirtation and snap judgment on Barrie.

Before: Actively broadcasting Bartlet's address from Resolute Desk
After: Powered down and idle on the desk amid …
Before: Actively broadcasting Bartlet's address from Resolute Desk
After: Powered down and idle on the desk amid personal exodus

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Meet the Press

Emerges as the redemptive platform Bartlet greenlights for Barrie, overriding CJ's containment amid Vietnam homage—transforms ambush risk into valor showcase, underscoring media's role in civil-military dialogue.

Representation Referenced as imminent interview venue for General Barrie
Power Dynamics Grants dissenting general leverage against White House messaging
Impact Elevates veteran voices, straining administration-military relations
Amplify unfiltered military perspectives Secure high-stakes ratings via controversy National broadcast platform Prestige amplifying critiques

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3
Causal

"Abbey's discussion of Nellie Bly directly inspires Bartlet's radio address about overlooked women in history, linking personal conversation to public action."

Bartlet's Humorous Plea for Bedroom Privacy
S2E5 · And It's Surely To Their …
Causal

"Abbey's discussion of Nellie Bly directly inspires Bartlet's radio address about overlooked women in history, linking personal conversation to public action."

Abbey's Tease Turns to Nellie Bly History Lesson
S2E5 · And It's Surely To Their …
NARRATIVELY_FOLLOWS medium

"C.J.'s exposure of Barrie's stolen medal leads to Bartlet granting him leniency on Meet the Press, showing the aftermath of her confrontation."

C.J. Exposes General Barrie's Stolen Valor
S2E5 · And It's Surely To Their …

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: Go ahead and let him out of the box. Say what you want about Barrie, and I could say plenty, but the man was the first one in and the last one out of a war that I didn't want anything to do with. Man's earned the right to say whatever he wants. Let him out of the box, would you?"
"C.J.: Yes, sir."
"BARTLET: I'm outta here."