Capitol View

Farewell West Wing

Posted at 8:18 PM on April 2, 2006 by Bob Collins (4 Comments)

I've been a West Wing fan since the first show and apparently I'm the only one still watching it but I've generally been impressed with the research that's done on it.

Sunday's night's episode featured Election Day between Matt Santos and Arnold Vinick and as the exit polling was coming in, they were taking apart what it meant. The resarch was solid and they weren't making it up. Minnesota's numbers were coming in and you heard a cnnversation in the Democratic boiler room that said, "don't worry about Dakota County. As long as we're solid in the 4th and 5th, it doesn't matter.

Dakota County is mostly the 2nd...Republican turf. The 4th and 5th are Minneapolis and St. Paul and relatively blue environs.

In another scene, the concern was about Massachusetts. The early numbers weren't good for the Democrats and it was noted that the Berkshires made up most of the numbers that were available. My father-in-law, a Massachusetts Republican of the traditional order, ran for Congress after Rep. Silvio Conte died. (You true political wonks will remember him as the guy who put on a big mask during a speech on the House floor to wail against pork spending. He was the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee.)

My father-in-law was talked into running by the state GOP Party, but they walked away from him as soon as the far right-winger from Springfield got into the race(I see Mitt Romney just appointed the guy a judge so it looks like, given his career politician status,he'll be able to retire never having actually worked a day in his life). So they had a primary.

My father-in-law won the Berkshires (from which he hails) and a few of the blue collar cities like Gardner and Fitchburg, but in a GOP primary you can't win the 1st in Massachusetts without Springfield, so he lost. And the guy who won got his brains beat out against then state Rep. John Olver.

Don, my father-in-law, was disappointed when he lost, of course, but I often think Washington would have been the worst place for him. He's a good, decent,intelligent man who really is interested in doing good things for people. He'd have been a fish-out-of-water in Washington. He may be the most decent person I've met in my life; he's the only poliician I can say that about.

Anyway, I know a lot of people soured on West Wing, but the writers' research was always spot on.

Unlike other TV shows. JAG comes to mind. I recall one episode when the lead character lands a plane, only there's a fuel truck on the runway. What to do? So the pilot -- the pilot, mind you -- turns the steering wheel to the right and the planes veers out of the way.

Interesting scene, except that the "steering wheel" doesn't actually steer the airplane...the rudder pedals do. But I guess they couldn't get a shot of the guy moving his feet.

It was a stupid show that was very popular. West Wing has, with exceptions, been an intelligent show that isn't.

Says a lot.


Comments (4)

Aw crap. You mean it got better again after that first non-Sorkin season when they set a world land-speed record for bipartisan preaching?

Posted by da Wege | April 2, 2006 10:12 PM


im going to miss west wing. i thought they had taken it off along time ago, because they changed it's time. its very well done-lawrence odonnell is the executive producer and he is very sharp/knowledgable. i think one of the reasons i like it is that it is what political followers probably wish what politics was-not what in reality it is. a hispanic guy from tx who could win sc or a ca republican who could win vt.

Posted by john | April 3, 2006 10:47 AM


When I heard that comment about Minnesota's 4th & 5th, I thought: "What about the 8th??"

(Bob notes: Having had considerable difficulty in the past getting numbers from the 8th, I have no choice but to assume the clerks in the largest cities had, once again, gone home without reporting the results to the SOS (g). But that's a whole 'nother series.)

Posted by Victoria | April 3, 2006 2:07 PM


Its a real shame that shows like OC and beautiful people are on and going strong, while the show that actully teachs you something about this country and the system, is going off air.

I really don't know what I'll be doing on Sundays anymore. it is a real shame.

Posted by Salman | May 11, 2006 3:14 PM


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The feature examines statements made by Minnesota politicians and checks them for accuracy. Based on data analysis, document reviews and interviews with non-partisan analysts, statements are rated either true, false or inconclusive. PoliGraph is a collaboration between Minnesota Public Radio News and the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota. More

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