La vida cotidiana de los profesionales de la salud en un hospital de Pittsburgh hacen malabarismos con las crisis personales, la política en el lugar de trabajo y la carga emocional de trata... Leer todoLa vida cotidiana de los profesionales de la salud en un hospital de Pittsburgh hacen malabarismos con las crisis personales, la política en el lugar de trabajo y la carga emocional de tratar a pacientes en estado crítico.La vida cotidiana de los profesionales de la salud en un hospital de Pittsburgh hacen malabarismos con las crisis personales, la política en el lugar de trabajo y la carga emocional de tratar a pacientes en estado crítico.
- Nominado a 12 premios Primetime Emmy
- 1 premio ganado y 30 nominaciones en total
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Resumen
Reviewers say 'The Pitt' is lauded for its realistic depiction of hospital emergency rooms and Noah Wyle's exceptional performance. However, it faces criticism for its heavy-handed social justice themes, perceived as preachy and unrealistic. The show is also faulted for relying on stereotypes, lacking originality, and inaccuracies in medical procedures and staff portrayal. Despite these issues, many find it engaging and emotionally resonant, especially those with healthcare experience.
Opiniones destacadas
I worked in EMS after training at a large teaching hospital. I rarely watch medical shows because the portrayal of medicine is so dumbed-down and inaccurate. I understand that it's a show and some license will be taken, but at least put in some effort to help me suspend disbelief. The Pitt puts in major effort to get it right (which I expect from creator of 'Southland' John Wells, one of the few cop shows that did it more accurately than most). ER's are places of extreme excitement, sadness and humor (the rat scene alone beat many comedies made today). It's fun to be a couple episodes into a medical show and looking forward to more instead of rolling my eyes and moving on.
Being Hollywood we get the usual moralizing, but most shows lecture while delivering inane dialogue with one dimensional characters. Give me a solid story in a realistic setting with great characters and I can sit through a fair share of finger-wagging. It's great seeing Noah Wylie in a hospital again, especially as a veteran doctor surrounded by fresh-faced medical rookies like he was in ER. The acting has been great from everyone. I recognize so many of these personalities from a career around this environment. The Pitt is a great new show.
Being Hollywood we get the usual moralizing, but most shows lecture while delivering inane dialogue with one dimensional characters. Give me a solid story in a realistic setting with great characters and I can sit through a fair share of finger-wagging. It's great seeing Noah Wylie in a hospital again, especially as a veteran doctor surrounded by fresh-faced medical rookies like he was in ER. The acting has been great from everyone. I recognize so many of these personalities from a career around this environment. The Pitt is a great new show.
By far the best medical drama show I have ever seen.
For being a healthcare worker and floating to the ER, this show's accuracy is like none other and had me nodding my head every episode on the realism of what we go through with families, coworkers, and students aside from patient care.
The level of production and the level of the script are excellent. The tension, the energy, and the difficulties are very well portrayed. The performances are very good. And the dialogues are the cherry on top, they all bring some reflection. The writing is brilliant, the character development is perfection.
The fact that the whole season covers just one shift obviously helps, but there are no dumb on-off relationships. No ridicolous cases that would never happen in real life.
For being a healthcare worker and floating to the ER, this show's accuracy is like none other and had me nodding my head every episode on the realism of what we go through with families, coworkers, and students aside from patient care.
The level of production and the level of the script are excellent. The tension, the energy, and the difficulties are very well portrayed. The performances are very good. And the dialogues are the cherry on top, they all bring some reflection. The writing is brilliant, the character development is perfection.
The fact that the whole season covers just one shift obviously helps, but there are no dumb on-off relationships. No ridicolous cases that would never happen in real life.
A rare occasion when all of the elements come together and engage the viewer completely. The pacing is fast but with the right rhythm. The writers have done their research, and the little I know about emergency procedures feels convincing. They must have some great medical consultants supervising. But the personal stories, complex interactions, and character development are where it shines. And it's not always the highest profile actors carrying it - Noah Wyle is polished for sure, but all of the young residents are individuals whose uniqueness, sensitivity, strengths and weaknesses, will have you holding your breath and sighing in relief when they save a patient. This is seriously a top tier series. I never anticipate a new episode of a show dropping, but I do for The Pitt. I wonder if season two will be able to match it.
I have watched and re-watched every episode. Great show. Huge entertainment value; the show challenges my view of doctors, nurses, and hospitals. It has raised my awareness of the stress and struggles of the job working in an ER. This show humanizes the people, and gives us a much more realistic view of their personal and professional struggles than we have ever seen in a hospital show. So interesting. Great cast and characters I care about. Every character is likable. The pacing, balance, and action in the show is superb. This is among my favorite shows of all time, and I can't wait for season two.
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I'm a board certified EM physician who has worked in big trauma centers and small but busy community ER's. Most medical shows are hyper unrealistic, which normally leads to absurd requests from patients. I'm only one episode in, but this is the first show (besides scrubs) that paints an accurate picture of what it's like to work in emergency medicine. Bravo to the consultants they got for this one; clearly they consulted an emergency medicine physician or three. I look forward to watching the rest of the series. Future medical series should follow in The Pitt's footsteps and actually consult a real physician if you want it to be accurate.
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Check out our list of renewals and cancellations to see if your favorite show made the cut.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDuring early development, John Wells and Noah Wyle originally envisioned the show as more a direct sequel to their previous hit NBC medical drama "ER," which Wells executive produced, wrote and directed from 1994-2009. Wyle would have reprised his role Dr. John Carter. However, they were unable to secure the rights with original series creator Michael Crichton's estate and thus altered the concept and setting to make it more a spiritual sequel instead.
- ConexionesFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 TV Shows of 2025 So Far (2025)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución50 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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What was the official certification given to The Pitt (2025) in Brazil?
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