Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first season of the American comedy television series Scrubs premiered on NBC on October 2, 2001 and concluded on May 21, 2002 and consists of 24 episodes. Scrubs was created by Bill Lawrence who wrote the pilot as well as three other episodes in the season. Adam Bernstein directed the pilot as well as four other episodes. Neil Flynn was ...
[45] [46] The eighth season includes webisodes and is the first Scrubs season broadcast in high definition. [47] Sarah Chalke was hoping that J.D. and Elliot would end up back together, comparing them to Friends characters Ross and Rachel, which has been addressed a few times on the show. In the early episodes of the season, they did rekindle ...
Bill Lawrence, riding a career high at 55, opens up about the 'Shrinking' finale, what's next for 'Ted Lasso' and how to fix television's star problem.
Scrubs 2.0 will not chalk the original series’ med school detour up to one of J.D.’s daydreams. Unlike Roseanne and Will & Grace, which found clever ways to erase their divisive finales from ...
[1] The set for J.D.'s sitcom fantasy is that of My Wife and Kids. Footage from this episode was later re-used in "My Urologist", with Dr. Kim Briggs digitally worked into it to make it look like she was there on J.D.'s first day. This was the only episode of the first eight seasons of Scrubs not shot at the former North Hollywood Medical Center.
Scrubs put Zach Braff on the map, but by the time it was wrapping up, he and the rest of the cast were ready to say goodbye.. Braff, who played J.D. on the medical sitcom that aired from 2001 to ...
Scrubs is an American medical comedy-drama television series created by Bill Lawrence, which premiered on October 2, 2001 on NBC. NBC had originally announced that Scrubs would end after its seventh season, containing a reduced 18 episodes. However, the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike ended up cutting the show's episodes down to 11, and Scrubs ended its run on NBC with a total of ...
Paste says that with show's ending "we're brought back to classic Scrubs comedy with a joke and a happy ending". [6] Uproxx put this episode on 8th place of best Scrubs episodes of all time and writes that "this is the episode that really elevates Dr. Cox into a full-fledged character on Scrubs instead of a ranting, abusive antagonist". [7]