In Praise Of… West Wing

Posted on Monday, December 14th, 2009 in: Misc.

There comes a point at the end of every show role when a girl’s just gotta unwind.  For the first time in six weeks, massive, regulated cycles of laundry are done (I promise, I do wash my socks more than once every six weeks… but panic is the motive, not systematic hygiene…) floors are scrubbed, bulbs are changed, kitchens are cleaned, windows are scrubbed, paperwork is tidied, filing is done.  And when all of that domestic upheaval is completed, there settles in a moment of… well, what now?

And there’s the answer… West Wing.

Had I known the day I staggered into HMV armed with a student discount card, a gift token value 25% and a determination that my weekend would be long and lazy what a discovery I would make there…

… well, I would have staggered in a little faster.  For lo!  The complete West Wing, all seven seasons, were there on offer for a ridiculously low price tag, and I had not a moment’s hesitation in buying it.  Back home, I turned down the lights, fired up the computer, wrapped myself in a blanket, got out the hot chocolate and started watching.

And it’s brilliant.  Utterly brilliant.  I mean, sure, I can sympathise with those who say it’s bewildering, too fast, makes no sense to anyone who doesn’t have a degree in American politics or isn’t a supporter of the Democratic Party.  But on the other hand, for decades, programs like Dr Who and Star Trek have specialised in talking utter nonsense at very high speed while being shot at by aliens with unknown motives – hell, anyone who’s ever watched 5 minutes of House or ER will know that it is a) utterly gripping and b) utterly non-sensical.  I’ve sat through I don’t know how much House (enthralled) and to this day can’t tell you the difference between a PET, CAT, CT or MRI scan.  (But I’ll not tell you the difference in a very urgent voice.)  With West Wing at least there’s a hope that if you concentrate very hard, you’ll get an insight into the workings of US politics.

Not that this is the point…

… I know only two people who might be accused of watching West Wing for its political insight…

No, the reason you watch West Wing is because it’s a fantastically constructed, break-neck bit of television, full of intelligent, sympathetic, complicated characters, performed brilliantly, which in its seven years of running swept up and down the gauntlet of political debate, probed those issues that no one really wants to probe, delved into every corner of the American psyche and came out with hands dirty and the conclusion that in governance, there’s really no such thing as an easy answer.  And yes, while we were cheering for the Democratic inhabitants of the West Wing who made up the leading characters, there weren’t really good guys or bad guys (except perhaps for the odd Bush-shaped Republican Senator…) … just people with passionate and opposing views that they struggled to reconcile in an ever-changing and complicated world.  And it’s funny.  I mean, like all good drama, it’s all other things besides, but even when it’s not actually making you laugh out loud, the sheer speed and wit of the dialogue keeps you entranced, and you’ll catch yourself grinning even when you should really be and probably are feeling something else.  For punchy one-liners, I have rarely seen anything better, and for intelligent argument delivered as gripping drama, it gets full marks.

If I have one single complaint against the West Wing, it’s this…

That President Bartlet (who the LSE proudly claims, incidentally, as one of our proudest (if fictional) alumni) seems perpetually to be haunted by a twelve piece brass band.  This brass band tends to only make its presence known at the end of episodes, and usually in the presence of morally ambivalent moments, but, at the very last, there it will be, the trumpets firing up in sombre and portentous manner as President Bartlet pulls off his glasses, looks up seriously to camera, and begins to declaim about the nature of morality in politics.  And as his speech, usually extolling truth, virtue and honour, reaches its crescendo, so this invisible brass band will also reach its crescendo, and if you’re really, really unlucky, I mean, having a really bad day, there might be an American flag in the background, and if you’re in serious trouble, someone, heaven help us, might go so far as to proclaim, ‘god bless America’ and that’s it, the entire EU audience rolls its eyes and cringes in the sofa.  But this is something of a rareity and I can, in fact, only think of one ‘god bless America’ moment in the entire, otherwise utterly brilliant series, when I’ve found myself making rude and fruitily inappropriate sounds at the TV screen.

If you’ve never seen it…

… pop down the local library, borrow season one, get yourself a warm sofa, a big blanket, a cup of hot chocolate and a ‘Dummies Guide to US Politics’ and buckle down for an addictive experience…

4 Comments so far - click here to join in

theonewhosenotjay
December 15, 2009

Brilliant! Love it! Bet I can name the two people ;-)

AdrianH
December 16, 2009

Funny, while I tend to watch far more American made dramas, West Wing is one that just never seemed to register on my TV radar. Neither did ER or Grey’s Anatomy, for that matter. House, on the other hand, and Wired, CSI, Criminal Minds, and most of the best SF series. But not West Wing. I love good writing, and that’s something the Americans seem to excel at, along with great ensemble casts. Firefly, Pushing Daisies, Dead Like Me…
it’s always difficult to imagine any other cast doing a better job. I’ll have to keep an eye on the various satellite channels and check out re-runs of West Wing; always willing to go by personal recommendations, rather than what some overpaid oaf in a newspaper says.

Arnold Akien
December 16, 2009

I’ve just posted this following on the avforums.com site …

” The author Kate Griffin has an entry on her Blog titled ” In Praise Of West Wing ” that’s well worth reading …

Fantasy Author Kate Griffin | Urban Magic

” And it’s brilliant. Utterly brilliant. I mean, sure, I can sympathise with those who say it’s bewildering, too fast, makes no sense to anyone who doesn’t have a degree in American politics or isn’t a supporter of the Democratic Party. But on the other hand, for decades, programs like Dr Who and Star Trek have specialised in talking utter nonsense at very high speed while being shot at by aliens with unknown motives – hell, anyone who’s ever watched 5 minutes of House or ER will know that it is a) utterly gripping and b) utterly non-sensical. I’ve sat through I don’t know how much House (enthralled) and to this day can’t tell you the difference between a PET, CAT, CT or MRI scan. (But I’ll not tell you the difference in a very urgent voice.) With West Wing at least there’s a hope that if you concentrate very hard, you’ll get an insight into the workings of US politics. ”

By the way Kate Griffins books are well worth reading … at least her book since her other work has been directed toward children under her Not So Secret Identity ” Catherine Webb ” whose ‘ Horatio Lyle ‘ books are great fun with a serious spin .. in one of the ‘Lyle ‘ novels theres an argument about the morality of actually using a weapon of selective mass destruction on your enemies ..said enemies being in the London of Queen Victoria. Anyway it’s a bit off topic I know but I do recommend Griffins “A Madness of Angels ” the first in a series whose second novels publication has been unaccountably delayed until next year! Damn ” The Midnight Mayor ” was going to be my Christmas .. pretend all the XXmas ghastliness isn’t happening .. read and now it’ll have to be the latest Terry Pratchett ‘Unseen Academicals ‘ which is about football . How much do I ****ing HATE Football ? Let me count the …. but thats really well off topic and … Honestly I’m Not bitter about the – well over the present bargain prices – amount that I paid for my complete ‘ West Wing ‘ and am rather glad that I didn’t see the series when it was being broadcast season by season.

Arnold. ”

I don’t doubt that there’s a reason why publication of ” The Midnight Mayor ” is being delayed until next year but as far as I’m concerned it’s not Good reason! I was perfectly prepared to buy in the advertised first publication paperback and then buy the hardback next year. The publication sequence used to be hardback then paperback but, what the hell, I can impose some sort of logic on the revision of an old formula from days of yore when I was but a boy … though now that I’m over 60 I’m less inclined to take any bloody non-sense from these mere infants in modern publishing houses.

Arnold.

AdrianH
December 18, 2009

Arnold, you are almost quoting my response in an earlier blog by Kate about the publishing date of Midnight Mayor being put back. I had planned on getting the paperback, then the American hardback, because the publishers in the UK no longer bother with Hardbacks very often, it seems. I already have the hardback of A Madness…
I too was very cross, but probably nowhere near as cross as Kate must have been. I’ve recently read all of the Catherine Webb books, too, and I think they are utterly wonderful, showing a storytelling maturity waaaay beyond the actual years of the young lady writing them. There’s a definite “Steampunk” attitude to the Horatio Lyle books, which I find especially appealing.
Anyway, March will soon be here, along with my much anticipated copy of Midnight Mayor

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