Oliver Ruthlessly Grills C.J. on MS Collapse and Flu Lie
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Oliver confronts C.J. about her knowledge of the President's MS attack, establishing the confrontation's stakes.
C.J. deflects Oliver's probing with humor and historical anecdotes, masking her unease.
Oliver shuts down C.J.'s deflection with a blunt admission of his own nature, pressuring her to take the questioning seriously.
Oliver accuses C.J. of lying to the press about the President's condition, challenging her complicity.
C.J. refuses to implicate others in the cover-up, asserting her boundaries under Oliver's relentless questioning.
Oliver uses a trivial question about the time to illustrate C.J.'s tendency to over-answer, revealing his manipulative tactics.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
unfazed
ruthlessly interrogating C.J. about her presence at the President's collapse and her flu announcement to the press, dismantling her evasions and calling a break
- • probe C.J.'s firsthand knowledge of the President's MS attack
- • demand precise answers about the flu lie and cover-up involvement
Neutral invocation as a rhetorical shield
James Polk is briefly invoked by C.J. during her evasive rambling as a historical example of a president concealing diverticulitis, deployed to normalize hidden executive health issues and deflect Oliver's probing into Bartlet's MS cover-up.
- • Undermine the uniqueness of Bartlet's concealment
- • Dilute legal scrutiny through historical relativism
- • Presidential infirmities are routinely hidden from public view
- • Historical parallels justify contemporary deceptions
significantly referenced as having had an MS attack and collapsed a year ago in January, with C.J. present nearby
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The glass pitcher and drinking glasses sit pristine and untouched at the interrogation table's center, embodying frozen civility amid escalating tension. C.J. references a 'Stueben glass pitcher' crashing during the President's collapse a year ago as her cue to enter the room, bridging the past incident to Oliver's present dissection of her complicity and the flu lie.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
This White House legal bunker hosts Oliver Babish's methodical takedown of C.J.'s defenses, with daylight slicing through the space as videotapes loom implicitly and questions carve into loyalties. The confined table setup amplifies claustrophobic pressure, turning a formal office into a psychological battleground where cover-up fissures widen under subpoena threats.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"OLIVER: What did you think had happened? C.J.: At first glance, I thought he might have a virus contracted from a rare African tsetse fly, possibly tropical sprue. I'm not an expert, but I did meet a man once in India."
"OLIVER: In my entire life I've never found anything charming. C.J.: [after long pause] Really?"
"C.J.: [yelling] I'm not getting into that! I'm not getting into who said what. We can do that at the next of what I'm sure will be many sessions."