Entertainment
8 Best Plot Twists of ‘The Pitt’ Season 2 (So Far)
Spoiler Alert: This list contains spoilers for The Pitt Season 2, Episode 11.
The Pitt is back, people, and this writer is happy to report that Season 2 is every bit as captivating as Season 1. Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center has a lot on its hands for the Fourth of July, and the first 11 episodes have made that extremely clear. With Dr. Robby (Noah Wyle) on his last shift before taking a three-month sabbatical, Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) has arrived one day early to get a feel of how he runs things. Meanwhile, Dr. Langdon (Patrick Ball) is back from rehab and struggles to feel welcome back.
This show is just one plot twist after another, so it’s hard to even keep track of all the developments that have taken place over the course of these 50-minute episodes. There are still four more to go, but there have definitely been enough plot developments to compile a list from what we’ve seen so far. Dr. Robby deciding to stay because his friend is waiting for a CT scan is a nice twist, but it’s not very surprising. After all, everyone expected Robby to stick around for the entire season. Something slightly more surprising would be Robby offering Whitaker (Gerran Howell) his apartment while he’s on sabbatical, but that doesn’t have the punch that the season’s best surprises so far have had. Ranked by their emotional impact, shock factors, and relevance to the overall show, these twists and turns tell us there are still more brilliant moments to come as the season draws to a close.
Orlando Leaves Early
Season 2, Episode 7 “1:00 P.M.”
Orlando (William Guirola) didn’t even want to go to the hospital in the first place, despite being in dire need of care. After his condition finally starts improving, his daughter and mother struggle to get him to stay. He says it’s too expensive, and apparently their income falls into a gap where insurance can’t be given. His daughter tries to start a GoFundMe. He’s told he can move to a much less expensive section of the hospital, etc. Nothing works, he leaves.
He tells Dr. Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) that he’s already in a lot of debt. He simply can’t take on anymore, even if it’s at a significant discount. As the family’s main provider, he thinks more about his wallet than his health—something that many people under the current healthcare system can relate to. It’s telling to have him leave so much sooner than he should and after all the help he was offered. Viewers can only hope he won’t return to the Pitt later in even worse condition.
Mohan’s Panic Attack
Season 2, Episode 10 “4:00 P.M.”
One of the most impressive things about The Pitt is that it somehow manages to be such a fast-paced phenomenon and yet doesn’t feel too hard to follow—at least for the viewers. The characters, on the other hand, can get pretty overwhelmed. Last season it was Dr. Robby, but this time it’s Dr. Mohan who breaks down in the middle of her shift.
She and third-year med student Joy (Irene Choi) are talking to a patient when Mohan starts having trouble breathing. It’s an intense sequence as she tries to get some air in the worst place possible. Joy has the common sense to bring her a wheelchair, which leads to Dr. Robby telling Mohan off. It turns out to be a panic attack, induced largely (but not solely) by her mother’s calls, showing indeed that Mohan looking for work elsewhere is probably a good decision.
Baby Jane Doe
Season 2, Episode 1 “7:00 A.M.”
Just as The Pitt provides enough answers to our questions to help us understand the context for this new season, it also gives us new questions for us to ponder. The biggest one right off the bat comes in the form of an infant, who was found in a bathroom in the ER. As they give the baby tests, she seems to be in good health overall. That’s good, but how did this happen?
This question still hasn’t been answered after 11 episodes, so at this point it will probably wind up being a conflict that resolves in the season finale. More than one person thinks the child has been abandoned, while it’s also been suggested that sometimes a mother will leave a baby in a bathroom and return to pick it up later (which would still leave a few questions). A bundle of innocence and mystery in a frantic environment, this anonymous patient has been making viewers scratch their heads since the season premiere—and we’re all hoping there’s a happy ending to this plot thread.
ICE Arrests Nurse Jesse
Season 2, Episode 11 “5:00 P.M.”
This show didn’t back down from America’s socio-political climate in the first season, and Season 2 is just as ambitious. In last week’s episode, ICE agents arrive at the ER with a detainee who was injured during their raid. As rumors spread that immigration enforcement is here, several hospital staff leave out of fear they’ll be arrested. The ICE officers weren’t intending on arresting anyone else, but, sure enough, Nurse Jesse (Ned Brower) winds up in cuffs.
And all because he was just trying to help Pranita (Ramona DuBarry) get her treatment before leaving. The agents don’t want to wait for the patient to be put in a sling; they want out, and Jesse gets too physical for their liking. ICE has accrued a reputation for being aggressive, and this episode demonstrates how the agency essentially comes across as the antithesis of a hospital. Meanwhile, the Pitt is now even more understaffed than it already was.
Waterpark Disaster
Season 2, Episode 9 “3:00 P.M.”
By the time we’ve hit Episode 9, another hospital is sending their ambulances over to Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center and the Pitt has shut down its internet. What else can go wrong? A waterpark disaster: after a ride collapses, the poor souls who were caught in the middle of it are now also getting sent to the ER. They definitely need help, piling more difficulty onto an already chaotic situation.
One of The Pitt‘s best new characters, Ogilvie (Lucas Iverson) was so cocky at the beginning of the season. Well, his attitude has gradually changed over the course of the day. In the wake of this mess, Ogilvie winds up having to hold a dismembered leg and is visibly distressed by it. It’s amazing how a show with such material can find dark comedy in a med student’s obvious yet ignored discomfort. Meanwhile, this emphasizes just how many things can go wrong in one day without having anything to do with each other. Their only common denominator is where the victims wind up: the emergency room.
Diverted Cases from Westbridge Hospital
Season 2, Episode 3 “9:00 A.M.”
The first few episodes of Season 2 were engrossing enough, but things really start to heat up when Westbridge Hospital shuts down. We aren’t told why, only that they’re sending their ambulances over to the Pitt. The workload is about to skyrocket, making this not only a suspenseful finish to Season 2, Episode 3, but also an excellent way to practically guarantee that the rest of the shift (ergo, the season) is going to be intense.
It’s a simple formula: more patients means more cases to do (and drama to deal with) in a short window of time, which means even less time for the characters to rest. As much as this sets us up for serious plot lines, the show finds a way to bring in a lighthearted response as well: the betting pool. The guy who set up last season’s pool enthusiastically sets up this new one, and viewers can safely bet this is going to be another terrific season.
Louie’s Death
Season 2, Episode 6 “12:00 P.M.”
Louie (Ernest Harden Jr.) was established as a regular patient in Season 1, and his return in the second season was both worrisome and unsurprising. The man’s charm and expertise in surprising subjects also meant that fans enjoyed seeing this mythical alcoholic’s familiar face, and we were led to believe that he just needed some fluid drained from his abdomen. A lot of it, sure, but he’d had this procedure done a few times before.
So when he dies, it comes as a shock to both the doctors and the viewers. Robby and Langdon together try to bring him back (fitting, as Robby knew him best), and it’s heartbreaking to watch them fail. Louie was so adored by the hospital staff that they even find time to pay their respects together, at which point Robby gives everyone Louie’s unknown backstory. Only now that he’s dead does the audience learn that his wife and unborn child died in a car accident, which both explains his drinking and makes it all the more tragic.
PTMC Shuts Down the Hospital’s Internet
Season 2, Episode 7 “1:00 P.M.”
Out of everything that’s happened so far, this season’s defining characteristic is the plot twist that was foreshadowed by Westbridge Hospital’s problems and finally arrived in Season 2: they need to work without computers. As we learn that hospitals in the area have been targeted for cyberattacks, the hospital CEO himself comes to announce that Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center will be shutting down their internet before any such attacks can be successful.
Very bad news, as everything nowadays has been so geared toward new technology that people have started using AI to take down notes. The more senior doctors need to explain how to document everything the old-fashioned way, and it’s a minor miracle that Joy’s photographic memory was strong enough for her to remember everything on the board. Miscommunication and other issues are inevitable, however, as they even ask a retired clerk to help out because she’s so proficient at the old system. Humanity’s reliance on technology is powerfully explored as The Pitt remains one of the decade’s most brilliant television series.
The Pitt
- Release Date
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January 9, 2025
- Network
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Max
- Showrunner
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R. Scott Gemmill
- Directors
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Amanda Marsalis
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Noah Wyle
Dr. Michael ‘Robby’ Robinavitch
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Tracy Ifeachor
Dr. Heather Collins
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