Fabula
S2E17 · The Stackhouse Filibuster

C.J. Interrupts with Greeting, Bartlet Spots Donna

In the charged atmosphere of the White House portico, following Bartlet's frustrated dismissal of Stackhouse as a 'crank,' C.J. approaches and offers a polite 'Good evening, Mr. President,' providing a brief, courteous interruption to the heated exchange with Leo. Bartlet, revealing his attuned leadership and care for his team, immediately pivots to notice Donna nearby, asking if she needs something. This fleeting moment humanizes Bartlet amid the filibuster crisis, underscoring staff loyalty and personal dynamics as a counterpoint to political tensions, setting up Donna's pivotal role in uncovering Stackhouse's secret.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

C.J. enters and greets the President, shifting the focus.

dismissal to greeting ['THE OVAL OFFICE']

Bartlet notices Donna and asks if she needs something, indicating a shift in attention.

greeting to inquiry ['THE OVAL OFFICE']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4
Stackhouse
primary

Resolute integrity fueling filibuster endurance (as invoked)

Central subject of Bartlet's preceding vent—dismissed as a 'crank' for filibustering instead of confiding his autistic grandson's needs directly, highlighting his principled secrecy that fuels White House ire and impending pivot.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure autism funding without grandson exploitation
  • Force bipartisan attention via unrelenting stand
Active beliefs
  • Personal vulnerability corrupts political process
  • Moral crusades demand personal sacrifice
Character traits
principled defiant protective
Follow Stackhouse's journey
C.J. Cregg
primary

Composed courtesy masking underlying urgency

Approaches the entering President with poised timing to deliver a courteous 'Good evening, Mr. President,' interrupting the frustrated dialogue seamlessly and restoring protocol in the charged transition space.

Goals in this moment
  • Interrupt heated exchange politely to engage President
  • Facilitate transition to Donna's critical input
Active beliefs
  • Decorum preserves power dynamics in crisis
  • President's attention must be earned through respect
Character traits
courteous professional poised
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

frustrated

Expressing frustration to Leo about Stackhouse not approaching him directly for help with his grandson, dismissing Stackhouse as a 'crank', then greeting C.J. and noticing Donna to ask if she needs something

Goals in this moment
  • Understand Stackhouse's reluctance to seek personal help
  • Pivot to caring for staff amid political tensions
Character traits
protective resolute self-aware principled
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey
Donna Moss
primary

Attentive readiness laced with quiet determination

Positioned silently nearby in the antechamber shadows, her presence draws Bartlet's immediate notice and solicitous query 'Hey Donna, you need something?,' positioning her as the poised bearer of pivotal Stackhouse intel.

Goals in this moment
  • Gain President's ear for grandson revelation
  • Shift filibuster strategy through personal insight
Active beliefs
  • Hidden human stakes unlock political empathy
  • Staff diligence uncovers legislative truths
Character traits
observant loyal competent
Follow Donna Moss's journey

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Thematic Parallel medium

"Stackhouse's critique of misplaced priorities in funding mirrors Bartlet's later realization of the importance of family and personal motives over political pragmatism."

Stackhouse's Fierce Autism Funding Ultimatum Ejects Josh
S2E17 · The Stackhouse Filibuster

Key Dialogue

"C.J.: "Good evening, Mr. President.""
"BARTLET: "Hey. Hey Donna, you need something?""