Season one of The Pitt ends unexpectedly, yet inevitably. While a few cases still linger, the quiet, meditative first-season finale focuses less on medical drama and more on where its characters have ended up emotionally at the end of a harrowing shift. â9 P.M.â takes its time tying up loose ends while creating new character dynamics. And, fittingly, for the first time all season and therefore in this entire series, we finally see the characters outside of the hospital. In the last hour before going home, Dr. Langdon pleads his case, Dr. Santos reveals a sensitive side, Dr. King gets to watch Elf in September, and Whittaker finds a home. But most importantly, Dr. Robby and Dr. Abbott circle back to a theme thatâs been omnipresent throughout the episode and the first season of The Pitt as a whole: Everyoneâs a little fucked up, and also: Men, go to therapy!
The finale instantly establishes a reflective tone by eliminating the penultimate episodeâs cliffhanger immediately. Dr. Robby berates and pleads with the cops who arrested Dr. McKay for disabling her ankle monitorâand comments on how ridiculous they are to do this amid the aftermath of a mass shooting. When Robby reminds them that McKay saved a brother officerâs life today, they agree to let her go, on the condition that she resolves the broken ankle monitor first thing in the morning. Dr. Robby then convinces Flynnâs dad, whose wife is aggressively anti-science, to approve the spinal tap, through some morbid manipulationâtheir walk-and-talk ends in the Peds room, which is now the Pittâs packed-to-capacity makeshift morgue.
âWe couldnât save them,â Robby says, as they stand over the bodies, âbut we could still save your son.â The dad calls him a âfucking asshole,â but it works: Dr. King performs the spinal tap while the mom takes her daughter to get food. She walks into the room during the procedure, horrifiedâand unsupported in her decision to risk her sonâs life because of what sheâs read on the internet. Dr. Robby has a brief, completely horrible conversation with Jake, who says, âWeâre not friends and youâre not my father, so fuck off!â right before he tells Leahâs parents the news about their daughter. Despite his never-ending hardship on this shift, Dr. Robby has the energy for an inspiring speech to the day shift staff before they head home. âThis place will break your heart, but itâs also full of miracles.â He encourages everyone to cry, because itâs grief leaving the body.
Dr. Abbott communicated the âMen, go to therapyâ message quite literally. This is, essentially, Dr. Abbottâs reveal episode: today was his day off, so he came in on his own volition (I, for one, assumed he simply came in a few hours early for his night shift) and heâs an amputee. After referring a patient to Dr. Shen, Utensil Specialist, Dr. Abbott visits Dr. Robby, who is standing disturbingly close to the roofâs edge, a reversal of Abbottâs first appearance in the pilot. The two old guys talk through it, but it is mostly Abbott talking and Robby asking Dr. Abbott to stop talking. Dr. Robby admits he choked during the MCI. âSo fucking what?â Dr. Abbott says. âThatâs what happens when youâre in a war and nothing makes sense.â
Then, before meeting the staff for park beers, Dr. Abbottâwho is coming back to work around 2amâtells Dr. Robby that his therapist says he âfinds comfort in darkness.â When Dr. Robby asks if therapy helps, he says, âI havenât jumped off the roof yet.â These exchanges are fitting bookends for the season, and for these characters, especially Dr. Robby, who not only survived a personally triggering day, but did excellent work despite the internal and external pressure. Despite the ongoing horrors of their day-to-day life, itâs in their DNA, like Dr. Abbott says.