Image via Warrick Page / ©HBO MAX/ Courtesy Everett Collection
By
Carolyn Jenkins
Published Jan 30, 2026, 8:15 PM EST
Rotten Tomatoes | Letterboxd | Metacritic
Carolyn Jenkins is a voracious consumer of film and television. She graduated from Long Island University with an MFA in Screenwriting and Producing where she learned the art of character, plot, and structure. The best teacher is absorbing media and she spends her time reading about different worlds from teen angst to the universe of Stephen King.
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Editor's Note: The following contains spoilers for The Pitt, Season 2, Episode 4
For weeks, fans have been worried about Dr. Robby’s (Noah Wyle) state of mind in The Pitt. After the principled ER doctor’s trauma resurfaced in Season 1, Robby returns and appears to be calling for help in one way or another. The opening scene shows him riding on a new motorcycle without a helmet, a fact that the staff is quick to note. As ER doctors, they see motorcycle crashes every day and know the risks. Robby also knows the risks, but is deliberately ignoring them. He goes so far as to lie to his coworkers and assure them that he wears a helmet even though the audience has seen that he doesn’t.
Season 2, Episode 4, “10 A.M.,” pushes this idea even further with the recurring character, Dr. Caleb Jefferson (Christopher Thornton). The two have a friendly rapport, with the doctor even calling Robby “Michael,” an honor seldom granted. In this episode, Caleb notes that Robby has been avoiding him, and it soon becomes all too clear as to why. Caleb is pushing for his friend and coworker go to therapy, even though Robby seems to be resistant to.
Dr. Robby Is Exhibiting Increasingly Startling Behavior
At the end of Season 1, Dr. Abbott (Shawn Hatosy) offers the services of a good therapist to Robby. He understands the turmoil that his coworker is going through, even if the job doesn’t allow for vulnerability. Evidently, Robby tried therapy but didn’t connect with the therapists he found. Even more concerning, he tells Caleb he is only interested in “zoom therapy,” which translates to the motorcycle sabbatical he plans to take.
Caleb doesn’t approve, and neither should the audience. This is just another terrifying hint as to what is to come for the doctor. He has been riding too close to the edge for too long, and someone needs to step in. Robby hasn’t just been getting warnings from concerned friends. Last week, a patient dismissed his plans to go on a motorcycle trip, suggesting Robby was going through a midlife crisis. Noah Wyle addressed where Robby’s head was at in a recent interview.
“He’s not really practicing what he preaches. He’s advocating that his staff make full use of all the mental health resources available. But he’s not buying in completely himself. He’s kind of curated a whole other kind of plan for himself and the restoration of this whole motorcycle and this romantic, slightly literary, slightly utopian trip that he’s planning to go on and get his head clear. And as the season progresses, we begin to call into question the motivations for this trip, the details of this trip, and begin to realize that it’s more of an escapist voyage than it is a voyage of self-discovery.”
Wyle also explained that it can be hard for doctors to sit in the patient's chair. This was established last season when a patient physically assaulted Dana (Katherine LaNasa). Even though she could have had a concussion, she refused to go home and barely let anyone take a look at her. Robby is also refusing to take care of himself, but in a more extreme way. His obvious struggles have to reach a boiling point sooner or later. Typical of The Pitt, it is likely to be sooner and with a large audience.
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The Pitt
Like Follow Followed TV-MA Drama Release Date January 9, 2025 Network Max Showrunner R. Scott Gemmill Directors Amanda Marsalis Writers Joe Sachs, Cynthia AdarkwaCast
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Noah Wyle
Dr. Michael 'Robby' Robinavitch
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Tracy Ifeachor
Dr. Heather Collins
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