re Shawn Hatosy's absolute power move of doing the Quinn collab
can I just say it's actually so wholesome for him to frame it as "stepping into the space with intention" and taking ownership of his moment as a total sex symbol and approaching it with creativity and idk
it just feels very healthy and sex positive and like just another expression of his love for acting and character building and I'm really here for it
People are projecting their anger onto Noah Wyle at this point. Or they just wanna be mad. Either way, it’s annoying as fuck!
If you hate Robby/Noah that much, stop watching The Pitt. It’s his show. He is the main character. He is always gonna be the priority. That is not changing, no matter how much y’all complain.
If you’re watching this show for secondary characters, you need to get comfortable with the fact that their stories will ALWAYS come second to his.
And bitching about it every single episode does nothing but flood the space with negativity and tired ass takes. That's not healthy for your mind and spirit.
At some point, you gotta ask yourself why the fuck are you still here?
I am all for fandom discourse where people share different perspectives and just talk shit about the show. But it’s gotten to a point where that’s not even what this is anymore. This is not discussion. This is dog-piling, personal attacks, and people actively looking for reasons to dislike an actor or a character.
It genuinely does not make sense to me to sit up and watch a show where you can’t even stand the main character or the lead actor. Like be serious, how is that enjoyable in any way?
I don’t watch shit that pisses me off or has people I hate in it. If I’m not enjoying something, I stop watching. It’s really that simple.
The gag is, a lot of y’all hate Robby because y’all act just like him. A hit dog gon’ holler.
Some of y’all need to start being honest with yourselves instead of projecting, because this is getting insane.
gnawing at the bars of my enclosure thinking about how we never see the outside of the hospital except in the first and last episodes of each season, which mirrors how as ED doctors they don’t see the outside until the end of their shift i can’t-
Okay, I’m going to say something a little controversial here.
Rant under the cut cause you all got me fucked up over this Pitt discourse.
Why is everyone mad at Noah Wyle for focusing his own show on the main character’s storyline? Robby is the main character. That’s literally the point. He created the show and plays the lead. Bro of course the narrative is centered around him.
It feels like people are forgetting how television works. Not every character is going to get equal screen time or a storyline that matches what you personally want. That’s what fanfiction is for—not the actual show.
Also, I keep seeing criticism that the show is treating its women of color poorly, but I honestly don’t think that tracks in the way people are saying it does. If anything, Mohan has had more focus this season. I didn’t even care much for her in season one—I thought she was underdeveloped—but she’s been more present and fleshed out this time around. I’ve actually found her 100% more endearing and relatable with her story line this season than last season. I really enjoyed her characters part with the sickle cell patient and the reflection of how the medical environment treats its patients of color. But that was kind of it? This season she comes off more like a real person with complex situations and feelings instead of just being that one character who’s there to shit on the broken system yet again.
That coupled with Baran, Trinity, and the entire nurses staff like???
People are also mad about a Supriya leaving next season and immediately spinning it into “it’s because she’s a woman of color” and “it’s a white male agenda,” and honestly… what show are you watching? This show has so much diversity it’s insane.
They’re completely ignoring the fact that she’s being replaced in the main cast by a Black woman whose character is already established, interesting, and clearly well-loved. So the idea that this is some kind of deliberate sidelining doesn’t even line up with what’s actually happening on screen.
This show has representation for not just poc but the lgbtq+ community, people who are neurodivergent and an assortment of religious and ethical backgrounds. It’s like you all are just fucking ignoring the fact that representation like this basically didn’t exist fifteen years ago. I’m so tired of people ragging on this show and not giving it recognition for all the subtle and complex details that come with mental health and the outrageous hell that is the American healthcare system.
And while we’re at it—this season has introduced and expanded some of the most complex character work we’ve seen so far. Baran Al-Hashimi, a woman who was initially framed like a straight-up antagonist “replacement” type, instead gets a layered, emotionally complicated arc that turns her into something far more interesting than a one-note villain.
Santos, a queer woman, is also given real depth: we see her carrying visible self-harm scars, navigating a toxic workplace relationship with another woman, and dealing with the trauma of being completely dismissed and humiliated by Langdon on her very first day. That’s not shallow writing—that’s intentional character building.
Mel has remained consistently written with clear neurodivergent traits that feel deliberate, grounded, and honestly deeply relatable.
Emma, meanwhile, is on her literal first day and is already being put through hell. Girl was physically attacked, choked out, and still managing to respond with care, professionalism, and control. And the rape kit scene wasn’t just “important,” it was handled with weight, precision, and actual narrative respect.
So again—what exactly are people watching?
Because if you’re looking at all of this and still claiming the show is flattening its women or stripping away complexity, that criticism just doesn’t hold up to what’s actually on screen.
It feels like people are so committed to being outraged that they’re not even engaging with the actual storytelling anymore. If you don’t like the direction of a show, that’s fine—but rewriting what’s happening in it to fit a narrative just doesn’t make sense.