The West Wing, Season Three

The West Wing (1999-2006) is a television show about a fictional United States presidential administration, set mainly in the West Wing of the White House.

Operator:
Hello, welcome to the Butterball Hotline.

Toby:
What the hell is...

Bartlet:
Shhhh. Hello!!

Operator:
How can I help you, sir?

Bartlet:
Well, first let me say, I think this is a wonderful service you provide.

Operator:
Well, thank you. May I have your name please?

Bartlet:
I'm a citizen.

Operator:
I'm sure you are, sir, but if I have your name I can put your comments in our customer feedback form.

Bartlet:
I'm Joe Betherson...ton. That's one 't', and with an 'h' in there.

Operator:
And your address?

Bartlet:
Fargo.

Operator:
Your street address, please?

Toby:
[picks up another phone, into it] Zip code, Fargo, North Dakota, right now. [hangs up]

Bartlet:
My street address is 114... 54 Pruder Street, and it's very important that you put 'street' down there because sometimes it gets confused with Pruder Way and Pruder Lane. Apartment 23 R... Fargo, North Dakota... [Charlie walks in with a piece of paper, Bartlet grabs it.] Zip code 50504.

Operator:
Thank you. Your voice sounds very familiar to me.

Bartlet:
I do radio commercials for... products.

Operator:
And how can I help you?

Bartlet:
[sits down] Stuffing should be stuffed inside the turkey, am I correct?

Operator:
It can also be baked in a casserole dish.

Bartlet:
Well, then we'd have to call it something else, wouldn't we? [Toby sits down and puts his hand under his chin.]

Operator:
I suppose.

Bartlet:
If I cook it inside the turkey, is there a chance I could kill my guests? I'm not saying that's necessarily a deal-breaker.

Operator:
Well, there are some concerns. Two main bacterial problems are Salmonella and Campylobacter jejuni.

Bartlet:
All right. Well, first of all, I think you made the second bacteria up, and second of all, how do I avoid it?

Operator:
Make sure all the ingredients are cooked first. Sauté any vegetables, fried sausage, oysters, etc.

Bartlet:
Excellent! Let's talk temperature.

Operator:
One hundred and sixty-five degrees.

Bartlet:
No, see, I was testing you! The USDA calls for turkeys to be cooked to an internal temperature of 180 to 185 degrees.

Operator:
Yes, sir, I was talking about the stuffing which you want to cook to 165 to avoid health risks.

Bartlet:
Okay. Good testing!

Operator:
Do you have an accurate thermometer?

Bartlet:
Oh yeah. It was presented to me as a gift from the personal sous chef to the king of... [Toby raises his hand and Bartlet catches himself] auto sales in...

Toby:
[whispering] Fargo.

Bartlet:
Fargo. Phil Baharnd. The man can sell a car like... well, like anything.

Operator:
Very good, sir. You have a good Thanksgiving!

Bartlet:
And you do, too. Thanks a lot! [hangs up the phone] That was excellent! We should do that once a week.

Sam:
Celia, I asked Ainsley, and she said she didn't mind at all. Plus, Charlie said he's fine with it.

Celia:
Charlie's a man.

Charlie:
Damn right.

Ainsley:
Sam.

Sam:
Yes.

Ainsley:
We need to be clear we're not going to take a bath when other countries can afford to take on more.

Sam:
Yes.

Ainsley:
This is important.

Sam:
I also think it's important to make it clear that I'm not a sexist.

Charlie:
And that I'm all man.

Ainsley:
You're Celia?

Celia:
Yes.

Ainsley:
He's not a sexist.

Celia:
If you're willing to let your sexuality diminish your power.

Ainsley:
I'm sorry?

Celia:
I said I'm surprised you're willing to let your sexuality diminish your power.

Ainsley:
I don't even know what that means.

Celia:
I think you do.

Ainsley:
And I think you think I'm made out of candy glass, Celia. If somebody says something that offends you, tell them. But all women don't have to think alike.

Celia:
I didn't say they did and when somebody said something that offended me, I did say so.

Ainsley:
I like it when the guys tease me. It's an inadvertent show of respect I'm on the team and I don't mind it when it gets sexual. And you know why? I like sex.

Charlie:
Hello.

Ainsley:
I don't think whatever sexuality I may have diminishes my power. I think it enhances it.

Celia:
And what kind of feminism do you call that?

Ainsley:
My kind.

Bonney:
It's called Lipstick Feminism. I call it Stiletto Feminism.

Sam:
Stilettos?

Ainsley:
You're not in enough trouble already?

Sam:
I suppose I am.

Celia:
Isn't the point that Sam wouldn't have been able to find another way to be chummy with a woman who wasn't sexually appealing?

Ainsley:
He would be able to, but that isn't the point. The point is that sexual revolution tends to get in the way of actual revolution. Nonsense issues distract attention away from real ones: pay equity, child care, honest-to-God sexual harassment, and in this case a speech in front of the U.N. General Assembly. So, you, [to Sam] 25% on the assessments for Category A. [To Charlie] You...I don't know what your thing is. [To Celia] And, you, stop trying to take the fun out of my day. With that, I'm going to get a cupcake.

Sam:
Well, for the moment, I'm going to do what she's telling me to do.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
I don't know who the world's leading expert on warfare is, but any list of the top has got to include me and I can't tell when it's peacetime and wartime anymore.

Leo:
Look, international law has always recognized certain protected persons who you couldn't attack. It's been this way since the Romans.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
In peacetime.

Leo:
Yes.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
The Battle of Agincourt...this was the French fighting against the British archers. This was like a polo match. The battles were observed by heralds, and they picked the winners. And if a soldier laid down his arms, he was treated humanely...

Leo:
Yeah.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
And the international laws you're talking about...this is where a lot of them were written, at a time and in a place where a person could tell between peacetime and wartime. The idea of targeting one person was ridiculous. It wouldn't have occurred to the French to try to kill William Pitt. That all changed after Pearl Harbor-

Leo:
I don't like where this conversation's going...In the Situation Room, Fitz...

Admiral Fitzwallace:
We killed Yamamoto. We shot down his plane.

Leo:
We declared war...

Admiral Fitzwallace:
If Dietrich Bonhoeffer had been successful...

Leo:
...and the plot to kill Hitler was an internal rebellion.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
...there would have been statues built of an assassin. We'd've had to explain that to our kids!

Leo:
I'm going to get back to the office.

Admiral Fitzwallace:
We measure the success of a mission by two things: was it successful and how few civilians did we hurt. They measure success by how many. Pregnant women are delivering bombs! You're talking to me about international laws? The laws of nature don't even apply here! I've been a soldier for thirty-eight years, and I've found an enemy I can kill. He can't cancel Shareef's trip, Leo. You've got to tell him, he can't cancel it.


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