Aaron Sorkin has said that the biggest regret he had was not getting Emily/Ainsley as a permanent star. But with the show only in its second season and already having a large main cast all they could offer was a recurring guest role. When CSI Miami was in the works she was approached by the writers and offered a permanent leading role for that show. And with a lead role comes more job security and more money. Realistically, at the time, she made the right decision and still came back throughout the series as a guest star. But I think the show would have benefited greatly having her as a lead. Her chemistry with the cast, Rob Lowe especially, was astounding. My favourite scene between the two of them will always be Blame It On The BossaNova. But there are brilliant scenes thrown in there too. Emily herself has even said that she would have loved to stay on The West Wing but she needed something with more security so she ended up going with CSI.
It was nice to see her in 'Requiem' at Leo's funeral and maybe an opportunity to work for the Santos administration. Leo was the first to welcome her into the White House, so it made more of impact she was there to say goodbye to him 🇺🇲
Back when she was on the West Wing Weekly podcast, Procter told a very telling story about CSI: Miami's creative process where they didn't have read-throughs which West Wing did for all their episodes. At least to me, you can still hear there's a tinge of regret she chased the money.
Sam's working relationship with Ainsley Hayes is the closest TWW ever came to justifying the original premise of Rob Lowe being the show's lead, for me personally. The way he defended her when she was wronged, the way he listened to her in this scene, and the way he generally respected her all model for us the conduct we ought to aspire to in our treatment of political adversaries. I'd like to have seen a lot more of Ainsley on TWW.
And all this after she (with lots of help from Sam) made a fool out of Sam on TV the first time they met. On a series that is hard to point to only one best scene, this is in the top ten as far as I'm concerned.
@@bristolrugby08 Emily Proctor actually turned down the opportunity to continue as Ainsley on TWW, much to her later chagrin! And I totally agree that we should have had a lot more Ainsley!
Love how nonchalant Leo is when he asks "You got turned around?" and Sam affirms, he just says "OK, good." Really illustrates how much faith he has in Sam's judgement. Leo seemed perfectly willing to go either way on the issue. When Sam says "we're going this way", Leo didn't give it a second thought. It's great to have lieutenants/deputies like Sam/Josh.
Jonathan Cheung Sorkin said one of his biggest regrets on the show was not signing her to a FT casting contract. There were already 8 contract players and he wasn't going to use her every episode, so they didn't sign her. And CSI snatched her up.
+Maureen Collins It's a shame because Emily Proctor's performance on CSI was kinda mediocre. The specificity of Ainsley worked incredibly well with the rest of the ensemble.
What I love about this scene is, sam changes his entire point of view based on facts and persuasion by Ainsley. That humility, respect is more important to an argument than who is right. That two people can have different views on how country should be run but come together to exchange ideas for the betterment of the country. Idealistic? Yes, but we should always shoot for the stars and only then may we reach the moon.
I think this is fine but also shows the smugness of the democrats pretending to care about black and brown people. Some Harvard mouth like seaborn with the “color if their skin talk” because when losing bring it up. She hit em with the 80% are white real quick. Both parties are wretched for working people in general regardless of race.
@@moegreene7940 How do you figure? Sam was saying "No" because he thought the legislation would hurt minorities. Ainsley brought numbers that showed it was mostly white male managers committing the fraud. Sam changed his mind. So he *was* trying to protect them, and when someone convinced him that what he was doing wouldn't accomplish that he changed his position. This is only TV, so it doesn't prove anything about actual Democrats, but if it did, it seems to prove the opposite of what you're saying.
I love that Ainsley knows exactly what she´s doing when she hands Sam the summary. If Sam´s reaction would come as a surprise to her, she would have given it to him and walked back to her office. Instead she calmly sits down and waits for Sam to come back to get answers.
You cut out the best part, that great pan around the office and back to Ainsley and her face with that "holy shit, I work at the White House" look on her face.
I agree!! That scene summed this whole thing up perfectly....her..."Wait, let me get this straight....I expressed an idea, that guy liked it, the next guy liked it, and now the President likes it....HOLY SHIT!! I WORK AT THE FREAKING WHITE HOUSE!!"
Bayougirl78 Precisely! That moment when she realizes that, by being the smartest kid in the room on a specifically-delineated issue, she has just framed national policy . . . What must that feel like? How many people get the chance to feel that, in some small way, "Wow! I just changed the world."
I love that she is so puzzled and shook. She was arguing her point like always and to her it was normal. She was almost used to being so passionate about her points but no one (especially Democrats) not taking her seriously or listening. Yet, when she humorously argued her point to Sam, she was a critical reason to a change by the president. She probably never imagined having impact on that large of a scale.
She is a wonderfull actress. Too bad the last bit of the scene was not shown. Ainsley watches all the staff being busy with work and realizes she is part of it as well.
You aren't/weren't alone! I've been retired from the USG (DOD) for 13 years, and I can testify that TWW was water-cooler conversation thanks to scenes like this.
"we play with live ammo around here" . . . man there was fuckin' alchemy in this show. Sorkin has done other good things. I really like Money Ball & Social Network & Newsroom. . . . but the MAGIC of this show is uncanny.
Sorkin's earlier project before TWW was a cute movie called "The American President", played by Michael Douglas. His Chief of Staff was played by ..... wait for it ..... Martin Sheen (a.k.a. Pres. Bartlett in TWW). If you've not seen it, I recommend it.
I love how Ainsley hand Sam his two-page summary, watches him walk into his office, walks over to a nearby desk, perches on it, and just waits. She knows what’s coming and doesn’t bother to hide or explain or defend herself, she just waits.
Even if you know every single scene in every episode, you're compelled to go back and binge watch this series again and again. I think I've gone through the whole series at least 7 times since it was closed out. And I don't consider it time wasted. Sorkin was magnificent!
"I don't understand what just happened. I don't understand. I was just TALKING, Sam. I was just TALKING to you. So because I said this in here, the President in there is going to ... You've got to tell me when that's going to happen."
I found that part annoying, to be honest. Does she not know where she's working? Sorkin tends to overword things, which can work a lot of the time, but sometimes it just comes off self-indulgent and sloppy.
I think that it's a case of the difference between intellectually knowing it and having it really hit home. It didn't hit home until the end of this clip that she really, really worked in the WH and could have an effect on policy. It wouldn't shock me if a lot of younger staffers have this kind of feeling when they start working in the WH.
My classmate used this line often and I never realised it was not original! He was lifting sorkin 😂!!! No wonder the guy always had the best one liners
There are many West Wing performers who have Rob Lowe to thank. Even the other obviously great West Wing actors looked even better when they shared a scene with him. His contributions to the show were vastly undervalued.
Well, originally, Sorkin envisioned Sam as the main character in TWW. So I guess he’d written a lot of material where Sam was central in some way or other, or moved the plot. It’s only after the pilot, when the reactions to Sheen’s Bartlet were so enthusiastic, that they switched it to Bartlet as the main character. Which in turn is why Rob Lowe left after a few seasons, he’d joined the cast with the expectation that he’d be the lead.
@@hexistenzsadly he believed he was a lead as well and that's why he ended up. Leaving the show is because he didn't like being part of the ensemble. He wanted to be the lead
"The West Wing" was often criticised for it's liberal outlook, however the series also showed conservative characters who were intelligent, thoughtful and fair minded (ie: Ainsley Hayes)....... Despite the potshots that the Republicians took during the run of the series, the show's writers were smart enough not to group them all into the same category.... The series could also demonstrate from time to time just how stupid some Democrats could be as well....
woohooboy Yep agreed I thought one of the best episodes for this was The Supremes where they needed to get a Supreme Justice nominated. I thought it showed beautifully how good democrats and republicans could be when they came together to TALK about the issues not just sit entrenched in their .....trenches I suppose lol.
In my view this was a well balanced show when it came to politics. When Goodman took the presidency they could have made his character try to force every republican idea through the system, but they didn't. You got to meet liberal and republican weenies along side ones that just want to do the best for their country.
When the show was written, Clinton was the model. Despite the impeachment stuff, he had a good working relationship with many of the real economic-minded Republicans like Kasich. Remember, they balanced the budget and did a massive, reasonable welfare reform bill. Things were different back then. Clinton, Bush1, and Reagan all worked across the aisle, it was only with Bush2 where things became ' i won the election, we do everything my way'..
It's hilarious that a show about a Democratic administration is criticized for having a liberal outlook. What were people expecting? A bunch of ultra right wing democrats? Lol.
This is governing: choosing the right option for the people. It should have nothing to do with republican of democrate. It;s a pitty the last bit was cut where Ainsley looks around and feels she is part of the team that runs the country.
Oh man, this clip leaves off the ending, the best part, the denouement! FTR, after this clip ends, the camera pans 360 degrees around the office, then back to Ainsley, who then walks away with a small, proud, appreciative smile that says "Holy shit, I work in the fucking White House."
@@AH-te5gs Preceded by Toby's *HILARIOUS* line: "Come quick! Sam's getting his ass kicked by a girl!", which is also one of the funniest scenes of the series. 🤣😏
I also liked Leo’s “ok” after Sam said he got turned around on the issue. No question about why he changed his mind... instead, just trusting Sam’s opinion.
You ended the clip five seconds too soon. Ainsley looks around the room, and is struck by the buzz of activity, the brilliant but ordinary people who are diligently going about their jobs, and she smiles. Great ending to a great scene.
Isaac Jaffe, Sports Night: "It's taken me a lot of years, but I've come around to this: If you're dumb, surround yourself with smart people. And if you're smart, surround yourself with smart people who disagree with you."
I like this idea for a show but I'd change it a bit. Emily Procter as The First Lady and Nathan Fillion as president. Actors from West Wing and other programs could guest star but this would be a series unrelated to West Wing. It would have its own continuity. Procter's First Lady is a modern day Lady Freaking MacBeth manipulating everybody like puppets and Fillion's First Dude has been dutifully letting her call the shots up until they get into the Presidency, but at a crucial point early on, Fillion's character realizes his wife's intentions are not to stop with the presidency, and he begins to grow a conscience if not a spine. The series would be about how they both do love each other, but she wants to use him as a battering ram to bring down the entire worldwide system, and he's not so sure that's a great idea. Maybe Rob Lowe could play the Vice President.
+Waltham1892 Sorry to tell you (although I suspect you already know) that all the incentives are for government not to ever work this way. Pass the buck, never say yes, don't speak up. _West Wing_ was a paean to the urge for liberals to use government to order people's lives on the assumption that they are too stupid to do it themselves.
James King I'm a Progressive Republican, and I have to say that after this primary season, my confidence is government has finally exceeded by confidence in the individual.
My favorite part about Sam was that he unlike other people like Toby for example took the time to listen to people like ainsley. We need more people like him in politics today. If both sides took the time to listen to each other life would be very different.
@@ChangedMyNameFinally69 I mean, we need to listen to different ideas. The problem is that pretty much every idea from the right nowadays is a fat load of bullshit either spewed to gain votes or spewed because someone got brainwashed by Fox or some underground right wing media site.
@@ChangedMyNameFinally69 Maybe this is me being optimistic (that'd be rare for me on this subject) but American politics has always been _very_ cyclical. It would be hard for young voters of today to believe but, for most of the country's history - even its recent history - bipartisanship was seen not just as their patriotic duty by representatives at all levels and on both sides of the aisle but as a vote-winner as well. It's arguably one of the key factors that made the US the most successful and powerful country in the world for such a long time. I'll grant you, it's hard to see how we get back to that from here but it's been hard to see happening in the past and it's still happened. I won't pretend I've got answers for anyone given where we are but I've not run out of hope just yet.
"In fact, I can't believe I'm listening to a Republican" I love that line! hey, I'm a Republican and I love Sam, even though he's a Democrat! Wish all democrats were like him in real life.
Lol and all Democrats wish Republicans were like Ainsley. I don't mean female and blonde but intelligent and willing to debate unlike what you have today in the GOP.
@@paulcrawford5437 As opposed to the DNC that relies on feelings rather than facts and rails against Free Speech when it calls them out for having an unsubstantiated, at best, stance on any given topic?
If you want a "Sam Searborn" Democrat, check out Andrew Yang (e.g. his 160+ well reasoned policies @ yang2020.com/policies and extensive policy whitepapers @ yang2020.com/blog/category/policy and his podcast @ yangspeaks.com ). If you want someone more raw / younger / even more idealistic, there's a guy running for Congress in CA-34 (i.e. Los Angeles) named David Kim who is also really interesting. And Jen Perelman is a little rough around the edges in FL-23 but has a good mindset as well.
@@mybaseexchangeonline3572 As opposed to the GOP that relies on nothing instead of facts and actively hates facts and education in general, uses free speech as a crutch to say whatever they want, and often cooks up ideas out of thin air to back themselves, case in point; apparently people storming the Capitol Building was just them on a tourist trip. Maybe wake up from the brainwashing.
Ainsley and Sam were the best. I loved their initial scenes, on the TV show debating an issue. Josh ran through the offices to yell at Toby "Hurry! Sam's getting his ass kicked by a girl!" Emily Proctor was brilliant. Then Matthew Perry got to be the smart Republican in the group. I loved this show!!
I was so disappointed we did not get more of Matthew Perry on The West Wing. I think he only had three episodes? The one where Josh does his interview, the one where he finds out VP is having affairs that leak confidential info and the one where Supreme Judge needs to step down due to health reasons. Matthew Perry is a great serious actor and I enjoyed seeing him in Studio 60 with Bradley Withford.
You cut off the video too soon! Watching Ainsley look around the office is a powerful moment where we realize that anyone can make a difference. I love this show!
Ainsley was a great mixture of confidence and insecurity, or maybe it was more that she had clear ideas about her own abilities. It was very enjoyable to see her come to want a place in the WW, and then proceed to earn that place.
that girl has the biggest sweet-tooth of any character on tv, she's always eating something sweet (Peach, cupcake, donut) seriously, half of her scenes have her eating something tasty
Not fer nuttin' ... but you cut off the best little bit of that scene ... The 360˚ pan around the room and the look on Ainsley's face when it comes back around to her.
I love this scene, but you cut it short. The cap of the scene is her watching the dozens of ordinary people going about their work to run the country, and the expression on her face of how proud she is of them, and the realization that she's one of them. Thanks for reminding me though.
Ainsley Hayes, is yet another West Wing character that was criminally underused. I understand their is only so much dialogue to go around, but I felt she was potential lost.
And the next few seconds actually finished that scene properly. Showed a bustling white house all going about their busy schedules like ants. But anyhow, a great few scenes, glad somebody shared these. Thanks
Dating a co-worker who outranks you is almost always a big mistake. Besides, it's a nice change to watch fiction where men and women can have a relationship based on mutual respect instead of hormones. ;-)
I like the scene and the show. Now that I'm older I question somethings. He couldn't hear the facts until it pointed in a certain direction. It makes me wonder. If this scene happened in real life what wound be the true goal? Scoring political points, targeting certain demographics, or preventing fraud?
Sometimes it's as simple as, "How does this get me what I need?" Notice that in the end Sam pitches it as a bone to throw to small businesses to get a minimum wage increase through. (And most small businesses aren't completely opposed to wage hikes so much as they can't afford suddenly massive hikes that will see all their costs jump as their local suppliers have to raise rates in response. Unfortunately, we wait so long to add increases that by the time we do, it's an emergency and we have no choice but to make a huge jump.)
I'm convinced this show is not just set in a alternate timeline of this universe, but a different one altogether, where people are just a little more honorable.
I like that "live ammo" quote. Ainsley getting a little spooked that a conversation with a colleague becomes the official policy of the White House just moments later.
The part after this is where she watches all the people work. Then she meets with her friends, and tells them she is "their lawyer", referring to the people in the White House. Her friends are shocked.
FlintF No that part is just before she goes back to Leo and accepts the job. She had made her mind up until she saw her friends bad mouthing a democrat as inhuman.
Instead of the "can somebody get her a cupcake or something" line, I would have liked to have seen Sam say to her something like "go home, call your father and tell him how you got a law written."
Aaron Sorkin has said that the biggest regret he had was not getting Emily/Ainsley as a permanent star. But with the show only in its second season and already having a large main cast all they could offer was a recurring guest role. When CSI Miami was in the works she was approached by the writers and offered a permanent leading role for that show. And with a lead role comes more job security and more money.
Realistically, at the time, she made the right decision and still came back throughout the series as a guest star. But I think the show would have benefited greatly having her as a lead. Her chemistry with the cast, Rob Lowe especially, was astounding. My favourite scene between the two of them will always be Blame It On The BossaNova. But there are brilliant scenes thrown in there too.
Emily herself has even said that she would have loved to stay on The West Wing but she needed something with more security so she ended up going with CSI.
It was nice to see her in 'Requiem' at Leo's funeral and maybe an opportunity to work for the Santos administration. Leo was the first to welcome her into the White House, so it made more of impact she was there to say goodbye to him 🇺🇲
Thank you for this I am always looking for more back story on this my favorite television show of all time
Back when she was on the West Wing Weekly podcast, Procter told a very telling story about CSI: Miami's creative process where they didn't have read-throughs which West Wing did for all their episodes. At least to me, you can still hear there's a tinge of regret she chased the money.
@@taylorcostello7913 I would love to listen to this!
She was great on csi
Sam's working relationship with Ainsley Hayes is the closest TWW ever came to justifying the original premise of Rob Lowe being the show's lead, for me personally. The way he defended her when she was wronged, the way he listened to her in this scene, and the way he generally respected her all model for us the conduct we ought to aspire to in our treatment of political adversaries. I'd like to have seen a lot more of Ainsley on TWW.
I know your comment is a year old, but I couldn't agree more. Phenomenal scene.
And all this after she (with lots of help from Sam) made a fool out of Sam on TV the first time they met.
On a series that is hard to point to only one best scene, this is in the top ten as far as I'm concerned.
Biggest mistake Sorkin ever made was not hiring her
@@bristolrugby08 Sorkin agrees.
@@bristolrugby08 Emily Proctor actually turned down the opportunity to continue as Ainsley on TWW, much to her later chagrin! And I totally agree that we should have had a lot more Ainsley!
Love how nonchalant Leo is when he asks "You got turned around?" and Sam affirms, he just says "OK, good."
Really illustrates how much faith he has in Sam's judgement. Leo seemed perfectly willing to go either way on the issue. When Sam says "we're going this way", Leo didn't give it a second thought. It's great to have lieutenants/deputies like Sam/Josh.
Look at where Leo looks when he asks, 'you got turned around?' He is looking at Ainsley, he knows exactly what happened.
Well, and it also reaffirmed his hire of Ainsley as it was exactly what they wanted, both sides of a political view detailed with facts.
That’s why they have aides…Thayer have to be trusted or only the head would do the work .
She reversed his position, and also gained a doughnut. It was a good day.
And quite possibly a cupcake too
And here I was, wondering 'What Kind Of Day Has It Been?'
wait where is the Fresca?!
@@bsgtrekfan88 th-cam.com/video/mQHswT5B-lk/w-d-xo.html
And a cupcake!
"It's a short day, Ainsley, and a big country. We've got to move fast."
I really wish we had more Ainsley Hayes in TWW. She was a very interesting character.
And I really wanted her and Sam to end up together. They had so much chemistry!
Jonathan Cheung Sorkin said one of his biggest regrets on the show was not signing her to a FT casting contract. There were already 8 contract players and he wasn't going to use her every episode, so they didn't sign her. And CSI snatched her up.
+Maureen Collins It's a shame because Emily Proctor's performance on CSI was kinda mediocre. The specificity of Ainsley worked incredibly well with the rest of the ensemble.
Jonathan Cheung and....she eats a whole lot through out the show!!! Guess she defines "petite" in a different light!!! Cheers
She was great on CSI also. It is why I started watching it.
"I was just talking Sam, I was just talking to you."
"Well, we play with live ammo around here"
Priceless
watch west wing every week
One of the best lines in a show with a lot of great lines.
Aaaand… you just made policy!
Agreed!
It’s like sex, but no one wanted to acknowledge that for the longest time.
I loved Ainsley Hayes since her first episode. She was a fantastic character and Emily Procter played her beautifully.
She could've have easily been this bogeyman strawman character but instead they tried to do the opposite.
Totally agree.......she should have had more episodes!
Hear hear!
What I love about this scene is, sam changes his entire point of view based on facts and persuasion by Ainsley. That humility, respect is more important to an argument than who is right. That two people can have different views on how country should be run but come together to exchange ideas for the betterment of the country. Idealistic? Yes, but we should always shoot for the stars and only then may we reach the moon.
Absolutely agree. You put it perfectly.
I think this is fine but also shows the smugness of the democrats pretending to care about black and brown people. Some Harvard mouth like seaborn with the “color if their skin talk” because when losing bring it up. She hit em with the 80% are white real quick. Both parties are wretched for working people in general regardless of race.
Shut your mouth.
@@moegreene7940 How do you figure? Sam was saying "No" because he thought the legislation would hurt minorities. Ainsley brought numbers that showed it was mostly white male managers committing the fraud. Sam changed his mind. So he *was* trying to protect them, and when someone convinced him that what he was doing wouldn't accomplish that he changed his position.
This is only TV, so it doesn't prove anything about actual Democrats, but if it did, it seems to prove the opposite of what you're saying.
This is the underlying hope of the series
I love that Ainsley knows exactly what she´s doing when she hands Sam the summary. If Sam´s reaction would come as a surprise to her, she would have given it to him and walked back to her office. Instead she calmly sits down and waits for Sam to come back to get answers.
You cut out the best part, that great pan around the office and back to Ainsley and her face with that "holy shit, I work at the White House" look on her face.
I agree!! That scene summed this whole thing up perfectly....her..."Wait, let me get this straight....I expressed an idea, that guy liked it, the next guy liked it, and now the President likes it....HOLY SHIT!! I WORK AT THE FREAKING WHITE HOUSE!!"
Bayougirl78 Precisely! That moment when she realizes that, by being the smartest kid in the room on a specifically-delineated issue, she has just framed national policy . . . What must that feel like? How many people get the chance to feel that, in some small way, "Wow! I just changed the world."
kissfan7 Totally fucking agree.
i was just about to post the same comment
go watch it on Netflix
I love that she is so puzzled and shook. She was arguing her point like always and to her it was normal. She was almost used to being so passionate about her points but no one (especially Democrats) not taking her seriously or listening. Yet, when she humorously argued her point to Sam, she was a critical reason to a change by the president. She probably never imagined having impact on that large of a scale.
50% of the series is people saying the same thing over and over and getting a different answer everytime. It's magical
She is a wonderfull actress. Too bad the last bit of the scene was not shown. Ainsley watches all the staff being busy with work and realizes she is part of it as well.
Doesn't someone put a cupcake in her hand at the very end?
Totally agree. It’s the perfect ending
As a federal govt worker nearing retirement, this show always inspired me to do good work.
You aren't/weren't alone! I've been retired from the USG (DOD) for 13 years, and I can testify that TWW was water-cooler conversation thanks to scenes like this.
"we play with live ammo around here" . . . man there was fuckin' alchemy in this show. Sorkin has done other good things. I really like Money Ball & Social Network & Newsroom. . . . but the MAGIC of this show is uncanny.
Sorkin's earlier project before TWW was a cute movie called "The American President", played by Michael Douglas. His Chief of Staff was played by ..... wait for it ..... Martin Sheen (a.k.a. Pres. Bartlett in TWW). If you've not seen it, I recommend it.
David fichner worked on social network and house of cards if i recall correctly
I love how Ainsley hand Sam his two-page summary, watches him walk into his office, walks over to a nearby desk, perches on it, and just waits. She knows what’s coming and doesn’t bother to hide or explain or defend herself, she just waits.
This is why this was one of the best shows ever made.
Even if you know every single scene in every episode, you're compelled to go back and binge watch this series again and again. I think I've gone through the whole series at least 7 times since it was closed out. And I don't consider it time wasted. Sorkin was magnificent!
"I don't understand what just happened. I don't understand. I was just TALKING, Sam. I was just TALKING to you. So because I said this in here, the President in there is going to ... You've got to tell me when that's going to happen."
Is this how you decide how to go to war?
I found that part annoying, to be honest. Does she not know where she's working? Sorkin tends to overword things, which can work a lot of the time, but sometimes it just comes off self-indulgent and sloppy.
I think that it's a case of the difference between intellectually knowing it and having it really hit home. It didn't hit home until the end of this clip that she really, really worked in the WH and could have an effect on policy.
It wouldn't shock me if a lot of younger staffers have this kind of feeling when they start working in the WH.
Bingo
Serai3 Yes, I have noticed he uses a lot of words to say simple things.
Can you imagine a fiery debate between Ainsley and Toby? The room would melt!
I love that Sam didn’t really lose his mind. He just asked Ainsley to start from the beginning and let her have the doughnut
"not to let the facts interfere with a good story" I am using this all the time from now on
My classmate used this line often and I never realised it was not original! He was lifting sorkin 😂!!! No wonder the guy always had the best one liners
There are many West Wing performers who have Rob Lowe to thank. Even the other obviously great West Wing actors looked even better when they shared a scene with him. His contributions to the show were vastly undervalued.
Well, originally, Sorkin envisioned Sam as the main character in TWW. So I guess he’d written a lot of material where Sam was central in some way or other, or moved the plot.
It’s only after the pilot, when the reactions to Sheen’s Bartlet were so enthusiastic, that they switched it to Bartlet as the main character.
Which in turn is why Rob Lowe left after a few seasons, he’d joined the cast with the expectation that he’d be the lead.
Nobody that followed the show undervalued Rob Lowe.
@@hexistenzsadly he believed he was a lead as well and that's why he ended up. Leaving the show is because he didn't like being part of the ensemble. He wanted to be the lead
Having never seen the episode, I choose to believe that the person leaning over in front at the end was getting her a cupcake. :P
"The West Wing" was often criticised for it's liberal outlook, however the series also showed conservative characters who were intelligent, thoughtful and fair minded (ie: Ainsley Hayes).......
Despite the potshots that the Republicians took during the run of the series, the show's writers were smart enough not to group them all into the same category....
The series could also demonstrate from time to time just how stupid some Democrats could be as well....
woohooboy Yep agreed I thought one of the best episodes for this was The Supremes where they needed to get a Supreme Justice nominated. I thought it showed beautifully how good democrats and republicans could be when they came together to TALK about the issues not just sit entrenched in their .....trenches I suppose lol.
In my view this was a well balanced show when it came to politics. When Goodman took the presidency they could have made his character try to force every republican idea through the system, but they didn't.
You got to meet liberal and republican weenies along side ones that just want to do the best for their country.
When the show was written, Clinton was the model. Despite the impeachment stuff, he had a good working relationship with many of the real economic-minded Republicans like Kasich. Remember, they balanced the budget and did a massive, reasonable welfare reform bill. Things were different back then. Clinton, Bush1, and Reagan all worked across the aisle, it was only with Bush2 where things became ' i won the election, we do everything my way'..
It's hilarious that a show about a Democratic administration is criticized for having a liberal outlook. What were people expecting? A bunch of ultra right wing democrats? Lol.
Stealthy Mongoose yea and had the the show been about a republican president it wouldve been called too conservative
This is governing: choosing the right option for the people. It should have nothing to do with republican of democrate. It;s a pitty the last bit was cut where Ainsley looks around and feels she is part of the team that runs the country.
It's what happens when moderates become pariahs.
Oh man, this clip leaves off the ending, the best part, the denouement! FTR, after this clip ends, the camera pans 360 degrees around the office, then back to Ainsley, who then walks away with a small, proud, appreciative smile that says "Holy shit, I work in the fucking White House."
I love the whole "Wow, I can actually do something for my country" realization of her.
I think Ainsley thought every decision is made in a dramatic way. It's not. It's usually done almost: "Click-click, next!"
"Will somebody get her a cupcake!"
One of the best lines from a serious drama.
I still think it's "Ginger, get the popcorn."
@@AH-te5gs Preceded by Toby's *HILARIOUS* line: "Come quick! Sam's getting his ass kicked by a girl!", which is also one of the funniest scenes of the series. 🤣😏
lol, this show was not serious at ALL if you knew where to look
Three minutes twenty-four sseconds of brilliance. Now, that's what you call INVOLVING television drama!
"This is from an independent study that I have faith in."
Of all the lines to highlight, not what I would have expected
I also liked Leo’s “ok” after Sam said he got turned around on the issue. No question about why he changed his mind... instead, just trusting Sam’s opinion.
@@neonjoe529 if you look at Leo's eyes as he is asking the question, they look at Ainsley.
Literally my favourite relationship in TWW, Ainsley and Sam. They are literally the best.
Agreed!
Agreed
You ended the clip five seconds too soon. Ainsley looks around the room, and is struck by the buzz of activity, the brilliant but ordinary people who are diligently going about their jobs, and she smiles. Great ending to a great scene.
Quote from Ainsley's interview, "The President likes smart people who disagree with him"
As opposed to Trump, who surrounds himself with yes-men
Isaac Jaffe, Sports Night: "It's taken me a lot of years, but I've come around to this: If you're dumb, surround yourself with smart people. And if you're smart, surround yourself with smart people who disagree with you."
And..."he is asking you to serve."
I love her 'wait for it' business. Puts down her briefcase, smooths her coat, and waits...
"Guess what professor," I love that line.
2020 reboot of west wing with president seaborn married to ainsley.... and josh being dragged kicking and screaming back into chief of staff role...
Adam Gray I'd watch it
I like this idea for a show but I'd change it a bit. Emily Procter as The First Lady and Nathan Fillion as president. Actors from West Wing and other programs could guest star but this would be a series unrelated to West Wing. It would have its own continuity. Procter's First Lady is a modern day Lady Freaking MacBeth manipulating everybody like puppets and Fillion's First Dude has been dutifully letting her call the shots up until they get into the Presidency, but at a crucial point early on, Fillion's character realizes his wife's intentions are not to stop with the presidency, and he begins to grow a conscience if not a spine. The series would be about how they both do love each other, but she wants to use him as a battering ram to bring down the entire worldwide system, and he's not so sure that's a great idea. Maybe Rob Lowe could play the Vice President.
bold of you to assume it's Sam who would be president in that relationship
@@MyOwnFan1993 I actually like the idea of Ainsley being president, and I'm not a republican. She was just that good of a character.
@@MyOwnFan1993 I was about to say Ainsley as Prez would get my vote just for how insanely funny it would be
"we play with live ammo" - fantastic.
the *greatest* show in the _history_ of television.....
We play with live ammo around here. Great quote.
She was a great addition to the show. Intelligent counterpoint makes for great television.
If this doesn't make you want to work in government, your soul is dead.
+Waltham1892 Jokes on you, my soul is dead _because_ I work in the government!
ManMadeGod4 Touche...
+Waltham1892 Sorry to tell you (although I suspect you already know) that all the incentives are for government not to ever work this way. Pass the buck, never say yes, don't speak up. _West Wing_ was a paean to the urge for liberals to use government to order people's lives on the assumption that they are too stupid to do it themselves.
James King I'm a Progressive Republican, and I have to say that after this primary season, my confidence is government has finally exceeded by confidence in the individual.
Waltham1892 Touche indeed. It's still fulfilling, don't get me wrong, but other times I question why I keep the job.
My favorite part about Sam was that he unlike other people like Toby for example took the time to listen to people like ainsley. We need more people like him in politics today. If both sides took the time to listen to each other life would be very different.
Do you still believe that dumb ass centrist shit
@@ChangedMyNameFinally69 I mean, we need to listen to different ideas. The problem is that pretty much every idea from the right nowadays is a fat load of bullshit either spewed to gain votes or spewed because someone got brainwashed by Fox or some underground right wing media site.
@@30secondstomarsMBH Yeah it's hard to be in the middle when one side believes provable nonsense
@@ChangedMyNameFinally69 Maybe this is me being optimistic (that'd be rare for me on this subject) but American politics has always been _very_ cyclical. It would be hard for young voters of today to believe but, for most of the country's history - even its recent history - bipartisanship was seen not just as their patriotic duty by representatives at all levels and on both sides of the aisle but as a vote-winner as well. It's arguably one of the key factors that made the US the most successful and powerful country in the world for such a long time. I'll grant you, it's hard to see how we get back to that from here but it's been hard to see happening in the past and it's still happened. I won't pretend I've got answers for anyone given where we are but I've not run out of hope just yet.
@@Pineappolis I don't want to work with conservatives
Not to let facts get in the way of a good story..... God damn we haven't learned very much since this show
I think Ainsley is one of the few ladies that can rhetorically pwn Sam on a consistent basis...
miss her, miss the show =(
"In fact, I can't believe I'm listening to a Republican"
I love that line!
hey, I'm a Republican and I love Sam, even though he's a Democrat!
Wish all democrats were like him in real life.
Lol and all Democrats wish Republicans were like Ainsley. I don't mean female and blonde but intelligent and willing to debate unlike what you have today in the GOP.
@@paulcrawford5437 As opposed to the DNC that relies on feelings rather than facts and rails against Free Speech when it calls them out for having an unsubstantiated, at best, stance on any given topic?
If you want a "Sam Searborn" Democrat, check out Andrew Yang (e.g. his 160+ well reasoned policies @ yang2020.com/policies and extensive policy whitepapers @ yang2020.com/blog/category/policy and his podcast @ yangspeaks.com ). If you want someone more raw / younger / even more idealistic, there's a guy running for Congress in CA-34 (i.e. Los Angeles) named David Kim who is also really interesting. And Jen Perelman is a little rough around the edges in FL-23 but has a good mindset as well.
Wish all Republicans were like Ainsley in real life.
@@mybaseexchangeonline3572 As opposed to the GOP that relies on nothing instead of facts and actively hates facts and education in general, uses free speech as a crutch to say whatever they want, and often cooks up ideas out of thin air to back themselves, case in point; apparently people storming the Capitol Building was just them on a tourist trip.
Maybe wake up from the brainwashing.
Luckily Sam knows the 1st rule of closing a sale........When you get a Yes....Shut Up
Ainsley and Sam were the best. I loved their initial scenes, on the TV show debating an issue. Josh ran through the offices to yell at Toby "Hurry! Sam's getting his ass kicked by a girl!"
Emily Proctor was brilliant. Then Matthew Perry got to be the smart Republican in the group.
I loved this show!!
I was so disappointed we did not get more of Matthew Perry on The West Wing. I think he only had three episodes? The one where Josh does his interview, the one where he finds out VP is having affairs that leak confidential info and the one where Supreme Judge needs to step down due to health reasons. Matthew Perry is a great serious actor and I enjoyed seeing him in Studio 60 with Bradley Withford.
You cut off the video too soon! Watching Ainsley look around the office is a powerful moment where we realize that anyone can make a difference. I love this show!
“Can somebody get her a donut or something” why I love that line so much I don’t know! But it’s one of my favorites
Ainsley was a great mixture of confidence and insecurity, or maybe it was more that she had clear ideas about her own abilities. It was very enjoyable to see her come to want a place in the WW, and then proceed to earn that place.
"Not to let the facts get in the way of a good story"
Ainsley🌹
that girl has the biggest sweet-tooth of any character on tv, she's always eating something sweet (Peach, cupcake, donut) seriously, half of her scenes have her eating something tasty
Don't forget the Fresca.
;)
"Can I take this muffin?"
The West Wing doesn't have an all night pastry chef, does it?
DeaneFlaherty-"The Closer",Brenda Leigh Johnson(Kyra Sedwick)+LOTS of chocolate.
She’s the Brad Pitt in the Oceans Movies character
Underappreciated: Sam and Ainsley were discussing/debating this for *an hour and a half* before we got to this scene.
That last moment, when she was looking around at Sam’s doorway, she had the same feeling Charlie got when he was hired.
I loved her character. She played it so well.
"Play with live ammo" I use that phrase a lot.
Same! I always knew it was from TWW but could never remember when.
Not fer nuttin'
... but you cut off the best little bit of that scene ... The 360˚ pan around the room and the look on Ainsley's face when it comes back around to her.
Exactly
+Christopher Scott Knell You stated my position.
These clips always seem to clip short the best parts.
You read my mind too
Sorkin is famous for dialogue in motion. It's usually walking down the hall, and not panoramic sweeps though.
I love this scene, but you cut it short. The cap of the scene is her watching the dozens of ordinary people going about their work to run the country, and the expression on her face of how proud she is of them, and the realization that she's one of them. Thanks for reminding me though.
She feels a sense of duty.
One of my favourite characters, Ainsley and Mrs Langerham.
I think it was Landingham.
It's a short day and a big country, we gotta move fast. Lol
"Is this how you guys go to war?" 😆
There. Right there, perfect place to start a song...
Why I love this show? Seeing the way things should be vs the way it is now.
post more!! please! i loved her in this show!! she was just the cutest and adorable woman ever!
If only the real govt had these people and worked this way. On sound facts and common sense. This would truly be the America we should be
"Well, we play with live ammo around here..." Too good
I miss the me back when this aired. I used to believe in things.
Trump woke everyone up.
“I don’t understay-and” god help me I love her accent so much. Wish she could have been a permanent fixture on the show!
Also love how she says Sam's name "say-am."
“We play with live ammo around here.” Love the writing.
I just adored her character.
I was more than a little disappointed that in the following pan around shot someone didnt in fact give her a cup cake. :)
i love ainsley hayes
Much loved character. They did not utilise her enough.
Ainsley Hayes, is yet another West Wing character that was criminally underused. I understand their is only so much dialogue to go around, but I felt she was potential lost.
Sorkin has gone on record and said his biggest regret with the show was not making Emily Procter a series regular.
And the next few seconds actually finished that scene properly. Showed a bustling white house all going about their busy schedules like ants. But anyhow, a great few scenes, glad somebody shared these. Thanks
”The President asked you to serv and the rest is just crap”. Some thing to think about🤓🇸🇪
I wish it showed the part where the camera pans around the room back to Ainsley as it sinks in she's where she always wanted to be
That look at the end there is her thinking: Is someone actually getting me a cupcake?
His utter bafflement, taken aback at the audacity :-D
I don't know why these 2 never became a couple
It was the fault of the Bossa Nova
Because drama doesn't always have to be driven by relationships.
Plus, we already had CJ and Danny.
I kind of liked the fact that they never got written into a relationship. I thought the brother/sister thing was as funny as it was endearing.
Dating a co-worker who outranks you is almost always a big mistake. Besides, it's a nice change to watch fiction where men and women can have a relationship based on mutual respect instead of hormones. ;-)
To the credit of the West Wing, they rarely went for the obvious.
"Is this how you guys decide to go to war?"
I don't think she wants to know the answer to that question.
One of the best scenes!
I like the scene and the show. Now that I'm older I question somethings. He couldn't hear the facts until it pointed in a certain direction. It makes me wonder. If this scene happened in real life what wound be the true goal? Scoring political points, targeting certain demographics, or preventing fraud?
Sometimes it's as simple as, "How does this get me what I need?" Notice that in the end Sam pitches it as a bone to throw to small businesses to get a minimum wage increase through. (And most small businesses aren't completely opposed to wage hikes so much as they can't afford suddenly massive hikes that will see all their costs jump as their local suppliers have to raise rates in response. Unfortunately, we wait so long to add increases that by the time we do, it's an emergency and we have no choice but to make a huge jump.)
My favorite West Wing character. Emily Procter.
Ainsley is so cute she prounces Sam like it's two syllables
Ainsley you reversed his position, got a donut and potentially a cupcake or something. Take the dub!
"We play with live ammo around here." The responsibility of great power
Donna Trump shoots blanks!
Facts. Facts, guide decisions ... it does not matter where they come from, or who is communicating them.
I love how she is always eating.
Why was she always eating food? Its a great hilarious part of her character.
I'm convinced this show is not just set in a alternate timeline of this universe, but a different one altogether, where people are just a little more honorable.
A little ??
I like that "live ammo" quote. Ainsley getting a little spooked that a conversation with a colleague becomes the official policy of the White House just moments later.
The part after this is where she watches all the people work. Then she meets with her friends, and tells them she is "their lawyer", referring to the people in the White House. Her friends are shocked.
FlintF No that part is just before she goes back to Leo and accepts the job. She had made her mind up until she saw her friends bad mouthing a democrat as inhuman.
Time to move beyond small goal and get ready for larger common goals that is suit for wider constituents
Sam--get down on your knee and give her the ring already !
Your never ever going to do better than Ainsley.
1:32 - Sam's smug smile gradually fades. I love their chemistry.
Instead of the "can somebody get her a cupcake or something" line, I would have liked to have seen Sam say to her something like "go home, call your father and tell him how you got a law written."