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"Scrubs is a Disney show. Bill [Lawrence] has a Warner Bros. deal. Bill [Lawrence] has a Warner Bros. deal. Once those two companies figure that out, I think the people will get what they want.
Scrubs is poised to pick up exactly where it left off: on ABC. TVLine has learned that the in-the-works revival of Bill Lawrence’s hospital-set comedy is in development specifically at ABC ...
Scrubs (stylized as [scrubs]) is an American medical sitcom created by Bill Lawrence that aired from October 2, 2001, to March 17, 2010, on NBC and later ABC. The series follows the lives of employees at the fictional Sacred Heart Hospital, which is a teaching hospital .
Fans of Scrubs have celebrated as the cast of the series unexpectedly reunited on Monday (15 April). The hit US sitcom, which first premiered on ABC in 2001, is a sitcom about a group of interns ...
The cast returned to film an additional 19 episodes, which were aired as Season 8 by ABC, with much of the story coming to a close, and definitive though somewhat flexible endings for the characters. The one-hour season finale, " My Finale ", which was originally planned to also be the series finale, ranked third in the ratings and was watched ...
Bob Kelso is the chief of medicine for Sacred Heart Hospital for the first seven seasons of Scrubs (a position held since 1984), though he resigns in the episode "My Dumb Luck". Kelso appeared in every episode during the first eight seasons except three Season 8 episodes, " My Last Words ", " Their Story II " and " My Full Moon ".
Lawrence considered the eighth season to be the end of the show for Scrubs, going so far as to ask ABC if he could change the name to Scrubs Med. [7] ABC declined, but Lawrence still advised fans to treat it as a new show, even putting a caption under the "Created By" on the X-ray in the opening sequence saying [Med School].
"My Screw Up" is the 14th episode of the third season and the 60th episode overall of the American television sitcom Scrubs. Written by Neil Goldman and Garrett Donovan, and directed by Chris Koch, it originally aired on February 24, 2004 on NBC. It features Brendan Fraser's final appearance as Ben Sullivan.