“The Pitt,” on HBO’s streaming platform Max, is a weekly medical drama that emulates the kind of shows that have long been — and remain — a staple on network TV. It’s an instructive blueprint for other streamers to follow.
Starring Noah Wyle, who knows his way around a hospital show thanks to his 11 seasons on “ER,” the 15-episode series is the work of a team that understands how television should be paced, satisfying the needs of an episodic weekly series while juggling ongoing storylines.
The show’s style is realism, with each episode tracking an hour of Wyle’s Dr. Michael Robinavitch’s 15-hour shift running the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital’s chaotic emergency department.
Everyone calls him Robby, or Dr. Robby. He’s approachable and good-humored. Along with the department’s unflappable charge nurse Dana (Katherine LaNasa) and a handful of residents, they guide a new class of wide-eyed interns and medical students through their first day.
A doctor ending his overnight shift is greeted by a new intern: “I can’t tell you how excited I am to be here!” He gives her an incredulous look, and then says: “Talk to me at the end of the day.”
Don’t mind him, Robby says, he had a rough night and is having an ongoing existential crisis. But the departing doctor gets the last word: “Don’t worry, you’ll get there soon enough.”
It’s the banter of grizzled veterans, but we also get to know the patients enough that they’re not cardboard cutouts but human beings experiencing a terrible, scary, occasionally humorously bizarre moment in their lives.
There also are close-ups of scalpels cutting into skin and glimpses of the human body in various states of mangled and bloody distress. We have no clue how much or little of it is accurate, but from an entertainment standpoint, it delivers.