Freshman drama “The Pitt,” HBO Max’s hour-by-hour take a look at a day shift inside a Pittsburgh emergency room, gained greatest drama on the 77th Emmy Awards on Sunday night time.
The medical drama entered the night time as a darkish horse contender, with many predicting Apple TV+‘s “Severance” would win the category. “The Pitt” also beat out “The Last of Us” (HBO), “The White Lotus” (HBO), “Andor” (Disney+), “The Diplomat” (Netflix) and “Slow Horses” (Apple TV+).
Series creator R. Scott Gemmill dedicated the win to healthcare and frontline workers and first responders.
“Respect them, protect them, trust them,” he said in his acceptance speech.
The first season of the drama unfolded over 15 gripping episodes that tracked a grueling 15-hour shift in an emergency room to present a realistic portrayal of the challenges healthcare workers face. It brought star and executive producer Noah Wyle back into scrubs 15 years after the end of “ER,” NBC’s long-running medical drama by which he starred as Dr. John Carter, and reunited him with “ER” producers John Wells and Gemmill, its showrunner.
The collection made headlines even earlier than its premiere when the property of Michael Crichton, creator of “ER,” sued Warner Bros., producer of “The Pitt,” arguing it was an unauthorized reboot of the NBC medical drama. In response, Warner Bros. mentioned “The Pitt” will not be a “derivative work” of “ER.” The case remains to be pending.
“The Pitt’s” debut season obtained 13 Emmy nominations, and ended the season with 5 complete wins, together with actor in a drama for Wyle and supporting actress in a drama for Katherine LaNasa.
“The Pitt” will return for a second season in January 2026.