(The following story contains spoilers from the season two finale of HBO MaxтАЩs The Pitt, тАЬ9:00 p.m.тАЭ)
In the final hours of season two of The Pitt, viewers have gotten more and more of a glimpse of Dr. RobbyтАЩs (Noah Wyle) suicidal thoughts.
What began with offhand comments and jokes led to him admitting first to his friend Duke (Jeff Kober) that he doesnтАЩt know if he wants тАЬto be here anymore,тАЭ and then to Dr. Abbot (Shawn Hatosy) that while the most important things heтАЩs done in his life have happened in this hospital, тАЬit is killing me.тАЭ
тАЬIтАЩve seen so many people die that I feel like itтАЩs leaching something from my soul,тАЭ Robby says.
Though this mental health storyline might seem extreme, as showrunner R. Scott Gemmill explains, тАЬitтАЩs a real thing,тАЭ with the American College of Emergency Physicians reporting that roughly 300-400 physicians a year die by suicide and the American Medical Association noting that тАЬphysicians are at a higher risk of suicide and suicidal ideation than the general population.тАЭ
And, as Gemmill argues, after a season of Robby rejecting conventional therapy for the issues he identified at the end of season one, the attending physicianтАЩs season two storyline, тАЬshows what can happen if you donтАЩt take the time to resolve mental health issues.тАЭ
тАЬRobby is someone who is very good at giving advice and very poor at taking it, and he hasnтАЩt been dealing with his own mental health issues,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬAs a result, they have exacerbated and got to a point where heтАЩs really in a bad head space, and he needs to take steps to get better, or things are going to get worse, and he could end up like a statistic.тАЭ
Though Robby has tense exchanges with a number of his colleagues in the final hours of his July 4th shift, itтАЩs Abbot whoтАЩs finally able to engage him in a conversation about his mental health.
тАЬAbbot is similar to Robby. He has been experiencing some of the same suicidal ideations,тАЭ Hatosy says of the night shift attending who Robby found on the roof in The PittтАШs pilot episode. тАЬHeтАЩs also a character on the show that has has had to manage the stress in the same way that RobbyтАЩs has. They are understaffed. ThereтАЩs not enough funding to take care of everything coming through the door, and that wears on on these attending positions. They are very similar but very different at the same time how they handle things. And Robby respects Abbot.тАЭ
Though Abbot shares why heтАЩs held on despite losing his leg and his wife and advises that Robby find a way to тАЬdance through the darkness,тАЭ Hatosy argues itтАЩs all of the interactions Robby has at the end of his shift тАФ chatting with Dr. Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) about her future, talking to Dana (Katherine LaNasa), Langdon (Patrick Ball) insisting he needs help and saying he saw a lot of guys like Robby in rehab тАФ as well as the pairтАЩs experience performing an emergency c-section and Robby spending a quiet moment with baby Jane Doe that hopefully keep him from a dangerous, final motorcycle ride.
Hatosy reveals that he and Wyle talked extensively about their last scene together in season two.
тАЬComing into that last scene, we spent a lot of time with (The Pitt executive producer) John (Wells), who was directing, and Scott just sort of figuring out exactly where the dynamic came to,тАЭ Hatosy says. тАЬAnd I thought it was really important to say that even though Abbot is under the impression that he is also doing the work, his hobby that his therapist recommended was golf but heтАЩs off working as a SWAT medic and getting shot at. So again, very similar paths. ItтАЩs a death wish and itтАЩs something that Abbot believes heтАЩs in the process of working through. Maybe instead of once a week, he needs to go twice a week until he figures that out. But at least heтАЩs talking about it.тАЭ
Going into The PittтАШs already ordered season three, Gemmill hopes that Robby finally gets some of the treatment he needs.
тАЬHopefully, season three is all about that mental health journey and seeing him finally admitting to needing help and seeking it out and setting himself as an example of what should be done when one is struggling,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬAs opposed to what seen in the last two seasons, which is what you shouldnтАЩt do and just shutting it down.тАЭ
Prior to his heart-to-heart with Abbot, Langdon shares his perspective as someone whoтАЩs been to rehab and is trying to deal with his own issues.
тАЬHeтАЩs come to terms over the last 14 hours, 15 hours, with the fact that he that the role model that he looked up to and modeled his life after for so long might not be the sterling, pristine example to follow that he might have assumed previously,тАЭ Ball tells The Hollywood Reporter of what prompts his angry exchange with his former mentor. тАЬI think this is why itтАЩs so it was so injurious in in season one, when this rift opened between Langdon and Robby, there is an assumption of like, тАШLook, man, I see you hurting. I see what you are carrying. I see that you are in pain, and I see that you carry that pain for the benefit of everyone around you, and I see the responsibility that you hold, and I feel like I can see you and understand you and support you in a way that you need.тАЩ And whenever that that sympathy was not reciprocated back to Langdon, whenever his wound became exposed, I think that felt like a real abandonment. Now Langdon has had the the privilege of sitting with himself for the last 10 months and getting help and getting clean and getting someone to talk to and the space to acknowledge what he is feeling that Robby has not because he has had to show up at work every day and be responsible for everybody else. And I think Langdon is now able to come back in the door and say, тАШWhoa, man, you need to pause because you are not doing well.тАЩ And this whole тАШsuck it up and donтАЩt talk about it and donтАЩt acknowledge anything thatтАЩs going on with you,тАЩ which IтАЩve emulated for so long, that led me down an errant path, and I think itтАЩs leading you down an errant path. IтАЩve talked with people that have gone through what youтАЩre going through, that have dealt with these feelings, theyтАЩre not that uncommon, and they can be overcome. They can be acknowledged, but it requires a willingness to pause and admit that theyтАЩre there, rather than just running and continuing to run.тАЭ
At the end of the last hour, viewers got the answer to another mystery from this season as Robby learned that new attending Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) suffers from a seizure disorder, which Moafi said she knew was a part of her character since the end of the audition process, with Gemmill confirming it when she appears to zone out while looking at baby Jane Doe at the end of the first episode of season two, and that she did extensive research to try to understand.
тАЬI spoke to as many doctors as I could. I spoke to epileptologists. I spoke to doctors with varying disabilities and medical conditions and about how they manage it,тАЭ Moafi says. тАЬI read a lot of testimonials of people who are living with this condition, or people who are parents with children with this condition.
She also watched footage of people with seizures that тАЬmanifest in a very similar wayтАЭ and insisted that the showтАЩs medical advisers let her know if anything in her performance wasnтАЩt accurate. At the end of the episode, after Robby insists Dr. Al-Hashimi disclose her condition to the administration or he will, viewers see her crying in her car, a moment Moafi says reflects тАЬthe world crumbling around her and the rugs having been pulled from underneath her.тАЭ The moment also originally featured another dimension to her character, she reveals.
тАЬThe car scene initially had a bit of dialogue where she gets in the car, sheтАЩs about to drive, and she doesnтАЩt,тАЭ Moafi recalls. тАЬShe calls her her ex husband to watch their child overnight. Instead of going to pick up her kid after work, she asks if he can watch her another night because sheтАЩs having car trouble, and her ex says, тАШYeah, of course. Are you OK? You need me to come get you?тАЩ And thatтАЩs when she chokes back tears, and she tries to hide it and get off the phone with him as quickly as possible and then completely unravels, because I think at that moment she is used to hiding. SheтАЩs used to isolating. What she wants more than anything else is for someone to hold her and tell her, тАШEverythingтАЩs going to be okay. You got this. YouтАЩre not going to lose everything.тАЩ SheтАЩs just grasping at some kind of control in that moment and she canтАЩt.тАЭ
When she tells Robby about her condition, after heтАЩs already spotted some curious behavior, she truly is seeking his medical expertise as someone she respects, Moafi says. But the way he reacts destroys the level of trust that she has in him, Moafi says, and thatтАЩs something that will continue to affect their dynamic in the future.
тАЬShe sees that thereтАЩs like a very generous, loving, wounded child in him, and there is a generous wounded child in her, and so she takes that part of her and reveals it to him, in hopes of getting closer and finding connection through their shared, respective traumas and it backfires,тАЭ Moafi explains. тАЬSo I think she expected to find more of a colleague and friend in him, in revealing herself, and itтАЩs that he threatens her, and it obviously flares up her trust issues. She canтАЩt be restricted or excluded just for having epilepsy, but she can be prevented from practicing if she poses a direct threat to patients or to herself, and usually this is at the discretion of the physician themselves. TheyтАЩre the ones who decide if itтАЩs safe, and so for Robby to come in and threaten her, thatтАЩs the biggest betrayal. Because it is not his call, and she has proven throughout her life and her career that she prioritizes patient care, and itтАЩs not about her ego. And so she will go about this responsibly but for him to try to report her тАФ┬аshe doesnтАЩt need to report herself. She got confirmation from her neurologist saying youтАЩre fine, you just need double coverage, which is standard for (the) ER. ItтАЩs unusual to have single coverage. So the way that heтАЩs viewing this is heтАЩs taking everything kind of personally and making it about himself and his sense of control and not treating her like a colleague, like a pro, and so itтАЩs really unjust, and itтАЩs shitty, and I think thatтАЩs obviously going to affect her trust issues moving forward and affect how she relates to him moving forward.тАЭ
As for Langdon, though heтАЩs gotten a bit of his confidence back, particularly through the closed reduction of the spinal injury in the penultimate episode of the season, heтАЩs still on a longer journey of recovery that Ball says тАЬis an act of daily maintenance.тАЭ
After his first day back, heтАЩs тАЬdoing OK,тАЭ Ball says, noting that his character тАЬdidnтАЩt relapseтАЭ but тАЬthat possibility is always there.тАЭ
тАЬThere are things that you can see over the course of the season where you can understand that Langdon is not perfectly reformed. ThereтАЩs still clearly some fear and resentment like that conversation with Santos (Isa Briones), that conversation with Robby, thereтАЩs still this sense of having been wronged and anger around that that is not fully processed, that I think will take time. ThereтАЩs little breadcrumbs throughout season two that suggests that Langdon is coming in and really trying to put his best foot forward. But the sort of perfectly reformed act is a bit of a shield, and there maybe is still a lot of pain and embitterment going on behind that that I think thereтАЩs still plenty of story to tell there.тАЭ
Meanwhile, looking at the superficial elements of season three, Gemmill confirmed that the show is planning a roughly four-month time lapse to November in part to have the hospital have to deal with colder-weather injuries.
тАЬWe wanted a shorter jump; less story has transpired in between seasons,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬWe wanted to do cold weather because we hadnтАЩt. WeтАЩve done summer, and we did September (in season one), and we figured itтАЩd be nice to do colder weather and what that brings into the ER and what sort of emergency situations change seasonally.тАЭ
One person who wonтАЩt be returning, it was recently announced, is GaneshтАЩs Dr. Mohan, who wonтАЩt be back for story reasons as the series aims to reflect the staff turnover reality at teaching hospitals.
While fans have been upset by both departures, Gemmill continued to defend the showтАЩs approach to cast changes.
тАЬIтАЩm sure people are going to be disappointed because people are going to come and go, and thatтАЩs just the reality of the medical world that weтАЩve created,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬI think one of the things it does is it eliminates the false jeopardy that a lot of shows might have. If I show someone who might not come back, some shows you know theyтАЩre coming back and so you donтАЩt really believe it, whereas I think here, people donтАЩt come back sometimes, and that adds an authenticity to it and real-life jeopardy that I think the show benefits from. And I think the show also does something very well, in that it launches actors careers as well. So I think thatтАЩs one of the good things too, people come on the show and even if they donтАЩt stay I think the show is a good launch pad for whatever comes next.тАЭ
Dr. Mohan will also be missed by Dr. Abbot, who Hatosy confirms тАЬdefinitely has feelingsтАЭ for his coworker, with whom heтАЩs had a number of memorable friendly interactions. But Hatosy suspects theyтАЩll find a way to stay in touch.
тАЬShe could go to Jupiter and heтАЩll find her,тАЭ he says. тАЬTheyтАЩll have a laugh about some medical case study from who knows where. Maybe theyтАЩll send a .gif to each other and an appreciation for how fantastic the doctors are who worked on it. ItтАЩs sad but I guess thatтАЩs part of the job and people move on. And itтАЩs part of television. Abbot will miss her.тАЭ
Abbot and Mohan arenтАЩt the only Pitt duo that fans have hoped would have a romantic relationship. For this series, though, with each season taking place over one day, Gemmill indicates it might be tough to show charactersтАЩ personal lives.
тАЬOur show really doesnтАЩt leave the ER, so weтАЩre not going to go home with people,тАЭ he says. тАЬWe break the POV sometimes, but those are sort of quick little clips of life at the end of the shift. But anything that we want to do really has to be, I think, told within the confines of our sets, because thatтАЩs where the show lives and breathes.тАЭ
Fans are also enjoying the bond between Langdon and Taylor DeardenтАЩs Mel, which Ball argues more resembles a brother-sister dynamic.
тАЬI think there is a sense of sameness,тАЭ he says. тАЬThere is a sense of identification that Langdon finds in Mel. Mel is a primary caretaker for her sister, and there is an element of needing to be needed, and the disappointment that comes when Mel realizes that Becca (Tal Anderson) is an individuated person who might actually not need her as much as previously assumed, and that Mel was drawing identification of being a provider. And I think that is something that feels true to Langdon as well as a husband and a young father. I think that shared experience of needing to be needed is something that he sees in Mel. And I also think Mel is also an outsider and and doesnтАЩt quite fit in with the other kids. And I think that is something that I think any addict knows. There is a sense of chronic uniqueness or apartness that any addict understands. And I think there is, there is just a recognition there that I think is really special.тАЭ
While Mel may be struggling to fit in, she has a bonding moment with Santos at the end of the July 4th shift as the two let their hair down and perform a karaoke version of Alanis MorrisetteтАЩs тАЬYou Oughta KnowтАЭ over the closing credits of the season two finale.
тАЬIt just seemed like it would be fun to have a little Easter egg in the credits for the fans who put in all the time for the whole season and the whole episode,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬAnd Mel and Santos had such a rough shift that it felt like they needed to blow off a little steam.тАЭ
Gemmill wrote the moment knowing Briones could sing and with Dearden on board, and selected Morrissette (тАЬsomething they both could wail toтАЭ) but gave them the option to swap it for another song, but they kept it.
тАЬThey went with for it with gusto. And that was one of my funnest little things IтАЩve done in a long time,тАЭ Gemmill says. тАЬIt was a nice, propulsive moment to launch us into season three with hope that these guys are going to survive, and theyтАЩre going to do well, and theyтАЩre going to thrive, and weтАЩll be back.тАЭ
