Bartlet's Dawn Radio Flub and Abbey Chase Fizzle

Exhausted after multiple failed takes of his radio address before a child audience, President Bartlet flubs 'Good evening' at 5:45 AM, sparking frantic debate over time amid mounting frustration that exposes his human impatience. Desperate for a moment with departing Abbey—fueled by her earlier coded intimacy promise—he abruptly halts taping with a lame 'special government meeting' excuse, only for Charlie to reveal she's already left for Pennsylvania. Crestfallen yet masking vulnerability with a playful threat to Charlie, Bartlet retreats to the Oval Office, humanizing his presidential burdens and clashing personal longing against public duty in comic pathos.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Bartlet attempts to record the radio address with children as his audience, showcasing his frustration and exhaustion with the repeated takes.

frustration to defeat ['Oval Office']

Bartlet abandons the radio taping in a frantic, futile attempt to meet Abbey, revealing his personal desperation and the absurdity of the situation.

desperation to resignation ['Oval Office to Portico']

Charlie informs Bartlet that Abbey is already in Pennsylvania, dashing Bartlet's hopes and forcing him to return to the Oval Office, humor masking his disappointment.

hope to disappointment ['Portico']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5
Donna Moss
primary

Optimistic anticipation curdling into resigned empathy for Bartlet's frustration

Donna stands vigilantly with Charlie, expressing buoyant optimism for the take before Bartlet's flub shifts her to resigned concern, gently protesting his abrupt exit while following him to the portico, embodying steadfast support amid unraveling presidential poise.

Goals in this moment
  • Encourage successful radio address completion
  • Support Bartlet through mounting exhaustion and personal distraction
Active beliefs
  • This take will finally succeed despite prior failures
  • Bartlet's impatience stems from deeper personal pressures
Character traits
optimistic loyal resigned proactive
Follow Donna Moss's journey

Amused detachment veiling loyal protectiveness

Charlie sharply cuts the flubbed take, clarifies the 5:45 AM timing sparking Bartlet's frenzy, trails him to the portico to deliver the crushing news of Abbey's departure, then absorbs playful threat with a smile before reentering the Oval.

Goals in this moment
  • Enforce accurate timing to halt flawed recording
  • Gently manage Bartlet's personal disappointment
Active beliefs
  • Duty requires blunt honesty even to the President
  • Humor diffuses presidential tension effectively
Character traits
precise dutiful amused poised
Follow Charlie Young's journey
Technician
primary

Calm professionalism amid controlled chaos

Technician initiates the critical countdown for the radio address take with professional precision, poised amid the Oval's tension, underscoring procedural rigor even as Bartlet's flub and abrupt halt disrupt the recording process.

Goals in this moment
  • Execute flawless recording countdown
  • Facilitate clean audio capture despite fatigue
Active beliefs
  • Strict protocol ensures broadcast quality
  • Interruptions are inevitable in high-stakes Oval sessions
Character traits
methodical authoritative unflappable
Follow Technician's journey
Children
primary

Wide-eyed fascination mixed with polite bewilderment

A dozen children sit silently in the Oval as captivated audience to Bartlet's exhausted radio attempts, their wide-eyed presence amplifying the pathos of his 'Good evening' flub and hasty exit apology, humanizing the Oval's high-stakes ritual.

Goals in this moment
  • Observe presidential recording process
  • Await promised autographed photo
Active beliefs
  • President's work is important and magical
  • Adults' sudden departures are part of the show
Character traits
attentive innocent silent
Follow Children's journey

frustrated

attempts to record radio address, flubs 'Good evening' due to time confusion, abruptly exits citing a special government meeting, learns Abbey has left, playfully threatens Charlie before reentering

Goals in this moment
  • successfully record the radio address
  • meet with Abbey Bartlet
Character traits
protective resolute self-aware principled
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
East Colonnade

The portico (East Colonnade) becomes the liminal threshold for Bartlet's desperate pursuit of Abbey, where Charlie delivers the deflating revelation of her Pennsylvania departure amid trailing aides, transforming hopeful interception into comic deflation before their Oval reentry.

Atmosphere Exposed and echoing with personal urgency and dashed longing
Function confrontation space for revelation and redirection
Symbolism Threshold between private desire and public retreat
Access Immediate access for President and personal aides only
Filtered dawn daylight through stately pillars Open flagstone expanse amplifying footsteps and voices

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

No narrative connections mapped yet

This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph


Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "Good evening." CHARLIE: "Cut." BARTLET AND DONNA: "What?" CHARLIE: "It's morning.""
"BARTLET: "It's evening. It's dark outside, Charlie." CHARLIE: "It's evening now, Mr. President. It's morning tomorrow." BARTLET: "What time is it?" CHARLIE: "It's 5:45 sir.""
"BARTLET: "Kids, I am so sorry. I have to go now, to a special meeting... of the government. I will mail you all an autographed copy of the picture we took together. And one day, you will all understand.""
"CHARLIE: "She's not there, sir." BARTLET: "I'm going to a special meeting..." CHARLIE: "...of the government. Yes, sir. She had to go to Pennsylvania early.""
"BARTLET: "Sure. Would you like to get that smile off your face before I send you on special assignment to the Yukon?" CHARLIE: "Yes, sir.""