Explore the latest developments concerning ‘The Pitt’ Season.
'The Pitt' Season 2 Review: A Triumphant Return
When “The Pitt” premiered on HBO Max almost exactly a year ago, it was an unflashy medical drama without the boost of preexisting IP (though the Michael Crichton estate, which claims the project is an unauthorized reboot of “ER,” would disagree) or major stars. The show returns for Season 2 a conquering hero, the incumbent winner of the Emmy for outstanding drama series along with a quartet of additional trophies. The awards only cemented a rapturous celebration of “The Pitt” as a return to TV classicism amid the streaming revolution’s upheavals: a 15-episode season, a weekly release and a cast of largely unknowns catapulted to fame by sheer collective chemistry. Katherine LaNasa, Shawn Hatosy and Isa Briones — to name just three standouts from a massive and uniformly excellent cast, with LaNasa and Hatosy Emmy winners alongside star and executive producer Noah Wyle — may not be household names, but they’re now beloved by millions for bringing their characters to beleaguered, adrenalized life over a single shift in a fictionalized emergency room.
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'The Pitt’ Season 2 Review: The Best Medical Show on TV Finally Lets Viewers Breathe
Everyone’s favorite ER superstar, Dr. Michael “Robby†Robinavitch (Noah Wyle), continues to balance patient, staff, and personal crises in the second season of The Pitt, HBO Max’s Emmy-winning smash hit about the men and women manning the fictional Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center.
Once again taking place over the course of a single fifteen-hour shift on an insanely busy and stressful July 4, R. Scott Gemmill’s series (January 8) doesn’t try to one-up its bracing debut, slowly easing its way back into the brand of overwhelming health-care mayhem that made it last year’s breakout small-screen drama. Nonetheless, by its midway point, it hits a comfortably uncomfortable groove, all while further developing a terrific cast of characters whose heroism is as understated as it is inspiring. Avoiding the sophomore slump, it’s the most harrowingly realistic medical show on TV—and, also, the most empathetic.
For more detailed information, explore updates concerning ‘The Pitt’ Season.


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