Why Dr. Whitter was the perfect person who helped Dr. Robbie
This article contains discussions about mental health and mass violence.
Stop reading right now that you didn’t look at 20:00, episode 14 “Pete”. Spoilers ahead!
In the episode of the 13 -scale new medical drama Max “Pit” – which, I must clearly, clearly, or no just back “er” and your own unique thing – Dr. Michael “Robina” Robinovich, who played Noah Weil, gets into his border. In one of the most rude and amazing scenes to date (Due to the absolutely stunning performance wile), Robbie brings his surrogate son Jake (Taj Speiths) to see the girlfriend of Jake Leai (Slov Mannin), who was deadly during the mass shooting at the local festival. Jake, overcomes grief, asks Robbie why he did not do it or cannot save the ferment tried it the hardest Despite the fact that the young girl was shot dead in his heart. Robbie starts crying and shaking, pulling Jake with an improvised morgue (this is actually a baby wing ER, making it more sad thanks to the murals behind it) and has a panic attack on the floor next to the gernie holding the body of Leah, and the episode of the end.
Advertisement
When the next episode “20:00” starts, no one can find Robbie to the student -medical -medical -Dennis White (Gerran Howel) to get a blanket for a living patient and find that he recits that he recovers his Jewish prayer in the fetal position. Instead of providing open comfort, the Whitter does exactly what the Robbie needs: he says the trauma that visits that the rest of the doctors are “f ** KED” without working on their side, and sitting with him, gets a blanket he came, and says Robbie that he will see him back on the floor, calling it “captain.” This is the Robbie out of his strong panic attack and returns him to work.
In an interview with Daily BeastHowell and Vail explained why it was so important that the Whitter was the one who found the fight against Robbie. “It was an interesting conversation. Who would find Robbie? It became so clear that we needed to be a friend,” Welle Emma Fraser said in an interview with Howel. “Because you create this experience between the youthful naivety of someone who comes to this environment for the first time, and a very veteran who stands in the world and a combat, which has a combined collapse of all his career, who goes to his shoulders.”
Advertisement
“It seemed that the two heroes met again at the end of the season, after holding this wonderful exchange at the early stage where I was talking about finding a balance,” Welle added (and we were spinning to this “wonderful exchange” for a moment.)