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Designated Survivor...

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September 21, 2016, 04:56 AM
kkina
Designated Survivor...
...starring Kiefer Sutherland, debuts tonight (Wednesday @ 10pm on ABC). Who plans on watching?



Note: THIS THREAD CONTAINS SPOILERS.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: kkina,



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September 21, 2016, 06:34 AM
BurtonRW
Thanks for the reminder. I haven't watched a series on network TV in years, but I think I'm going to give this one a shot.

Kind of reminds me of the tail end of Debt of Honor going into Executive Orders with maybe a smattering of By the Dawn's Early Light thrown in, depending on how they frame the story.

-Rob




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September 21, 2016, 06:56 AM
Bigboreshooter
I'm planning to watch. Seems like an interesting concept for a movie, but I'm not sure how well it will play out over the course of a series. At some point, it becomes just another show about someone who is president.



When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house, his possessions are undisturbed. Luke 11:21


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Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." -- George W. Bush

September 21, 2016, 07:24 AM
Sigmund
https://www.washingtonpost.com...le%3Ahomepage%2Fcard

The truth behind the ‘designated survivor,’ the president of the post-apocalypse

By Roxanne Roberts

September 20 at 12:02 PM

Tom Kirkman is having a really bad day.

First, the housing and urban development secretary discovers that all of his proposals have been cut from the president’s upcoming State of the Union address. Then he’s asked to resign — the president wants to appoint a fresh face for his second term — and is offered an obscure ambassadorship as a consolation prize.

Hours later, he learns that he’s that night’s “designated survivor” — the Cabinet member who sits out the president’s speech in case of a catastrophic attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Guess what? There’s a catastrophic attack on the U.S. Capitol.

So begins “Designated Survivor,” ABC’s new Washington-based drama about an accidental president faced with the worst crisis in American history. The series, which debuts Wednesday night, stars Kiefer Sutherland as the former academic with no political experience thrust into power after the president, the vice president, the Cabinet and most members of Congress are killed.

Replete with explosions and vast conspiracies, it looks like another high-concept political thriller. But the premise is based on the real practice of sequestering someone in the presidential line of succession during the State of the Union and on similar occasions — and the controversial question of how we determine who takes over if the president and other senior officials perish.

“I’m obsessed with Washington, D.C., protocols,” says show creator David Guggenheim, who first learned about designated survivors while watching a State of the Union broadcast. “There’s inherently such a great character story in someone’s life changing in an instant, an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances.”

The concept of a “designated survivor” first arose sometime during the Cold War, amid fears that the Soviet Union could wipe out the U.S. government with one well-timed nuclear strike when all of the country’s leaders were gathered in one place, such as at the State of the Union or an inauguration. It was a secretive but informal practice, with one Cabinet member omitted from the event to head the country in case of a disaster.

Before 2001, being selected as the designated survivor was a bit of lark, a good story to share after the fact. Take the oft-told tale of Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman. In 1997, he spent the evening of the State of the Union at his daughter’s New York apartment surrounded by the highest security. Once President Clinton was safely back at the White House, the agents disappeared, and Glickman — on his way to a late dinner — found himself on the street unable to find a cab in the pouring rain.

But since the terrorist attacks 15 years ago, the role has become much more serious. Cabinet members selected in recent years did not return calls asking about the experience, or they answered with a stern “no comment.” Turns out, it’s a security breach to discuss any details.

This much we do know: The president and his top aides decide who will sit out that year. The designated survivor is escorted out of Washington by the U.S. Secret Service, accompanied by military and communication aides. In earlier years, the selected person was able to pick a location nearby (Bill Richardson spent the evening in Oxford, Md., in 2000), but since 9/11, all have been taken to the same secure government facility a couple of hours from Washington.

And a little-known fact: For the past decade, there have been two designated survivors — one Cabinet member to rebuild the executive branch and one member of the congressional leadership to lead a new legislature.

Like the president, the designated survivor must be at least 35 years old and a natural-born citizen, so Cabinet members not born in the United States, such as former secretary of state Madeleine K. Albright, are ineligible. And the designee doesn’t automatically become president: If another administration official higher in the line of succession happens to survive, he or she would take office instead. In 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was overseas during the State of the Union, but because her schedule and whereabouts were known, HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan was named the designated survivor. If both had survived any attack, Clinton, outranking Donovan, would have been sworn in as president.

All this is governed by the Presidential Succession Act, which determines the exact line of succession to executive power. And, says political scholar Norm Ornstein, is “a poorly crafted piece of legislation.”

Ornstein has been writing about the issue since shortly after 9/11. When he realized that the Capitol could easily have been wiped out by the fourth hijacked plane, he identified several flaws in the current law: It sets up a line of succession based on the order in which Cabinet departments were created (rather than jumping to the better-prepared Secretary of Homeland Security, for example) and calls for special congressional elections that could take months. In the event of an attack that wiped out the nation’s leadership, “you’d have the complete fog of war,” Ornstein says. “It’s a mess the way it is now.”

He’d like to see changes that would allow governors to appoint successors to dead and incapacitated legislators so that there could be a functioning government within a week of an attack. And he also wants politicians to take a hard look at whether the historic line of succession would yield the most qualified president in the midst of a national tragedy.

Despite his lack of experience, we know that fictional President Kirkman will prevail because . . . hey, he’s Jack Bauer in glasses. And it’s a television series.

“From the very beginning, we wanted this to live in real Washington,” said Rich Klein, who worked in the Clinton administration and is a consultant for film and television productions including “Designated Survivor.”

“Our goal is that people who know Washington, know the presidency and know the town’s rhythms, watch the show and say, ‘They really know their stuff.’ ”

Kal Penn, who took a break from acting to work briefly for President Obama in the White House, plays speechwriter Seth Wright, and he also brought his real-life experience to the set, offering advice on such tiny details as who would wear badges in the White House and who would not.

But, this being Hollywood, the writers have made a few tweaks for dramatic purposes.

Kirkman, still reeling from the news that he’s been unceremoniously dumped by the administration, doesn’t find out that he’s been selected to sit out the speech until he’s preparing to leave for the Capitol. His cellphone rings. “What’s a designated survivor?” he asks. In reality, the selected official would know days before and would be secretly whisked out of Washington on the day of the address.

In the pilot, Kirkman and his wife are at a secure location (which just happens to overlook Washington), eating popcorn and watching the president’s speech. When the broadcast abruptly cuts off, Secret Service agents rush into the room as news reports of an explosion come on the air. Kirkman flings open the blast-door shutters just in time to see a fireball plume over the Capitol, and it’s clear that he’s in Rosslyn. The real designated survivors are nowhere near the nation’s capital.

And although it seems counterintuitive, taking Kirkman back to the White House to be sworn in wouldn’t be out of the question, if only to rush him to the underground Presidential Emergency Operations Center (PEOC) beneath the executive residence. (Dick Cheney and other top Bush administration officials were evacuated to the bunker on 9/11.) We’re not convinced that fictional White House staffers, having just watched the Capitol explode, would be comfortable hanging around the West Wing, but it makes for good television.

There are also a few details that look Hollywood but turn out to be real.

When Kirkman gets the news that he’s being dumped, he’s offered a job as ambassador to the International Civil Aviation Organization. That’s an actual agency of the United Nations based in Montreal that deals with global air navigation — and the representative from the United States holds the title of ambassador.

And there’s a scene where speechwriter Wright has an awkward exchange with the new president in a White House bathroom. That shoe polisher in the background? A real thing.

“Kal made sure there was one of those old-fashioned black-and-red shoe buffers plugged into the back wall,” Klein says. Because even in a global crisis, polished shoes are a must.
September 21, 2016, 08:46 AM
6guns
He sounds like Jack Bauer. Big Grin




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September 21, 2016, 07:05 PM
just1tym
DVR is set Smile


Regards, Will G.
September 21, 2016, 07:08 PM
Jus228
I'm looking forward to this one.


!~God Bless the U.S. Military~!

If the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off

Light travels faster than sound, this is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak
September 21, 2016, 08:14 PM
P-220
My wife and Daughter are big Jack Bauer fans, and have been waiting for this series.

I will probably end up watching it, as they are recording it.


Niech Zyje P-220

Steve
September 21, 2016, 08:23 PM
wreckdiverjosh
Thanks for the reminder... the DVR is set..


Change of Plans...
September 21, 2016, 08:39 PM
TheFrontRange
DVR set; 20 minutes to airtime as I type!



"The sea was angry that day, my friends - like an old man trying to send back soup in a deli." - George Costanza
September 21, 2016, 08:56 PM
remsig
I hadn't heard of the show. After reading this thread I've set my dvr to record the series.
September 21, 2016, 09:16 PM
Balzé Halzé
Haha, was "Jack Bauer" drinking a Dos Equis at the secure location? Perfect.

I'm going to give this one a go.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Balzé Halzé,


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September 21, 2016, 10:07 PM
Zecpull
Okay.. How many think it was an inside job?? I think that General knows more than he should..


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September 21, 2016, 10:15 PM
smschulz
quote:
Originally posted by Zecpull:
Okay.. How many think it was an inside job?? I think that General knows more than he should..


Highly probable.
September 21, 2016, 10:44 PM
grumpy1
Not bad first episode once past the typical family and background story. I am in.
September 21, 2016, 11:35 PM
bald1
I concur it's not a bad start. As for the general, he is portrayed as a borderline meglomaniac so the notion of an inside job looks more like a plot diversion.



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September 21, 2016, 11:41 PM
gw3971
quote:
Originally posted by smschulz:
quote:
Originally posted by Zecpull:
Okay.. How many think it was an inside job?? I think that General knows more than he should..


Highly probable.


I think the general and all of his bluster will not be the suspect. They will play him as the bad guy for a while. Some other Domestic plot is likely. I'm betting the bad guys will probably end up as a bunch of white, right wing, gun nuts.
September 21, 2016, 11:45 PM
Mike S
I liked the first episode. I'm in for more.
September 21, 2016, 11:50 PM
jprebb
quote:
Originally posted by gw3971:
I think the general and all of his bluster will not be the suspect. They will play him as the bad guy for a while. Some other Domestic plot is likely. I'm betting the bad guys will probably end up as a bunch of white, right wing, gun nuts.


Bingo! It's going to be some politically correct aggressor, which can only mean white and right-wing. That said, I enjoyed the first episode.

JP
September 22, 2016, 12:16 AM
TMats
quote:
Originally posted by jprebb:
quote:
Originally posted by gw3971:
I think the general and all of his bluster will not be the suspect. They will play him as the bad guy for a while. Some other Domestic plot is likely. I'm betting the bad guys will probably end up as a bunch of white, right wing, gun nuts.


Bingo! It's going to be some politically correct aggressor, which can only mean white and right-wing. That said, I enjoyed the first episode.

JP

I thought the first episode was intriguing and it looks like the show may have some staying power. That said, as soon as the woman playing the FBI agent at the site of the unexploded device cautioned the agents against assuming it came from the ME, I sensed a set-up to lay this all on "right-wing, domestic" terrorism. I erupted, which pissed off my wife.

Repeating, I liked it. I was caught up in it, I like Sutherland, and found him convincing in the role. I just hope they don't go home-grown.


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