Kevin Casey, Fox is a fiercely gifted physician who everyone at Sacred Heart either admires or despises. That puts pressure on the J. Cox mentorship, but this episode is more notable for the way that Casey helps Elliot. Joshua Radin's heartbreaking song "Winter. McGinley's first unraveling. It's all here in this two-parter that features the death of the show's most beloved recurring guest star.
It draws Perry and Jordan closer together, and it's a professional step forward for J. There's really not much more to say than to note that this is the emotional peak of the series. It never reached this kind of perfection ever again, though it came close on multiple occasions. Season 4: Episode 6, "My Cake" For a show that is so focused on comedy, Scrubs sure knew how to deal with death better than most of television.
In the aftermath of John Ritter's death, Lawrence and his staff decided not to recast J. Perry is always a paternal figure to J. But in terms of comedy, this is a notable episode for featuring The Blanks, the a cappella group made up of timid lawyer Ted and his buddies, facing off against Hibbleton, the Janitor's hastily assembled group that manages to shock with a rendition of The Beach Boys' "Barbara Ann.
Season 5: Episode 21, "My Fallen Idol" In the back half of the show's run, it was dependable for one big emotional peak each season. In this one, right after Jill Tracy dies suddenly, Dr. Cox gives her organs to three patients, who then all die when it's discovered Tracy had rabies. It is Dr. Cox at his most professionally reckless. Everyone else rallies around to try and lift Perry's spirits, but J. In retrospect it's not pleasant to recall that throughout the entire series Dr.
Cox calls J. It's tough to pick episodes for Carla that aren't rooted in how she functions in relation to J. Cox's ego and Kelso's Scrooge-like tendencies.
But here, as she says goodbye to Laverne Roberts—left unresponsive in a coma after an accident—allows Reyes a featured moment to herself where she carries the dramatic weight. And in tying up a bunch of loose ends, the biggest question mark to deal with was always going to be J. At this point, J. Their frank conversation about the trials and tribulations of years on the romantic rollercoaster finds a way to acknowledge their youthful mistakes—especially J.
For an inevitable ending, it's somewhat astounding how much the show manages to earn it as the right one in the span of a final season. Season 8: Episodes , "My Finale" Scrubs is by no means a perfect show, but it got exactly the finale it deserved. Yes, there was a ninth season , but that was different and this is still the finale.
It's full of fan-service send-offs, a delightful final prank on Dr. Cox, and one of the most satisfying tearjerker montages we've ever seen, set to Peter Gabriel's cover of the Magnetic Fields' lovely "The Book Of Love.
There is no surprise when it comes to what the IMDb averages rank as the worst season of Scrubs ; it is the worst season of Scrubs , it had a lot of potential as a spin-off yet awful as the primary Scrubs season and was doomed from episode one, it is, of course, season nine. With Sacred Heart now a medical school and the main cast either gone or taking a back big back seat except for Turk and Cox, the show did have a lot of potential as a premise.
Attaching it to the core eight seasons, though, was a big mistake by the studio, and the limited amount of episodes in the season failed to come close to living up to what Scrubs brought to the table. Season seven understandably falls bottom of the good seasons of Scrubs , with only eleven episodes the season was in production hell due to the writers strike, unproduced episodes, a jumbled order to give the season a satisfying end, and the uncertainty of the show's future.
The fact that the lowest-rated season, by way of the averages, is at 8. Highlights of this season include Kelso's retirement, the birth of little Sam Dorian, and some confusing continuity. The second season of the show is a step down from the premiere season but by a tiny margin. This season served as proof that the first season was not a one-off and that this show had the quality and potential to run for a long time.
Season two dives deep into a lot of characters, with Janitor interacting with other people, Cox's history and relationship with Jordan furthered, and everyone dealing with the series of bombs Jordan dropped at the end of season one. Season 2- Brilliant, hilarious season, with the perfect balance of comedy, drama and relationshippy stuff. Brilliant, brilliant writing.
Season One- The beginning! The greatest first season of any show, it was unique, intriguing, gripping- everything a first season needs to be. Everything about it was funny and interesting, so surreal and brilliant. Then there was also all the darkness with Coxy at the end and it was all just so fabuloso and aaahh! I think I'd actually put it on par with season one. So different, but so amazing. Season Six- Another corker! Some of the story lines were a bit soap opera-y, but the result was that I was on the edge of my seat for the entirety of it, so I suppose that's a good thing.
Hilarious and dramatic, wunderbar. Season 8- Oh this is a good'un! A good'un I tell ye! I spent ninety percent of this season just weeping through every episode, facing the false ending.
I just don't have words for this season. So tragic, so final but not actually , so phenomenal. Haven't cried that much since I came out of the womb and realised I could no longer kick my mother. Season 3- Lovely lil' season. I don't dig the lighting, and it feels flatter than some of the seasons, but it's still a work of absolute genius. Love the Ben and Kevin Casey storylines, amazing performances by both actors. Didn't care for Doctor Miller, but I loved what she brought out in Turk. And the Turla stuff was lovely.
Season 9- It gets so much flak, but I freaking love this season. I love the new kids, yes, even Lucy, I love seeing the people I've worshipped for nine years finally older and proper adults, and I love how fresh and exciting everything is.
I wish from the bottom of my soul that this hadn't been cancelled. I loved it so much. My heart literally bleeds knowing that it was so disrespected and knowing that it shall never continue. And all the things we did for Save Our Scrubs Why didn't it work? Why didn't ABC even give it a chance?
Why didn't the fans even give it a chance? So damned much. Still kills me. I wish Scrubs could just have gone on forever and ever and ever and ever. Season Four- A pretty meh season. I didn't like what became of Elliot, and while Matt Perry and Colin Farrell were great in their appearances, the whole season was one of the weaker ones. It seemed to be too much about characters being brought in, and it was all to hide the fact that the core relationship of the show, JD and Elliot, had been broken down and it meant certain things just didn't work.
Plus it had the disgusting abomination that is My Common Enemy in it. Season 7- Well. This season just never got itself off the ground. It had potential, and there are some magic moments in it, but it felt at times like the show lost sight of what it is.
Also, the WGA strike just screwed this season over big time. It never stood a chance. Doing this reminded me how much I love this show. It really is true: Scrubs is life. To the Scrubs board: it was amazing while it lasted. Find More Posts by tushtush.
Real shame it was canned. Find More Posts by Scrubber. I generally love something about almost every episode.
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