...except in The West Wing, of course. But at the moment, I was thinking Stargate.
They don't make clear who's with which party in Washington, which is probably for the best (since the producers don't want to burn bridges with the Air Force and all). But after looking at the wrapups to the first debate, I have this image stuck in my head:
General Hammond, down in Cheyenne Mountain, hangs up the Red Phone, checks to make sure his office door is completely closed, and begins to bang his head against his desk. In a dignified way, of course.
(As opposed to Jack O'Neill, who would probably be banging his head against the wall after getting off the phone with Domino's...)
They don't make clear who's with which party in Washington, which is probably for the best (since the producers don't want to burn bridges with the Air Force and all). But after looking at the wrapups to the first debate, I have this image stuck in my head:
General Hammond, down in Cheyenne Mountain, hangs up the Red Phone, checks to make sure his office door is completely closed, and begins to bang his head against his desk. In a dignified way, of course.
(As opposed to Jack O'Neill, who would probably be banging his head against the wall after getting off the phone with Domino's...)
no subject
Date: 2004-10-02 02:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-03 09:57 am (UTC)They have identified Kinsey as a Republican, and since he was the running mate of the current prez (as of "Inauguration"), I'm assuming he is too. I actually loved that he looked like a clueless puppet at the start of that, but was gradually revealed as pretty much Jed's Republican twin. *snerk* By the end of that episode, I was actually fine with someone we'd never met before cutting in line to take Kinsey down a peg or sixty...
no subject
Date: 2004-10-03 01:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-03 06:22 pm (UTC)I think it was mentioned in "Smoke and Mirrors," but not positive. Pretty sure they've said, tho.