The Good Fight, the legal drama series and Good Wife spin-off, will soon be hitting its fans with a case of ripped-from-the-headlines inception. According to Variety, the series’s next installment—airing Sunday on CBS All Access—is about a TV writer who gets sued by his network after he writes an episode about a Donald Trump–esque leader getting caught up in an alleged sexual-assault scandal. After the leader actually becomes president, the network decides to delay the episode several times, determined to keep it off the air forever.

The episode, titled “Requiem for an Airdate,” is clearly inspired by the continued brouhaha surrounding a Trump–inspired episode of Law and Order: S.V.U.. Penned and filmed last year, before the release of that infamous Access Hollywood tape, the S.V.U. episode is about a Trump–esque presidential candidate (played by Gary Cole . . . who also appeared on The Good Wife, and appears in this Fight episode as well—inception!), who finds himself in the middle of a sexual assault scandal. Though episode was initially scheduled to air on Oct. 12, it has been delayed multiple times. Following Trump’s election, many have concluded that the episode will never see the light of day.

The Good Fight creator Robert King tells Variety that the episode isn’t inspired by the content of the S.V.U. episode, but “the fact that they hadn’t put it on the air yet, and the subject matter is so provocative. And the fact that it was delayed not once, but twice.”

Fight co-creator Michelle King added that “Requiem for an Airdate” shouldn’t be perceived as an attack on NBC. “We didn’t really feel that we were taking shots at NBC,” King said. “It was very much a generic network, and the fear was that any network or entertainment conglomerate could end up being frightened by this administration.”

S.V.U. cast member Ice T recently told Vanity Fair that the S.V.U. episode at the center of all this controversy isn’t even “worth showing.“ It wasn’t “one of our best shows,” he said.

The S.V.U. star also shared details about the episode’s plot, which may shed some light on NBC’s continued resistance to showing it: “There was this guy who was running for president—he was very Trump-ish, and girls were coming out of the woodwork saying [he] was raping them,” he said. “And me and Mariska [Hargitay, who plays Lt. Olivia Benson],we’re on his bumper, and he’s sweating it. But at the end of the day, it comes out that he was innocent. He didn’t do it. So we’ve got to apologize, and he’s still doing his thing, talking his shit. And it turns out that his campaign advisor, who was his best friend, was booby-trapping him because he knew he would be terrible for America!”

Alas, that is likely the closest we mere mortals will get to seeing the Trump-inspired episode forever caught in NBC limbo. Representatives for Law & Order have yet to respond to V.F.’s request for comment.