Wednesday, April 27, 2016

S2e17- The Stackhouse Filibuster (I am full of mirth)

Damn it, West Wing... you got me again- totally trying to choke back tears at the end of this episode.

Here's the thing- Sorkin went Triple Doogie Houser, MD on this episode- CJ, Sam and Josh are all writing emails to their parents to provide the narration for the episode.
(CJ, writing a happy birthday email to her dad on his 70th Birthday)
(Sam, writing a Dear Jackass email to his dad)
(Joah, writing a thanks for the shoes email to his mom)

Of course, all of these emails start with their own stories; CJ broke a statue of a cat and is in big trouble, Sam got totally schooled by a 19-year old intern named Winnie, and Josh wore his new shoes.  


The filibuster in question is by Howard Stackhouse, who spends around 10 hours reading a book of recipes, "David Copperfield" and the Rules of Cards- out loud, without a sip of water, a restroom break or the freedom to lean on anything.  Why?   He wants 47 million for autism care and research attached to an huge health bill aimed at addressing health issues amongst children.  Stackhouse, it turns out, has a grandchild with autism, but doesn't want to use his family member for political purposes.  However, the cynic in me is always somewhat painfully aware at how quickly everyone moves to act once they realize that there was a familial connection to autism, and that was the reason behind his filibuster- it seems to reinforce that he should have used his family member for political purposes: not the idea I'd like to leave this episode with.  

Anyhow, in a wonderful moment of art imitating life, the fictional "Family Wellness Act" that Josh Lyman got passed is modeled after the Children's Health Act of 2000; a very real law that actor Bradley Whitford was involved with in its advocacy.  Whitford encouraged Sorkin to include autism prominently in the episode, as it was the center of the real bill, and Whitford was at the time very involved in the group "Cure Autism Now"- an organization that in 2006 joined with and became known as "Autism Speaks."  

So, why does all this leave me in tears?  In the end, Donna is still doing her job when everyone else is writing personal emails on their work computers (government accountability, anyone?) and not only realizes that Stackhouse is filibustering because his grandson is autistic, but knows how to get him some help.  According to Senate rules, Stackhouse could yield the floor for a question without yielding the floor- allowing his filibuster to continue while he gets to lean on anything he likes, get a drink of water or go to the restroom.  So, everyone is trying to get some Senator on the phone to enact the Donna Plan, then they're in the bullpen rooting for Stackhouse to yield for a question, and when he does, the celebration ensues- because they did the right thing.  How often is that celebrated in politics, or even just on a tv show?  Our three emailers do a fine job of summing it all up:

"There are so many days here where you can't imagine that anything good will ever happen.
You're buried under a black fog of partisanship and self promotion and stupidity and a brand of politics that's just plain mean... tonight I've seen a man with no legs stay standing, Dad, and a guy with no voice keep shouting, and if politics brings out the worst in people then maybe people bring out the best, 'cause I'm looking at the T.V. right now and damned if 28 U.S. Senators haven't just walked onto the floor to help."

And that's why I'm choking back some tears on the couch.  You got me again, Sorkin... you got me again.

What's Next?  S2e18- 17 People

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Monday, April 25, 2016

S2e16- Somebody's Going to Emergency, Somebody's Going to Jail (The Block of Cheese was Huge..)

Happy Second Big Block of Cheese Day!

It's hard to believe that nearly two months have passed since S1e5: The Crackpots and These Women, the first Big Block of Cheese Day Blog.  My, how much has changed.  We've lost Mandy and gained Ainsley, Donna is now a full (non-co-starring) member of the cast, we've had two States of the Union, Josh and the President got shot, one Woot Canaw (obviously, I never get tired of saying that) and now all of a sudden, here we are again.  Big Block of Cheese Day.

Last time, we got to see a very un-bearded Nick Offerman (of Parks and Recreation fame) give a presentation on a wolves-only highway in memory of Pluie, the now dead wolf (C.J.'s probably still not really sorry) while managing to keep his sportcoat draped over his arm.  Impressive!

(Ron Swanson, before he fell off the wagon?)

We also had the opportunity to meet Bob Engler from US Space Command, the world's single largest purchaser of pocket protectors.  

(Bob Engler- not afraid to admit that they're a little nerdy over there at US Space Command)

This year, C.J. get's the meeting we're all going to care about: a powwow with the folks from the Organization of Cartographers for Social Equality.  Donna apparently had a meeting with the Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle Society, but unfortunately, it's not shown.  Which is a shame, because the Kemp's Ridley is the most endangered variety of Sea Turtle today, it would have been a great meeting, and they're very cute:
(For more info and to find links to relevant organizations involved in saving this species, visit RidleyTurtles.org)

But alas, no turtle meeting.  So, on to the Organization of Cartographers for Social Equality, a fictional organization to allow CJ and Josh (along with the people watching the episode) to have a bit of a freak-out moment when they realize that the world doesn't look like what they thought it did.   

Their point?

Maps like this one-
vastly adjust the size of certain countries and continents, and has at the very center of the map Europe; not a surprise for a map created in the 16th century by a European, most of whom assumed that Europe was indeed the center of the world.  

Don't think that this map is misleading?  Or that social justice could be influenced or at least reflected in it?  Take a look at the continent of Africa.   Now compare it to the other continents.  

Now, take a gander at this:

The truth is that the continent of Africa is 14 times larger than Greenland, though on the Mercator map, they're displayed as nearly the same size.   Here is a wonderful article from highlighting some of the regular issues of reporting on Africa.  It's main point?  The vast majority of news coming about Africa is coming from people who are discovering Africa for the first time, and seldom accurate.  

So what do these Cartographers for Social Justice, Truth and Light want?  More of THIS MAP!
(Seriously, where do you even live? Also, shoutout to my friend Aidan, who sent me my very own Peters Projection Map!)

(Seriously- what is that?!)

Why?  In their words, it has fidelity of axis, fidelity of position, and east-west lines are parallel and intersect north-south axes at right angles.   That all sounds great, except most of us feel like someone turned the world upside-down and the continents are all sliding to the bottom of the map.  

So, once again, the once skeptical and cynical staffers have been impacted by Big Block of Cheese day.  Seriously though- if you want more info, I encourage you to read this article, which get's a lot right.

Quick hits from this episode- Toby flirts with a cop, Josh gets a banana thrown at him and claims he almost died again, President Bartlet can't find a place for his Library, Leo knows a lot of ways to drive to the White House, Sam just found out his dad had a mistress for 28 years, and Donna has a friend whose grandfather was a spy, but we're nice to his granddaughter because her dad is sick.  Seriously, I should write the summaries for IMDB.

Last thing, and I'm sorry- but this ends on a downer.  Josh and Sam have a nice little moment about Lincoln signing a pardon on the day of his death, right?  Don't use that little West Wing factoid in common conversation, because it turns out to be a lie.  Turns out that a Lincoln researcher named Thomas Lowery altered the year on the pardon of a deserter named Patrick Murphy from 1864 to 1865, using a fountain pen that he smuggled into the Smithsonian.  Unfortunately, he confessed after the statute of limitations passed, so no criminal charges were filed for ruining this West Wing Episode historical document.  However, he has been permanently banned from the Smithsonian, so that's something.  

What's Next?  S2e17- The Stackhouse Filibuster

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

S2e15-Ellie (Charlie, please don't say the word "erotic" in the Oval Office.)


There are things that, if you're watching the West Wing for the first time, you might not realize when a major theme is introduced.  In this episode, Toby introduces his best friend and partner in thought:


That's Toby, with his hands full of thoughts: The Pink Rubber Bouncy Ball.
(Follow Toby Ziegler's Ball on twitter HERE)

(The symbol of wisdom and truth.)

Think I'm making this up?  Think again, Pink Rubber Bouncy Ball denier!  There's hard bouncy science that backs this up, and this is hardly Aaron Sorkin's first time promoting this truth of sphere-based intelligence.

Behold- evidence:

("The American President")

("A Few Good Men")

("Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip")

("Sports Night"-Josh Malina is in so much Aaron Sorkin, he's graduated to being able to just use an imaginary ball)

Sorkin isn't the only one.  Clearly, the opinion of scriptwriters is that genius is associated with spheres.
("House, M.D.")

(Sheldon from "The Big Bang Theory")

Aaaand, I just spent 30 minutes trying to find a picture of Doogie Howser throwing a ball while typing on his computer, to no avail.  Curse you Internet!

So, what's there to share from this episode besides Toby's new prop?  We meet our second Bartlet daughter- Ellie, and realize that she's the black sheep of the family.  What does that mean?  She goes to medical school at Johns Hopkins, isn't terribly involved in the politics of the Bartlet Presidency, and regularly allows her hair to fall over her face.  She also provides the groundwork for one of the most touching lines in the show.  After she told the President that she doesn't know how to make him happy like Zoey and Liz (the so-far-never-pictured Bartlet daughter), he responds by saying:

"The only thing you ever had to do to make me happy was come home at the end of the day."

As a 20-year old watching for the first time, I called my mom and dad.  As a 34 year old father of a one-year old, I cried.  Is this what life is like?  Increasingly unable to manage your emotions with anything sentimental?  It would seem so.  I teared up watching a life insurance commercial the other day, but I think that's only partly my fault, since the industry seems intent on guilting you into purchasing their product, and have hired the people who created the ASPCA ads that had Sarah McLachlan songs playing in the background.  Yeesh.

Also, there's some heavy statistics regarding the legalization of marijuana in this episode that do demonstrate some shifts in public opinion to today's political landscape, but I'd rather talk about Sorkin's connection between genius and spheres, because he's got science on his side.  There's quite a lot of research on the connection between hand-eye coordination and brain development, but this article  highlights my favorite bit of info: "the cerebellum also controls the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) which is a reflex eye movement that stabilizes images during head movement by producing an eye movement in the direction opposite to head movement, which keeps the image in the center of your visual field." That's why you can read this while shaking your head in disbelief that I'm spending so much time on Toby and a pink bouncy ball.  Pretty cool, right?

Ok, stop shaking your head, I don't want you to get sick!

What's Next?  S2e16- Somebody's Going to Emergency, Somebody's Going to Jail

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Saturday, April 23, 2016

S2e14- The War at Home (It's how you justified it to God.)

Abbey- "Do you get that you have M.S.? "

With this one question and the ensuing conversation with the President, it becomes clear that "The War at Home" isn't the kidnapped DEA agents, Congress or the press; rather, between the First Couple.  After Mrs. Bartlet tells Leo that the President has Multiple Sclerosis in Season 1, episode 12 ("He Shall, from Time to Time"), the fact of his illness is dropped from all plotlines and episode.  Then, nearly a full season later, we learn that the President, mindful of his illness, made a deal to only serve one term as President.  He would leave office before entering the time where more severe symptoms would be likely to emerge- and it was this deal that allowed him to justify not disclosing his illness to the electorate.  


While the idea of hiding information from the voting public is hardly new, the notion of hiding an illness is somewhat without precedent.   FDR is somewhat misrepresented in this light- it's clear that though the Secret Service restricted photos of FDR getting in and out of a car, being assisted or in other compromised positions by confiscating cameras and destroying film, there were plenty of mentions of the President's illness in the press (though it is now thought that he suffered from Guillian-Barre syndrome, not Polio).   Videos also taken show FDR using his wheelchair in front of servicemen and his method of walking (essentially pivoting) in public certainly exemplified some level of compromised health.


The much more complete deception in Presidential history belongs to Woodrow Wilson, who suffered a massive stroke in 1919 and was incapacitated for much of the final year and a half of his term.   During that time, his wife Edith managed the Executive Branch, deciding which information made it to the President, and was assisted in maintaining the secret by Wilson's doctor- all before passage of the 25th Amendment which clarified the process of succession in the event of death or incapacitation of the President.  

Would such a thing be possible in today's world?  If you have enough production assistants, and are the president of a fictional United States of America.  Initially, Sorkin just wanted the president to have an illness so he could get the funny scene of him watching daytime soaps- it turns out that he asked his staffers to find an illness that "did not put Mr. Bartlet in a wheelchair, could go undetected for years at a time, and that could be in remission and undetectable in checkups because there was no laboratory test for it" (from a NYTimes article here).  So, while receiving such a diagnosis and maintaining secrecy seem far-fetched in the information age/TMZ/Cellphone cameras everywhere world we live in, it is made possible in this fictional realm by thorough research and clever use of exposition by the creative forces behind the show.  

Finally, in a completely unrelated note, Joey Lucas (via Kenny) tells Josh the following while she is in the process of explaining to him that polling data can be misleading:

"If you polled a hundred Donnas and asked them if they think we should go out, you'd get a high positive response. But, the poll wouldn't tell you it's because she likes you. And she's knows it's beginning to show and she needs to cover herself with misdirection."

Josh tries to dismiss the notion out of hand, but it's clear that he's impacted by the statement.  More fuel for the Josh/Donna Will They or Won't They fire!

Oh, and Ainsley managed to meet the President, despite having her skirt on backwards, hiding in a closet and needing to pee.  It's much sweeter than it sounds.



What's Next?  S2e15- Ellie

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Wednesday, April 20, 2016

S2e13- Bartlet's Third State of the Union (Blame it on the Bassa Nova)


That's roughly how I felt when I realized the gap between blog posts. I'm going to do my best to catch up.  

Yes, Ainsley meets the President, and brings great shame to her family's name, and gives us the incredible line, said by Bartlet:
"I never even knew we had a nightclub down here."

This is really part one of a two part episode, taking place just before and in the 24 hours after the President's Third State of the Union Address.  We get Joey Lucas back in a room with Josh, and to make it more romantic, we even dim the lights (well, the power goes out, but close enough).  More telling, though, is Josh's confusion over Donna encouraging him to ask Joey Lucas out.  It's as though he is realizing and clueing the audience in on their mutual affection.  Don't hold your breath, though.  The "will they or won't they" will go on for some while.  

One bombshell that is dropped is that it's clear that Mrs. Bartlet and the President had an agreement that he would not seek reelection, and the State of the Union was clearly altered to establish his candidacy.  Why they had a deal isn't made clear because he has to focus on the crisis in Columbia, where several DEA agents have been taken hostage.  It's a busy night, made more so by the fact that "Capital Beat"is broadcasting live from the White House, and there is a rash of freshly painted and poorly marked benches.  For the record, the "Sculpture Garden" mentioned is actually the First Lady's Garden, known since 1965 as the Jackie Kennedy Garden.  It is located symmetrically to the Rose Garden: 



During the Clinton years (on which the show roughly bases it's concept of the White House, grounds and all), Hillary Clinton installed a sculpture exhibit of American sculptors- during which time it was sometimes referred to as the "Sculpture Garden."  Different First Ladies have used it for different purposes- Michelle Obama doubled down on her initiative for Healthy Eating by creating a produce garden, and Laura Bush had roses that were named for her grown there.  Finally, here's a picture of the offending bench.  I cannot comment on the freshness of the paint in the picture provided, or on the clarity of sign postings that might have indicated said fresh paint:


Moving on from the Garden tour, I'm always interested when The West Wing employs tactics to change the format of the show.  In this case, we have the trope (sorry, I listened to a lot of NPR, so now I'm using the word "trope" whenever possible) of a Show Within a Show.  Hardly an original idea- on stage, Shakespeare had "The Most Lamentable Comedy, and Most Cruel Death of Pyramus and Thisbe" in the middle of "A Midsummer's Night Dream," Leoncavallo had "Pagliacci," and "Kiss me Kate" is home to "The Taming of the Shrew."  Television has no shortage of Shows Within Shows- more recently, the successful "30 Rock," and let's not forget Sorkin's own "Sports Night." 

It's an incredibly useful device, allowing the audience to see "behind the scenes" and giving the writers multiple layers of reality to create dialogue for, as well as natural transitions.   We get to see CJ talking to the host on and off camera, Josh is watching the show from the phone banks, Ainsley is shown before, on and after her segment, Toby comments on his performance with the First Lady, and the episode ends not with a "to be continued" that makes viewers groan with displeasure at having to wait a week (remember those pre-Netflix Binge-watching days?), but with the host of Capital Beat talking to both the real and fictional audience as he introduces his next segment, which dissolves into commercial.  It's an incredibly useful device; though I'm not sure if the Show within a Blog is as effective:

So, if you're just joining us, we're discussing the second season of "The West Wing," and we're just beginning to see some of the plotlines that will continue throughout the......

What's Next?  S2e14- The War at Home

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Saturday, April 16, 2016

S2e12- The Drop-In (Was that sass?)

My, how the times have changed.

First, I'd like to note that this episode aired on January 24, 2001, and Sam says this:
"Is global warming a real environmental condition, or merely a temporary anomaly? Is it a global threat, or the exaggerated claim of alarmists? The time for such debate is over.  As of today, it shall be the unequivocal position of the United States government that global warming constitutes a clear and present danger to the health and future well-being of this planet and all its inhabitants."

Keep dreaming, Sorkin.  15 years have passed, and whether or not Climate Change is real is still a subject of controversy.  The most recent salvo in the struggle to accept that science isn't opinion, Sarah Palin has suggested that Bill Nye isn't a scientist.  I'm not sure on what basis the former Governor of Seeing-Russia-Out-My-Kitchen-Window-Is-Foreign-Affairs-Training is basing her criticism, but the fact that we have to rely on The Science Guy for a voice of reason and Sarah Palin is welcomed into the conversation at all tells you the current state of things.


Next, I'd like to point out that the President is delivering this speech to the GDC (Global Defense Council) is the same fictional organization that Annette Bening worked for in "The American President"- also written by Aaron Sorkin.  You can see their logo etched on the glass:


Lastly, one quick note on the drop-in that the episode title refers to.  This destruction of a ski resort that would have threatened the habitat of the lynx was a real thing, carried out by the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) in 1998 in Vail, Colorado.  Members affiliated with the ELF then set a gasoline-fueled fire in Agriculture Hall on the campus of Michigan State University on New Years Eve, 1999.  No one was hurt in either act, but these two incidents were in the midst of a surge in "eco-terrorism" throughout the late 1990's and early 2000's, when environmental activists moved beyond graffiti and into destruction of property.  At the time, the FBI considered "eco-terrorism" the top domestic terrorism threat.  In contrast to the current rhetoric on domestic terrorism, that seems like a simpler time indeed- and how those times have changed.

What's Next?  S2e13- Bartlet's Third State of the Union

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Wednesday, April 13, 2016

S2e11- The Leadership Breakfast (So the spirit of bipartisanship begins!)

Well, we've got all sorts of failed partnerships going on here in this episode:


  1. Josh and Sam try to build a fire in the Mural Room.  They are successful, but fail to notice that the flu is welded shut, so they're basically lighting the Mural Room on fire- together. 
  2. Ed and Larry are working with CJ to get all the seating right for the Leadership Breakfast, and really do a wonderful job of it, with only one exception: they forget to put the President somewhere in the seating chart.  
  3. Toby and the new Chief of Staff for the Senate Majority Leader, Ann Stark (Felicity Huffman, from Sorkin's previous show, Sports Night) work together to come up with a more substantive conversation at the Leadership Breakfast, but instead Toby gets outwitted by her, and creates a mess out of what was, according to Leo "a breakfast. It was a damn photo opportunity!"
  4. Leo makes a dumb joke and asks Josh to help make it right (never joke about shoes).  Josh get's Sam to do it instead, but he ends up saying something just... dumb (really, Sam?  Nuclear weapons in Kyrgizstan?).  Sam asks Donna to make it right, and ends up leaving her underwear on the floor after trying to make it right (just don't ask).  Donna asks Charlie to see if the President will make it right, but he declines (a wise choice).  
Lots and lots of failed partnerships, all which begin with the notion of improving a situation- the cold, perfect seating, a substantive conversation, and whatever the hell the mess of #4 is.  In the words of Donna, "So the spirit of bipartisanship begins!"


LEO- Alexander Hamilton didn’t think we should have political parties. Neither did John Adams. 
He thought political parties led to divisiveness.
TOBY- They do. They should. We have honest disagreements. Arguments are good.
LEO- Only if they lead to statesmanship. Or it’s just theatre. And statesmanship is compromise.

Alexander Hamilton wasn't alone.  This is from George Washington's Farewell Address in 1796, after he refused to serve a third term as president.


"The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries has perpetrated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism. But this leads at length to a more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries, which result, gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation, on the ruins of Public Liberty."

There was a brief period of American history where this idyllic version of politics without party was lived out- known as "The Era of Good Feelings"- thirteen years from 1816-1839 led in many ways by James Monroe, who seized on the post-victory enthusiasm after the War of 1812 to bring people together through the politics of consensus.  So, in terms of honoring the wishes of the founding fathers, we've had no partisan politics for 13 of the more than 200 years in American politics.  6.5% is not stellar, and it doesn't seem to be getting any better.  

Sam's written remarks for the President at the Leadership Breakfast say it better than I ever could:


"We spend so much time demonizing the other side, treating our opponents as if they were strangers with which we share nothing in common that we’ve lost sight perhaps of the greater truths."


One of those greater truths: there is far more that brings us together than that which separates us.  

Another of those greater truths: Disagreements and statesmanship should be about compromise- not about asserting your beliefs over anyone else's.


What's Next?  S2e12-The Drop-In

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

S2e10- Noël (Yo-Yo Ma Rules!)

A Christmas episode with very little Christmas in it.  Instead, we loop all the way back to the beginning of season 2, only to find that several months later, Josh isn't doing very well.  In fact, he is in crisis.  I should note that we have two wonderful guest stars in this episode- Adam Arkin, who plays Dr. Stanley Keyworth, and Yo-Yo Ma, who plays himself- and the cello.  Two quick bits of West Wing trivia:

  1. Aaron Sorkin clearly thinks that all members of the Mental Health field are named Stanley.  In S1e5- The Crackpots and These Women, Josh goes to see his old therapist, who is named Dr. Stanley Maxwell.   Stanley means "stone clearing" in old English, so there's no onomotological reason that I can see (yes, onomotology is the study of the meaning of names).
  2. Apparently, Yo-Yo Ma didn't want to mime playing the cello, so played the piece for every piece.  Between all the shots and takes needed, this meant playing the piece around 45 times.  Hence Donna's line: "Yo-Yo Ma Rules!"


As I said at the outset, though, the main focus of this episode is on Josh, who is clearly struggling- he yells at the President and cuts himself badly when he puts his hand through a window in his apartment.  Dr. Stanley the psychologist knows that Josh is suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder within 5 minutes of meeting Josh, despite him being a huge pain in the neck the entire time.  While I am fully aware that this is a depiction of therapy for entertainment purposes, but the opportunity to display the effects and nature of PTSD on prime time television is pretty incredible.  More importantly, Josh brings up the stigma of PTSD by suggesting to Dr. Stanley that he wouldn't be able to continue in his job, but Leo makes it clear why that would never be the case:


"This guy's walking down a street, when he falls in a hole. The walls are so steep. He can't get out. A doctor passes by, and the guy shouts up "Hey you! Can you help me out?" The doctor writes him a prescription, throws it down the hole and moves on. Then a priest comes along and the guy shouts up "Father, I'm down in this hole, can you help me out?" The priest writes out a prayer, throws it down in the hole and moves on. Then a friend walks by. "Hey Joe, it's me, can you help me out?" And the friend jumps in the hole! Our guy says "Are you stupid? Now we're both down here!" and the friend says, "Yeah, but I've been down here before, and I know the way out." 
As long as I got a job, you got a job, you understand?"

Yes, this is a television show, and certainly; these characters are fictional.  That being said, it reminds me of the Homeland Security airport motto: If you see something, say something.  We should all be this vigilant with our friends and loved ones as Donna and Toby are, and have the same amount of care and compassion that Leo shows, and insist that anyone in our lives who needs it, seeks out the help they need- like any good psychologist named Stanley would.  


What's Next?  S2e11-The Leadership Breakfast

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Monday, April 11, 2016

S2e9- Galileo ("An atonal nightmare of pretention")

IF anyone was still wondering why I'm watching The West Wing again and writing a blog about it, just listen to Charlie:

C.J.- Everybody’s stupid in an election year, Charlie.
CHARLIE- No. Everybody gets treated stupid in an election year, C.J.

I could give a thousand examples from this week alone, it seems- but I'm going to try to stay focused.  I'm not going to get distracted by Sam's eloquence at the start of the episode, Puerto Rico's place in the United States (John Oliver makes some incredible points here) or the Cold War mentality in a modern world.   Instead, I want to talk to you, dear reader, about being wrong.  By the end of this episode, the broader theme for the NASA classroom becomes encouraging students who are so afraid to be wrong that they don't try.  When I'm not writing this blog, I work in the education field, and as a teacher of the Millennial generation, I can tell you that everything that gets said about them is true, but it's not everything, and you rarely find them all in one person.  These are no different from students from other generations, except that a lot of nouns have changed, we are better at defining what is going on when they are struggling, and they have been raised in an onslaught of information messaging.  By far, though- one struggle that I see most often is this fear of being wrong leading to inaction.

Atychiphobia is defined as the abnormal, unwarranted and persistent fear of failure, and it is running relatively unchecked by many.  These are not students whose struggles manifest in overt and obvious ways- sometimes, they simply don't turn in an assignment they didn't get to do well enough on, but mostly this is a silent struggle; and one that students deal with alone- avoiding situations, not volunteering, and shouldering the awesome weight of self-doubt on a daily basis.  It is a terrible thing to behold.  CJ is absolutely right when she suggests this as the broader theme for the NASA classroom- because the largest factor in helping these students is letting them know that failure is more that acceptable- in many cases, it is a necessary part of success and improvement.  Now, all we have to do is make sure that our education system is set up to reinforce that notion- then we might have a chance.

Lastly, President Bartlet gives a wonderful example of the power of open-mindedness, reflecting on how touched he was by the premiere of the Icelandic composer's music.  After saying that anything (including Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Barber) written after 1960 sucks, he allowed himself to listen, and was pleasantly surprised.  It's that ability to conquer even his own predilections that makes him so wonderful, and the kindness to recognize when people have positively impacted him.  This after several jokes are made (CJ hopes that modern music means Jackson Browne, for example) about attending a concert by the Reykjavik Symphony.  As an educator, I rely on open-mindedness every day to successfully do my job; if my students already have their mind made up, they have exited the learning highway, and usually have the car parked with the engine off.

Though Galileo V is a fictitious spacecraft and mission (there was only one Galileo mission, and it was to Jupiter), the West Wing envisions a journey of exploration, curiosity, wonder and inspiration; a wonderful view of education, as well.  Try to pack all of those words and their meanings as we all say together: Galileo!


What's Next?  S2e10- Noël

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

S2e8- Shibboleth (I'm dropping off the turkeys.)

This Thanksgiving episode, besides having a lot of turkey-based comedy and a rather incredible range of information about carving knives, centers around a container ship full of refugees who claim to have fled religious persecution in China.  Obviously, refugees entering the U.S. became a larger issue in the 2016 election cycle after the Paris terrorist attacks.  In an attempt to separate fact from fiction, I found an article that claimed that attempting to enter as a refugee would be possibly the worst way for a terrorist to attempt entry into the country.  This episode digs into the drama of this particular situation, but here's an excerpt from the article that shares specifics of the process:

"How does a refugee get into the U.S.?
Refugees must undergo an 18- to 24-month screening process, minimum, that the United Nations' refugee arm oversees. And that's before individual countries even begin to consider a refugee's application and conduct their own additional interviews and background checks.
The screening process generally includes multiple interviews, background checks and an extensive cross-referencing process that tests refugee's stories against others and accounts from sources on the ground in their home country.
Throughout that process, U.N. officials and local government officials in temporary host countries like Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon look to determine the legitimacy of asylum seekers' claims and ensure that they meet the criteria of a refugee, including that they are not and have not been involved in any fighting or terrorist activities.
Refugees also have their retinas scanned and have their fingerprints lifted."

And that's just the UN process.  The US has even more steps once the refugee enters into the countries.

At the end of the episode, after the fictitious refugees are allowed to enter into the country (through a bit of deception, but nothing illegal, apparently), President Bartlet tells Josh:

"We can be the world’s policeman. We can be the world’s bank, the world’s factory, the
world’s farm. What does it mean if we’re not also..."

The sentence is finished with a smile, and then Bartlet continues to say:

"They've made it into the New World, Josh. You know what I get to do now? I get to proclaim
the National Day of Thanksgiving.  This is a great job."

I imagine that first sentence could be finished in several ways:

  • A leader in religious freedom and tolerance
  • An example of compassionate leadership
  • Willing to live up to the inscription on the Statue of Liberty
  • A country judged by its care for those in need
For the record, President Bartlet demonstrates these qualities in nearly every episode, but especially with Charlie- the presentation of the knives gets a 4/5 kleenex rating...


CJ demonstrates all of those qualities in her treatment of Eric and Troy, as well...


It's not as though I could get all the way through this blog without mentioning the turkeys again, right?  But in truth, if some of our leadership cared as much for the citizenry as CJ does for the turkey, we'd be in better shape.  Why does she care so much?  It's simple- she took care of them.  It's not as though CJ doesn't understand that turkeys are eaten on Thanksgiving- as she reminds us, she has a Masters Degree from University of California at Berkley.  Maybe we should require all candidates spend considerable time caring for, well, I was going to make a list, but everyone who isn't a white upper-class male is probably more appropriate inclusive.  

One last thing, nearly completely unrelated.  There are a lot of fictitious twitter accounts for the West Wing- @donnatella_moss and @joshualyman are two of my favorites, but imagine my delight when I realized that Morton Horn of Jasper Farms, who was in the West Wing to drop off two turkeys and pick up one, has a fictitious twitter account.  So, I'm happy to tell you that I'm the fifth follower of @mortinhorn17, and I hope you will join me.

What's Next?  S2e9- Galileo

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Monday, April 4, 2016

S2e7- The Portland Trip (You should really have Fresca)

Ainsley's office is hot and there are occasionally loud noises.  Donna has plans to go to drinks, dinner, dancing and dessert (apparently the four D's to a date in Aaron Sorkin's world), but Josh can only let her leave for one hour and five minutes.  CJ made a joke about Notre Dame football on the eve of their game against Michigan, and is now being punished.  Sam's not writing very well.  Leo's not having a lot of luck capturing an oil tanker that is violating UN sanctions, and also received his divorce papers.  Josh is trying to figure out how Congressman Skinner can be both gay and a Republican.  President Bartlet is hoping that the romance of a late night departure and the subsequent separation between his staff and the ground will produce some inspired solutions to any of the above problems.

Charlie comes up with the idea of offering free college tuition for 100,000 students, as long as they agree to teach for 3 years- but the closest the President gets to it on this flight is Leo putting together a team to study whether or not a pilot program of 100 teachers is feasible.

Oy.  What a bummer.  This whole episode is a bit of a downer, aside from:

  1. The humorous punishment of CJ:


  2. Josh telling Donna she looks great in her dress (Team Donna, represent):



  3. Ainsley telling the cashier that they should really be carrying Fresca, a soda that she is apparently      a fan of (sorry, I couldn't resist the urge to pun):



Ainsley would have loved working in the White House for Lyndon B. Johnson- he loved Fresca so much that he had a special call button installed to press any time he wanted a Fresca.  So basically, he invented the Amazon Dash system, which allows you to press a button whenever your run out of something around the house.  Like Doritos.  Because no time should be wasted in obtaining Doritos.  If only there were a solution to get Doritos faster than the Two-Day shipping that Amazon offers.  A large building where food is stored and available for purchase in a variety of sizes and amounts.
Anyways, Ainsley and LBJ- big Fresca fans (see, I did it again).  If you were wondering, LBJ's other favorite foods were canned peas and tapioca.  Don't ever think I don't do plenty of research for this blog.

Quick word on the fictitious "Marriage Recognition Act."  I'm assuming that this is a reference to the "Defense Of Marriage Act," usually referred to as DOMA, given the information given about the law and possible challenging strategies (Ainsley's task is to research the "full faith and credit clause" for Josh).  This bit of legislation was struck down in 2013 by the Supreme Court and is discussed later in the show- S5e17-The Supremes.  Interestingly, in that episode it does refer to DOMA by its proper name; I'm not entirely sure why there was a need to create a fictitious law that was so clearly close to the real one, which was enacted in 1996- 4 years before this episode was written.  President Bartlet decides to Pocket Veto the law- not responding to its submission from Congress while not in session.  This is why it will be sent back to him in January.   For the record, James Madison was the first president to use the Pocket Veto- apparently, he didn't want to give Congress the chance to override his veto, so he walked around with the proposed law in his pocket until Congress was no longer in session- hence the term Pocket Veto.

By my count, that's two instances of excessive Presidential folklore and one really bad fan joke, which means it's time to ask:


What's Next?  S2e8- Shibboleth

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Sunday, April 3, 2016

S2e6- The Lame Duck Congress (Hey, how ya doing, Dalai Lama.)


You see, if you get Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, you get pain in the forearm, and you lose your ability to grip and pinch.  That makes Donna's treatment of Josh in the above image ironic.

Honestly, though, there's not too much happening in this episode- the closest thing to a major plot-point is that Ainsley is asked by Sam to help him out, she ends up changing his mind, making a difference and getting some sentimental music at the end of the episode as she gazes around the Communications Office.  It's great.  Oh, and I should probably mention that she seems rather hungry.  By my count, she eats her lunch from home (and tried to get Sam's lunch), a muffin she took from Republicans, and probably the cupcake Sam tried to order for her.  I'm not sure why that's relevant, but it does continue to create this endearingly awkward aspect to her character.

Back to ergonomics.

I've been trying to find out if fewer people are getting Carpal Tunnel Syndrome today or not- information is hard to come by, surprisingly- and it doesn't seem like we're on the cutting edge of technology here.  These are the first five images that come up in a google image search for "ergonomics and typing."





First, the second through fifth image are all from the Cornell Human Factors and Ergonomics Research Group, or CHFERG, as they suggest you can call it.  Well, their sense of technology today is as keen as their ear for catchy acronyms.   Notice the monitor's tube design- notice the location of the keyboard in the handy slide-out tray (or just on top of the table).  Notice that the keyboard has a number pad on it's side, and imagine if you will the clickity-clackity sound those keys must make in the fifth image.  But, oh, that first image.  You've got your earpiece attached to the phone, your document reader is attached at eye level to the monitor, your mouse and keyboard (the clickity-clackity variety, no doubt) are both at the same level.  In short- you're ready to do business.  

I only have two problems:
  1. What is this thing you refer to as a mouse?
  2. How am I supposed to ergonomically type when I'm using my laptop like this?
(one quick question: why the hell would getty need this particular image?  An expose on shocking emails received in the middle of the night?  What a plot twist in "Scandal" looks like when you're watching Netflix on your laptop because it's the second week of your vacation and you haven't gotten out of bed for anything but basic bodily functions in 53 hours?)

Anyways, I'm sorry I can't provide any update on OSHA's standards (except that she is positive that Jon Snow know's nothing), but I've got to end this blog post, because my wrists are starting to ache.

What's Next?  S2e7- The Portland Trip

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Saturday, April 2, 2016

S2e5- And It's Surely to Their Credit ("Oh God... I hate plutonium!")

Sure, we're laughing about Leaf-Peeping, but it is a thing, and not just in New England.  If anyone was wondering, Michigan is a nice place to visit for a Fall Foliage tour.  Talk about that, One-Take Bartlet!



Unfortunately, there's no way to transition from leaf-peeping to anything except to point out your lack of transition, which is what I've just done.  Judge for yourself the success.

I've been watching "Fixer Upper" while writing this entry, so I feel inspired to show a transformation of space.  Ainsley is assigned an office in the West Wing (although an area that Leo is surprised to find exists) that also happens to serve as the "Steam Pipe Trunk Distribution Center."  This little wrinkle was based on David Gergen, who had previously worked for the Reagan and Nixon Administration.  When he joined the Clinton White House, his office was the space formerly used as a barbershop- complete with the barber's chair.  Ainsley's office (the Steam Pipe Trunk Distribution Center) gets a makeover at the end of the episode, themed on Gilbert and Sullivan's Operetta (which are, for the record, more often about Social Class than duty, but whatever).

BEFORE:



AFTER:


We've got posters for "H.M.S. Pinafore," "Pirates of Penzance," "Yeoman of the Guard," "The Sorcerer," and (I think) "Ruddigore."  But, I'm pretty sure it's the rug that really brings the room together.  Not pictured in this after-shot is Toby, who hides very successfully in this scene.  I'm pretty sure he didn't learn "He is an Englishman" from "H.M.S. Pinafore."

Now, on to the focus of the blog... there are four different plot lines in this episode:
  1. Ainsley's first days at her new job.
  2. CJ clashing with a soon-to-retire three star General.
  3. The president being pronounced healthy enough for marital relations (and a radio address- though not at the same time).
  4. The possibility of Josh suing the KKK.
The moral of this episode's story is presented in the final scene, where the President gives a radio address about some of the less appreciated female figures in American History, who are woefully underrepresented in National Monuments (and then he gets to go have a special meeting of the government with Mrs. Bartlet).  Certainly an idea we can all get behind. That's not the only type of inequity shown, though. After Ainsley saves their butt, two jerks send her dead flowers with a card that says "bitch" on it. Sam fires these two morons, but should also probably contact the florist.  CJ, in her conversation with the retiring General (and Chief of Staff of the Army) is called "lady" and my personal favorite: "kitten."

Obviously, these are all alarming and overt examples of sexism, and it's fantastic that it is featured in an episode of what was (and is) such a popular show.  However, it is worth noting that there are so many different forms of sexism that are more subtle and can be more damaging; opportunities that aren't presented, salary differences and so much more.  CJ demonstrates the type of sexism I'm referring to at the start of the episode:

TOBY- By the way, you are a beautiful woman. And no one around here has ever assumed you were either ambitious or stupid.
C.J.- Toby.
TOBY- Yeah.
C.J.- Took two years.

** Full Disclosure: I am a man, and as such, am speaking not as an expert but rather with the hope of demonstrating empathy and understanding.  

What's Next?  S2e6- The Lame Duck Congress

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