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The West Wing Episode Directory Season One “Pilot,” September 22, 1999. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc,” September 29, 1999. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “A Proportional Response,” October 6, 1999. Directed by Marc Buckland; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Five Votes Down,” October 13, 1999. Directed by Marc Buckland; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Crackpots and These Women,” October 20, 1999. Directed by Anthony Drazan; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Mr. Willis of Ohio,” November 3, 1999. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The State Dinner,” November 10, 1999. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Enemies,” November 17, 1999. Directed by Alan Taylor; written by Ron Osborn and Jeff Reno. “The Short List,” November 24, 1999. Directed by Bill D’Elia; written by Aaron Sorkin and Patrick Cadell. “In Excelsis Deo,” December 15, 1999. Directed by Alex Graves; written by Aaron Sorkin and Rick Cleveland. “Lord John Marbury,” January 5, 2000. Directed by Kevin Rodney Sullivan; written by Aaron Sorkin and Patrick Cadell. “He Shall from Time to Time . . . ,” January 12, 2000. Directed by Arlene Sanford; written by Aaron Sorkin. Appendix A: 07.appa.173-178_Parry-Giles 12/12/05 4:45 PM Page 173 “Take Out the Trash Day,” January 26, 2000. Directed by Ken Olin; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Take This Sabbath Day,” February 9, 2000. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Celestial Navigation,” February 16, 2000. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Twenty Hours in LA,” February 23, 2000. Directed by Alan Taylor; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The White House Pro-Am,” March 22, 2000. Directed by Ken Olin; written by Lawrence O’Donnell Jr., Paul Redford, and Aaron Sorkin. “Six Meetings before Lunch,” April 5, 2000. Directed by Clark Johnson; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Let Bartlet Be Bartlet,” April 26, 2000. Directed by Laura Innes; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Mandatory Minimums,” May 3, 2000. Directed by Robert Berlinger; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics,” May 10, 2000. Directed by Don Scardino; written by Aaron Sorkin. “What Kind of Day Has It Been,” May 17, 2000. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. Season Two “In the Shadow of Two Gunmen, Part 1,” October 4, 2000. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “In the Shadow of Two Gunmen, Part 2,” October 4, 2000. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Midterms,” October 18, 2000. Directed by Alex Graves; written by Aaron Sorkin. “In This White House,” October 25, 2000. Directed by Ken Olin; written by Aaron Sorkin. “And It’s Surely to Their Credit,” November 1, 2000. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Lame Duck Congress,” November 8, 2000. Directed by Jeremy Kagan; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Portland Trip,” November 15, 2000. Directed by Paris Barclay; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Shibboleth,” November 22, 2000. Directed by Laura Innes; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Galileo,” November 29, 2000. Directed by Alex Graves; written by Kevin Falls and Aaron Sorkin. “Noël,” December 13, 2000. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. 174 . appendix a: episode directory 07.appa.173-178_Parry-Giles 12/12/05 4:45 PM Page 174 [18.117.153.38] Project MUSE (2024-04-23 23:54 GMT) “The Leadership Breakfast,” January 10, 2001. Directed by Scott Winant; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Drop-In,” January 24, 2001. Directed by Lou Antonio; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Bartlet’s Third State of the Union,” February 7, 2001. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The War At Home,” February 14, 2001. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Ellie,” February 21, 2001. Directed by Michael Engler; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Somebody’s Going to Emergency, Somebody’s Going to Jail,” February 28, 2001. Directed by Jessica Yu; written by Paul Redford and Aaron Sorkin. “The Stackhouse Filibuster,” March 14, 2001. Directed by Bryan Gordon; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Seventeen People,” April 4, 2001. Directed by Alex Graves; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Bad Moon Rising,” April 25, 2001. Directed by Bill Johnson; written by Aaron Sorkin. “The Fall’s Gonna Kill You,” May 2, 2001. Directed by Bryan Gordon; written by Aaron Sorkin. “18th and Potomac,” May 9, 2001. Directed by Robert Berlinger; written by Aaron Sorkin. “Two Cathedrals,” May 16, 2001. Directed by Thomas Schlamme; written by Aaron Sorkin. Season Three “Isaac and Ishmael,” October 3, 2001. Directed by Christopher Misiano; written by Aaron Sorkin...

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