If the super-real is more to your taste, check out The Pitt, a modern, accurate, and surprisingly engaging medical drama that avoids the weirdly perfect doctors of most shows and sticks to a more ...
The first two episodes — which premiered via HBO on January 9 — also introduced viewers to some other faces in the ER, ...
R. Scott Gemmill and EP John Wells talk about crafting the new Noah Wyle-led "The Pitt," and the perks of making a procedural ...
We’re not saying he’s the second coming of George Clooney’s Doug Ross, but he is a hottie who took care of a kiddo in the ER.
Promising to be an incredibly tense and insightful watch, The Pitt takes place in the fictional Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital. As with any self-respecting medical drama, The Pitt explores the ...
The series stars Noah Wyle, Tracey Ifeachor, and Patrick Marron Ball. The ensemble cast also includes Supriya Ganesh, Fiona Dourif, Taylor Dearden, Isa Briones and Gerran Howell. R. Scott Gemmill has ...
The show’s style is realism, with each episode tracking an hour of Dr. Michael Robinavitch’s 15-hour shift running the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital’s chaotic emergency department.
But the biggest gross-out moment from this episode comes courtesy of Dr. Langdon using his finger to prop up a guy’s busted facial bones. The bloody, broken bone-y aftermath of “stand-up scooter rider ...
The Pittsburgh-based medical drama "The Pitt" debuts Jan. 9 on MAX. Here are all the Pittsburgh references we noticed. How ...
Humans and mice exposed to long-wavelength red light had lower rates of blood clots that can cause heart attacks, lung damage and strokes, according to research led by Elizabeth Andraska, M.D. (seated ...
"The Pitt" is a smart show that values character detail and intricate medical science that sometimes succumbs to doses of ...
That’s in the form of a new, intense medical drama on Max (formerly HBO Max) called The Pitt. It’s not just similar in theme, its creator is a producer and writer on ER, R. Scott Gemmill, and its star ...