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Delhi North | Culture

The Pitt Season 2: Still the Best Show on TV

Kripa Malhotra Student Contributor, University of Delhi - North Campus
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Delhi North chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

If you have been on the internet in the last year and a half, you have almost certainly heard of The Pitt. The medical drama that took the world by storm in early 2025, swept the Emmys, and broke the hearts of millions of viewers worldwide is back for its second season. And it is not letting up.

Season 2 of The Pitt picks up 10 months after the chaos of season 1, dropping us off in the ER on the 4th of July. It is statistically one of the most dangerous holidays in the USA, especially for drivers, due to a high amount of traffic, alcohol consumption, and also because of fireworks related injuries. With the hospital operating completely offline due to the threat of a cyber-attack (paperwork by hand, in 2026, the horror. We all relate to you Dr. Santos), a nearby hospital shutting down, flooding our ED with extra patients, and ICE agents crawling the halls, it makes for stunningly gorgeous television. 

Critics are calling it the best show of 2025 and 2026, which is the kind of double year complement that needs to be framed on a wall. Rotten Tomatoes audiences called it “captivating even without the spectacle of Season 1,” and it could not be truer.

What Season 2 trades in spectacle, it more than makes up for in character depth. Without having to establish who everyone is, the writers go in on the inner lives of the doctors and nurses we’ve already fallen for. Dr. Langdon continues to face consequences for his actions back in season 1. Now out of rehab, he hopes to rebuild his relationship with Dr. Robby, while his attempts to do so are thwarted again and again. Dr. King wrestles with depositions, and with juggling a caretaker relationship with her sister, who she feels has left her behind for better things in life, while she was not afforded the same luxury. The beloved Dr. Samira Mohan is left unmoored and unanchored in the wake of her mother setting off on a cruise around the world with her new boyfriend, which is made even worse by the constant antagonistic behavior that Robby displays towards her.

The Robby Problem

Let’s talk about Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch, played by Noah Wyle, who continues to give one of the best performances of the decade. This season, it is apparent right from the get-go – from the first scene even – how much Robby is suffering. His helmet-less approach to life raised a few eyebrows throughout the ED. His depression and suicidal ideation are front and center, manifesting as a controlled implosion. We see this harsher, more reckless, more volatile version of Robby. Particularly towards his female colleagues.

It’s an uncomfortable watch. Which, I assume, is what the exact intention of the writers was. Watching Robby yell and demean Dr. Mohan while she is undergoing a panic attack, something he himself experienced just last season… It made me hate the character just a little bit. But even with all its messiness, the writing is doing something that other medical dramas just haven’t been able to do. It builds the idea that someone can be both deeply unwell and still be held accountable for the harm they cause. 

We see it in the way the other characters in the show consistently question his actions against Dr. Mohan and in the way he apologizes (albeit the apology could definitely have been better) to Dr. Mohan.

The PITT Format Still Slaps

Fifteen episodes. One continuous shift. Real time. No binge-dumping all at once. The Pitt aired weekly, which in the age of Netflix feels… ambitious and rebellious. But it works. The slow-burn of watching the tension pile up and up and up, weekly, for 15 weeks is a glorious experience and genuinely stressful. And it allows fan artists and writers to work up some absolute banger pieces of art. 

Where Season 1 was a sprint to the finish line, Season 2 is an endurance race. And the show makes us work for every mile.

The Fan-Fiction and Fan Art

On a much, much lighter note, The Pitt has inspired countless artists and writers to come out of the woodwork and produce amazing works of art in the form of Fan-Fiction and Fan Art. Hucklerobby and MohAbbot (it literally translates to love in Hindi – oh be still my heart) are the ships that have taken over the internet since the first season and season 2 has only fed the fires it seems. And the actors love it. From Noah Wyle liking Huckrobby pieces of fan art on Instagram to Shawn Hatosy (aka Dr. Abbot) talking about MohAbbot during interviews, the actors are feeding into the frenzy.

Noah Wyle acknowledging the existence of a homosexual relationship involving his character, much less praising it, seems like a dream come true and the fans, me included, are loving it. 

So, Should You Watch It?

Yes. Absolutely yes. If you loved Season 1, Season 2 will not disappoint. It’s just doing a different thing and doing it really well. If you haven’t started yet, what a time to be alive, because both seasons are sitting right there on Max waiting for you. Clear your schedule. Stock up on snacks. Maybe have a comfort show queued up for after, because you will need it.

Kripa Malhotra

Delhi North '26

Kripa Malhotra is a student at Indraprastha College for Women (IPCW), where she is studying Multimedia and Mass Communication. She has always been drawn to media in all its forms and enjoys looking at how stories are told and why certain narratives connect so strongly with audiences. Alongside her academic work, she also has a strong interest in graphic design and enjoys exploring how visuals, layout, and aesthetics shape the way people experience content. Her studies and creative interests often overlap, allowing her to approach media from both an analytical and visual perspective.

Outside the classroom, Kripa spends a lot of time engaging with different kinds of media, from television shows and films to books, video games, and anime. She enjoys thinking about storytelling choices, character arcs, and the small details that make a story memorable. Watching or reading something rarely ends when the credits roll or the last page is turned; she enjoys reflecting on what worked, what didn’t, and how audiences respond to it.

Outside of media and academics, Kripa enjoys cafe hopping, spending slow afternoons discovering new spaces, and collecting rings, a personal habit that has turned into a signature style. She loves wearing a ring on every finger, seeing it as a small form of self-expression. When she’s not working or exploring new ideas, she’s usually unwinding with comfort media and a scoop of blueberry cheesecake ice cream, finding inspiration in the quiet moments between everything else.