The Prestige TV Podcast - ‘The West Wing’ Hall of Fame: “Two Cathedrals”
Episode Date: December 4, 2025In honor of the The Ringer’s Best TV Episodes of the Century list, Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney head to the White House to revisit and induct ‘The West Wing’ episode “Two Cathedrals” into... the Prestige TV Hall of Fame. (0:00) Intro (3:21) What makes ‘The West Wing’ so special? (6:25) Why is “Two Cathedrals” famous? (30:21) Favorite characters (31:33) Best performance (37:55) Most iconic shot (38:50) Favorite underrecognized detail (40:13) Best moment (44:22) The runner-up pick Check out The Ringer’s list of The 100 Best TV Episodes of the Century! Email us! prestigetv@spotify.com Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of ‘The Prestige TV Podcast’ and so much more! Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney Producers: Kai Grady and Donnie Beacham Jr. Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, welcome back to the Prestige TV podcast.
Me and I'm Jointer Robinson.
I'm Rob Mahoney.
We're here with a very special episode today.
We are talking about a cherished episode of television.
And the reason we're talking about it is you go to the ringer.com right now.
What a great website.
There is an incredible piece or package as we prefer to call it up on
the website right now called the 100 best episodes of the century. It's an incredible, like,
if you scroll through it, there are so many bits and pieces to it. There's video elements.
There's just like all the bells and whistles are involved. But basically, the fine folks who we
work with have put together 100 best episodes of basically the last 25 years.
Um, an incredible list. Do we agree with every single thing on the list? No, but that's what one of
these lists is about, right? Yeah. And we would never complain about such a thing.
No, that's preposterous.
But we are here to talk about two entries on this.
We're going to talk about one today, and then we're going to hit another one on a different prestige episode.
Basically, we were doing like Hall of Fame episodes about two episodes of television that are on this list.
And we're starting with a show that you and I have never talked about in any sort of depth.
I've attempted to smuggle it into a couple episodes.
Because it's a cherished show for you.
Truly.
My heart is full at the possibility of discussing the West Wing with you today, Joe.
My heart is full.
My cathedrals are two.
I just think we have a lot going on.
We're here to talk about the season two finale of the West Wing, two cathedrals.
It simply does not get bigger than this for this particular show, or frankly, for me personally, bigger than this, basically in the history of television.
This is number 16 on a list of 100.
Rob, how do you feel about that play's been on the list?
lukewarm, you know.
I'm trying to quell the anger within,
but this is part of the exercise.
And ultimately, look, top 10 is mostly the heavy hitters, right?
Some of the greatest shows ever made.
I'm not quibbling with any of them in particular.
But I think as far as individual episodes go,
even West Wing doubters,
even people who do not associate themselves
as being fans of Aaron Sorkin
will reluctantly have their hearts pierced
by two cathedrals.
I got to say,
So I did a little like preview Instagram real moment where I like put up the screenshots of basically I was watching the West Wing episode.
And then I was watching the other episode we'll talk about.
So if you're on my Instagram, you can see what that was.
But I put up, I would say a not very recognizable moment necessarily from this episode.
It's not like one of the iconic moments.
I have never gotten Rob such a response to like a tease.
We're going to talk about this.
People lost their minds.
I didn't know I had that many West Wing fanatics in my following, but...
Well, first of all, demographically speaking, a Joanna Robinson fan and a Westman fan,
they may have something in common.
Might be one single circle, perhaps.
But Rob Mahoney, why is West Wing such a huge show for you?
Oh, my God.
I mean, to me, it's just like the ultimate workplace drama.
And some of that is just you're starting with one of the great ensembles that's ever been put together.
I could just, like, go on and on for this whole episode about Richard Schiff,
if that's what you want me to do, Joe.
Sometimes.
But in the spirit of Toby, I will not,
and I'll simply, like, nod in affirmation.
I think the show itself, in terms of the episodes,
we always talk about the writing,
we always talk about the dialogue and the walk-and-talk elements.
They're just brilliantly constructed.
I think you see that here in two cathedrals,
but you really see it in almost every episode
of the Sorkan era of the West Wing in particular.
It's just the structure,
the way that everything is tying together.
It is kind of a classic TV sensibility,
but it's also very much like a playwriting sensibility as well.
This is the era of 22 episodes of television.
This is completely wild that by the time you get to the end of season two,
you've already had nearly 50 episodes of this TV show,
which is like the complete run for a lot of other shows.
So that's a completely wild and different sort of world we're living in here.
This is universally considered the best West Wing episode,
like without question.
And one of the best episodes.
of television to ever exist.
The only disputing point on that is this is not so much of a full senior staff episode.
It is very much a President Bartlett episode.
I could see some argument from fans who just want a little more C.J. Craig in their lives
as the representative sample.
Okay.
So before I get to my first question, which was sort of like, is this episode typical?
And you just sort of kind of answer that.
But we'll swing back to that.
Will you set the stage for what's happening in the series at this point and then sort of
of like what are the broad strokes, what happens in this episode?
Yeah, so the first two seasons, I mean, the bulk of the show is covering Jed Bartlett's
presidential administrations. This run of like six episodes in particular, Joe, is really building
up to close out the second season, all dealing with the fact that Jed Bartlett has been
diagnosed with MS and hiding it for eight years. And it's the slow role of who is aware of
that information and what are they going to do with it. And then ultimately, what we're
working up to in this finale is like what does that mean for a potential re-election bid and as
that all of that is happening plus like a coup in Haiti and some legislative priorities and all normal
like moving the chains of running a government shit is going on yeah mrs landingham our beloved
mrs landingham the the president's long time secretary and confidant is killed tragically in a
drunk driving accident she is not the drunk driver she's killed tragically by a drunk driver
And so we have this natural structure in this episode in particular of this ticking clock of a press conference.
The president will announce something, whether he intends to run, whatever he wants to say about having MS to the public at this press conference.
No one seems to know what he's going to say, including his own staff, and certainly including us.
It feels like Leo knows what he's going to say.
He suspects.
Right.
It's famous for a number of different reasons.
It's got a flashback structure, which is not the only time on West's.
that you see a flashback structure, but I thought it was interesting that, like, this episode
and the next episode we're going to talk about are both, like, quite timely-y-wimy episodes,
and the way in which those things are cut together, like inside this episode, you'll have
older Jed Bartlett, like, open a door and then younger Jed Bartlett, like, walks through
a different door, you know what I mean?
Like, all of those match cuts are really smoothly done.
But I thought it was really interesting to think about this is an end of season two episode.
one of my most cherished beliefs in television
is that TV shows are almost always at their best
in season two and season three of those shows.
And for example, in this episode,
you mentioned this as somewhat anomalous
because it's a Jed Bartlett episode,
but the growing pains that the West Wing went through,
which happens all the time on shows,
is pivoting away from
this being a Roblo vehicle
into this being a Martin Sheen vehicle.
Like Jed Bartlett becomes the anchor of this show
in a way that they didn't expect.
They thought it was going to be,
Sam Seaborn was going to be the main character
to the point where eventually Roblo leaves the show
because he's like, guess what?
I was supposed to be the start of the show.
Not what I signed up for.
But here in season two, you still have,
the main cast, minus Mandy, is like still here.
So that's usually what's happening in season two and three is like we figured out what our show is.
Yes.
We know where all of our strengths are.
And the original cast and the original creators are usually all still here.
So it feels like the original show.
We've gone past our growing pains.
We've hit our stride and we're really just cooking.
And I was going through the list of top 100 episodes that are wonderful, incredibly talented colleagues picked.
And like, there's a lot of season one episode.
actually in the mix here, but a lot of those have to do with, like, limited series.
Like, there's only one season. So, so that's the case. And then you see, like, a smattering of
twos and threes and fours, mostly. That's, that's what we're working with. So I don't know,
like, do you disagree? What do you, like, when you hear something, now when you hear something
has seven seasons, are you like, well, those last three seasons aren't going to be very good? Like,
like, what do you think about that? I would say when you hear something has seven seasons, the last
seasons aren't going to be the best, but they might have a couple of standout episodes.
But to your point about the twos and the threes, that's where it's just banger after banger
after banger. And it is that exact sweet spot where you're right, the main cast is still intact.
And more than that, they're not disenchanted yet. There's nobody among them necessarily who's like,
oh my God, I can't wait to get out of this deal so I can go do movies based on my success from
this show. That always works out really well, honestly.
Historically, for sure. I also think there's something about the writer's room, too,
where they've sort of like settled
and some people
who've usually left
after the first season
because they got obligated to,
they were obligated to other jobs
and you've sort of figured out
what the voice of the show is going to be.
Less of a case for the West Wing
where everything is sort of funneled
through Aaron Sorkin's voice
whether you like it or not.
But ultimately,
most of these shows find their writing rhythm
in season two and three.
And they find which characters
are working together in which combinations,
what plot lines the audience is responding to.
And you can see you're into that stuff
or away from it,
depending on what you want to do.
But you just have so much
more like feedback going into two and three than you do out of the gate and you don't have the
exhaustion of going into a season five or six. Is season two your favorite season of West Wing?
I think it probably is. I think there's just like there's a freshness to season one that I think a lot of
people really respond to myself included. But season two feels a little more polished. It has a lot more of
my favorite episodes overall. I just think that the cast is in such a great rhythm at this stage.
and if, you know, we're going to talk a little later about, like, if not two cathedrals, what would you pick?
And I think many of the compelling options also come from season two.
You said this doesn't feel like a typical episode because this is so Jed-centric and it's not as ensembley as the show could be.
But there are ways in which, you know, looking at the broader list that our colleagues put up, like, there are episodes on there that are just clear, like, anomalies.
Yeah.
This feels less of that to me.
I mean, you could say the one where, the one with Mrs. Lendingham's funeral, the one where
Jed Bartlett rails against God and a cathedral, you know, like, there's easy logline identifiers,
but it doesn't stand out the way that some other episodes on the list do in terms of, like,
this is an exception to a show that was, like, pretty good, but then they did this absolutely
insanely banger episode. And this to me, even though it's incredibly good, and I understand why it is
usually at the top of people's list about West Wing episodes.
It's just classic Sorkin also and classic Martin Sheen as Jed Bartlett also.
So it is and isn't, you know, atypical of the larger show.
I think it's more focused, but it's not form breaking.
Like, it still is a West Wing episode to the point that, you know, we're entertaining meetings.
We're talking about, you know, we're in a war room at one point.
Like all of the settings and kind of checkmarks are there.
it just ultimately is a little narrower
where you don't have
a really robust Sam Seaborne plot line
you know CJ really isn't doing much
other than figuring out like
where the press conference is going to be
and for as much as you miss that stuff
the gravitas of this episode is kind of undeniable
and it's there's so many red flags
with two cathedrals
like there are the flashbacks
you talk about there's like an imaginary conversation
with a dead person there's a huge musical montage
there's a freaking booming thunderstorm metaphor
and it just hits Joe.
I don't even really know how to entirely
how to explain it other than to say
that there's like a time for cliche
and there's a time for grandeur
and if you calibrate it just so
and Sorkin doesn't always do that
like he doesn't always nail it.
What?
But when he does, this is what it looks like.
When it's not congratulations,
sir, we got Osama bin Laden,
this is what you get from the other end of the spectrum.
How dare you, my favorite episode of the newsroom.
So listen, I think what
helps that work is
Jed Bartlett himself
as this
larger than life figure.
It's really interesting the way in which people
latch on to the West Wing,
both as it aired and then in subsequent
years when there was this sort of
West Wing resurgence
during the First Trump administration, during COVID,
there were all these moments where it's just like
this feels comforting.
This idea that we live in a world where these are the people
who are at the wheel of the world we live in
is really appealing to certain people.
And I think that, like, Jed Bartlett, in order to be this guy, and as we hear in one of the flashbacks, Mrs. Lendingham says, calls him a God king, right?
Like, a boy king, right?
Thinking about that, of course, I love and admire Jed Bartlett.
But what I also love that the show does, because Jed is kind of Aaron's self-insert, they're all our Aaron Tork and self-insert.
but the way that this show pokes at how egotistical one has to be in order to be this person.
So I don't say that to knock dead Bartland entirely.
I like and admire him.
And at the same time, to grandstand the way that he often does, to believe with conviction that I'm going to do this.
Yeah, I'm going to do this and I'm going to win, like all this sort of stuff like that.
Like you have to have this ego.
so when he's in the church
and he's railing against God
in Latin and English,
whatever you prefer.
And it's all framed around
like, how could you do this to me?
Right.
Right.
Josh was my son.
Like, not how could you hurt Josh,
but like my son.
Yeah.
Right.
You come from Mrs. Lanningham.
She's my sister, right?
You hit my ship.
Right?
Like, he's just made this, like,
entire thing, a war between himself
and God.
And the ego requires,
to frame it all that way is so deliciously fascinating
to me inside of that character.
Completely.
And to have that ego,
and I can't even tell you how important it is,
that young Jed,
when he goes out to do the difference-making thing,
stop short.
He fails in the thing that young Dolores Landingham
asks him to do.
And this is one of those areas
where, like,
I know we were kind of taken shots at it earlier
of the West Wing is this sort of like liberal fantasy.
And that's, it's true.
Like, it is a fantasy where like a turn of
can hypothetically change people's minds.
It's like that is deserved, a deserved reputation.
But honestly, like, if you dig into the text of the show,
it's mostly President Barlett and his staff getting stymied and roadblocked
and having all of their grand plans blown up by whatever happened that day
versus whatever they wanted to focus on.
And so they still get to make the big speech and they do their jobs with a kind of dignity.
And to me, like, that's what the West Wing is, is,
are you carrying yourself in a way that respects the people,
you work with the world that you live in
and the job that you are setting out to do.
And it's not so much like you're always
going to have the last clever word because
Jed's dad shows us.
Sometimes that's not so clever.
Sometimes that doesn't get you as far as you think it will.
Another thing I love about this era of television,
it's always true of television
that it is a reactive medium.
I say that all the time.
And I love that about television.
You can recalibrate your show based on what's working.
So like my theory about season two,
being the best has to do with
how I feel about the TV show
Justified, how I feel about the TV show Buffy
Vampire Slayer, like these are
shows that hit their stride in their second
season in a way that like
just leaps and bounds.
But it's reactive, right?
Walton Goggins is incredible
on Justified, so we have to make Boyd
Crowder like the second lead of our show
or Buffet Vampire Slayer,
like we figured out, we've
recalibrated the camp and we figured
out exactly where it needs to go, sort of
on how people are responding to things.
Well, and David Borey on aster figured out of act.
Like, there are many variables involved.
He did have quite a breakthrough in season two.
It's important.
So this idea that Catherine Juson, who plays Mrs. Lendingham,
comes to Aaron Sorkin and is like, I have a pilot.
She's a guest star on the show.
And she's like, I have a pilot that I want to do.
The way Aaron Sorkin tells it is that she did it on a smoke break
at, like, some gala they were at or whatever.
And he was like, huh, she leaves the show.
What am I going to do?
And as Aaron Sorkin tells it, he's like, I don't like the responses to those things
where you just sweep it under the rug and Mrs. Lendingham has retired somewhere and you just
throw a nice little party for her.
So how do you react to like someone wanting to leave the show?
Do you make it the core and text of the show or do you make this really obvious like we
couldn't keep this actor they had to leave sort of thing?
And so he's like, ah, what am I kill her?
And what if I kill her in a way that pushes my main character at that point,
Jed Bartlett, his main character, into renouncing his faith,
which is just a core part of his own character, right?
Absolutely.
And so to turn this casting hiccup, and by the way, it's apocryphal,
it's either Joan of Arcadia, which she was a guest star on,
or a different pilot that didn't go forward.
I can't remember with, but it's not like Catherine Justin went on and you're like,
oh, and then she did this great thing that like everyone knows her from.
She played God on Joan of Arcadia.
It was great, but it wasn't like a main character.
Anyway, point being.
How was God not a main character on Joan of Arcadia?
Because God takes many different forms.
Oh, it's true.
I forgot.
It's shaped like Mrs. Lanningham, and sometimes it's like a young punk rocker.
Sometimes it's a kid.
I love Shown of Arcadia.
It's a real touched by an angel situation.
I really loved that show.
Anyway, I won't defend it though.
But it's sort of like a great what if.
What if I hadn't told Aaron Sorkin?
I was doing that when Mrs. Lendingham still be on the show.
But like turning that into daring storytelling like this,
I think is a real testament to a writer firing at the top of his game
and wanting to take risks and wanting to push his characters and push his writing.
Yes.
And especially to do it with, as you said, a guest star, like a tertiary character at best
who is a super welcome presence in the show in the early seasons,
and you're happy when Ms. Lannigham gets off a quip
or puts President Barlett in his place in a way that,
honestly, only she and Leo really can speak to him that can'tedly.
And Abby.
And absolutely, Abby.
Stocker Channing could talk that way to literally anybody, and I would believe it.
Talk to me like that, Stocker Channing, I beg me at least.
Would I sign up for that cameo?
I might, you know?
I would.
But, like, the idea, as you're saying,
saying, Jov, using Mrs. Leningham's memory and specifically, like, her determination, right?
Like, who she was as a person. And that being what nudges Jed Barlett to not just, like, run for
re-election, which would be a whatever thing, but like to do the hard thing, right? To face criticism,
to answer the questions. Like, that's just a beautiful way to make sense of who these characters
are to each other. Like, that is great storytelling. All of Aaron's Orkin shows, sports night,
West Wing Newsroom
are
their ostensibly workplace
shows but actually
their family shows and most good workplace
shows are family shows.
But this idea that like
something that Sarkin likes to say
is you can be alone in a big city
if you've got family at work basically
right? So like this idea that
Mrs. Lannigham
who positions herself as
Jed's older sister in a flashback
but is also like
motherly to him in a way where he is
in a position where he's really against
God, but also his dad has some issues
going on or something like that. But the way that...
And Aaron Sorken character with daddy issues,
I mean, where would it even come from?
Never heard of it. Certainly not
involved in our next show that we're going to talk about as well.
When Jess says, I need
pallbearers and the Paul bears
are men in this office,
that that is the family that is here
because Mrs. Leningham's entire family has
been like wiped away.
very, very meaningful.
And this idea of like,
the West Wing always has this great cadence of like,
what's next, right?
What's next?
What's going on?
What are,
what is Toby wrangling in this office while CJ's doing this in this office?
And Josh and Don are arguing about this over in the hallway.
And there are those moments inside this episode,
but then constantly in the background of Jed's mind is,
I need Paul Bears.
There's this funeral happening.
There's this loss that's hounding me.
and I think that's done really subtly and really beautifully
inside of this beautiful episode.
For sure.
I mean, they're juggling huge personal loss
and huge geopolitical stakes within the same episode.
And this is why of all the frameworks that Sorkin has explored,
like the West Wing works best for him,
is because it feels the least ridiculous
to approach the day-to-day with the level of pomposity
we've been talking about and ambition and ego.
All that stuff feels natural when it's like,
The structure of his shows are about people who take their work very, very seriously.
And when the work is actually inarguably quite serious, it just kind of lends itself to the format.
So as a as a sportsman, you're saying covering sports on a television show isn't as important as running the White House?
I actually think sports night works quite well even still.
And some of that is because sports lend themselves to mythology.
And this is why the newsroom doesn't work because it's like the active real-time.
writing of myth as opposed to regarding like a politician who was shot or you know a current event
it just doesn't work it just like our relationship to those things is totally different than a merit like a long
distance runner who's 45 years old and breaking a record and you know you're on like a sports center
knockoff commentating about how incredible and historic and inspirational this is like there's just a
different tone that fits his writing better there is also unfortunately like there's aspects of the
newsroom I actually really quite like, but there is unfortunately,
Sportsline is so scrappy and ultimately kind of a failed, in its own way, experiment fair in
Sorkin, but a show that I really, really love, but it got canceled before he wanted it to
or something like that. West Wing is like the peak of his work. And then the newsroom is this
sort of like defiantly high on his own supply sort of era of Sorkin that, again,
works sometimes and then when it doesn't it doesn't and to go back to this idea of like to your
point there's so much stuffing in the turkey here the uh the scene where and an imagined version of
mrs landingham comes in to the room to talk to jed after the metaphorical storm has been
blowing the door open uh all episode um and they have this conversation there is a similar
seen in the newsroom
that I
despise
and so
it can so easily go wrong.
I usually roll my head
when that happened on the newsroom
I was like oh it's ghost dad
ghost dad bothers me every time
and ghost dad will show up again
again on shows it's not a sorkin problem
it's a TV problem
this feels so different
why do you think it feels so different
in this episode.
I wish I could put my finger on it.
Again, it's such a finely calibrated measure of like eight different variables.
And some of it is just like you have Martin Sheen, right?
Like you just have him in the chair.
And he could be talking to nobody.
He could be talking to a ghost, an actual ghost of Mrs. Langingham, which as you said,
it is not.
It could be another actually a live character.
And just anything he delivers in that cadence as President Bartlett is going to be pretty
compelling stuff.
Like that is a character who can hold a script.
and an actor who no question can hold the screen.
So if you have that as kind of your foundational point,
then I think you just have a little bit more wiggle room to work with.
And he also sells the big and broad stuff so, so well.
Like he's the reason why the store metaphor works
because you have him standing in the rain.
And I could just watch Martin Sheen standing in the rain
looking off into the middle distance.
And I would be captivated by it.
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One of the categories that we have been doing on these Hall of Fame episodes, not consistently, but here and there, is needle drop.
I actually don't know if I have one for the next one we're going to do, but there is only one answer here.
It's an absolutely iconic musical moment inside of television history.
How do you feel about dire straits in general and dire straits' usage here?
Yeah.
I have no real relationship to dire straits other than if you've been.
play this song, I will get goosebumps because
of this show. Yeah, this is
a television moment
that forever changed
a lot of people's associates. We should
say, in terms of ratings,
this got 20 million
people who are watching this episode, which is just
astonishing
bananas does not exist anymore.
Network television and
notwithstanding, like this just doesn't
happen. And so
for like, you know,
a good portion of those 20 million people,
not to mention all the people who have watched the West Wing since,
Brothers in Arms, the Dire Strait song, forever invokes this television moment,
this, the grand walk-no talk that the Bartlett administration does
over to the press conference and up onto the stage,
the American flag blowing in the wind outside behind them, and it works.
Like, all of it works.
This is what we're doing.
How does it happen?
If that doesn't move you, I don't even want to know you.
You know? Like it just, it has to affect you in some way. And this is one of those areas where in terms of the soundtrack and the score of the West Wing, very rarely do you get any of these sorts of needle drops. Like, it's just not that kind of show. It's very much like a snuffy Walden joint through and through. Like that is what's going on? So if you hear an electric guitar on the West Wing, you're like, okay, some shit's about to go down. You know, something is really happening and moving here and to incorporate it with a song that literally opens with its own storm sound effect.
And to just kind of layer that in with your actual booming tropical storm that's moving through DC out of season unusually in a way that just like President Bartlett cannot stop thinking about.
The whole thing just works through and through again in ways that it probably shouldn't and probably wouldn't on basically any other show.
I think that's true.
Do you think I don't, I did not watch West Wing in real time.
I might have caught up with it before it ended, but definitely like sort of a couple seasons.
I started watching like reruns were happening over the summer or something like that.
That's how I caught up on the West Wing.
But like, do you think it takes any of the tension out of this episode that anyone watching West Wing now knows that probably knows that Tim Matheson is not the president, like Hoynes is not the president going forward on the show that Bartlett's not only going to run, but he is going to win?
Like, does that, do you think that matters at all in watching this episode?
because, like, what's cool about this?
I mean, you know he's going to run
because he does the hands in his pocket,
looks aside, smiles thing.
Right.
But it's kind of fun to remember
that they didn't explicitly say it
and that you have that as like,
not really a cliffhanger,
but kind of cliffhanger
over the entire summer,
which seems like a long time
until you remember now
that we have like three years between things
and you probably couldn't get away
with this anymore.
But like, I don't know,
there's tension throughout the episode.
Is he, you know,
he's like, you get hoines to God.
Like, fuck you, I'm not going to do it.
And then he decides to do it.
But, like, if you already know that Bartlett's going to be Bartlett for many seasons afterwards, does that impact it at all?
It doesn't have to.
I was just curious.
Yeah, I think it probably does not impact it.
And I say this, like, very anecdotally, as someone who has seen this episode, I don't know, 20 times.
And I still feel it.
Like, you have a physical feeling watching a dramatic layout like this, where it is hitting the beats.
It is hitting the musical cues.
like you're just so on that razor's edge
of trying to understand like who is this man
if he is the broken down faith disavowing version
of the person that we've come to know and understand.
And so like that variable,
even if I know exactly how season three starts,
which spoiler alert,
it's with a weird 9-11 classroom allegory.
I let it roll, like as I do sometimes with these whole fan episodes.
I was like, okay, let's watch the next episode.
And I was like, what's happening?
And I had to remind myself that there's this weird
interstitial sort of episode.
Isaac and Ishmael, not canon, not recognized officially.
We're just going to keep moving.
But I think even if you know what happens, even if you've seen the show before,
there is just something about the magic of the space of this episode,
where you feel everything so acutely and everything is so heightened that I think it pulls
you in to that moment of like, even though I know, part of my brain is tricked by this.
I love that.
Do you have a favorite character who's not Dead Bartlett on the show?
Is there a single person that you're like, this is my guy?
This is so hard.
I mean, I think there is like a favorite beetle thing that happens, at least for me, where I like, I kind of bounce back and forth.
I feel like I am in a Toby place of my life.
Are you?
Yeah.
I think we all have a Josh Lyman phase of a kind.
I think Josh Lyman is probably the Paul if I had to equate them.
Yeah, the obvious answer.
And what would you say Toby is the...
He's the George.
There's no doubt.
You're a George guy.
So, yeah, that would be the answer.
rising George, rising Toby.
But like, how could the writer in us not be moved by Sam Seabor?
And how could the person who, like, wants to have the command of a room or hypothetically
a podcast not be channeling their C.J. Craig in some way?
I actually think my answer is Leo McGarry.
I actually think John Spencer is my guy.
And that certainly wasn't always the case.
Like, I think I went through a very long,
Josh Lyman phase, of course.
Sure.
But, yeah, I think it's...
I mean, you were posting on LemonLyeman.com with the rest of us, as we know.
With Alacrity.
One of the questions we asked ourselves in these episodes is, like, best performance.
And, like, Martin Sheen seems like the obvious answer, but there's something about
John Spencer in this episode.
He opens the episode with this idea, like, there's going to be a press conference
tonight.
You're going to want to watch it.
So there's, like, a ticking clock, as you said on this episode, like, we're headed
towards a press conference where a big decision will be made.
and the staff doesn't even know
what the answer is going to be
and they're going back and forth,
as you said.
And, like, Leo, though,
there are moves inside of this episode,
like the move he pulls with Toby and stuff like that,
where it seems like Leo knows that Jed is going to,
he feels so certain.
But when Leo says,
watch this,
like,
that is the part that actually, like,
made me choke up,
watching it,
this,
rewatching it this time is just like,
Leo's relationship with,
complicated as it is, is so beautiful.
Straight up, yeah.
In terms of like you talking about sports narratives being mythology, sort of writing itself in real time, or the history of America is being written, the fictional history of America is being written.
This idea of, you know, what is the chief of staff to the boy king who becomes, you know, the king of America?
like what is that figure, how, what is that guiding hand mean?
What does that level of faith in you mean?
Especially in a context where as we go into the other episode, the next, the following episodes,
Abby is not that person, you know, so like when your spouse is not that person, like,
Leo as his, like, workwife essentially is, like, has to sort of stand in for that.
And I just think that that relationship is really profound to me.
So, yeah.
Absolutely.
I mean, I think there's two.
really fundamental things happening with Leo in this episode.
One is what you're saying,
which is there's just a read of the West Wing in its bulk
that is like a Leo and Jed love story, basically.
This is a long-lasting relationship and partnership
between these two guys who understand each other so well.
And part of that, watch this is the, like,
I know this guy better than anyone in this room,
and you're going to want to pay attention for this moment.
And then there's also the grizzled political operator
who has seen everything and knows when something special is about to happen.
It's like that intersection,
of this is the moment where everything comes to a head, and we all feel it.
To hear Leo say it is really the punctuation.
He's like, can you hear the dire straits play?
Do you see the flag flapping?
History is about to be written here.
Yeah.
Who would you say your best performance in the episode is?
I think it has to be Martin Sheen, and this is your ongoing reminder that Martin Sheen never won an Emmy for the West Wing.
I mean, just tough fields.
I get it.
But, like, he's so great here in particular, and the show and the episode of Riot on him.
Bartlett in a place of like pure rage
scolding God, the ultimate walk and talk with God
in the National Cathedral
is, like I don't say this term like epic television.
Like that is must-see stuff.
I don't know if this is apocryphal, but I read some stories
that they got banned from the National Cathedral
because of the cigarette moment inside of this episode
or maybe the cursing out God part of it.
I don't know.
I believe this is the reason why like I'll omit the spoiler,
but when a future character dies in the West Wing,
they don't return to the National Cathedral for the funeral.
So I think there's some truth to it,
or at least some truth of convenience, for sure.
I will say, Joe, on the performance front, though,
like, this episode does not work without Kirsten Nelson.
That was my runner up as well.
Yeah, young Dolores Landingham, like, so impeccably cast.
Yeah.
Love her.
I'm a huge, like, comfort watch psych person,
so I'm a Kirsten Nelson fan.
But, like, her...
impression that's not an impression,
it's an embodied performance is so good,
and she is responsible for keeping
the importance of Mrs. Lendingham alive
throughout the episode until we get
not a ghost, the apparition
of Mrs. Langingham at the end of the episode,
but to have her so embody
the sharpness of that character
and to be able to see with your own eyes
how long that person has been in Jed's life
and what it means to live.
lose that person who
believed you could make meaningful
change even though he fails her inside of that
flashback for as long as she did
is. It's just
so interesting because I was I was
re-listening to the West Wing Weekly
episode about this episode
where Aaron Sorkin's on
giving an interview, Kirsten Nelson's on giving you an interview,
it's great stuff. They did a two-partner.
They also had Lawrence O'Donnell. I didn't listen to the one with
Lawrence O'Donnell, but Lawrence O'Donnell did.
Senior Bartlett himself, Lawrence O'Donnell.
really weird casting
but it works
I mean like he's stern in a way he needs to be stern
something I love about
Rishi who's a friend of mine and the co-os
of that show is like
how like
unabashedly and like
optimistically he loves the West Wing
and I'm just a much more cynical person than him
and I love that
both of those takes exist but he's
he was talking about Jed like
talking to the operation of Mrs. Leningham
about like he's just thinking of other people
And I was like, that is such a beautiful way to frame it.
And it is on the one hand true, but on the other hand, like, this is a man so certain that no one but himself could do this job.
And that egotism is also really important to me as part of that character.
So it is like, it's altruism and it's egoism like together.
And I just, I like the way those flavors, you know, coalesce inside the show.
She needs the egoism.
He needs the altruism, which isn't just in him, but is kind of fanned by a lifetime with
Dolores Langingham.
Like, you're seeing her kind of stoke that in him.
And he also needs, like, the weird underdog chip on your shoulder, like, fight.
Like, that's a huge part of President Bartlett as well.
And part of what brings him to that press conference.
It's fuck you, it's fuck you, it's fuck you, it's fuck you, dad, it's fuck you God.
It's fuck you any, like, fuck you Toby based on the previous episode.
It's like, anyone who doubted me, I'm going to prove.
that I can and will do this and that I'm the only person that should do this.
Watch this.
Most iconic image slash shot composition.
I don't think there's a lot of competition, is there?
What's your answer?
I think there's two options.
I think specifically Jed's stepping on the cigarette in the National Cathedral, but really
Annie, just showing the cathedral and the scale of it is part of what sets the stage for this
whole thing, and certainly that particular monologue confrontation, however you want to
describe it.
I think if you show that image, Jed Bartlett alone in a cathedral.
But we've already talked about it, but I will say the American flag waving out of the window as the storm rages, like, I think you have to work really hard to not make that look cheesy.
It's true.
And it works.
So I think yours is the right answer, but I think that flag waving is really interesting.
Favorite under-recognized detail of this episode,
look, depending on your familiarity with the West Wing,
it may or may not surprise you that this is not the only time
President Bartlett or any character just starts speaking in Latin
as like a matter of course in the episode.
But if you're not like in the weeds of this shit,
I think part of the important distinction is basically every other time
that Jet Barlett speaks Latin, it's in this like very professorial way.
It's in like he's trying to explain something to Josh or Toby or Sam or CJ.
from his point of view, from within his faith,
just like, you know, an elder passing along wisdom.
And the fact that he turns it here, like,
that he's so heartbroken,
that he turns it to not just, like, talk to God,
but mock God effectively.
I think it's one of those, like, really stunning character details
that even if you don't have that background,
you kind of feel it,
even though you don't fully realize it.
Mock God, curse God out in a way that you can put on prime time television, etc.
Definitely.
For me,
And I never noticed it before, but there's a couple different moments where the camera just lingers on Mrs. Lendingham's empty desk.
Like following characters around, but then it'll just sort of like stop and just show you her desk empty for a beat or two longer than it normally would.
And I thought that was really.
And Jed can't even look at it.
He like keeps moving past it like as quickly as possible.
Yeah.
Okay.
Best moments seen.
I think this is also just has to be Jed yelling at God.
I don't know what else it could be.
So you have something else?
See, I actually think it's the ending.
Okay.
I actually think it's the dire straits build up to the press conference
and the Hold Your Press season ending moment.
Like, look, ultimately like these episodes are real,
this run of episodes, but this one in particular,
it's just like the most revealing part of the West Wing when it comes to character.
When it comes to Jed Barlet, like we are laying out who this guy is and what he is made of.
and he's put through a lot in two cathedrals.
Like he's isolated.
He's being kind of stripped down of the protection of his office in some ways,
of like the pageantry of his office.
Like he is just a guy who's having to make a hard choice while dealing with this other really painful thing.
And I think getting him to the point where he goes through all that and he curses God and he has the show,
you know, he has the showdown and he has his moment in the office during the storm,
getting him to the point where he can walk in there
and put his hands in his pockets and smile, look to the side.
That is one of the most satisfying renderings of any character
in my television life.
And so it doesn't feel like a cheat or a shortcut.
Like it feels, this whole episode really feels like payoff, pay off, pay off, pay off.
And it is seeding stuff and bringing it back and it feels insular within the episode.
But it's also like, this is two years of President Jed Barlett getting to this point.
And when he gets there, it's hard to argue that that is the moment.
There is a question I wanted to ask about both this and then the next episode we're going to talk about, which is, does this episode work out of context?
Sort of like in that vein where we did the hooked series earlier this year on this feed, where we talked about sort of episodes if they aren't the pilot, what you would show someone to tell them about what this show is, right?
The end of season two of 22 episodes, these are shows way too far in.
This would never be the hooked episode.
I might talk about a hooked episode actually in a second.
But could you show someone this episode without them having the lead-up of knowing who Mrs. Lending-M-Had is or knowing about the build-up of the MS storyline or anything like that?
It doesn't have to be.
But I'm just curious if this is an episode you feel like you could show out of context to someone.
I think it would be legibly very good, but maybe not legibly great.
Yeah.
And you need the 40-something episode.
of background to really feel everything that you need to feel in an episode like this.
But at the same time, the execution of it, the pacing of it, the structure of it, that's all very
recognizable, even if you have no idea who any of these people are.
Is the Westwing a show that you would put on?
Is this a show that you put on just, because I know you have shows like this.
This is a show that you just put on like, I want to feel comforted or I want to feel uplifted.
Is this like a frequent, you said you watched this episode dozens of times, like is,
When do you rewatch the West Wing?
It's definitely more comfort than uplift.
Like, I'm not looking to be roused into political affirmation by the West Wing.
I'm like, this is a drama and most importantly, like, a group of characters that are so pleasant to spend time with and wonderful to spend time with.
And that's while they're fucking up.
It's while they're sometimes doing very dumb things or self-centered things or egotistical things or whatever it is.
But, like, this is in that zone of show for me where it's such an easy comfort watch and a very easy trap of like,
I'm going to put on season one, episode 12,
and then all of a sudden I'm on season six
because I've just run through the whole thing.
Rob, who watched All of Lost over the course of, like, I don't know, one month.
It's a slippery slope.
That's what I'm saying.
I feel this way about most of the shows we did for the Hook series,
and I feel this way about this show.
Both this show, the next one we're going to talk about,
I couldn't just stop at one.
It's like a Pringle.
Like, I couldn't just stop at one episode.
I wanted to watch.
I watched, like, the next three, essentially.
Because there's like the interstitial one, and then there's like the two-part premiere.
I watched all through that, and I was just sort of like, oh, I could do this.
I could just keep going, honestly.
Why not?
What would be the runner-up episode?
If it were not this episode, if you were making this list...
Yeah.
And again, I salute our colleagues.
They had a really hard job of putting this list together, so I'm not knocking it.
But if you were to put this list and you're not picking two cathedrals, which West Wing episode are you picking?
So this is where I operate somewhat in defiance of my earlier claim that there's, I mean, there are many great season two episodes and I want to talk about one in a second.
But if I had to pick one or really I'm going to cheat and pick two, it's 20 hours in America, which is the two part season four premiere.
It is a two part of like has everything.
It is, so Josh and Toby and Donna are out in Iowa kind of out of their element.
It's like exposing their hypocrisies a little bit.
It's a really good election episode or re-election episode.
It's a great issues-driven episode.
It has guest star Amy Adams out of absolutely nowhere.
And also, for my money,
it has the single best bit of Sorkin's speechifying
in the entire series,
which is Jed Barlitz,
the streets of heaven are too crowded with angels' speech
after there's like a bomb that goes off at a school.
And so it hits, like, literally everything
that the West Wing is at such a high level.
If you can, like, cheat and pick a two-parter,
I think that would be my pick.
I think sort of like a clear frontrunner for second place is in a Chelsea's Deo, which I think a lot of people think of as like the hooked episode, perhaps of West Wing.
This is a season one episode.
This is a Toby-centric episode.
Your guy, Toby, the George Harrison of the West Wing.
And this is just an episode that stands out in the history of West Wing as.
Maybe the first time this show really demonstrated how high it could reach.
So that's, and then in the shadow of two gunmen is like an absolute classic episode, two-parter again, a cheat.
But, you know.
Sometimes you got to smuggle them.
And while we're talking Toby episodes too, I do think 17 people, which is season two, episode 18, the episode where Toby finds out about President Bartlett's MS.
And really is like the one to challenge him.
him about it.
Like this, as you can tell from two cathedrals, like, the show can be quite forgiving and
understanding of President Barlett, but like, this is a dude who lied to the entire American
public about his health for eight straight years.
And Toby is really the only one who's like, isn't this kind of fucked up and like shouting
at President Barlett in the Oval Office?
A remarkable piece of television.
And really one of the best, like, behind closed doors debating and arguing, which is the
crux of what the West Wing is.
Like, that's that version at its best.
I love that. Anything else? Any other episodes you want to shout out?
I think those are the definitive ones for me.
There's many other great ones, but again, it's like, I love somebody's going to emergency,
somebody's going to jail, which is a very Sam Seaborne off on a quest episode.
But it's like sometimes those feel a little too much like side missions.
You know, it's like we're spending a lot of time with one of the core senior staff,
but not enough time with everybody else to see what they've got going on.
Do you have a favorite...
either like sort of recurring guest star
like in Oliver Platt
sort of like you know whatever
do you have a favorite like recurring
Marley Matlin blah blah
guest star or like an era
of like the
you know
various guest stars who stuck around for a while
and you're like I really liked the X era of West Wing
and they never became a series regular
but I was a fan
I think
a single episode guest star who like really got me
is Laura Dern pops through as a
U.S. Poet Laureate who Toby has like a really bad crush on.
And she's just fucking phenomenal.
Like, I mean, as you would expect from Laura Dern popping through for an episode.
But it's like a great, another great confrontation of like the idealism of the show of
somebody who doesn't work in government, who's just like an outside observer, but politically
minded.
And she gets to come in and be the voice of basically like, why don't we do more about a lot of
very seemingly simple ideas and issues?
And then Toby gets to be Oscar the Grouch.
but they just have such a warm dynamic
that I'm so charmed by it.
So that's always one.
Her is Tabitha Fortis
that just like sings for me.
Do you, sorry,
I've just never gotten to interrogate you
about the West Wing,
so I should have a lot of questions.
This is what we're doing here, Joe.
Do you, when you rewatch,
how often do you watch the non-Sorkan era
versus the Sorkan era of the West Wing?
I do re-watch it.
And in fairness, I think it gets there by seven.
Like it doesn't get back to the,
heights of the first four seasons, but it gets into
a really comfortable, watchable place.
I just think if you have, like, Al-N-Alda
on TV that much, it's never going to be that bad.
Again, the floor is super high.
And so, like, by the time you get to seven,
like, they figured some stuff out, and it's so much more of a
campaign show than it is an actual, like,
running the government show by that stage, that it feels like a
distinct thing. So, look, five and six can be pretty rocky.
Like, they didn't do right by our pal Lizzie Moss
ultimately with this show
with a lot of her plot lines.
Our best friend,
losing loss, yeah.
Ultimately, like,
I think seven is pretty fun.
And so, like,
five and six are definitely,
like, the multitasking seasons.
You know,
maybe I'll still put them on,
but, like,
it's okay if I'm cooking dinner.
All right.
Well, this has been a little toe dip
into West Wing,
one of Rob's favorite shows.
I'm really glad that we got to talk
about one of your favorite shows.
Joe,
thank you for indulging me.
Thank you to the ringer.com
for giving us this excuse
to talk about
the Westway.
16th on the list.
Justin Sales, our producer
was like, hey, maybe one of these top
episodes and we're like, nope, number 16
it is. That's what we're doing.
Anyway, I really recommend you read, of course,
the entire list that's up on the ringer.com.
You know,
let us know your opinions about what
should have been on there.
Definitely.
Politely, perhaps disagreeing
with what's on there.
And just like, our
colleagues are just so
smart and funny in the way they talk about.
write about television and I really admire what they did here. So please support the project.
Anything else you want to say? Romney before we go. Just email us at prestige TV at Spotify.com
with any of your other various West Wing takes. Mandy was robbed. You know, like Toby got what he
deserved in the end. Whatever your bad take, maybe I kind of do want to hear it.
Yeah. Prestage TV at Spotify.com or resident of Mandyville at Gmail.com.
We will answer either emails.
And hopefully we did right by the people who are so excited to see that we would be talking about West Wing.
I think some people thought we were doing in every episode rewatch of West Wing.
I'm sad to say it's already been done.
It has been done perfectly.
So no need for us to do that.
But we will maybe check in again in the future if we have another excuse to do so.
Thank you to Kai Grady, our chief of staff on this episode.
And we'll be back with more pluribus coverage.
with another installment of the 100 Best episodes of the Century episode.
We got chair company coverage coming, heated rivalry coverage coming,
so there's just a lot going on.
So stay tuned to the feed, and we'll see you soon.
Bye.
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