Leo Breaks Bartlet's Vicious Circle Obsession, Urges Babish Meeting
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Leo enters as Cal leaves, signaling a shift in focus from policy discussion to more pressing matters.
Bartlet obsessively repeats his 'vicious circle' metaphor to Leo, revealing his underlying stress and distraction.
Leo cuts through Bartlet's circular thinking with decisive action, directing them to meet with Oliver Babish immediately.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
frustrated
Discusses school funding inequities with Cal, then obsessively repeats 'vicious circle' to Leo, reluctantly questions meeting timing
- • Express outrage over school funding vicious circle
- • Resist immediate redirection from obsession
Calmly neutral, absorbing presidential intensity without disruption
Cal concludes the policy discussion with crisp resolve, politely thanking the President and exiting the Oval Office precisely as Leo enters, serving as a neutral pivot point transitioning from education equity debate to crisis redirection.
- • Gracefully end the school funding consultation
- • Maintain poised advisory presence amid tension
- • Action on inequities is feasible and necessary
- • Presidential frustration requires steady handling
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Bartlet's 'vicious circle' metaphor about property taxes echoes Toby's 'big potatoes' comment, both hinting at larger, unresolved issues (MS scandal) beneath surface conversations."
"Bartlet's 'vicious circle' metaphor about property taxes echoes Toby's 'big potatoes' comment, both hinting at larger, unresolved issues (MS scandal) beneath surface conversations."
Key Dialogue
"BARTLET: "It's a vicious circle, Leo.""
"BARTLET: "It never stops.""
"LEO: "Let's go see him." / BARTLET: "Now?" / LEO: "He's waiting for us.""