The actor departed Aaron Sorkin’s hit series in 2002.

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    they needed someone to actually play “the president” instead of just have the staff talk about him all the time

    Funny, because Veep managed to do this so seamlessly. But then Veep was about the bureaucrats being self-obsessed greedy hacks clawing at the coat tails of power, rather than Model UN nerds bemoaning the imperfections of everyone outside their White House clique.

    One could skirt around the President by focusing on the petty bureaucracy and political fiefdoms that divide Veep’s staff from their kingpin. The other absolutely had to introduce this Messiah-like figure for the staff to alternately evangelize and and debate and betray.

    Him leaving wasn’t exactly a loss anyways.

    No, but only because they were all so interchangeable. Lowe crafted a role for himself that was identical to all the other sanctimonious Aaron Sorkin clones bouncing around the set. It wasn’t until you got guys like Alan Alda popping in to do a Bernie Sanders impression that they had anyone to really argue with. Even then, most of the show was about pushing past Labor Democrats and cutting deals with Rockafeller Republicans, which was basically just the Clinton Era without the sex.

    During the Bush Administration, The West Wing was just an opportunity to retcon how cool 90s-era DLC Democrats were. And a guy like Rob Lowe was just the wrong kind of fit for a show that worshiped anyone other than Rob Lowe.

    If he’d been quicker or smarter, he would have taken the Tony Stark role for Iron Man. That’s exactly the kind of character that would have fed his ego.