Fabula
S4E2 · 20 Hours in America Part II

Hoover Handshake Unnerves Bartlet — Photo‑Op Postponed

During a tense afternoon when the Dow has just plunged, an elderly visitor, Mr. Keith, casually mentions meeting President Hoover on October 23, 1929 — the day before the Great Depression. The anecdote unnerves Bartlet, who briefly contemplates canceling a feel‑good photo‑op out of superstition. Charlie reads the room, intervenes, and gently but decisively reschedules the event. The moment humanizes Bartlet (a leader susceptible to small, private fears), and underscores the staff’s protective, pragmatic role in shielding him and the administration’s optics during crisis.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet meets Mr. Keith, who shares a personal anecdote about meeting President Hoover on the eve of the Great Depression, unsettling Bartlet.

humor to unease

Bartlet expresses superstition about the photo-op with Mr. Keith, given his historical connection to market crashes, and Charlie steps in to reschedule.

unease to relief

Charlie and Bartlet privately discuss the superstition, with Charlie humorously reinforcing Bartlet's unease, leading to the cancellation of the photo-op.

relief to amusement

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

11

N/A — referenced historically and rhetorically.

Alfred Nobel is invoked via Bartlet's quip equating market destruction to an inventor of explosives — his name functions as a rhetorical device, not a physical presence.

Goals in this moment
  • Serve as rhetorical shorthand for destructive invention
  • Offer darkly comic contrast to current financial collapse
Active beliefs
  • Historical figures can be used as metaphors in political conversation
  • Wit helps leaders cope with crisis
Character traits
iconic (referenced) ironic
Follow Alfred Nobel's journey

N/A — offstage motivational detail that softens Bartlet's approach to Keith.

Bartlet's granddaughter is referenced as the prompt for the favorite‑president question — a small offstage presence that humanizes the President and shapes his playful opening line.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide a human touchstone to prompt conversation
  • Facilitate a benign exchange between President and guest
Active beliefs
  • Children's curiosity invites candid personal stories
  • Family ties inform presidential interactions
Character traits
curious (implied) innocent
Follow Annie Bartlet …'s journey

Protective calm with a hint of exasperation — he refuses to indulge superstition and acts to contain potential fallout.

Charlie enters on request, listens to Keith and Bartlet, bluntly rejects the idea of canceling the photo‑op, and then directly reschedules the session — protecting the President and the administration's optics with decisive, practical action.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent needless disruption of scheduled public relations events
  • Shield the President from symbolic panic and maintain control of optics
Active beliefs
  • Staff must manage both policy and appearance to protect the Presidency
  • Superstition should not dictate scheduling decisions
Character traits
protective decisive pragmatic slightly exasperated
Follow Charlie Young's journey

N/A — referenced as a matter of personal preference.

Harry S. Truman is named by Mr. Keith as his favorite — the mention briefly humanizes Keith and lightens the exchange before the Hoover detail deepens tension.

Goals in this moment
  • Serve as a contrast to Hoover in Keith's recollection
  • Provide a benign humanizing detail in the conversation
Active beliefs
  • Personal impressions of presidents matter in informal conversation
  • Invoking a 'good man' can temper historical dread
Character traits
personable (referenced) moral exemplar (implied)
Follow Harry S. …'s journey

N/A — historical reference that triggers contemporary anxiety.

Herbert Hoover is referenced by Mr. Keith as the president he met — his historical association with the onset of the Great Depression fuels the symbolic weight of the anecdote.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide historical anchor for Mr. Keith's memory
  • Evoke unintentional symbolism related to market collapse
Active beliefs
  • Historical coincidences can carry interpretive weight
  • Public memory of presidents influences present perception
Character traits
historical symbolic
Follow Herbert Hoover's journey

Surface wit masking a flicker of anxiety — a public leader suddenly aware of symbolic threat and embarrassed by the admission.

President Bartlet watches the Dow collapse on TV, banters to deflect, then admits a private unease when Mr. Keith cites Hoover; he steps to the window with Charlie and concedes only momentary superstition.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain public composure and reassure staff despite market collapse
  • Avoid making impulsive decisions that harm optics or policy credibility
Active beliefs
  • Public ritual and optics matter politically
  • Markets and symbolism can interact; superstitions can sway perception even if irrational
Character traits
wry vulnerable (briefly) self-aware willing to be persuaded
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey
Keith
primary

Benign and conversational — unaware his detail will carry symbolic weight and unsettle the President.

Mr. Muriel Keith, the elderly guest, answers Bartlet's question about Hoover, gives the October 23, 1929 date matter‑of‑factly and prefers Truman when asked — his anecdote unintentionally triggers Bartlet's unease.

Goals in this moment
  • Share a personal presidential anecdote
  • Engage respectfully with the President and his family’s interest
Active beliefs
  • Personal memories of presidents are appropriate and valued
  • Naming a favorite president is a courteous human exchange
Character traits
polite matter-of-fact nostalgic
Follow Keith's journey

Concerned and pragmatic — focused on external economic variables rather than symbolic unease, trying to keep conversation tethered to facts.

Sam stands near Bartlet, provides the pragmatic market note about Japan's role, listens and offers quiet grounding while Bartlet processes the anecdote and Charlie intervenes.

Goals in this moment
  • Frame the market story in technical terms to reduce panic
  • Support the President by supplying rational alternatives to superstition
Active beliefs
  • External market actors (e.g., Tokyo/Nikkei) will materially affect domestic markets
  • Rational context can counteract irrational fears in moments of crisis
Character traits
pragmatic steadying concerned
Follow Sam Seaborn's journey

N/A — referenced as the reason for the public photo, embodying outreach goals.

The Mayor of Shantytown is the intended subject of the planned photo‑op; referenced by Charlie/Bartlet as the human face of the event and the reason for the scheduled draping of the President's arm.

Goals in this moment
  • Represent community to the President
  • Provide positive imagery for administration outreach
Active beliefs
  • Photo‑ops help connect policy to people
  • Community leaders serve as authentic optics
Character traits
symbolic constituent-focused
Follow Shantytown Mayor's journey

Detachedly urgent — reporting stark figures that create pressure for the administration to respond.

The on‑screen reporter announces the Dow's 685‑point collapse and attributes it to the Gehrman‑Driscol fund bankruptcy, setting the crisis context that sharpens every subsequent line and decision.

Goals in this moment
  • Convey the economic facts to viewers clearly
  • Frame the administration within the unfolding financial narrative
Active beliefs
  • Objective facts will drive public reaction
  • Media framing shapes political pressure on leaders
Character traits
factual urgent public-facing
Follow TV Reporter's journey

Expectant, then momentarily thwarted — focused on getting the shot but quickly adaptable to the President's request.

The Photographer positions for the official shot, counts down and pauses when Bartlet asks for a second — professionally ready but halted as staff recalibrate the moment for optics.

Goals in this moment
  • Execute the planned presidential photo successfully
  • Follow directions while maintaining composure under shifting circumstances
Active beliefs
  • Timing and coordination are essential for a successful photo‑op
  • The President's request determines whether to proceed
Character traits
professional patient attentive
Follow Unnamed Paparazzo …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
The Dow (Dow Jones Industrial Average)

The Dow functions as the abstract object of crisis. Its 685‑point plunge (announced on TV) heightens pressure, gives real stakes to the conversation, and turns a casual anecdote into a potentially toxic piece of symbolism.

Before: Has just closed with a historic 685‑point decline; …
After: Remains the central economic datapoint generating follow‑on concern; …
Before: Has just closed with a historic 685‑point decline; its movement has been reported and is actively discussed.
After: Remains the central economic datapoint generating follow‑on concern; staff plan to watch international openings for stabilization.
Photographer's Camera for Bartlet-Keith Photo-Op

The Photographer's camera is physically poised to capture the President with Mr. Keith and the Mayor; it amplifies the pressure to proceed with the staged moment and becomes an instrument paused when the President and staff recalibrate.

Before: Set up and aimed for the scheduled photo‑op, …
After: Lowered/paused after Bartlet halts the count; remains available …
Before: Set up and aimed for the scheduled photo‑op, operator counting down.
After: Lowered/paused after Bartlet halts the count; remains available but the shoot is rescheduled.
Bartlet-Shantytown Mayor Photo-Op

The Bartlet‑Shantytown Mayor photo‑op is the planned PR object: a staged interaction meant to produce positive imagery. It is referenced continuously as the practical thing at risk from superstition and ultimately gets rescheduled to preserve optics.

Before: Scheduled and imminent, with staff and camera ready …
After: Postponed to the next day by Charlie's decision; …
Before: Scheduled and imminent, with staff and camera ready to execute.
After: Postponed to the next day by Charlie's decision; scheduling records and participants will be notified.
President's Office Television

The White House television broadcasts the market close and the Reporter’s bulletin, providing the factual catalyst for the scene — it frames the crisis that makes the Hoover anecdote consequential and forces staff to manage optics.

Before: Tuned to national business news and placed in …
After: Remains as the informational focal point; continues to …
Before: Tuned to national business news and placed in the Oval/adjacent room where Bartlet and staff can see it.
After: Remains as the informational focal point; continues to broadcast market coverage as staff discuss scheduling and reactions.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Tokyo

Tokyo is invoked as an offstage economic actor — its Nikkei opening is framed as the immediate hope that could stabilize markets and relieve domestic anxiety, a distant fulcrum for the scene's stakes.

Atmosphere Not present physically; invoked as calm potential anchor across time zones.
Function Referenced external stabilizer for markets; rhetorical lifeline for the President's confidence.
Symbolism Represents the global interconnectedness of markets and the thinness of presidential control over economic forces.
Mentioned as 'mother's milk' — figurative nourishment for markets Referenced with a specific opening time (7:00 PM Eastern) to create urgency
Shantytown

Shantytown is the community source for the mayor who would appear in the photo‑op; it exists as the human subject of outreach and the reason the administration staged the feel‑good moment.

Atmosphere Implied modesty and constituency need — a contrast to White House formality.
Function Origin of the positive PR subject; the community that the administration hopes to symbolically serve.
Symbolism Represents the people the President touches for political connection; a practical symbol of outreach.
Referenced as the Mayor's constituency — no physical presence in scene Serves as the narrative justification for the photo‑op

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Gehrman-Driscol Fund

The Gehrman‑Driscol fund's bankruptcy is the proximate cause of the Dow's historic point loss, reported on TV and seeding the day's crisis context; its failure pressures the White House to manage market panic and public perception.

Representation Represented indirectly via news report attributing the Dow plunge to the fund's filing; there is …
Power Dynamics Its financial collapse exerts outsized influence over national economic stability and forces the Presidency into …
Impact Highlights how private financial institutions can destabilize public governance and compel political actors to manage …
Internal Dynamics Not depicted in the scene, but implied turmoil within the fund (bankruptcy filing) that precipitated …
(Implicit) Wind down or reorganize after filing (bankruptcy process) (External consequence) Its failure shapes market behavior and public confidence Market disruption through asset liquidation and investor panic Media amplification of its bankruptcy to create political pressure

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 4
Causal

"The market crash triggers widespread economic anxiety, which is later compounded by the human tragedy of the campus bombing, showing how national crises escalate and intersect."

Televised Swim-Meet Bombing Interrupts the News
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Causal

"The market crash triggers widespread economic anxiety, which is later compounded by the human tragedy of the campus bombing, showing how national crises escalate and intersect."

Comfort Inn: Counting Points, Seeing Bodies
S4E2 · 20 Hours in America Part …
Character Continuity medium

"Bartlet's dry humor and superstition in reacting to the market crash foreshadow his later interactions with Debbie Fiderer, where his humor and deductive reasoning play key roles."

Integrity Over Patronage: Bartlet Confronts Debbie
S4E2 · 20 Hours in America Part …
Character Continuity medium

"Bartlet's dry humor and superstition in reacting to the market crash foreshadow his later interactions with Debbie Fiderer, where his humor and deductive reasoning play key roles."

The Interview: Integrity on Trial in the Oval
S4E2 · 20 Hours in America Part …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "You shook hands with him, and next day the Great Depression started.""
"BARTLET: "But now, while I'm talking about it, I feel like it's ridiculous that someone like me would consider canceling a photo-op...""
"CHARLIE: "Mr. Keith, I'm sorry. We're going to have to reschedule this for tomorrow.""