While emotionally potent, “Vodka” is not without flaw. The episode suffers from the season’s persistent issue of historical compression. Key figures, such as Hickok’s threatening correspondent, are rendered as caricatures of political malice, reducing complex political blackmail to melodrama. Furthermore, the episode’s decision to parallel Eleanor’s repressed love with Betty’s pill addiction risks equating sexual orientation with substance abuse—a clumsy juxtaposition that the writing does not fully interrogate.

In the anthology series The First Lady , creator Aaron Cooley deliberately deconstructs the myth of the White House hostess, redefining the role as a seat of quiet power, political influence, and profound personal sacrifice. Season 1, Episode 7, titled “Vodka,” serves as the emotional and narrative fulcrum for the entire season, specifically for the Eleanor Roosevelt timeline portrayed by Gillian Anderson. Far from a simple historical biopic, “Vodka” uses the dual meanings of its title—the literal liquor and the Russian word for “little water”—to explore themes of erosion, resilience, and the cost of public morality.

The genius of “Vodka” is its thesis: every First Lady must hide a part of herself. Eleanor hides her sexuality, Betty hides her dependency, and Michelle hides her rage. The substance “vodka” becomes a metaphor for the numbing agent required to survive the role—whether that agent is alcohol, emotional suppression, or political calculation.

The essayistic power of this episode lies not in scandal but in sacrifice. Director Susanna White frames Eleanor’s decision not as a defeat but as a tragic redefinition of love. Eleanor chooses the nation over herself, a choice that “Vodka” argues is the true, unspoken duty of the First Lady. The episode masterfully uses silence—long shots of Anderson standing in the dim Yellow Oval Room, her face a mask of stoic grief—to illustrate that the First Lady’s greatest power is often the ability to swallow her own truth for the greater good.

“Vodka” intercuts Eleanor’s 1930s crisis with the parallel struggles of Betty Ford (Michelle Pfeiffer) and Michelle Obama (Viola Davis). This tripartite structure is not random. In the Betty Ford timeline, the episode shows her beginning to struggle with addiction, using alcohol (literal vodka) to numb the isolation of the Vice President’s residence. In the Michelle Obama timeline, she faces the racist double standard of being labeled “the angry Black woman” for any display of authentic emotion.