Andrews Fly‑By — The President Calls the Families

While venting about domestic politics, President Bartlet is interrupted by Colonel Weiskopf with urgent news: Air Force One's landing-gear indicator can't be visually confirmed, forcing a slow fly‑by of Andrews and an hour‑plus delay over Central Tennessee. The moment refocuses Bartlet from partisan irritation to human consequence — he immediately decides to call the families of the five fallen servicemen from the plane. The scene functions as a tonal pivot, humanizing the presidency, raising operational and political stakes, and compressing time and risk into a single, morally decisive choice.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet notices Colonel Weiskopf approaching and steps out to receive an update on the landing gear situation.

anticipation to concern ['Air Force One hallway']

Weiskopf informs Bartlet that the F-16 couldn't get a visual read, necessitating a fly-by at Andrews, which will take over an hour.

concern to resignation

Bartlet updates Leo on the situation and decides to call the families of the fallen soldiers while still airborne.

resignation to determination ["Air Force One, the President's Office"]

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
Mark
primary

Off-screen; invoked as a symbol of local political pressure rather than an emotional actor in the scene.

Mentioned by Bartlet as a political example ('Mark's got a tough district') during the opening rant; he is not physically present and contributes only as rhetorical context for Bartlet's irritation.

Goals in this moment
  • Stay politically viable in a difficult district (inferred)
  • Ensure constituent issues receive attention (inferred)
Active beliefs
  • Local political pressures shape national political conversations (inferred)
  • Individual district challenges demand White House awareness (inferred)
Character traits
campaign-aware constituency-focused used-as-exemplar
Follow Mark's journey

Irritated and sarcastic about politics, then quickly shifts to solemn, focused resolve—public irritation gives way to private empathy and executive clarity.

On the phone in his compact Air Force One office, Bartlet is mid‑rant about political priorities when he notices Weiskopf, moves into the hallway to receive a briefing, returns to the office, digests the operational timeline, and immediately pivots to order personal outreach to the fallen servicemen's families.

Goals in this moment
  • Get a clear, authoritative account of the aircraft problem and timeline
  • Ensure the safety and proper handling of the flight (minimize risk)
  • Honor the human cost by personally contacting the families of the fallen
Active beliefs
  • The presidency requires personal responsibility for human consequences
  • Operational realities constrain political theater and must be faced directly
  • Political complaints are secondary when lives and families are involved
Character traits
decisive morally-centered impatient wry authoritative
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey
Weiskopf
primary

Controlled urgency — prioritizes precision and protocol over commentary, conveying seriousness without alarmism.

Descends the stairs and briefs the President directly and succinctly: no visual confirmation of the landing gear, plan a fly‑by of Andrews, and estimate an hour and fifteen minutes. He communicates factual, procedural information with professional gravity.

Goals in this moment
  • Convey accurate technical assessment so leadership can make decisions
  • Obtain buy‑in for the fly‑by procedure and hold pattern
  • Control risk through established aviation and military procedures
Active beliefs
  • Clear, direct reporting is essential in an in‑flight emergency
  • Procedural responses (fly‑by, tower observation) are the safest path
  • The President must be informed immediately to coordinate next steps
Character traits
calm professional direct competent urgent
Follow Weiskopf's journey

Not present; represented in Bartlet's frustration and used to underscore shifting political priorities.

Referred to in Bartlet's anecdote about the Vice Chairs pulling out a map of Africa; they function here as the target of his earlier political irritation and as rhetorical background to the interruption.

Goals in this moment
  • Elevate policy priorities for constituencies (inferred)
  • Use visible, forceful tactics to gain presidential attention (inferred)
Active beliefs
  • Direct pressure is required to move the White House on issues
  • Constituency advocacy can and should reshape presidential priorities
Character traits
demanding politically assertive symbolic
Follow Black Caucus …'s journey

Absent and deceased; their loss creates a solemn, grieving emotional current that Bartlet responds to on behalf of the nation.

Referenced by Bartlet as 'the five guys' whose families he will call; they are not present but their deaths are the moral engine that redirects Bartlet's attention from politics to human consequence.

Goals in this moment
  • Be acknowledged by the Commander‑in‑Chief (inferred from Bartlet's decision)
  • Have their families contacted and honored (inferred)
Active beliefs
  • Service members' deaths demand personal recognition from the president
  • Their sacrifice requires the state to respond humanely and directly
Character traits
victims sacrificial narrative-catalyst
Follow Five Fallen …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Bartlet's Air Force One Phone

The Air Force One phone is active at the opening of the exchange—Bartlet is on the line with Leo—then becomes the instrument he will use to call the families of the five fallen servicemen. It enables the instant translation of operational delay into personal presidential action.

Before: In use in the President's office; Bartlet is …
After: Remains the primary communication device; prepared to be …
Before: In use in the President's office; Bartlet is speaking into it while venting about politics.
After: Remains the primary communication device; prepared to be used to call the families once phone numbers are sent up.
Air Force One (Andrews Fly-By)

Air Force One itself is the operational stage: airborne in a holding pattern over Central Tennessee, removed from standard jet routes, and ordered to perform a low fly‑by of Andrews so ground crews can attempt visual confirmation of the landing gear.

Before: Airborne over Central Tennessee, holding away from jet …
After: Preparing to execute the Andrews fly‑by; will remain …
Before: Airborne over Central Tennessee, holding away from jet routes while crew and command assess the landing gear indicator.
After: Preparing to execute the Andrews fly‑by; will remain airborne for the estimated hour and fifteen minutes until visual confirmation or another resolution is achieved.
Map of Africa

The map of Africa is invoked in Bartlet's opening rant as a memory prop—an anecdotal proof of past political pressure—serving rhetorical and thematic purposes rather than direct action in the scene.

Before: A recalled prop from past retreats/dinners; not physically …
After: Remains a rhetorical reference point in Bartlet's complaint; …
Before: A recalled prop from past retreats/dinners; not physically present in the office during the event.
After: Remains a rhetorical reference point in Bartlet's complaint; its status unchanged.
Phone Numbers for Families of the Five Fallen Servicemen

A logistical detail made into a narrative beat: Bartlet instructs that the phone numbers for the families be 'sent up' to his office, turning the abstract obligation to contact next of kin into an immediate, actionable item.

Before: Held at a lower deck/operations area (not yet …
After: Ordered to be sent up to the President's …
Before: Held at a lower deck/operations area (not yet delivered to the President's office).
After: Ordered to be sent up to the President's office so Bartlet can make the calls from Air Force One.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Andrews Tower

Andrews Tower is the operational observation point for the planned fly‑by: Air Force One will 'buzz the tower' so ground crews and tower personnel can visually inspect the landing gear, making the tower the immediate tactical focal point of the emergency.

Atmosphere Procedural, tense, and utilitarian—an observation post suddenly charged with urgent consequence.
Function Observation and control point for visual confirmation of landing gear; the destination for the fly‑by …
Symbolism Represents institutional capacity to verify and act—where technical confirmation meets human oversight.
Access Military-controlled tower with restricted, authorized personnel only.
Tower lights and radio chatter as primary sensory markers Ground crews on the tarmac prepared to observe or respond
President's Office Aboard Air Force One

The President's compact Air Force One office is where the scene begins and largely unfolds: Bartlet phones Leo, receives Weiskopf, steps into the hallway, and returns to make the private decision to call families. It condenses policy argument, operational briefings, and moral choices into an intimate executive space.

Atmosphere Tense, intimate, and claustrophobic—engine hum and night create a background of suspended urgency punctuated by …
Function Private command center for immediate presidential decision‑making and communication during flight.
Symbolism Embodies the intersection of institutional power and individual responsibility—the place where policy rhetoric becomes personal …
Access Restricted to senior staff and security personnel; functionally private during flight.
Dimly lit cabin interior with distant engine noise Telephone in use, narrow doorway leading to a hallway and stairwell Close quarters that force conversational immediacy
Central Tennessee

Central Tennessee is the aircraft's current airspace location, chosen because controllers removed Air Force One from jet routes; the dark, featureless night below prevents easy visual confirmation, necessitating the Andrews fly‑by and producing the temporal limbo for the scene's moral pivot.

Atmosphere Suspended and isolating — a dark, featureless expanse that emphasizes limbo and the compression of …
Function The physical locus of the holding pattern; explains the duration and procedural constraints of the …
Symbolism Represents a moral and temporal limbo—decisions suspended until human confirmation is possible.
Access Restricted airspace; operationally controlled by military/ATC.
Nighttime over rural terrain with limited visibility Absence of moonlight and ground reference points complicates visual confirmation

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
Congressional Black Caucus

The Congressional Black Caucus functions as the political subtext: Bartlet's annoyance at their shifting priorities (from Africa to Brooklyn) opens the scene and explains his initial mood, supplying rhetorical contrast to the human tragedy that follows.

Representation Indirectly, through Bartlet's anecdote and complaint about their tactics and demands; they are not physically …
Power Dynamics Exerts political leverage over the White House through votes and public pressure; their demands can …
Impact Their asserted priorities complicate the President's political calculus and highlight tensions between symbolic advocacy and …
Internal Dynamics Potential friction between high‑visibility leadership (Vice Chairs) and broader caucus goals; tactical bargaining emerges as …
Press the administration to prioritize issues affecting Black communities Leverage political capital to secure policy attention or concessions Legislative bargaining and vote leverage Public advocacy and moral pressure Internal caucus coordination and targeted demands
U.S. Armed Forces

The U.S. Armed Forces provide the operational backbone of the event: their officers (Weiskopf) relay the technical assessment, authorize or recommend the Andrews fly‑by, and control air assets and procedures that determine the President's options and timeline.

Representation Through Colonel Weiskopf's direct briefing and by enacting aviation protocols (holding pattern, fly‑by orders, coordination …
Power Dynamics Exerts operational authority over aircraft safety and procedures while reporting to civilian leadership; the military's …
Impact The incident underscores the military's role as executor of emergency protocol and situational limiter for …
Internal Dynamics Relies on disciplined chain of command and interagency coordination; pressure exists to balance caution with …
Ensure the safety of the aircraft, passengers, and crew Accurately assess and resolve the landing gear uncertainty Maintain controlled, secure handling of a presidential flight Control of air assets and flight procedures Expert technical assessments and chain‑of‑command reporting Coordination with ground control and tower personnel

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Causal medium

"Bartlet noticing Weiskopf's approach leads to the update about the F-16's failed visual read and the need for a fly-by."

Bartlet Vents as Air Force One Ordered into Andrews Fly‑By
S4E19 · Angel Maintenance
What this causes 1
Causal medium

"Bartlet noticing Weiskopf's approach leads to the update about the F-16's failed visual read and the need for a fly-by."

Bartlet Vents as Air Force One Ordered into Andrews Fly‑By
S4E19 · Angel Maintenance

Key Dialogue

"WEISKOPF: No, sir, they're unable to get a visual read. We're going to go ahead with the fly-by at Andrews."
"WEISKOPF: Probably about an hour and 15 minutes."
"BARTLET: The Falcon couldn't get a visual read, so we're going to buzz the tower at Andrews in a Boeing 747. Weiskopf says it's going to be an hour and 15 minutes. I'm going to call the families from up here of the five guys. We'll send up those phone numbers."