C.J. Recruits and Rehearses Sloane for Media Redemption

In her office, Sloane watches post-SOTU TV commentary as C.J. bursts in, pitching a satellite interview to preempt scrutiny over his past excessive force allegations. Overcoming his reluctance to go home, she coaches precise responses—highlighting his heroism, addressing 1980s trouble head-on—and advises coat-and-tie polish. Enlisting Carol for hotel transport, C.J. transforms Sloane into a controlled narrative tool, countering media chaos amid the administration's spiraling hostage crisis.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

5

Officer Sloane watches Mark Gottfried on TV discussing the length of Bartlet's State of the Union address, establishing the post-speech context.

curiosity to focus ["C.J.'s office"]

C.J. enters abruptly and pitches Sloane on doing a television interview to capitalize on his State of the Union appearance.

hesitation to persuasion

Sloane resists with weary reluctance while C.J. counters with media inevitability, demonstrating her press secretary expertise.

resistance to reluctant acceptance

C.J. coaches Sloane through anticipated interview questions about both his heroism and past troubles, shaping his narrative.

uncertainty to cautious preparation

C.J. arranges Sloane's transportation while asserting sartorial control (coat/tie), completing her media packaging of the officer.

resolution to departure

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Animated enthusiasm for broadcast dissection

Appears via TV broadcast in C.J.'s office, delivering live post-SOTU commentary on speech length with witty historical comparisons, inadvertently fueling Sloane's tension until C.J. intervenes.

Goals in this moment
  • Entertain and inform national audience on SOTU metrics
  • Highlight speech's historic scale
Active beliefs
  • Precise trivia underscores political spectacle
  • Viewership thrives on insider speech analysis
Character traits
witty analytical pundit-sharp
Follow Mark Gottfried's journey
Jack
primary

Wary reluctance laced with resignation, eyes the media glare with haunted caution

Seated in C.J.'s office, intently watching TV commentary on the SOTU, interjects defensively about word count trivia, voices strong reluctance to appear on TV preferring to go home, participates in her rehearsal by asking about uniform, ultimately acquiesces to coaching.

Goals in this moment
  • Avoid unwanted media exposure and scrutiny of past
  • Seek safe return to hotel amid escalating fame
Active beliefs
  • Media will inevitably dredge up his 1980s excessive force incident
  • White House experience predicts news cycles accurately
Character traits
reluctant defensive pragmatic forthcoming under pressure
Follow Jack's journey
C.J. Cregg
primary

Determined intensity veiling crisis urgency, laser-focused on narrative control

Bursts into office with urgent energy, grabs remote to silence TV, perches on desk pitching satellite interview, expertly rehearses responses blending heroism and past defense, overrides Sloane's objections with predictive savvy, yells for Carol to handle logistics, exits decisively.

Goals in this moment
  • Preempt media scandals by scripting Sloane's redemption arc
  • Integrate Sloane into White House media defense against broader tempests
Active beliefs
  • Proactive spin shapes news cycles before they erupt
  • Personal candor rehearsed disarms past allegations effectively
Character traits
commanding strategic persuasive empathetic yet firm
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey
Carol
primary

Calm professionalism, unflappable amid late-night frenzy

Promptly enters office at C.J.'s yell, affirms readiness with simple 'Yeah,' agrees without hesitation to escort Sloane back to his hotel, embodying efficient support in the Press Office hierarchy.

Goals in this moment
  • Execute C.J.'s logistical directive seamlessly
  • Ensure Sloane's safe transit preserving operational flow
Active beliefs
  • Team coordination maintains crisis momentum
  • Guest handling upholds White House protocol
Character traits
reliable concise dutiful poised
Follow Carol's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
C.J.'s Office Television

Dominates the office as Sloane watches Mark Gottfried's Capitol Beat commentary shredding the SOTU, its glow amplifying post-speech scrutiny; C.J. grabs the remote to abruptly silence it, shifting focus from chaotic punditry to controlled rehearsal—symbolizing media's double-edged threat now neutralized for narrative hijack.

Before: Powered on, broadcasting live post-SOTU analysis in C.J.'s …
After: Powered off via remote, screen dark and silent …
Before: Powered on, broadcasting live post-SOTU analysis in C.J.'s office
After: Powered off via remote, screen dark and silent in the office

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
Bartlet Administration (Executive Office of the President)

Embodies the Press Office's nerve center where C.J. and Carol orchestrate Sloane's transformation into a media asset, countering scandals through rehearsed heroism amid national hostage frenzy—White House machinery grinds media chaos into controlled spin, protecting Bartlet's image in unwinnable drug war shadows.

Representation Through Press Secretary C.J. Cregg and aide Carol executing crisis comms protocol
Power Dynamics Exerting authoritative control over Sloane's narrative, directing staff logistics against external media scrutiny
Impact Reinforces White House mastery of news cycles, turning personal redemption into institutional armor
Internal Dynamics Hierarchical efficiency: C.J. commands, Carol executes in unified press operation
Forge proactive counter-narrative to bury Sloane's past amid SOTU glow Secure guest asset for TV defense bolstering administration amid Colombia crisis Media coaching and scripting by senior comms staff Logistical deployment of aides for asset management

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"C.J.: "Officer Sloane? Would you be willing to go on television tomorrow?""
"SLOANE: "I think I'd really rather just go home.""
"C.J.: "This is going to be a part of the news cycle tomorrow whether you go home or not.""
"C.J.: "You'll do a very quick satellite interview. [rehearsing] 'What was it like being at the State of the Union?' 'Did you meet the President'... It was a thrill and an honor. Talk about your act of heroism... 'Now, I understand you had some trouble back in the early 80's...'""