
Scrub up! It's nearly time to return to Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Hospital and reunite with your favorite overworked ER staff. Diehard fans already know that "The Pitt" season 2 is set to premiere on HBO Max in January 2026, and now a new teaser trailer is helping to cushion that months-long wait and give viewers an idea of just what we can expect in the new episodes.
Released by HBO on Thursday, August 21, the minute-long promo is packed with familiar faces, with Noah Wyle's Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch leading the realistic examination of the challenges facing healthcare workers in today’s America. "The prodigal son returns," quips Nurse Dana Evans (Katherine LaNasa) upon Robby's arrival.
Wyle's character is joined by fellow returning physicians including Dr. King (Taylor Dearden), Dr. Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) and, controversially, Dr. Langdon (Patrick Ball) — on his first day back at work after his return from rehab — as well as student docs Dennis Whitaker (Gerran Howell), Trinity Santos (Isa Briones), Victoria Javadi (Shabana Azeez) and a new med student played by Laëtitia Hollard. Season 2 looks to introduce more medical anomalies, legal mess and personal tensions for our Pitt crew.
We also briefly meet new series regular Sepideh Moafi ("Black Bird," "Generation Q: The L Word") and her character Dr. Al-Hashimi, a new attending physician in emergency medicine; she joins the season 2 cast alongside Charles Baker, Irene Choi and Lucas Iverson as recurring characters.
"[Dr. Al-Hashimi's] gonna be someone who's very progressive in her approach to medicine and believes in the modernization of the medical field," showrunner R. Scott Gemmill recently told Entertainment Weekly. "And Robby's a little bit more old school and there'll be a little bit of, let's just say, tension as they try and figure out how to work together."
Gemmill added, "Robby has a very specific way of how he likes to run his emergency department, and Dr. Al-Hashimi has her own specific ways of how she likes to run an emergency department, and they're not necessarily cohesive."
The second season of the critically acclaimed series, which has garnered 13 Emmy® nominations thus far, will have a similar structure as its predecessor: Episodes will play out in "real time" over the course of a 15-hour hospital shift. However, season 2 will see a time jump of 10 months after the events of season 1, taking place over the course of the Fourth of July weekend.
There’s fireworks,” Gemmill previously teased to Vulture. “Somebody doesn’t do so well at a hot-dog-eating contest; somebody’s sunburned. You can see all the cases wandering in.”
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