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Scandal premiere whet my appetite for more

No, it's not 'The West Wing.' Not even close. But 'Scandal' has earned itself a regular spot on my DVR.

- Season 1, Episode 1 - "Sweet Baby"

I was a big fan of The West Wing. Loved the politics, those super-smart walk-and-rapid-fire-talk scenes, the surprising glimpses of doubt from characters who acted as though they were 100 percent certain of everything, the compromises that good people had to make in order to get things done. Adored the setting, Washington, D.C., as the weighty epicenter of political power that doubles as a gossipy hotbed of scandal, particularly with the advent of the internet, cell phone photos and, in recent years, of errant Tweets sent by elected officials. (Paging Congressman Weiner …)

So when I learned that Shonda “Grey’s Anatomy Rhimes had created a drama about a Washington-based “fixer” — a lawyer who had worked for the president but now has her own firm where she helps clients out of jams — my interest was more than piqued. With Kerry Washington at the helm as the fearless Olivia Pope, who has a merry band of “gladiators in suits” who worship her, Scandal’s pilot episode provided more than enough material to tempt me into coming back for more.

The political elements in the two cases Pope’s firm worked on in this initial episode felt contemporary.

The first story featured a decorated military hero who fled his fiance’s home after he discovered her bloody body. This prominent conservative speaker, who had his eyes on running for elected office, wanted Pope’s firm to help him before the police detained him for questioning. In under 24 hours, Pope’s tribe of super-human investigators uncovered the truth (faster than House’s diagnostic team): The guy didn’t do it, despite circumstantial evidence to the contrary, but he didn’t want to use the one piece of evidence bolstering his alibi because it would out him as a gay man. (Who killed the woman? Not Pope’s concern. The dead woman wasn’t her client.)

From this we learned three things about Scandal: 1) Pope’s associates have almost unreal connections and pull (plus they’re unafraid to blackmail and bargain to get their way … wonder if they know The Good Wife’s Kalinda?) 2) They flourish under a tight deadline 3) Pope is interested in more than just getting the goods for her clients, she wants to do “right” by them. She had moral nobility that trumps just getting a paycheck. Pope persuaded the man to come out of the closet, exonerate himself from the murder charge and be a role model for other soldiers.

The other case proved far more interesting as it served as a more than just an investigative procedural story because it involved Pope’s “always right” gut being wrong, her judgment clouded by misguided loyalty and lust, presidential lust. Pope initially believed her former employer, President Fitzgerald “Fitz” Grant (Tony Goldwyn) when he said he didn’t have sex with that woman, Amanda Tanner, professing that his marriage was strong and that he needed Pope to shut Tanner down. She did indeed shut Tanner down with such extreme ferocity that I imagined that the likes of Monica Lewinsky would have physically shuddered had they been watching. Only after Tanner tried to commit suicide did Pope learn that Fitz had lied to her face and her gut was totally wrong.

Why had she believed Fitz, fallen for his lies? Because she used to sleep with him too. In fact, the presidential letch made the moves on Pope in the Oval Office after she confronted him with the truth, because Olivia Pope and her people always get to the truth, or so we’re supposed to believe. Based on the previews for upcoming episodes, this infraction, lying to Pope, will cost President Letch because if there’s one thing you don’t do is make Olivia Pope look like a fool.

For all its soapiness, Scandal was a blast to watch, particularly when it demonstrated, right from the get-go, that the imperious Pope — who “doesn’t believe in crying” though she herself teared up on numerous occasions — can be manipulated into making the wrong choices.

With Jeff Perry as a key presidential advisor (Grey’s Anatomy’s Thatcher Grey), Josh Malina (The West Wing’s Will Bailey) as a sarcastic U.S. attorney and Henry Ian Cusick (Lost’s Desmond) as Olivia’s work sidekick lending acting support to Washington’s smart, take-no-prisoners Pope, I’m hoping that the writers keep the stories within the realm of believability and continue to depict Pope as a flawed character who, despite her facade, has feet of clay like everybody else.

Photo Credit: Danny Feld/ABC

Categories: | Episode Reviews | Features | General | News | Scandal | TV Shows |

4 Responses to “Scandal premiere whet my appetite for more”

April 6, 2012 at 12:26 PM

The cast was really great. I really enjoyed the show and I was shocked at that.

The oval office set looks very much like The West Wing set, which is nice because the West Wing set is my favorite of all the oval office sets. However they had the old style rug, I like the new oval office that Bush did with the yellow rug floor and the brighter color walls. Yes I’m a nerd. :)

April 6, 2012 at 1:27 PM

I liked the show too and will give it another watch. I knew the President was lying as soon as I saw Tony Goldwyn, I havn’t trusted that guy since Ghost..lol.
Thanks for telling me where I knew Jeff Perry from, it was driving me nuts, but I was too lazy to look it up.
I’ve stopped watching Grey’s Anatomy and Private Practice but will give this a shot.

April 7, 2012 at 9:28 AM

I didn’t get to see it until last night and I now have a favorite drama. I don’t get to watch tv to much and don’t have cable so it’s slim pickings and I must be selective. I won’t get to see the show in real time, I will be watching it regular online. It was great and I’m with the poster who sadi that as soon as they saw Tony Goldwyn they knew he was a lier lol. Yep, Ghost messed his chances of ever not being thought suspicious infinity.

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April 8, 2012 at 11:36 AM

I fully agree, one the best new network shows of this season. As mentioned, it is not West-Wing, but it has the potential to be excellent and actually give “Good-Wife” a run for its money–more action, less drama. I liked it, even though the local LA reviewer had problems with it. Seems like our reviewers are beginning to want every show to be a deep character piece, rather than a fast, interesting hour of TV. As an aside, I had high hopes for “Missing”, but it is almost off my viewing list–It would have been a good movie, or even a special 6 episode show like premieum cable does–the female version of “Taken”, but as a series I can’t see it beyond even a season.

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