Noah Wyle discusses his new TV role on Max's "The Pitt," which comes more than three decades after he started as fresh-faced "ER" Dr. John Carter.
When it comes to stressful content, the most important thing is how you personally react. Some people actually find stressful ...
I suspect that many people currently watching The Pitt on HBO and Max are longtime fans ER, an NBC medical drama that ran from September, 1994 to April, 2009, dropping over 300 episodes across its 15 ...
one of the best TV shows of all time was "ER," this beautiful primetime drama about doctors in an emergency department in Chicago. And "The Pitt" really echoes that in both metaphorical ways or more ...
AM,” the fourth episode of the first season of Max’s “The Pitt.” For Noah Wyle, everything old is new again. More than 30 ...
The small screen is no stranger to compelling medical dramas, and Max's new original series 'The Pitt' is the latest ...
It’s all set in the ER; “The Pitt” never goes home with its doctors (although a couple of times family members of staff come into the hospital). “We wanted to show what’s happening in ...
I did not watch ER in the 1990s because it was too gross. Or, at least, I assumed it would be. I’m a pretty squeamish person so, despite the fact that the show had become a watercooler series even ...
The Pitt is set in the present, and if you’ve been following TV hospital shows ... of arcs that ER — or any other medical procedural — would let play out over months in its doctors ...
2) “ER” was excellent television. Now, many moons later, I can confirm both those things are still true.
Viewers of ER recall the sometimes-strained relationship between Wylie’s John Carter, whom we first met as a third-year medical student, and Dr. Peter Benton (Eriq La Salle), one of his teachers. Are ...
Although he has been in no rush to play another TV doctor since hanging up his ER stethoscope in 2009, Wyle felt the time was right for a new realistic medical drama that spoke to a modern audience.