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Related: About this forumAaron Sorkin Thinks Life Still Imitates 'The West Wing'
The political drama debuted 25 years ago. But the creator believes the politics were mostly beside the point.
When it premiered on NBC on Sept. 22, 1999, The West Wing contained elements of both what great television had been and what great television would become.
It had the strict structure, self-contained episodes and PG-13 language of esteemed network contemporaries like NYPD Blue and ER. (John Wells was an executive producer of both ER and The West Wing.)
But the shows sophisticated content, idiosyncratic sensibility and season-long story lines anticipated the prestige-television boom of cable and eventually streaming. It was a ratings hit and won the Emmy for outstanding drama series four times, one of only five programs to do so. (The others: Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, Mad Men and Game of Thrones.)
Twenty-five years later, The West Wing is a cultural touchstone: dissected by podcasts, parodied for its trademark style, still viewed regularly on Max more than 212 million viewing hours worth since 2020, according to Nielsen. Several cast members were feted at the Emmy Awards last Sunday, and on Friday, the first lady, Jill Biden, will honor the series at the real White House.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/19/arts/television/aaron-sorkin-the-west-wing-25th-anniversary.html
Aristus
(68,328 posts)Ive lost count of how many times Ive seen the first four seasons (the Aaron Sorkin years) all the way through.
Nothing else even comes close.
What we could be as a nation, if only we chose to be
elleng
(136,043 posts)and it's helping me retain sanity NOW, Every Day! (Have a boxed set, and run it most days/nights.)
Aristus
(68,328 posts)Good to see you!
FakeNoose
(35,664 posts)... but it was definitely pre-Chump. Chump changed everything, and I'm sure Aaron Sorkin must realize that.
"The West Wing" created a happy alternate universe for us, because the presidency of Dubya was so depressing and stupid.