Fabula
S1E16 · 20 Hours in L.A.

Brittle Levity on the Tarmac

On the Air Force One tarmac, Bartlet mounts the plane while trading perfunctory goodbyes with Leo, then greets C.J. and Charlie with a practiced, exuberant patter meant to buoy an exhausted press. His “race the sun” line is jaunty on the surface but thinly veils fatigue and strain. C.J.’s deadpan reminder that the press is not in the mood at 3:00 a.m. punctures the façade, crystallizing a theme: the President must perform optimism even as his staff— and the media—are frayed. This quiet beat sets the tonal counterpoint before the flight’s political urgencies intensify.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet greets C.J. and Charlie with forced cheer as they join him boarding the plane.

weary to performatively energetic ['Air Force One stairs']

Bartlet checks on press morale, masking exhaustion with grandiose travel imagery.

concern to forced optimism

C.J. delivers dry reality check about the press corps' 3 AM displeasure.

optimism to wry resignation

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4
C.J. Cregg
primary

Dryly exasperated and attentive; she prioritizes honest appraisal of press conditions over comforting display.

Greets the President with a polite 'Good morning,' gives a deadpan assessment of the press's mood, and punctures the President's upbeat line with a reality check — exercising media-savvy candor rather than sycophantic cheer.

Goals in this moment
  • Set realistic expectations about the press to avoid being blindsided.
  • Protect the President from unsustainable messaging and poor optics.
Active beliefs
  • The press's mood materially affects how events will be reported and perceived.
  • Honest, even blunt, briefings are preferable to false cheer when planning responses.
Character traits
sardonic truthful media-savvy protective
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Polite professionalism mixed with fatigue; eager to be useful and to maintain decorum during a strained moment.

Walks up with C.J., greets the President respectfully, stands in supportive, attentive readiness as boarding unfolds — a junior aide present to assist and observe the presidential routine.

Goals in this moment
  • Support the President and senior staff during transit and be available for tasks.
  • Remain composed and efficient to minimize disruptions during boarding.
Active beliefs
  • Deference and steadiness contribute to the smooth functioning of presidential movements.
  • Small gestures of professionalism matter when the broader team is exhausted.
Character traits
dutiful attentive respectful reliable
Follow Charlie Young's journey

Feigning buoyant energy to mask exhaustion and the political weight he carries; publicly upbeat but privately strained.

Steps from the limo, exchanges a perfunctory goodbye with Leo, greets C.J. and Charlie with practiced exuberance, and delivers a jaunty line about "racing the sun" — performing optimism to lift morale while boarding Air Force One.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain the presidential rhythm and public image of composure.
  • Lift staff and press morale to avoid negative optics for the flight and upcoming events.
Active beliefs
  • The President must perform optimism to hold the administration together.
  • Public appearances and small rituals can influence morale and media narrative.
Character traits
charismatic performative wry tired
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Controlled concern; quietly vigilant about logistics and the President's condition, masking any deeper worry behind professional brevity.

Steps out with the President, delivers the brief, businesslike parting line 'Have a good flight,' and remains a steady, procedural presence at the limo — ensuring the transition to boarding is orderly and swift.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the President departs without complication and on schedule.
  • Shield the President from unnecessary friction or additional burdens before flight.
Active beliefs
  • Stability and procedural discipline prevent small problems from becoming crises.
  • His role is to preserve presidential focus, even at the expense of public theatrics.
Character traits
pragmatic protective laconic authoritative
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
President Bartlet's Limousine

The long black limousine functions as the immediate transfer point from ground vehicle to aircraft, arriving the President and Leo, and serving as the private, cramped threshold where brief ritual farewells and last-minute greetings occur before ascending the airstairs.

Before: Idling at the tarmac with doors open; the …
After: Vacant after occupants leave; remains at the plane …
Before: Idling at the tarmac with doors open; the President and Leo inside/stepping out.
After: Vacant after occupants leave; remains at the plane briefly before being moved off or closed up for departure.
Air Force One (Presidential Aircraft)

Air Force One serves as both transport and stage—its lowered airstairs create the physical act of transition while the aircraft's cabin promises the next arena for political work; boarding signals the end of ground interactions and the start of airborne policy urgencies.

Before: Parked on the runway with airstairs down and …
After: Occupied by the President and staff as they …
Before: Parked on the runway with airstairs down and cabin ready for boarding under runway lighting.
After: Occupied by the President and staff as they complete boarding; prepares for imminent departure toward the west.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Andrews Air Force Base

Andrews Air Force Base tarmac provides the open, exposed setting for this transfer ritual: a neutral, tightly controlled public stage where private fatigue collides with official duty and where the President must perform for both staff and media.

Atmosphere Cool, fatigue-tinged, procedural — quiet except for engines, footsteps and clipped greetings; a mixture of …
Function Staging area and transitional threshold between ground obligations and airborne work; a place where optics …
Symbolism Embodies the intersection of personal cost and institutional duty; the tarmac symbolizes exposure—where private strain …
Access Heavily guarded and restricted to authorized personnel and credentialed press; controlled perimeter and protocol in …
Runway lights and dim night illumination Hum of idling vehicles and distant aircraft sounds Cold air and the briskness of pre-dawn hour Airstairs lowered against the plane, the limo parked nearby

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

No narrative connections mapped yet

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Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "Press in a good mood?""
"C.J.: "No, Mr. President, I wouldn't say they were.""
"BARTLET: "Oh, it's going to be great. We're going to race the sun to the pacific horizon!""
"C.J.: "I'll be sure to tell them that, sir. I'm sure it'll pick them right up.""