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elleng

(136,043 posts)
Sun Dec 29, 2019, 12:18 PM Dec 2019

They Can't Get Enough of 'The West Wing' Right Now.

'President Bartlet doesn’t live in the White House, even on TV, anymore. But his fans find solace in streaming an old favorite.

Election night, 2017. Alarmed and unnerved by the state of politics in America, Josh Reinitz, a lawyer and Democrat in Fair Lawn, N.J., is running for borough council. But it is a stressful time.

As his campaign waits for the results at a local senior center, Mr. Reinitz slips away to a dark room to the side and powers up his iPhone. For the next 45 minutes, he sits by himself watching television — “Two Cathedrals,” to be specific, his favorite “West Wing” episode.

“Fortunately,” Mr. Reinitz recalled recently, “I was able to immerse myself in the episode to the point that I didn’t hear another sound until the room erupted in cheers as our victory was assured.”

“The West Wing,” a workplace drama set in the White House and dedicated to the notion that Washington is run by good people who are doing their best, was broadcast on NBC for seven seasons, from 1999 to 2006. Though its ratings declined over the years, at its peak it regularly drew more than 17 million viewers.

It is now streaming on Netflix. And to its many liberal and independent-leaning fans, in particular, it has become something more than just a nostalgic drama from a time when men’s suits with pleated pants is fashionable and Twitter does not yet exist. For many in the Trump era, the show is an idealistic alternative reality, an escape from the vitriol and ill-will that they see coursing like poison through contemporary politics. . .

“The bulk of the mail we’d get would be from people who identified themselves as Republicans or said, ‘I don’t agree with the politics’ but nonetheless liked the way they felt when they watched the show,” Aaron Sorkin, who created the show and wrote nearly all of the episodes in the first four seasons, said in an email. “That continues today.”'>>>

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/29/us/politics/west-wing-politics.html?

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They Can't Get Enough of 'The West Wing' Right Now. (Original Post) elleng Dec 2019 OP
I may start re-watching this myself. 3catwoman3 Dec 2019 #1
it was a vital resource for surviving the W years... dhill926 Dec 2019 #2
"What Kind of Day Has It Been" LessAspin Jan 2020 #3
Blackmailing Bartlett... LessAspin Jan 2020 #4
Allison Janney on Kimmell last night.. LessAspin Jan 2020 #5
I agree on all those points, elleng Jan 2020 #6

LessAspin

(1,406 posts)
3. "What Kind of Day Has It Been"
Wed Jan 1, 2020, 01:41 PM
Jan 2020
Note: "What Kind of Day Has It Been" is also the title of season finale episodes of the other Aaron Sorkin TV series Sports Night (season 1, episode 23), The West Wing (season 1, episode 22), and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (episode 22).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Newsroom_episodes#cite_note-27


Aaron Sorkin explained in the dvd commentary of the series finale of The Newsroom where that quote came from.

LessAspin

(1,406 posts)
4. Blackmailing Bartlett...
Fri Jan 3, 2020, 10:17 PM
Jan 2020

Another storyline I recall is where Bartlett's daughter gets kidnapped. In order to avoid any possibility of some foreign government or bad actors from blackmailing Bartlett they turned over power to the Speaker of the House (John Goodman).

Given all the crap that Trump is into you can easily imagine him being blackmailed into doing the bidding of MBS or any number of similar scenarios...

LessAspin

(1,406 posts)
5. Allison Janney on Kimmell last night..
Wed Jan 15, 2020, 09:48 PM
Jan 2020

Jimmy Kimmell asked if West Wing could be re-booted.

Allison Janney said that's up to Aaron Sorkin.

They both agreed that it really wouldn't work with the original cast. Which is probably the only way it would come back anyways. Plus they would probably want it to reflect the new political landscape we live in.

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