The Pitt is finally available to stream in the UK on HBO Max — be ready for the unmissable ‘mass casualty trauma’ you need to catch up with
March 26 marks the long-awaited launch of HBO Max UK, finally bringing emergency room smash The Pitt to British fans. It’s the only major continuing HBO show viewers across the pond haven’t had access to — except for me, who’s 14-month long streak of smugness finally comes to and end.
When I tell you that The Pitt is one of the best TV shows of the last decade, and I’m not exaggerating. With each season’s 15-episode arc covering a single shift, the tension (and most patients) can be cut with a knife. Our group of medics become more agitated by the second, unable to cope with the increasing hospital demand sprawling onto any empty space.
Without giving anything away, you’re going to have your brains blown out by the first season alone.The Pitt season 2 is also ready to stream, so we’re completely caught up with the US.
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However, it wouldn’t have mattered much if this wasn’t the case. In fact, I asked one of its cast members to explain why you’re in for such an unmissable treat, and now I want to rewatch it all from the very start.
‘It’s been about getting over the PTSD that comes with mass casualty’
Fiona Dourif plays Cassie McKay, resident physician whose former addiction issues led to losing custody of her son. We learn more about this as season 1 progresses, but her natural warmth and empathy makes her one of the most essential members of the ER team.
Up until now, Dourif’s managed to maintain Pitt-related anonymity across the pond. “I’m shooting a movie in Ireland right now, and it’s the place where I can wear all of The Pitt gear they give you when you work on the show,” she tells me. “It’s too embarrassing to wear it in America. So when I go over to your guys’ side of the pond, I’m decked out and Pitt stuff because nobody’s seen it. Nobody knows what it is.”
Until now. Cassie is one of our B-storylines in The Pitt season 1, and she rarely gets lost in the chaos. You’re going to be seeing a lot of her, but what’s going on in Cassie’s mind?
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“For most of the characters, is about getting over this, trauma, for lack of a better word, or PTSD of going through a mass casualty,” she explains. “I think a lot of doctors really do struggle to be around that amount of death.
For Cassie, because her journey to become a doctor has been a lot, there’s been a lot more left turns than the other characters. As things progress, it’s almost a little more about self actualizing, like thinking about what’s missing in her personal life, what she really wants.”
Cassie is just one example of how beautifully The Pitt blends personal and professional disarray into one jaw-dropping mess you can’t tear your eyes away from. It’ll all move faster than the speed of light, and you’ll be fully swept along for the ride.
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March 26 marks the long-awaited launch of HBO Max UK, finally bringing emergency room smash The Pitt to British fans. It’s the only major continuing HBO show viewers across the pond haven’t had access to — except for me, who’s 14-month long streak of smugness finally comes to and end.…
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