- published: 24 Apr 2013
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CJ or similar may refer to:
The West Wing of the White House, also known as the Executive Office Building, houses the offices of the President of the United States. The West Wing contains the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room, the Situation Room, and the Roosevelt Room.
The West Wing's three floors contain offices for the White House Chief of Staff, the Counselor to the President, the Senior Advisor to the President, the White House Press Secretary, and their support staffs. The Vice-President has an office in the building, but his primary office is next door in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
The James S. Brady Press Briefing Room – where the Press Secretary makes announcements and gives daily briefings to reporters – is located in the West Colonnade of the White House, between the West Wing and the Executive Residence.
Before construction of the West Wing, presidential staff worked on the second floor of what is now the Executive Residence. However, when Theodore Roosevelt became President, he found that the existing offices in the Mansion were insufficient to accommodate his family as well as his staff. In 1902 he had the West Wing constructed by the New York architects McKim, Mead & White. The West Wing was originally intended as a temporary office structure, built on the site of the greenhouse and stables. The President's Office and the Cabinet Room took up the eastern third of the building. President Roosevelt's office was located approximately where the Roosevelt Room is now.
Claudia Jean "C. J." Cregg is a character played by Allison Janney on the television serial drama The West Wing. The role earned Janney the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series (2000, 2001) and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series (2002, 2004). From the beginning of the series until the sixth season, she is White House Press Secretary in the administration of President Josiah Bartlet. After that, she is White House Chief of Staff until the last episode, when Bartlet's successor is inaugurated. The character is supposedly loosely based on Clinton Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, who served as a consultant to the show.
According to series creator Aaron Sorkin, casting for C.J. Cregg was a problem. While everybody had "fallen in love" with Allison Janney, she, like every other actor who had been cast at the time, was Caucasian. The cast's lack of racial diversity was making the network nervous, and another "wonderfully talented" Afro-Guyanese actress (C.C.H. Pounder) was also reading very well for the role of C.J. "Still," says Sorkin, "When we closed our eyes at night we wanted Allison. So we cast Allison."
The White House is the official residence and principal workplace of the President of the United States, located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW in Washington, D.C. It has been the residence of every U.S. president since John Adams in 1800.
The house was designed by Irish-born James Hoban and built between 1792 and 1800 of white-painted Aquia Creek sandstone in the Neoclassical style. When Thomas Jefferson moved into the house in 1801, he (with architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe) expanded the building outward, creating two colonnades that were meant to conceal stables and storage. However, in 1814, during the War of 1812, the mansion was set ablaze by the British Army in the Burning of Washington, destroying the interior and charring much of the exterior. Reconstruction began almost immediately, and President James Monroe moved into the partially reconstructed Executive Residence in October 1817. Construction continued with the addition of the South Portico in 1824 and the North in 1829.
The West Wing is an American serial political drama television series created by Aaron Sorkin that was originally broadcast on NBC from September 22, 1999, to May 14, 2006. The series is set primarily in the West Wing of the White House, where the Oval Office and offices of presidential senior staff are located, during the fictitious Democratic administration of Josiah Bartlet (played by Martin Sheen).
The West Wing was produced by Warner Bros. Television. For the first four seasons, there were three executive producers: Aaron Sorkin (lead writer of almost all of the first four seasons); Thomas Schlamme (primary director); and John Wells. After Sorkin left the series, Wells assumed the role of head writer, with later executive producers being directors Alex Graves and Christopher Misiano (seasons 6–7), and writers Lawrence O'Donnell Jr. and Peter Noah (season 7).
The series first aired on NBC in 1999 and has been broadcast by many networks in several other countries. The series ended its seven-year run on May 14, 2006.
The West Wing: C.J. Cregg - From Press Secretary to Chief of Staff
CJ Cregg Returns To White House Briefing Room
CJ CREGG TESTS YOUR MATH
"Technichally I outrank you"-WEST WING
CJ Moments
C.J. Cregg Does The Jackal - West Wing S1E18
C.J. Cregg on agenda-setting
West Wing - Claudia Jean "C.J." Cregg and Danny Concannon
WEST WING - Good Morning CJ
CJ, Josh & Peters Projection Map
Posing as her "West Wing" character C.J. Cregg, actress Allison Janney made a surprise appearance at the White House press podium. "Josh is out today, he has, I believe it's a root canal," she said about real-life White House press secretary Josh Earnest's absence. "But let's be honest, I'm better at this than he is anyway." Janney announced that President Obama is "still working" on his speech for tomorrow's White House Correspondents' Dinner and that "he intends to be funny, very funny." Janney ended the spoof by revealing her real reason she was at the White House today: to talk about opioid addiction and what was being done to combat the problem. Her current show on CBS, Mom, deals with drug addiction and its struggles. "This is a disease that can touch anybody, and all of us can ...
An absolutely PRICELESS scene from the episode "The US Poet Laureate (Season 3 Episode 16) Where CJ yells at Josh for interacting with some "crazies" on the internet. I absolutely loved this scene because it shows how often CJ yells at people like Sam and Josh, even though they outrank her. She's totally awesome
The West Wing, Season 1, Episode 18, Six Meetings Before Lunch: CJ does "The Jackal."
For our presentation
Claudia Jean "C.J." Cregg and Danny Concannon
A brief glimpse of the genius that is Aaron Sorkin's writing in the first two years of THE WEST WING. From The West Wing, Season Two, "The Midterms" All Rights NBC Universal No Infringement Intended
Josh and CJ meet the Organization of Cartographers for Social Equality, and it's freaking CJ out!
Claudia Jean "C.J." Cregg and Danny Concannon
For our presentation
C.J. is worried about the lack of yeast in Bartlet's polling numbers.
West Wing's C.J. Cregg makes surprise White House briefing The actress Allison Janney, who played C.J. Cregg in the Emmy-award winning West Wing, made a surprise White House press briefing.
West Wing's C.J. Cregg makes surprise White House briefing The actress Allison Janney, who played C.J. Cregg in the Emmy-award winning West Wing, made a surprise White House press briefing.
Allison Janney, the actress who played White House Press Secretary C.J. Cregg on "The West Wing," made a surprise appearance at today's press briefing. Janney is at the White House today to discuss combating opioid addiction.
Allison Janney dishes on Romney in 2016 and her favorite real life C.J. Cregg, Dee Dee Myers, and much more from the red carpet at the Golden Globes.
Aus der Serie The West Wing - C.J. Cregg Das Ritual
The reelection campaign of President Josiah Bartlet (series star MARTIN SHEEN) is underway and moving quickly--so quickly that after Bartlet finishes a speech in Unionville, Indiana, Josh Lyman (series star BRADLEY WHITFORD), Toby Ziegler (series star RICHARD SCHIFF) and Donna Moss (series star JANEL MOLONEY) are accidentally left behind by the motorcade containing C.J. Cregg (series star ALLISON JANNEY) and the other staffers. The three must find their own way back to Washington, D.C. At the White House, Leo McGarry (series star JOHN SPENCER) and Admiral Fitzwallace (recurring guest star JOHN AMOS) become anxious when they learn that the country of Qumar has reopened its investigation into the death of one of its officials. Later, Bartlet is informed that Qumar intends to accuse Israel of...
The reelection campaign of President Josiah Bartlet (series star MARTIN SHEEN) is underway and moving quickly--so quickly that after Bartlet finishes a speech in Unionville, Indiana, Josh Lyman (series star BRADLEY WHITFORD), Toby Ziegler (series star RICHARD SCHIFF) and Donna Moss (series star JANEL MOLONEY) are accidentally left behind by the motorcade containing C.J. Cregg (series star ALLISON JANNEY) and the other staffers. The three must find their own way back to Washington, D.C. At the White House, Leo McGarry (series star JOHN SPENCER) and Admiral Fitzwallace (recurring guest star JOHN AMOS) become anxious when they learn that the country of Qumar has reopened its investigation into the death of one of its officials. Later, Bartlet is informed that Qumar intends to accuse Israel of...