How the co-star of Noah Wyle, George Clooney, feels for the Pitt

Anyone can Finally relax – George Clooney likes “The Pitt”.
During an appearance on “Late Night With Seth Meyers” on June 3, Clooney – which is nominated for a Tony Award for “Good Night and Good Luck”, the adaptation of Broadway in 2025 of his 2005 film on Edward R. Murrow – Clooney, while discussing both his time on “ER” and the Stade Stage. ” (Wyle, Julianna Marguiles and Anthony Edwards, who were all original “ER” actors, attended the premiere of Clooney Broadway show.)
“Have you seen this show?” Clooney asked the public, who applauded with approval. “It’s so good, and you know, I must say that we have been really dear friends since the show, since we made the pilot of the show,” he added warmly, speaking of Wyle. “He is just the most honorable and talented young man, I can say, because I am an old man. And I cannot be happier for his success in this show. The show is just a beautiful show, and he just does a great job with.”
“And he does what you have exceeded, that is to say that he will go back and do all these medical terms,” ​​said Meyers with playfulness before Clooney reveals that Wyle had never really had any difficulty with the medical jargon on “ER”, where the actor played Dr. John Carter (and Clooney played one of his superiors, Dr. Doug Ross). “But he never had any problems,” recalls Clooney. “He could always do it, I hated him for that. People should hate Noah.” (Closic Clooney.)
“I think we should all,” degenerated Meyers before the two go to a different subject. So what was the problem with the DRS. Carter and Ross on “ER?”
George Clooney and Noah Wyle both obtained their big break on ER – and have become huge stars
George Clooney and Noah Wyle appear in the very first episode of “ER”, which began to be broadcast in 1994 on NBC and became one of the gold standards of medical dramas from this moment. The character of Clooney, Dr. Doug Ross, is a pediatric scholarship holder at the start of the series and finally becomes a participation in this concentration in the emergency department. As for Dr. John Carter de Wyle, he is only a third year student when he presents himself for the first time, as opposed to a full doctor. After registering, however, he rides to be a resident at the Cortea County County Hospital of the show and finally becomes an emergency medicine participation (although he briefly launches into surgery and abandoned him fairly quickly at the start of his residence).
Carter and Ross are, for the most part, friendly colleagues and even good friends at various points through “ER”. Indeed, Carter sometimes crashes in Ross’ apartment, and even if they live a brief schism in their friendship on a girl of season 2 (Harper Tracy of Christine Elise, who deceives Carter with Ross), they are on good terms when Ross (and Clooney with him) leaves Chicago in season 5 of the series.
Later, during the 15th and last season of “ER”, Carter is in the need for a kidney transplant – in season 6 of the show, he stabbed by a patient suffering a mental break, which causes damage to kidney life – and when he receives the kidney, he has no idea that Ross and his organization now for the transplant. Even in last season of the show, in which neither Clooney nor Wyle work as a regular character or even a recurring character, the link between the two seems unshakeable.
The success of the Pitt after season 1 did not stress Noah Wyle (all for the moment)
George Clooney is right-“The Pitt” is really excellent, and after word of mouth helps season 1 to become a feeling of good faith through his 15 episodes “in real time”, the fans are claiming season 2. (He has already been confirmed, and the chief of Hbo Casey Boys has almost promised that we will see a January 2026 panel, after “The Pitt”. – Who plays Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch “and works as an executive producer alongside the showrunner R. Scott Gemmill and the director John Wells, both who Also Worked on “ER”) – said that even if he was a little nervous about high expectations, he is convinced that the show can go up to meet them.
Wyle has precisely said that, with regard to the praise of “The Pitt”, he has the impression that the series needs to close everything and work. “You almost have to make it a non-factor and create the same feeling of intimacy and the same feeling of sealed hermetic and isolated the sense of the company that we built the first year,” Wyle sounded. “I think that if we succeed in this regard, then the narration will simply be unrolled.” He continued:
“It was a combination of a lot of background, leading, crew and casting, hungry to work, eager to work in a way in which they could really sink and feel a goal with a goal. And which had an exponential effect where everyone came to do even better the next day. And I think that with this collective group, we could make it reproduce, delighted that we arrive.”
Wyle certainly has a high bar to meet, but he is right – the cast and the team of “The Pitt” are simply phenomenal, and as long as they continue this show, it will probably be less Quite good, if not great. Hopefully Wyle always liked to hear about the taking of Clooney in the series.
“The Pitt” is in trouble on HBO Max now.




