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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 ...
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 ".
In 2008, Empire placed Scrubs 19th on their list of "The 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time" and cited "My Screw Up" as the show's best episode. [2] In IGN ' s list of the 10 best Scrubs episodes, "My Screw Up" placed third. In 2024, Rolling Stone included My Screw Up on the list 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time, placing it 92. [3]
Not all shows have stuck to their original premise over the years — in fact some changed their central story lines on purpose. Family Matters is a great example since it shifted its cast. The ...
Bill Lawrence, the creative mind behind bygone shows like "Spin City," "Scrubs" and "Cougar Town," has a full plate these days with a slate that includes "Shrinking," "Bad Monkey" and a Steve ...
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 ...
[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.
Jill Tracy, played by Nicole Sullivan, was a recurring patient at Sacred Heart Hospital and one of the longest recurring ancillary characters on Scrubs, appearing in six episodes over five seasons (in chronological order, "My Nickname”, "My Occurrence”, "My Fifteen Seconds”, "My Lunch”, "My Long Goodbye”, and "My Finale (Part 2 ...