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The Guide #239: Two successful seasons in, The Pitt has resuscitated the medical drama

1 day ago
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After a wait more interminable than most spells in an A&E reception area, medical-drama-of-the-moment The Pitt finally made it on to UK screens last month, via the arrival of streaming service HBO Max, and just about everyone I know has spent the following weeks hoovering it up.Some, in fact, are already up to speed with its second season (the finale aired last night on US TV) and so are trying very, very hard not to blurt out major plot points at the office tea point/on public transport/in an actual hospital waiting room – we’re in a post-spoiler age, remember.I’ve been a little bit slower off the mark – mainly because it took so long to figure out if I actually had access to HBO Max as part of my bafflingly arcane Sky TV package – but I’m racing through it now, and so am ready to share the same observations that everyone else made weeks, or in the case of the US, a full year ago.The main one being: how did not one TV producer have the idea to mash together ER and 24 before? It was right there, staring you all in the face! (Jed Mercurio, whose forgotten 2015 medical drama, Critical, also had a real-time element, might have a finger raised in objection at this point.)Beyond The Pitt’s formal innovation (each season follows, to the second, a 15-hour shift at an under-resourced teaching hospital in Pittsburgh), what’s striking is how familiar it feels.

In part that is down to the comforting presence of Noah Wyle, who as the show’s lead – big-hearted, sad-eyed senior attending physician Dr Michael “Robby” Robinavitch – is essentially playing a continuation of his ER character John Carter, a fumbling junior MD who became the show’s inspirational figurehead.But the familiarity doesn’t begin and end with Wyle: it’s there in the show’s very foundations.With its jarring tonal shifts between soft relationship drama and intense, claret-spilling operation scenes, The Pitt plonks itself unapologetically in the lineage of the modern medical drama, a strange stew of comfort TV and high-tension unpleasantness that viewers seem to find endlessly appealing.In the UK and the US, early medical dramas were often soap operas, a genre that tends to prioritise formula and a sense of the familiar over formal daring.(Which isn’t to say that they were conservative – one of the first interracial kisses on British TV occurred on the ITV soap Emergency Ward 10.

) But in the 1980s the medical drama started to evolve, on both sides of the Atlantic.In the US there was the arrival of a new generation of gritty, layered workplace dramas, including the hospital-set series St Elsewhere, now remembered largely for its completely crackers ending, but revolutionary in its use of multi-strand plot lines and of-the-moment subject matter – among other landmarks, it was the first show to feature an Aids storyline.Meanwhile in the UK, the BBC launched Casualty in 1986, a show that might feel hopelessly traditional to viewers today, but was anything but when it debuted.Conceived by its creators Paul Unwin and Jeremy Brock as an unflinching look at how Thatcherite reforms were destroying the original vision of the NHS – “In 1948, a dream was born.In 1985, that dream is in tatters” read the first line of a manifesto the pair wrote for the show – Casualty prompted hoots of complaint from the Conservative government of the time.

(“What do the Tories want us to do? Make the blood blue rather than red?” was controller of BBC1 Michael Grade’s response.) The show rarely seemed to be out of the headlines in its first decade: most famously, a 1993 episode where a gang of violent youths burned down the hospital had to be moved past the watershed and received record complaints due to its violent scenes.At around the same time, ER emerged in the US and changed everything, a blockbuster medical drama that fully modernised the genre.Its storylines – opioid addiction, mental health crises, institutional racism – were remarkably bold for its era.And with its heightened commitment to medical accuracy, verité filming style, sprawling casts, sudden tonal shifts and so much more besides, it set the template for every similarly minded shows that followed.

As well as long-forgotten straightforward knock-offs including Code Black, Chicago Med and The Resident, you can see ER’s influence in everything from the gentler likes of Grey’s Anatomy and the Good Doctor, to pricklier takes on the format such as House (pictured above).And of course The Pitt, a show that was reportedly conceived as an ER reboot and is now subject to a lawsuit from ER creator Michael Crichton’s estate.So why has it chimed with viewers when so many other ER-a-likes have been memory-holed? Much of its success is down to that conceit where minor storylines from early episodes spiral off into something unexpected and major, turning the medical drama’s procedural format into something satisfyingly elongated.But The Pitt also has the same nettle-grasping spirit as the landmark medical dramas.It is unafraid to take on live issues – ICE agents descending on hospitals, post-Roe-repeal abortion restrictions – and unwilling, like Casualty with the NHS, to gloss over the risible state of US healthcare, as one grim storyline showing the ramifications of a patient’s insulin rationing shows.

So perhaps my year-late observation is actually this: The Pitt is a show that captures the medical drama at its best, and leaves the genre is safe hands.To read the complete version of this newsletter please subscribe to receive The Guide in your inbox every Friday
politicsSee all
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MoD has lost track of veterans on recall list, says defence adviser

The Ministry of Defence has lost track of military veterans they intend to recall at a time of national danger, according to a key government adviser.About 95,000 former soldiers and officers are in the strategic reserve but it is claimed that officials have failed to maintain a full record of their contact details.George Robertson, a former defence secretary and head of Nato who co-authored last year’s strategic defence review (SDR), made the claim at an event in Salisbury, Wiltshire.“What the review talks about is having the strategic reserve, that is, all of the people in this room who’ve been in the forces who have got a continuing obligation,” the Labour peer said. “But the Ministry of Defence at the present moment doesn’t even know where most of them are

about 15 hours ago
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‘Things could go backwards’: Kezia Dugdale on safety, LGBTQ+ rights and the future of Stonewall

Kezia Dugdale, the former leader of Scottish Labour, says she is now “quite scared” as a lesbian in Britain and has started to feel nervous holding her wife’s hand in public.Speaking to the Guardian in Edinburgh on the announcement of her appointment as the chair of Stonewall, the LGBTQ+ charity, she said it was “completely possible” gay rights in the UK could be eroded with the rise of rightwing populism.Equal marriage could not be taken for granted, she cautioned. “I don’t think it is an implausible argument now in the way that it maybe was five years ago. My rationale for that is: look at Italy, for example, where you see a rollback of rights for LGBT people

about 16 hours ago
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Two more Reform local election candidates accused of offensive posts

Reform UK’s checks on candidates are “clearly not fit for purpose”, Labour has said after two more candidates in May’s local elections were accused of making offensive or potentially racist social media posts.Meanwhile, it emerged that Restore Britain, the party set up by the MP Rupert Lowe after he left Reform, appeared to have accepted a donation from someone who has called publicly on social media for “another Hitler” to come to power.Reform has faced a series of controversies about some of its candidates in the local elections in England on 7 May, as well as some people standing for the Scottish and Welsh parliaments, despite Nigel Farage saying the party had greatly improved its vetting.Images of Facebook posts by Alan Stay, a candidate for Reform in the Isle of Wight, show he shared racist and sexist messages, including one that repeatedly used an explicitly racist epithet, arguing that it was not a harmful word. The post was made in response to a news story about a DJ losing their job for playing a record that featured the word

1 day ago
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Mandelson scandal is biggest crisis for diplomatic service in decades, says ex-Foreign Office chief

The Peter Mandelson security vetting scandal is the biggest crisis for the diplomatic service in decades, a former Foreign Office chief has said.Simon McDonald, who was the permanent under-secretary of the government department until 2020, has spoken out in defence of Oliver Robbins, saying the civil servant was “thrown under a bus” by the prime minister, Keir Starmer, when he was dismissed from his role on Thursday.Robbins was sacked as permanent secretary of the Foreign Office hours after the Guardian revealed that Peter Mandelson failed his security vetting in January 2025, during the process to appoint him as ambassador to the US.It is said that Robbins knew about Mandelson’s failure to pass the UK Security Vetting (UKSV) assessment but did not forward that information to ministers. Starmer claims he was not made aware of the outcome of the vetting process until this week

1 day ago
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‘Pure shock’: how ministers reacted to revelation of Mandelson vetting failure

When the Guardian revealed that Peter Mandelson had failed his vetting checks before being appointed as British ambassador to Washington, members of Keir Starmer’s cabinet, who were scattered around the world on government business, were caught by the same element of surprise.In Washington for the spring meeting of the International Monetary Fund, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, had just come out of a meeting with the Ukrainian finance minister when she was told the breaking news.“I didn’t know anything about the vetting process,” she told reporters. “I’m the chancellor, I’m not the foreign secretary and I’m not 10 Downing Street, so I can’t give you any more information on that.”David Lammy, the deputy prime minister, was on a military flight back from the Middle East when he was summoned to the cockpit by the captain who told him that No 10 needed to speak to him over the radio

1 day ago
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Green MP: Labour caricatures working-class people over greyhound racing

Labour is “offensively caricaturing” working-class people by saying they do not want a greyhound racing ban in England, the Green party MP Hannah Spencer has said.The sport has traditionally been associated with working-class culture and has historically been popular in so-called red wall areas, which Labour insiders suggest is part of the reason why there are no plans for England to follow bans announced last month in Scotland and Wales.The culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, said in parliament on Thursday that the gambling industry “brings joy to a lot of people”. She said: “The industry as a whole brings positive benefits to the United Kingdom.”Spencer, who won the Gorton and Denton byelection in February and has four rescue greyhounds, said: “Lisa Nandy just continuously offends people by saying that working-class people don’t care about dogs or each other

1 day ago
societySee all
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‘Labels protect us’: Olivia Nervo wants reproductive coercion to be a standalone offence – she is not alone

1 day ago
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Three meningitis B cases confirmed in Dorset as young people offered vaccines

2 days ago
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Centrepoint to cut ties with Sharon Osbourne after she backs Tommy Robinson rally

2 days ago
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Aysha Raza obituary

3 days ago
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Tell us: have you ever been concerned about the behaviour of a child you know?

3 days ago
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Future of the NHS, saviour of the high street? High hopes for health hub in a Barnsley shopping centre

4 days ago