Fabula
S1E14 · Take This Sabbath Day

Tarmac Rebuke — C.J. Confronts Bartlet, Leo's Ominous Beat

On the tarmac at Andrews, a small, acidic confrontation reframes the crew's dynamic. C.J. forcefully rebuffs the President's attempts at charm, asserting personal and professional boundaries after an unbearable flight. Bartlet shrugs it off with humor; his minimization exposes a gap between levity and others' lived discomfort. Charlie's quiet comment and Leo's sotto voce "It ain't over yet" turn the moment from private spat into narrative pivot — a human beat that hints at looming moral and political strain inside the administration.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

C.J. forcefully rebuffs Bartlet's attempt at charm, asserting her annoyance with his behavior during the flight and reclaiming her personal agency.

playfulness to defiance

C.J. and Bartlet's conflicting reports about the flight reveal underlying tensions and Bartlet's dismissive attitude toward C.J.'s frustrations.

mock irritation to simmering hostility

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4
C.J. Cregg
primary

Fed-up and indignant, mingled with weary amusement — anger at the infringement of personal space and exhaustion from the trip.

C.J. forcefully rebukes the President, enumerating the flight's intrusions (fjords lecture, quizzes) and asserts personal/professional boundaries before climbing into the car; her language is sharp and performative.

Goals in this moment
  • to establish clear boundaries with the President
  • to signal that the flight's behavior was unacceptable
  • to reclaim personal dignity after an invasive situation
Active beliefs
  • she is entitled to personal rights and comfort even when traveling with the President
  • calling out inappropriate behavior is necessary to maintain professional respect
  • minimization by others will not erase her experience
Character traits
assertive exhausted witty boundary-oriented
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Wryly amused and slightly uncomfortable; protective of staff morale while avoiding confrontation.

Charlie offers a low-key, sympathetic comment to Leo ('It was quite a trip'), quietly acknowledging shared discomfort without escalating; he then boards the car, serving as a calm witness to the exchange.

Goals in this moment
  • to acknowledge C.J.'s experience without creating a scene
  • to support the President and senior staff by reading the room
  • to maintain decorum during arrival
Active beliefs
  • small candid acknowledgments defuse tension
  • it is often wiser to note discomfort quietly than to confront directly
  • maintaining professional calm benefits overall cohesion
Character traits
observant measured supportive discreet
Follow Charlie Young's journey

Amused on the surface, lightly defensive and inclined to minimize conflict through humor.

President Bartlet attempts to defuse the cramped flight with humor and charm, opening a line to C.J., then shrugs the rebuke off with a teasing line as he gets into the car with staff.

Goals in this moment
  • to relieve the awkwardness of travel with levity
  • to reassert personal rapport with his staff through charm
  • to avoid escalating a confrontation
Active beliefs
  • humor is an effective social lubricant
  • staff will accept and forgive his traveling behavior
  • lightness can prevent small incidents from becoming political problems
Character traits
playful sociable oblivious to others' discomfort deflective
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Concerned and quietly vigilant; a sober recognition that the flight's friction may presage ongoing strain.

Leo arrives, offers a formal welcome, listens to the terse exchange, then mutters under his breath ('It ain't over yet') as he gets into the limousine, signaling foreboding and a managerial awareness of longer trouble.

Goals in this moment
  • to take the measure of the interpersonal dynamic
  • to contain any fallout and prepare for future complications
  • to maintain operational control of the situation
Active beliefs
  • momentary exchanges can indicate larger problems
  • the White House must manage both public and private friction
  • anticipation and preparation prevent escalation
Character traits
pragmatic cautious authoritative steady
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
President Bartlet's Limousine

The government limousine functions as the immediate refuge and machine of transition: characters enter to physically close the confrontation, its doors and enclosed space compressing the exchange into a final private moment and signaling movement away from the public tarmac.

Before: Idling at Andrews tarmac, ready to receive the …
After: Occupied by Bartlet, C.J., Charlie and Leo; driving …
Before: Idling at Andrews tarmac, ready to receive the President and senior staff.
After: Occupied by Bartlet, C.J., Charlie and Leo; driving away from the tarmac.
Air Force One (Presidential Aircraft)

Air Force One serves as the proximate source of the friction: the cramped cabin and its in‑flight rituals are referenced as the cause for C.J.'s anger. It anchors the moment — characters descend from it already charged by what happened inside.

Before: Stationary on the tarmac with passengers disembarking after …
After: Emptying of passengers complete; remains parked as the …
Before: Stationary on the tarmac with passengers disembarking after a tense flight.
After: Emptying of passengers complete; remains parked as the entourage departs.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: C.J., look..."
"C.J.: Don't start with me, Mr. President."
"LEO (under his breath): It ain't over yet."