The Pitt, Season 2

Anonymous
Nothing this season has been as bad as the degloving injury from the very first episode.
Anonymous
The Mcgyver reference and the young docs was funny!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dear lord, why were there two incidences of fingers up butts so far?


Relying on gross out scenes a little much this season.


+1. The poop on the table, the butt scooping, the maggots, etc. I’m out ….


+didn’t need the erection either. Can’t watch with my young kids.


It's supposed to be a fairly accurate and realistic portrayal of an ER. It's not meant for young kids -- ERs are not filtered. That's baked into the concept.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dear lord, why were there two incidences of fingers up butts so far?


Relying on gross out scenes a little much this season.


+1. The poop on the table, the butt scooping, the maggots, etc. I’m out ….


+didn’t need the erection either. Can’t watch with my young kids.


It's supposed to be a fairly accurate and realistic portrayal of an ER. It's not meant for young kids -- ERs are not filtered. That's baked into the concept.



+1 My former ER nurse friend said this season is more realistic. That there are a lot of GI issues of various kinds, which yes means excrement, and that the only thing they haven't been showing is how many different kinds of objects get inserted then stuck in orifices. She said she saw the latter countless times.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dear lord, why were there two incidences of fingers up butts so far?


Relying on gross out scenes a little much this season.


+1. The poop on the table, the butt scooping, the maggots, etc. I’m out ….


+didn’t need the erection either. Can’t watch with my young kids.


It's supposed to be a fairly accurate and realistic portrayal of an ER. It's not meant for young kids -- ERs are not filtered. That's baked into the concept.


our kid isn't super young (12) and her mom is a surgeon so we've enjoyed watching it with her even if there are a couple look away moments.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dear lord, why were there two incidences of fingers up butts so far?


Relying on gross out scenes a little much this season.


+1. The poop on the table, the butt scooping, the maggots, etc. I’m out ….


+didn’t need the erection either. Can’t watch with my young kids.


It's supposed to be a fairly accurate and realistic portrayal of an ER. It's not meant for young kids -- ERs are not filtered. That's baked into the concept.



+1 My former ER nurse friend said this season is more realistic. That there are a lot of GI issues of various kinds, which yes means excrement, and that the only thing they haven't been showing is how many different kinds of objects get inserted then stuck in orifices. She said she saw the latter countless times.


Yep. My sister is an ICU nurse. Confirms these people deal with a lot of sh**... literally.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The Mcgyver reference and the young docs was funny!


Agree!
Anonymous
Also have a ER doc friend who told me before this season even started that the most unrealistic thing about the first season was how little poop there was. I actually think they probably got that feedback from people last season and sought to "correct" it this season. I don't love it but I get that it's realistic.

My friend also told me that for a Trauma 1 center in a major urban center, it would be more realistic to show more gunshot wounds, both serious traumas and also non-life threatening wounds, it's super common. I wouldn't be surprised if this doesn't get highlighted on some future season. A lot of ER docs have strong feelings about gun control because they see firsthand the burden our country's proliferation of guns places on our medical system. Seeing kids come in with gunshot wounds is extremely radicalizing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Also have a ER doc friend who told me before this season even started that the most unrealistic thing about the first season was how little poop there was. I actually think they probably got that feedback from people last season and sought to "correct" it this season. I don't love it but I get that it's realistic.

My friend also told me that for a Trauma 1 center in a major urban center, it would be more realistic to show more gunshot wounds, both serious traumas and also non-life threatening wounds, it's super common. I wouldn't be surprised if this doesn't get highlighted on some future season. A lot of ER docs have strong feelings about gun control because they see firsthand the burden our country's proliferation of guns places on our medical system. Seeing kids come in with gunshot wounds is extremely radicalizing.


Robby gives a talk to the staff in Season 1 after the they couldn't save the girl who drowned. He talked about his first kid... a boy who had been accidentally shot after getting dad's gun, and right up until he died the boy was worried about getting in trouble.
Anonymous
I feel like they’re foreshadowing something is going to happen to Robbi when he leaves for sabbatical like they’re going to have an incoming for a motorcycle accident and it’s going to be him, but then he wouldn’t have a main role in the next season so maybe I’m reading too much into it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I feel like they’re foreshadowing something is going to happen to Robbi when he leaves for sabbatical like they’re going to have an incoming for a motorcycle accident and it’s going to be him, but then he wouldn’t have a main role in the next season so maybe I’m reading too much into it.


I agree and I’m wondering if Langdon will be the one that saves him.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel like they’re foreshadowing something is going to happen to Robbi when he leaves for sabbatical like they’re going to have an incoming for a motorcycle accident and it’s going to be him, but then he wouldn’t have a main role in the next season so maybe I’m reading too much into it.


I agree and I’m wondering if Langdon will be the one that saves him.


From a motorcycle accident.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Nothing this season has been as bad as the degloving injury from the very first episode.


Remind me…
What degloving injury??
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel like they’re foreshadowing something is going to happen to Robbi when he leaves for sabbatical like they’re going to have an incoming for a motorcycle accident and it’s going to be him, but then he wouldn’t have a main role in the next season so maybe I’m reading too much into it.


I agree and I’m wondering if Langdon will be the one that saves him.


From a motorcycle accident.

I just cannot handle if it's anything like the George/007/Grey'sAnatamoy accident (was he hit by a bus?). That scene still lives in my head.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Also have a ER doc friend who told me before this season even started that the most unrealistic thing about the first season was how little poop there was. I actually think they probably got that feedback from people last season and sought to "correct" it this season. I don't love it but I get that it's realistic.

My friend also told me that for a Trauma 1 center in a major urban center, it would be more realistic to show more gunshot wounds, both serious traumas and also non-life threatening wounds, it's super common. I wouldn't be surprised if this doesn't get highlighted on some future season. A lot of ER docs have strong feelings about gun control because they see firsthand the burden our country's proliferation of guns places on our medical system. Seeing kids come in with gunshot wounds is extremely radicalizing.


Not enough gunshot wounds?
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