Scrub (styled as [scrubs] ) is an American television comedy television drama series created by Bill Lawrence that aired on 2 October 2001, until March 17, 2010, on NBC and then ABC. The series follows the lives of employees at the fictitious Teachings of the Sacred Heart Hospital. The title is a surgical scrub game and a term for low-ranking people because at the beginning of the series, most of the main characters are medical surgeons.
The series is fast-paced, with slapstick and surreal sketches mostly presented as daydreams of central figures. John "J.D." Dorian, played by Zach Braff. The main actor for all except the last season consists of Braff, Sarah Chalke, Donald Faison, Neil Flynn, Ken Jenkins, John C. McGinley, and Judy Reyes. The series features several guest appearances by movie actors, such as Brendan Fraser, Heather Graham, and Colin Farrell.
Although the eighth season of "My Finale" was conceived and filmed as the final series, the show finally rebooted for the ninth season, with the arrangement of a move to medical school, and a new cast member was introduced. Of the original players, only Braff, Faison, and McGinley remain regular cast members, while others, with the exception of Reyes, make guest appearances; Kerry BishÃÆ'à ©, Eliza Coupe, Dave Franco, and Michael Mosley became fixed series, with BishÃÆ' à © becoming the new narrator of the event.
Scrubs , produced by the television production division of the Disney-ABC Television Group, aired on October 2, 2001, on NBC. The series received a Peabody Award in 2006. During the seventh season, NBC announced that it would not update the show; ABC announced it has taken its eighth season of the series, which begins January 6, 2009. The ninth season aired on December 1, 2009, and on May 14, 2010, ABC formally canceled the series.
Video Scrubs (TV series)
Ikhtisar
Scrubs focuses on the unique viewpoint of the main character and the narrator, Dr. John Michael "J.D." Dorian (Zach Braff) for the first eight seasons, with a nine season narrated by new key character Lucy Bennett (Kerry BishÃÆ'à ©). Most episodes feature theatrical links that are linked thematically to Braff's voice-overs, as well as the cute reverie of JD According to Bill Lawrence, "What we decide, rather than being a monotonous narrative, if it will belong to Zach's voice, we will doing it all through JD's eyes. "It opens up a visual medium for us as a comedy writer unaccustomed to." The actor was given the opportunity to improvise their line set with encouragement by Bill Lawrence series creator, with Neil Flynn and Zach Braff being the main dissidents.
Almost every episode title for the first eight seasons begins with the word "I". Bill Lawrence says this because every episode is Dr. John Dorian who wrote in his diary (revealed in a comment on the DVD episode of the first season "My Hero"). Some episodes are told from the perspective of other characters and have episode titles like "His Story" or "Her Story". Regardless of the short period of narration of the J.D. at the beginning and end, these episodes primarily contain an internal narrative of characters other than J.D. The transfer of narrative tasks usually occurs during physical contact between two characters. Beginning with the season of nine, the episode title begins with "Our..." as the focus has shifted from the perspective of J.D. to a group of new medical students. The webisodes that accompany season eight, Scrubs: Interns , are also named "Our...".
Maps Scrubs (TV series)
Transmission and character
The first season introduces John Michael "J.D." Dorian and his best friend Christopher Turk in their first year out of medical school as an apprentice at the Sacred Heart Hospital. J.D. met his reluctant mentor. Perry Cox; an attractive apprentice named Elliot, where he developed a crush; the hospital cleaning staff, who went out of his way to make a living J.D. difficult; Head of Medicine Dr. Bob Kelso, who is more concerned about the budget than the patient; and Carla Espinosa, the head nurse who eventually became Turk's girlfriend. The characters are facing issues of romance and relationships, family obligations, extraordinary documents, long turnover, dealing with patient deaths and conflicting pressures from senior doctors.
The second season follows the second year of practice J.D. in the Sacred Heart where Elliot, Turk, and he are now residents. As the season progressed, money issues affected the three of them, especially Elliot, whose father cut him off and JD's brother. And (Tom Cavanagh) came to visit, as did Turk's brother, Kevin (D.L. Hughley). The second season focuses on the romantic relationship of the main character: Turk proposes to hesitant Carla, who has doubts about whether Turk is mature enough, Elliot is dating the nurse Paul Flowers (Rick Schroder), Dr. Cox dated pharmacy rep Julie (Heather Locklear) before reigniting a relationship with his ex-wife, Jordan (Christa Miller). J.D., meanwhile, tried to connect with Elliot, and then fell in love with Jamie (Amy Smart), the wife of one of the coma patients.
When the third season opens, Elliot decides to change his image with help from Janitor. JD's unfulfilled interest in Elliot reappears, but J.D. instead began a relationship with Jordan's sister Danni (Tara Reid), who also dealt with feelings for his ex. Turk and Carla are involved and planning their marriage. Turk, along with Todd and other operating residents, was dealing with the new surgeon Dr. Grace Miller (Bellamy Young), who disliked Turk and considered her sexist. Dr. Cox and Jordan are fine with their relationship and their son, Jack, though Dr. Cox develops a schoolboy that yearns for Dr. Miller. He also fought with the death of his best friend. Elliot had a serious relationship with Sean Kelly (Scott Foley) and tried to maintain a long-distance relationship when he was in New Zealand for six months. J.D. finally convinces Elliot to break up with Sean to date him, only to realize, once he has it, that he does not really love her. Their relationship lasted for three days. The season ends with the marriage of Turk and Carla, who disappeared by Turk because of surgery and jumbled church.
In the fourth season, J.D. completed his residency and became Dr. Cox, although their dynamics have not changed much. When the season opens, Turk arrives from his honeymoon with Carla, but they soon start having problems when Carla tries to change things about her new husband. Their marriage and Turkish friendship with J.D. experience friction when J.D. and Carla shared a drunken kiss. Dr. Cox and Jordan know that their divorce is not final, but this is not necessarily all good news. Elliot is still angry with J.D. for having broken his heart, and the situation became more uncomfortable when he was dating JD's brother. J.D has a new love interest when a new psychiatrist and very interesting, Dr. Molly Clock (Heather Graham), arrives at the Sacred Heart. Molly also served as Elliot's mentor during her time at the hospital.
Season five starts with J.D. stay in the hotel, resolve the apartment issue. Elliot has taken a new fellowship at another hospital. Turk and Carla are trying to have babies, though Turk still has doubts. Finally, a new apprenticeship has arrived at the Sacred Heart, among them is Keith Dudemeister (Travis Schuldt), who soon becomes Elliot's new boyfriend, much to JD's discontent. J.D. playing a role as a dad's candidate, finding out at the end of the season that his girlfriend, Dr. Kim Briggs (Elizabeth Banks), was pregnant with her child.
The sixth season has a J.D. and other mature characters to fill the different roles required of them. Turk and Carla became parents when Carla gave birth to their daughter, Isabella. Elliot planned his marriage with Keith, though JD. and he still keeps each other's feelings. Dr. Cox, as the father of two children with Jordan, struggles to prevent his rotten tendencies from affecting his care.
In season seven, JD. and Elliot fights once more to deny their feelings to each other, even though Elliot will soon marry Keith and J.D. to have his first son with Kim, while the Janitor may have a new girlfriend. Bob Kelso's work was made a line when he was 65 years old. Brother J.D. And also back to town.
Eighth season has a successor. Kelso, Dr. Taylor Maddox (Courteney Cox), arrives; he quickly made many changes, influencing the way doctors treat patients. Elliot and J.D. finally discussing their true feelings for each other and returning to the couple. Janitor and Lady (Kit Pongetti) were married, while Dr. Cox was promoted to head of medication to replace Dr. Maddox, with some encouragement from Dr. Kelso. Dr. Kelso and Dr. Cox became friends and J.D. preparing to leave the Sacred Heart to move closer to his son, with Elliot. Turk was promoted to head of operations at Sacred Heart.
Coinciding with the eighth season, the webisode series Scrubs: Interns was launched, focusing around the eighth medical apprenticeship season, Sonja "Sunny" Dey (Sonal Shah), Denise (Eliza Coupe), Katie (Betsy Beutler), and Howie (Todd Bosley). The interns learn from the various characters of the show about life in the hospital.
The ninth season lasted more than a year after the eight season finale. The old Sacred Heart hospital has been torn down and rebuilt. Doctors Cox, Dorian, and Turk are now professors of Winston University's medical school whose students sometimes spin through the new Heart. Between the end of season eight and the beginning of season nine, the Supervisor has left the hospital after being told that J.D. not back, and Elliot and J.D. married and expecting their first child. Stay J.D. at the university was short and he left the series after six episodes, reappearing in episode 9, "Our Stuff Gets Real", as a secondary character. Kelso's wife died and Ted left the Sacred Heart to travel around the US with his girlfriend.
Production
The origins of this event are loosely based on Dr.'s experience. Jonathan Doris as a resident in internal medicine at Brown Medical School, who serves as an inspiration to college buddies and the makers of Bill Lawrence's show.
Scrubs are produced by ABC, through its production division, although broadcast by NBC. According to Lawrence show runner, the arrangement is unusual, at least for 2007: "The show is a dinosaur, on one network and wholly owned by another" and, now in syndication, makes "tons of money for Touchstone." Lawrence asserts ABC will broadcast seventh season if NBC refuses to do so.
Title sequence
Chest x-rays displayed at the end of the title sequence are hung backwards for most of the first five seasons. Lawrence has stated that having a backward X-ray is deliberate because it signifies that a new intern is inexperienced. During Zach Braff's audio commentary on "My Last Chance", he declared that the error was actually unintentional. The error became rather popular and even parodied in "My Cabbage".
Attempts were made to correct errors in an extended title sequence used at the start of season two that included Neil Flynn, but the extended sequence (including X-ray corrected) was immediately canceled due to fan and network demand. Finally, in "My Urologist", Dr. Kim Briggs stepped into credit and turned the X-ray around him, saying, "That's upside down; it has been bothering me for years". At the start of the eight season, when the series switched to ABC, the chest X-ray once again retreated.
The ninth season featured a new title sequence with a new version of the "Superman" theme song performed by WAZ. This new title sequence features four new characters - Denise, Lucy, Drew, and Cole, as well as Dr. Cox and Turk, while JD looks at the end of placing a chest X-ray. In all the nine season episodes that do not feature JD., he is absent from the title sequence and Lucy is the one who puts the X-ray. The X-ray at the end of the sequence also does not retreat and the subtitle "Med School" appears at the end of the sequence.
Main crew
The creator of the show, Bill Lawrence, is also an executive producer and event host. She wrote 14 episodes and directed 17. Neil Goldman and Garrett Donovan co-wrote 13 episodes during the eight-year running of the event, starting as a co-producer at the show and ending as executive producer; they left the show after the eighth season. Mike Schwartz, who also plays Lloyd the Delivery Guy, writes 13 episodes during the first eight seasons; He started as a story editor and became a co-executive producer in season six. Janae Bakken and Debra Fordham were writers and producers for the first eight seasons, each writing 16 episodes. Other famous writers who started in the first season included Mark Stegemann, who wrote 14 episodes and directed two episodes during the first eight seasons; Gabrielle Allan, who wrote 11 episodes during the first four seasons and is a co-executive producer; Eric Weinberg, who wrote 11 episodes for the first six seasons and was a co-executive producer; Matt Tarses, who wrote eight episodes during the first four seasons and is a co-executive producer. Famous authors who joined in the second season included Tim Hobert, who wrote 11 episodes from season two to six, and became executive producer in season five. Angela Nissel wrote 10 episodes from season two to eight, started as a staff writer and became a supervisor producer in season seven. Bill Callahan joins the show in season four, writes eight episodes of the four to eight seasons; he became an executive producer in season six.
Adam Bernstein, who directed the pilot episode, "My First Day", also directed 11 episodes to season seven. Michael Spiller directs the most episodes, 20 during the entire series running. Ken Whittingham and Chris Koch direct 12 episodes from season two to nine. Comedian Michael McDonald, who also appeared on the show, directed five episodes. Show stars Zach Braff directed seven episodes of the show, including the 100th episode of "My Way Home", which won the Peabody Award in April 2007. In 2009, Josh Bycel, a writer and watchdog producer for the American animated comedy Dad! , joining the crew as a new executive producer for the ninth season.
Medical advisor
Scrubs the author works with several medical advisors, including doctors Jonathan Doris, Jon Turk, and Dolly Klock. Their names serve as the basis for the names of John Dorian, Chris Turk, and Molly Clock characters (played by Braff, Faison, and Heather Graham, respectively). In the season of eight finale "My Finale", "real JD", Jonathan Doris, made a cameo appearance as a doctor who said "adios" to JD. In addition, the show maker said that every single medical story on the show was handed to them by a real doctor, whose names will then be written into the show. The show never used the real name of the patient, but Lawrence and his authors would make sure the names of the doctors were written into the episodes.
Location of filming and Sacred Heart Hospital
In the show, the Sacred Heart is a teaching hospital downtown located in California. The first eight seasons Scrubs were filmed at a location in North Hollywood Medical Center, a disabled hospital located at 12629 Riverside Drive in North Hollywood, but the location of Sacred Heart Hospital in the fictional world Scrubs left ambiguous. The cast and crew on the show refer to the location as "San DiFrangeles" - a portmanteau of San Diego, San Francisco, and Los Angeles that is meant to cover much of California. In the fourth episode of the season nine, "My Malpractice Decision", Turk's new phone number has an area code of Sacramento 916. For the ninth season, the event was moved to Culver Studios. The building used for the exterior of the new Sacred Heart Hospital is located at the intersection of Ince Boulevard and Lindblade Street in Culver City, California ( 34.023988 à ° N 118.391414 à ° W / 34.023988; -118.391414 ).
WGA network strikes and changes
On November 5, 2007, Writer Guild of America went on strike, putting the production of the seventh season of the event suspended. When the strike starts, only 11 of the Scrubs ' 18 are planned for the seventh season episode to have finished. Lawrence refused to cross any WGA picket line to serve every task for the show, so ABC Studios had a non-WGA member complete episode 12, which the studio did not manage to suppress Lawrence to rewrite it as the final series before the strike.
During the strike, NBC announced that Office and Scrubs will be replaced by Celebrity Apprentice. NBC then announced that they would leave Scrubs on hiatus for a while and charge 8-9 pm timeslots with various specials and repetitions.
Episode 11, "My Princess", was eventually filmed, though Lawrence was not there. The making of episode 11 is interrupted by picketers. It is believed that Lawrence gave instructions on the filming schedule, although this belief was wrong because Lawrence quickly went to the set to "keep the peace". After the strike ended, Lawrence announced that the final episode of Scrubs would be produced, though at the time, he was not sure where or how they would be distributed.
Switch to ABC
Amid the doubts caused by a strike involving the final episode of Scrubs , on February 28, 2008, The Hollywood Reporter reported that ABC was in talks with a sister company ABC Studio for the purpose of bringing < i> Scrubs to ABC for the eighth season of 18 episodes, despite Lawrence and Braff protests that the seventh season will surely be the last. Hours later, Variety reported that NBC whipped and threatened legal action against ABC Studios. McGinley confirmed that he had been told to report back to work on March 24, 2008, to start production for another season. On March 12, 2008, McGinley was also quoted as saying that the old gossiped move from NBC to ABC was a deal made, and that Scrubs will be aired on ABC during the 2008-09 TV season as a substitute for midseason.
On March 19, 2008, Michael Ausiello of TV Guide reported that although there is no "official", the players Scrubs will report back to work on the next Wednesday to work on the season "unofficial" yet. Zach Braff posted on his blog on MySpace, on April 28, 2008, that the eighth season of 18 episodes is in production, but he can not say where the episode will be aired. He then stated, on May 7, 2008, that the May 8th episode will be the last episode of NBC-broadcast Scrubs, followed by a bulletin on his MySpace on May 12, confirming that Scrubs ' eighth season will be moved to ABC.
Season eight
On May 13, 2008, ABC announced that Scrubs would be a substitute for midseason, airing late Tuesday night at 9 pm EST. Steve McPherson, ABC Entertainment President, also stated that the additional season of Scrubs beyond the eighth can be produced if the performance is good. At the end of November, ABC announced Scrubs will continue with a back-to-back episode on January 6, 2009, at 21:00 EST.
Creator Bill Lawrence described the eighth season as more like the tone of the first few seasons, with increased focus on a more realistic storyline, accompanied by the introduction of new characters. Courteney Cox joins the cast as new head of medicine, Dr. Maddox, for a three-episode arc. The eighth season includes webisodes and is the first season broadcast Scrubs that are broadcast in high definition.
Sarah Chalke hopes JD and Elliot will come back together, comparing it to Ross's and Rachel's "Friends" friends, who have been discussed several times on the show. At the beginning of this season episode, they revived their relationship, and continue dating until the end of the season. Some of the actors who became guest stars as patients in the Sacred Heart during the Scrubs process returned for the final.
The final eight seasons, "My Finale", aired May 6, 2009, and are expected to be the final series, as well. However, it soon became clear that the show would be back for the ninth season.
Season nine
On April 16, 2009, Bill Lawrence wrote on the ABC.com message board that nine seasons of Scrubs are still "50/50". On April 28, it was announced that ABC was in talks to update Scrubs for another year.
Bill Lawrence also states that Scrubs is over, for an event to move forward with a new player in the ER
On June 19, 2009, it was announced that the ninth season Scrubs would "shift from hospital to classroom and create high school professors from John C. McGinley's Dr. Cox and Donald Faison Turk." According to Lawrence, the ninth season will be "very similar to Paper Chase as a comedy", with Cox and Turk students sometimes spinning through the Sacred Heart passageways and meeting former permanent customers. McGinley and Faison join the "quartet of newbies (mostly of them playing students)" as regular regulars, while one of the new students "gets pretty famous".
Of the seven actors who have appeared on the show since the pilot, only Faison and McGinley have retained their role as regular customers. Zach Braff returned part-time and missed for much of the season, while still leading the billing for six episodes. Sarah Chalke returns for four episodes as a guest star; Ken Jenkins, credited as a guest star, appeared in nine of 13 episodes; Neil Flynn appeared at the season premiere in a short cameo; Judy Reyes is the only former star who does not return to the show. In an interview on the YouTube series Made Man, John C. McGinley stated that the reason for some players who do not return is because they demand a higher salary. Although, he did not confirm who the cast was, he mentioned that the original two players made said the request, therefore, they were not brought back.
New leads include Eliza Coupe returning to the recurrent role of Denise "Jo" Mahoney from season eight, Dave Franco as Cole, a stunning, self-absorbed, stupid, self-confident medical student whose family donates money to build school Kerry Bisha © Lucy, who shared a starring role with Braff at the start of the season and eventually became the new narrator of the event, and Michael Mosley as Drew, a 30-year-old medical student on his last attempt at school.
Production for last season took place at Culver Studios.
Cancellation
On May 14, 2010, it was officially announced that the show was canceled. The nine-season finale, titled "Our Thanks", aired March 17, 2010. Five days later, on March 22, 2010, Zach Braff announced, through the official Facebook page, that the ninth season Scrubs would be the last, that, "Many of you are asking, so here it is: it seems that 'New Scrubs', 'Scrubs 2.0', 'Scrubs with New Kids', 'Scrubbier', 'Scrubs without JD' are no more.... it did not work. "
Crossover
Zach Braff, Sarah Chalke, Judy Reyes, John C. McGinley, and Neil Flynn modeled their roles as JD, Elliot Reid, Carla Espinosa, Perry Cox and the Janitor to make a cameo appearance in the 2003 Muppets movie It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie , trying to revive Miss Piggy. Finally, Piggy and Scrubs threw away the fourth wall, with the actors describing themselves and Bill Lawrence appearing as himself/director of the current episode.
Sam Lloyd imitated his role as Ted Buckland in the season two finals of the Lawrence Cinematography and submission formats
This event is taken with one and not a multi-camera setting that is more typical for sitcoms. The Four Seasons episode of "My Life in Four Cameras", has a short multi-camera style, as it includes a J.D. about life that is more like a traditional sitcom.
John Inwood, the cinematographer of this series, recorded this series with Super XTR Aaton XTR movie camera himself. Despite the fact that some broadcasters, like the BBC, regard Super 16 as a "non-HD" format, John Inwood believes that the recording of his camera is not just enough to air in high definition, but also "looks great."
Except for the fifth season finale, "My Transition", broadcast in high definition, the first seven seasons of the event have been broadcast in standard definition with a 4: 3 frame aspect ratio. After the event was moved from NBC to ABC, the broadcast format for the new episode was changed to high definition. John Inwood argues that older episodes can be relaunched in HD, as well. From the outset, he filmed the show with a widescreen delivery in mind so the whole series can be aired in high definition when the market evolves.
Nine seasons have been released in 4: 3 DVD format. However, the eighth season is also released on Blu-ray Disc in the original widescreen format.
Music
Music plays a big part in Scrubs . A variety of rock, pop and indie artists are featured, and almost every episode ends with a music montage that encapsulates the theme and flow of the episode, and the music for this montage is often taken even before the episode is actually written.
The cast and crew members are encouraged to contribute song suggestions, with many ideas coming from Bill Lawrence series creator, author Neil Goldman, and actor Zach Braff (whose college friend Cary Brothers and Joshua Radin appear on the Scrubs soundtrack) and Christa Miller (who chose Colin Hay and Tammany Hall NYC). According to Lawrence, "Christa chose so much music for the show that so many writers and actors do not even go to me again when they have a song they hand it to him."
The main songs in the original broadcast appear unchanged in the event DVD release. However, some songs are replaced in versions accessible via streaming services such as Netflix and Hulu due to licensing issues.
In addition to the music that is featured as the soundtrack for the show, the performers also often sing, as in the episode "My Best Friend's Mistake" when all players have the Erasure song "A Little Respect" stuck in their head and will sing it repeatedly. Producers expanded the music scrubs with music episodes awarded early in the sixth season, called "My Musical". This episode aired on January 18, 2007.
Theme song
The theme song of the series, performed by Lazlo Bane, is titled "Superman", and can be found on the album All the Time in the World , as well as on the Scrubs first soundtrack. Lawrence praised Braff for discovering and suggesting "Superman" as the theme song, with the special lyrics "I'm not Superman" that serves as a reference to the error of the main character.
The Scrubs main title is done at a faster tempo than the original recording of the song. Original recordings, slower used briefly at the beginning of season two, were played during an extended version of the title sequence, as well as the opening for "My Urologist", and special edits of the title sequence to produce approximately 1 to 2 seconds of music, followed by the " I'm not Superman ", accompanied by a quick glance of credit. The original introduction of season one is used through most of the season three and then used for seasons four through eight. Beginning with the ninth season, a new version of "Superman" is used by WAZ.
Soundtracks
Three official soundtracks have been released. The first soundtrack, Music From Scrubs , was released on CD on September 24, 2002. The second soundtrack, Scrubs Original Soundtrack Vol. 2 , was released exclusively on iTunes on May 9, 2006. The third soundtrack, "My Musical" Soundtrack , displays music composed and displayed in the music episode "My Musical"; released on Amazon.com and iTunes on August 7, 2007.
Featured music contributors
Colin Hay, former frontman of Men at Work, has had music featured in at least seven episodes, and has appeared in the episode "My Overkill", performed "Overkill" as a street musician, and in the episode "My Hard Labor" performs "Down Under ". Hay also sings "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", themes from Cheers , in the episode "My Life in Four Cameras" and episode "My Philosophy" featuring Hay "Waiting For My Real Life To Start" sung by several cast members. He also appeared on "My Finale".
The music of Joshua Radin, who is a star friend of Scrubs, Zach Braff, appeared in six episodes.
Music by Keren DeBerg has been featured in 15 episodes, and she appeared in "My Musical" as an addition to the song "All Right".
Clay Aiken muncul di episode "My Life in Four Cameras" dan membawakan lagu "Isn't She Lovely?" oleh Stevie Wonder.
The Worthless Peons
The Worthless Peons (also known as Ted's Band, The Blanks, or at Cut Director of "My Way Home", as "Foghat") is a cappella group consisting of Sacred Heart hospital employees from various departments. They are cover bands, and often sing a song of a certain genre (eg, cartoon theme song or commercial jingle).
The Worthless Peons are played by The Blanks, a real live band of a cappella consisting of Sam Lloyd (who plays Ted), George Miserlis, Paul F. Perry, and Philip McNiven. Blanks' album, Riding the Wave , features guest appearances from Lawrence and cast members Scrubs . The band was put on the show when Sam Lloyd brought his band a cappella to the Scrubs cast a Christmas party. Lloyd told Lawrence about his band, and Lawrence got the idea to put him in the show.
The Worthless Peons also sang the theme song for the web series of Scrubs: Interns, which featured new interns from the eight seasons learning about the hospital in the same way as JD did in the first season. The apprentice is displayed on the ABC website.
Reception
Critical reception
First eight seasons
Throughout the process initially, Scrubs got critical acclaim, with many critics praising its players, its character, and its humor (especially a collection of JD fantasy). In 2006, Entertainment Weekly 'Website , EW.com gave the entire series (reviews made earlier after the fifth-season premiere) with "A-" levels, with the author saying " Scrubs is the toughest comedy on TV [...] The fun, daffy, buoyant series that will be a big mess if not done right, Scrubs very agile ". IGN gave the first season a perfect score of 10. The next seven seasons were rated, respectively, 9, 9, 9, 8, 7.5, 8.3 and 7.5.
Common Sense Media, which mainly reviews the series in terms of violence, sex, and indecent words, gives positive reviews of Scrubs and gives it 4 of 5 stars despite rating "Sex," "Language" and "Drinking, drugs, & smoking" 3 out of 5, stating "this event can be very funny but very adult oriented". The Truth About Nursing, which examines the realism of the medical series, gives Scrubs "Nursing rankings" of 1.5 of 4 stars, but the "Artistic Rank" of 3 of 4 stars, praises that " evil and surrealist, his character is not above learning or growing up, because they are trying to cope with the very real stresses of life and death in the hospital. " However, the reviewer stated, "Nursing show show has been less impressive".
Metacritic aggregate reviews only give the average score for the eighth and ninth seasons, with the eighth season with a score of 79/100, based on only four reviews (all positive), indicating a "favorable overview".
Ninth season
The ninth and final seasons receive mixed reviews, with many critics criticizing new players; it received a 64/100 score on Metacritic, showing "Generally favorable reviews". An IGN editor gave it a positive score of 7 out of 10, stating "although this is not the best season, I will always have fond memories of the show".
Merciful USA Today Robert Bianco wrote a negative review, stating "The result is a deadly mistake, driven by a deal that takes a network that has made the sitcom big step forward one unprofitable step back". He also noted that the presence of some original cast members (Braff, Faison, and John C. McGinley) "only makes it harder for new characters to hold" (despite his additional criticism of Braff's performance). Blogcritics gave it mixed reviews, criticized new players, but praised the show by original cast members.
Awards and nominations
Scrubs received 17 Emmy nominations, in categories such as casting, cinematography, directing, editing, and writing, winning just two. His fourth season won the first nomination series for Outstanding Comedy Series. Zach Braff was also nominated that year for Best Actor in a Comedy Series. The series was nominated again the following year for Outstanding Comedy Series. At the 59th Anniversary Emmy Awards, the episode "My Musical" was nominated for five awards in four categories: Outstanding Directing for Comedy Series (Will Mackenzie), Extraordinary Music Direction (Jan Stevens) and Extraordinary Original Music and Lyrics ("Everything is Coming Down to Poo "and" Guy Love "); while sharing awards for Exceptional Sound Mixing for Comedy Series or Drama (Half Hour) and Animation (Joe Foglia, Peter J. Nusbaum, and John W. Cook II) with Entourage .
Braff was nominated for a Golden Globe award for Best Actor in a TV, Comedy or Music Series in 2005, 2006, and 2007.
The event won the Humanity Prize of 2002, 2008 and 2009, an award made to honor human dignity, meaning, and freedom. It also won the Peabody Award.
Reference
External links
- Scrubs in IMDb
- Scrubs on TV.com
- Scrubs on Disney-ABC Domestic Television
Source of the article : Wikipedia