Narrative Web
Location

Shenandoah National Park

Large national park in Virginia's ridgelines, proposed as a drivable retreat from DC by President Bartlet, distinct from urban DC parks like Tidal Basin.
3 events
3 rich involvements

Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S1E8 · Enemies
Bartlet's Midnight Parks Lecture

Shenandoah is singled out as both geographically proximate (in Virginia) and practically actionable—a place Bartlet suggests for a staff field trip, tying rhetoric to a concrete administrative gesture.

Atmosphere

Conjured as restorative and domestic—ridge-top overlooks and pine-scented air.

Functional Role

Proposed destination that converts anecdote into potential staff bonding and future policy framing.

Symbolic Significance

Represents immediate, local stewardship and accessible conservation.

Mention of ridge-top overlooks and proximity to Washington Used as a concrete proposal to anchor the lecture
S4E19 · Angel Maintenance
Blue Ridge Diversion: Scrambling the Cover Story

Shenandoah National Park is explicitly named by Ed's laptop search ('Wildfire Week') and becomes the substantive detail the staff could hand reporters — an actual event that could explain ridgeline glows, lending the team's spin factual color.

Atmosphere

Remote, natural, and seasonally active in a way that can be plausibly cited as cause for visible lights.

Functional Role

Source of a concrete cover story (controlled burns/Wildfire Week) that could be cited to rationalize what reporters might observe.

Symbolic Significance

Functions as the benign, natural explanation standing in for unwanted military or technical truths.

Access Restrictions

Public national park, not controlled by the White House; the team can only reference it, not direct it.

Controlled burns during 'Wildfire Week' producing ridgeline glows. Forested slopes and vistas visible from the air at night. Official event calendar entries searchable online.
S4E19 · Angel Maintenance
In-Flight Briefing: Casualties, Cover Stories, and Colombia

Shenandoah National Park is the factual anchor Ed finds on his laptop — 'Wildfire Week' offers descriptive imagery staff can lift into a cover line, lending ecological legitimacy to the explanation for glowing ridgelines.

Atmosphere

Evoked as colorful and seasonal (lilacs, ochre, crimson) — an oddly pastoral counterpoint to the stark political crisis aboard the plane.

Functional Role

Source of verifiable detail to support the improvised press narrative.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the tension between natural spectacle and manufactured political narrative.

Controlled burns or seasonal foliage that could create visible glows. Park events and lighting that are potentially visible from altitude at night.

Events at This Location

Everything that happens here

3