Fresh Air - Best Of: 'The Pitt' Star Noah Wyle / 'Sinners' Director Ryan Coogler
Episode Date: April 26, 2025Oscar-nominated filmmaker Ryan Coogler's movies include both Black Panther films and Creed. His latest fillm, Sinners, is a vampire thriller about twins, both played by Michael B. Jordan, opening a ju...ke joint in 1930s Mississippi. The film explores race, faith, and American history through the lens of horror. Also, Noah Wyle talks about his starring role in the MAX series The Pitt, about life at a Pittsburgh hospital emergency room. He also played a doctor on the long-running hit ER. Plus, contributor Carolina Miranda reviews Laila Lalami's suspenseful new novel, The Dream Hotel.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Listen to Trump's Term terms from NPR. From WHYY in Philadelphia, this is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tanya Mosley. Today, filmmaker
Ryan Coogler. His films include both Black Panther films and Creed. His latest movie,
Sinners, is a vampire thriller about twins, both played by Michael B. Jordan,
opening a juke joint in 1930s Mississippi.
The film explores themes of race, faith,
and American history through the lens of horror.
They gotta be killed one by one.
How the hell do we do that?
Sunlight, I wouldn't stake that on.
Also, Noah Wiley talks with us about his starring role in the TV series the pit about life at a Pittsburgh hospital emergency room plus contributor Carolina Miranda reviews Laila lalami's suspenseful new novel.
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This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tonya Moseley. Today, my guest is filmmaker Ryan Coogler.
You probably know his name as the director of Fruitvale Station, Creed, and both Black Panther films. Well, his new film is called Sinners, and it hit theaters just last week.
It delves into horror with a genre-bending thriller set in 1930s Mississippi.
The story follows twin brothers, Smoke and Stack, both played by Michael B. Jordan.
After surviving the trenches of World War I and navigating Chicago's criminal underworld,
the brothers return home to Mississippi, hoping to start fresh by opening a juke joint. But peace
does not last long. Instead, they're met by supernatural forces, vampires, who act as metaphors
for oppression, exploitation, and systems that feed on black life, body, and spirit.
I only ever heard stories. I ain't never come across them myself.
What stories you heard?
How Hanes worked. They switched places with the soul of a man.
But vampires is different. Maybe the worst kind.
The soul gets stuck in the body.
Can't rejoin the ancestors.
Cursed to live here with all this hate.
Can't even feel the warmth of a sunrise.
Okay.
Can we bring him back?
Maybe if I kill the ones that made him this way.
Smoke.
They have a connection, but they live on,
even if the one that made them is killed.
The best thing we can do for him is free his spirit from this curse.
They gotta be killed one by one.
How the hell do we do that?
Sunlight, that wouldn't stake that on.
Ryan Coogler says Sinners is also a tribute to his late uncle James, who first introduced
him to the blues.
When he was a kid, Cougler would soak up his uncle's stories about Mississippi as
old Delta Blues records spun in the background.
Cougler's debut into the film world happened in 2013 with Fruitvale Station, which chronicled
the final hours of Oscar Grant, a young black man killed by police in Oakland.
Since then, he's become the highest-grossing
black filmmaker in history and the youngest director
to helm a billion-dollar movie with Black Panther.
He decided to press pause on making Black Panther 3
to take the risk of making sinners.
Ryan Coogler, welcome to Fresh Air
and congrats on this film.
I have seen it twice and I enjoyed it very much.
Hey, I appreciate you having me.
I'm really thrilled to be here.
So, Ryan, you put Black Panther 3 on hold.
That is a billion-dollar franchise, as I mentioned, to make this film.
In a moment when it seems like Hollywood is kind of playing it safe to sequels and
remakes.
What made you say, this is the story I have to tell now?
And even if it means stepping away from the success of something like a Marvel machine,
did that feel like a risk?
Yes.
But to be honest with you, it would have been more of a risk to not make it. The movie was kind of on my heart and
When you have something
That clear
For me
it's a rare thing and and I had this this idea and
It was very
Well, I will go back to say like I didn't put anything on hold for this, you know.
It was more, you know, like that last Panther film took a lot of time, you know.
It took more time than any of us had anticipated it to take.
You know, those movies tend to take about two years.
You know, this one took four because
of...
The last Black Panther film.
Yeah, the Black Panther kind of fervor. It was because of the tragic passing of Chadwick
Boseman, rest in peace, the global pandemic. And in making those films man like like
There's so many there's so much interest. There's so many people involved. There's so many industry industries
That are around a Marvel film, right? Yes. Yes. Yes, because because you know, and it is
I'm not I'm not
Complaining about it, but there's a lot of pressure
around those movies.
And I had just made two back to back,
so I was coming off of both of those projects,
knowing there was no way I was gonna do another one next.
I was gonna have to do something different
before I came back to that.
But for me, I got hit by almost like a bolt of lightning.
You said this particular film, Sinners,
was like it was on your heart to do.
And I want you to take us back to when that idea
really clicked for you.
Yeah.
Not only the creation of a story like this,
but that the story didn't have to live in one genre,
even one reality, because you're blending so much here. I mean, you're blending
history, historical drama, action, all against the backdrop of 1930s Mississippi.
What made you realize that this mix was necessary to fully bring this story to
life? This movie was like all about dichotomy, you know,
and that's something that I've been dealing
with my whole life, you know.
This feeling of not totally fitting in
or things not totally squaring with each other, you know,
like coming up, I was black, I was from Oakland,
I was middle class, and I was in these neighborhoods
where my parents were kind of outliers.
They got married young and they went to college,
but they stayed in their neighborhood, you know.
So I constantly, as a kid, would feel like
I was living in two different worlds.
It was a dichotomy there.
And I took the students serious.
I was like a big old giant nerd.
But I was also like a very, very serious athlete.
And where I'm from, to be an athlete,
you're like adjacent to street culture.
You know what I'm from, to be an athlete, you're like adjacent to street culture. You know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, you get cool points in the streets
when you good at football or basketball
or running track like I was.
I was also raised Christian.
I was raised Baptist in the Black Baptist tradition.
You know what I'm saying?
But I was going to Catholic school.
So I was around these two very different types
of Christianity and trying to reckon with that
on a daily basis.
And it made me very sensitive to themes of identity
and dichotomy as an idea.
That's so interesting because I really feel it
almost with
every single character in this film. I want to talk to you in a minute about
how you complicate like villains but the use of vampires in particular to like
really articulate the story. One of the vampires says in the film I want your
stories and I want your songs.
And that line is very important for me.
You gotta finish it though.
Oh, finish it for me.
He says something after that.
Say it.
Yeah, he says, and you're gonna have mine.
Yes, right, right, exactly, exactly, right.
It's important.
That's such an important line because it brings into focus
that these vampires are like draining
more than blood.
They're draining culture and identity, but they're also offering something back like
in replacement of that.
Like how did you land on using vampires as a metaphor for that kind of extraction?
I mean, I'll be honest with you.
To me, allegory, metaphor, all these things,
I'm not gonna tell you that they're not present
in my work, right?
But I was not, in this case with this project,
I was not being conscious of it.
You know, like I was trying to,
you know, I was trying to communicate a feeling
through cinematic language.
And the reality is, as I've gotten older in this business
and in this craft, I realized that if I can make something
true, it's up to the viewer to draw those parallels.
You take the thing and you analyze it.
And in your analysis, you might project your own experiences,
your own knowledge, you know what I'm saying?
And you might draw certain parallels
that weren't the parallels I was intending, you know?
But I think it's super fascinating though,
that like when I asked you the question about like,
what drew you to this story
and why you had to tell this story,
you said immediately like,
my life experience is the reason why I wanted to tell this story, you said immediately, like, my life experience is the reason why
I wanted to tell this story.
What drew you to a vampire story?
Yeah, I love vampires, man.
Like, you know, and I love horror fiction.
I love horror movies.
I love fantasy.
I was raised, you know, around a lot of organized religion.
And vampires intersect with all of that, you know what I mean?
Like, I find vampires,
they pull from all of that
in terms of supernatural creatures.
And I thought when the idea came to me for this movie,
I thought about other supernatural creatures
as a thing that they confront at the juke joint.
I went down the line, like I thought about werewolves, I thought about zombies,
you know, I thought about shapeshifters,
which in some indigenous cultures
might be referred to as skinwalkers.
I thought about, you know, I went through
the Hall of Rolodex, you know,
and I kept coming back to vampires
because of everything that the vampire implies in public consciousness.
You know, vampires, it's not a stiff ass rule,
but it's pretty commonly associated with sensuality.
Vampires are expected to be sexy,
usually expected to be fashionable,
usually expected to be knowledgeable,
usually expected to be knowledgeable, usually expected to be very powerful.
It's not thought of as wrong if a vampire
is converted to vampirism,
but they maintain their human personality,
their human memories.
It's a fascinating premise.
You'll see a version of this,
almost in every culture.
And to me, that know, like that is just like a fascinating
thing if I'm trying to have a conversation about
our common humanity, you know?
Like which for me, you know, this movie is about.
Director Ryan Coogler's new film is called Sinners.
We'll hear more of our conversation after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm really struck by what you said
that the blues connected people to their humanity.
It reminded them that they were human,
and blues serves really as the sound
and the soul of this film.
Your relationship with the blues,
you talk about your Uncle James,
what music did he play around you?
What was he into?
Man, he played all of it, man.
He was big on Albert King.
He was big on Muddy.
He's big on Holland Wolf.
He was big on Coco Taylor.
Big on John Lee Hooker. Sonny Boy Williamson, Mississippi
Fred McDowell.
He's big on all of them, man.
You being a kid of the 80s and the 90s, what was it like for you to sit at his knee and
listen to that music?
Did you appreciate it at that young age?
I just liked being with him.
I wasn't thinking about the music.
You know, like I associated it with him.
And at that time, the blues wasn't for,
I didn't think the blues was for me.
I didn't think it was mine.
You know, like it was just all man's.
And like to be honest with you, I thought the blues
was like for white people.
You know what I'm saying?
Because at that time, you know, you had like the movie
The Blues Brothers, which I hadn't seen,
but you know, on the poster was these white dudes
with these hats, you know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, so I was like, okay, you know,
the blues is for all black people and it's for white people.
You know what I'm saying?
Cause I was listening to Tupac and what's crazy is
I was listening to Tupac and what's crazy is
my favorite song, group, and music video was Bone Thug's Crossroads.
Not even knowing that like,
you know, like the Crossroads is like,
you know what I'm saying, like that's a blues thing.
You know what I mean?
Like it made its way in the Cleveland gangster rap,
but it was really that, you know, but I didn't know.
I was a kid and it took my uncle dying.
And then me listening to the music without him anymore
to explain it to me.
But I'm trying to hang on to every word,
trying to see if, you know what I'm saying?
Like if I could get a clue about my uncle's life
or like why he liked this stuff, you know what I'm saying?
And then boom, I realized that the brilliance of it,
like that this was the base that everything came out of.
How did legendary blues guitarist Buddy Guy
become part of this project?
It was so cool to see him.
That was like a really cool cameo.
Buddy Guy was like the last musician
my uncle would go see consistently.
You know, he would get dressed up
and go to his concerts, up to his death.
So when I was finishing up the script,
I had this idea when I got to those last few scenes,
I was like, oh man, wouldn't it be cool if,
like, wouldn't my uncle get a kick out of Buddy Guy
being in this movie, you know? So I kind of got that, I kind of had that idea and I talked to my casting director,
Francine Masler, and my producers, Zenzi and Sev, and said, I want to try to get Buddy
Guy in this movie.
And, you know, everybody kind of panicked a little bit, you know, but then, but then,
but then, you know, we got into it and Zinzy and I went out there and went to his restaurant,
Blues Club, Legends.
I fully expected Buddy Guy to say, hey man, it's nice to meet you kid, but I'm not being
in a movie.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm good.
I'm almost 90 years old, bro.
You know, like I don't have time for that.
And so I was prepared for that.
But his kids, man, they were smiling at me.
And I go to sit down, and he's like,
look, I don't know who you are or what you do,
but my grandkids tell me I should sit with you
and I should hear you out.
And I've decided, whatever you need from me,
because they speak so highly of you, you know what I mean?
Has he seen the film?
Have you guys talked to him?
He has, yeah, we showed him to him in Chicago.
What did he say?
He gave it a stamp of approval,
because that was his life, man.
He was a sharecropper in Louisiana.
And it had to make the decision to leave home.
And he has so many beautiful stories,
but a lot of them are heartbreaking, man.
Like he wears polka dots, polka dots suits,
polka dots guitars.
And I asked him why, and he said,
when he left home
to become a blues musician, he told his mom
he was gonna make enough money to buy her
a polka dot Cadillac, you know,
and she passed away before he could do it.
So the polka dots became his trademark,
you know what I'm saying?
And just that story of him having,
like me imagining this nearly 90 year old man having explained to his mom,
hey, I'm gonna leave home.
I'm gonna try and go make it with this guitar.
While she's in what was a slave shack in Louisiana.
You know what I mean?
Like sharecropping.
And he's here in 2025 completely lucid
telling me all about it.
There is this moment when one of the twins,
he says something like,
it's better to deal with the devil you know.
And he's referring to having lived in Chicago
and up north and gone all across the world,
but now he's back in Mississippi.
And you being a guy who was born and raised
on the West coast and in
Oakland, your accent gives it away. What did you learn growing up about kind of those
myths like you talk about the shame a little bit but those myths that somehow
the West or the North or the East was better than the South?
I was born in the wake of the military defeat
of the Black Panthers.
So that dream of a better life in the West,
you know, I was gone.
You did not grow up with that myth
that where you are is better than the South?
No, I grew up, look, the first movie I seen in theaters
was Boys in the Hood, you know, which, you know, I was five years old, my dad took me to see that movie and
you know, that was what was happening, you know, down on Highway 5 from us.
You know, I was four years old.
You saw Boys in the Hood at four years old?
I was, I might have been actually five.
Yeah, I was born at 86. I think that movie came out in 91. Yeah, I was five years old? I might have been actually five, yeah. I was born at 86, I think that movie came out in 91.
Yeah, I was five years old.
You know, my dad, but my dad was, you know,
dad in his 20s, he heard that there was a,
he had just lost his father before I was born.
My mom's dad died before I was born.
Both my parents' fathers died within two weeks of each other,
right after they got married.
And you know, I heard that this was a movie, my parents' fathers died within two weeks of each other, right after they got married.
And you know, I heard that this was a movie black fathers would text their sons to, so
he took me.
You know, did the same thing with Malcolm X like six months later.
Five years old in the theater watching Boys in the Hood, do you remember the scenes that
like were seared into your brain that stuck with you?
Because that's a real powerful movie for a five-year-old.
I remember the whole movie.
My memory with movies is pretty solid.
You and Michael B. Jordan, you guys have worked on Fruitvale Station and Creed, Blank Panther,
and now Sinners. In Sinners, he plays twin brothers.
Why twins?
It's a great question.
The film deals with dichotomy, as I mentioned.
And I was born into a family with loads of twins,
specifically like my mom's older sisters,
who are identical, Monty Merlin and Monty Curlin.
So you saw that intimacy of twins up close.
Oh yeah, my whole life.
Like I can't, like my aunts have always been around.
One of them is my godmother, you know.
So they always been a part of my life.
The dynamic between them and the stories, you know.
They're in their 70s now and they live next door
to each other.
But the stories, man, of like them beating people up
and you know, like the fact that they can't live with each other,
they can't live without, they're constantly arguing.
The games they would play with people
when people couldn't tell them apart.
And the fact that us and our family always could.
We could turn our backs and feel one of them
come into the room and know which one it was.
You know what I'm saying? So it was something that I was always interested in exploring and it
felt mythical. The other thing is like identical twins are kind of always outlaws, you know,
they're kind of always local celebrities. And like there's always like a level of othering
that happens with them. I want to end asking you about legacy because
I heard there was a bidding war over centers and part of the deal was that you'd retain Final Cut
and you'd get share of the theatrical opening and eventually own the film outright after 25 years,
which I felt like that's such a boss move. Is that all right, first off?
And why was it important for you?
I mean, it's some truth, some of those articles,
like I haven't seen any that were totally accurate.
But the thing is, is like, you know,
those terms are not new terms, like they're not unique.
I will say they are unique,
but there are other filmmakers out there in the world who
have not made as much money as I have at the box office, who've had these terms for a long
time.
It's not that unique for me to have asked for these terms and for me to have received
them, right?
I wrote the script on spec.
My production company has made some really incredible movies in the past, you know, and
there was no shortage
of companies that wanted to work with us, thankfully.
You know what I mean?
Like, for me, the film was so personal,
and about my family,
100 years ago, my family were sharecroppers.
100 years before that,
they were in a different type of situation,
if you catch what I'm saying.
So for me, that was something that I stood on,
you know, that my company stood on.
And I was so thrilled that Warner Brothers
was comfortable with us standing on that
and saw value in this project.
And I have to imagine there were some people
that were upset by that, you know what I mean?
Well, I feel like owning centers outright after 25 years,
I mean, it is a long play.
And I just wonder what your vision for this story
over that kind of timeline.
Right?
But is it something that you imagine expanding
or revisiting or building upon after you've shared?
I wouldn't rule anything out, but that was not the reason.
Like the reason for me was just this story
that I wanted to...
You listed the films that I've made before.
I made these movies when I was very young and they came at a steep price.
I was not there when my uncle died because I was making a movie.
I missed so much making these movies before I was 40 years old.
They've done well over $2 billion at the box office.
You understand?
And I will never own any of these movies.
The next movie I'll make, Black Panther 3, I will not own that.
Disney will own that.
It was time for me to own this.
Ryan Coogler, this has been such a pleasure to be in conversation with you.
Thank you so much for this and thank you for this film.
Thank you for watching and thank you for talking about it and bringing your brilliant expertise to it.
I'm looking forward to folks hearing it.
Ryan Coogler's latest film is Sinners starring Michael B. Jordan.
It's now showing in theaters.
Michael B. Jordan. It's now showing in theaters. In her new novel, The Dream Hotel, author Layla Lalami plunges us into the story of a woman who is imprisoned solely on the basis
that she might commit a crime. Lalami, who was born in Morocco and is now based in Los
Angeles, won the American Book Award for her 2014 historical novel The Moor's Account.
She's also been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Contributor Carolina Miranda reviews the
Lamis novel and the disquieting ways it speaks to our tech-saturated lives.
Sarah Hussein hasn't committed a crime, but perhaps she was flagged because she dreamt about it,
or because of the heated argument she'd had with a crackpot on social media.
Or maybe it was the images of early 20th century Moroccan rebel fighters
she'd been posting to the internet.
Whatever the cause, Sarah now finds herself incarcerated in the California desert
because an algorithm has determined she's an imminent risk.
What exactly that risk may be,
and when and under what conditions she might be released,
is anybody's guess.
This is the dystopian premise
of Leila Lallamy's gripping new novel, The Dream Hotel.
In this unsettling vision of the future,
a company called DreamCloud makes brain implants
that give insomniacs like Sarah a better night's rest while also harvesting valuable data from
their dreams.
The blandly titled Risk Assessment Administration assigns individuals a score that determines
how likely a person might be to commit a violent crime, but how that score is calculated is
confidential.
And the places where high-risk individuals
are held for observation, called retention centers,
are run by a private company called Safex
that contracts out detainees as cheap labor to corporations.
Into the crosshairs of these overlapping systems steps Sarah,
a busy 30-something mother of
twins who works as a museum archivist in Los Angeles.
She's in the process of returning from a conference in London when an elevated risk
score, based partly on data taken from her dreams, gets her dinged for retention at LAX.
The Dream Hotel has been compared to Philip K. Dick's 1956 science fiction novella,
The Minority Report.
That story imagined a society in which police arrest people for the crimes they have not
yet committed based on data produced by a trio of humans with predictive powers.
But The Minority Report, with its snappy gumshoe dialogue, is told from the perspective of
the police.
Lalami instead sends us down the psychological rabbit hole of what it means to be incarcerated
without due process, in a world where your fate is decided by algorithms.
The narrative is propulsive, but what makes the novel so absorbing are the ways the author makes this near-future world come to life.
Much of the story is presented as an omniscient third-person narrative, but in between, L'Alamy inserts fragments of emails, corporate reports, and bits of a procedural manual,
all of which give insight into the systems that keep people like Sarah indefinitely detained.
Ultimately, it is Sarah who is the beating heart of this remarkable story. And Lallamy gives us a
character that isn't simply an archetype, but a real human being full of ambition and ambivalence.
Sarah is a scholar of post-colonial African history who works
at the Getty Museum. She's also a woman who dwells on her insecurities and on
petty annoyances like the mundane squabbles she has with her husband.
Occasionally she's betrayed by her own irritability. The novel credibly conveys
her harrowing sense of disorientation as the wide world she once inhabited is reduced to a cell.
Sarah's most relatable trait is the struggle she faces trying to contain the rage that she feels over her situation.
Rage that, if expressed, will only worsen her circumstances.
As the narrator tells us, compliance begins in the body.
The trick is to hide any flicker of personality
or hint of difference.
It's a condition that isn't specific to her incarceration.
As a woman of color, Sarah's of Moroccan descent,
she's not the kind of person who has generally afforded
the benefit of expressing anger.
To inhabit Sarah's story is to hear the echoes of real people who are held in private
immigration detention centers, who have no legal recourse and no timeline for when they
might get released.
Her book also paints a grim picture about the ways in which our data can betray us.
Lollamy was inspired to write the novel after receiving a notification from her smartphone
giving her the travel time to a yoga class, but she had never set such a reminder.
Her phone was simply keeping track of her personal habits.
The Dream Hotel is a suspenseful novel.
The book's simmering tension is whether Sarah will be able to find a way out of this trap. This ordinary woman who has plotted through
life has to figure out how to undermine a system that has overtaken her mind and
her body. Carolina Miranda reviewed Leila Lalami's new novel The Dream
Hotel. Coming up, actor Noah Wiley will talk with us about
starring in the new TV series, The Pit, about a Pittsburgh hospital emergency room. I'm
Tanya Mosely, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
Dave Davies has our next interview.
Our guest today, Noah Wiley, is an executive producer, writer, and star of the new Mac
series The Pit, which gives viewers an inside look at the chaos and drama of a big city
hospital emergency room.
Wendell Stone, 52, Chief Rigger from Pitfest.
Isolated trauma to the left chest when a speaker tower came down on him.
Looks like multiple rib fractures.
Pulse 110, BP 130 over 85, decent SATs at 96, 50 a-fent in the field.
Got it.
How we doing, Mr. Stone?
Mr. Stone is my dad.
This is just stone.
The pit has drawn critical praise for its engaging storylines, intelligent dialogue,
and well-drawn characters.
And it's gained a following of real-life emergency room doctors who praise the accuracy
of the show's depiction of medical conditions and treatments. Noah Wiley is a veteran of stage, screen, and television who's
no stranger to lab coats and hospital scrubs. He played a medical student and then a physician
on the hit NBC TV series ER for most of its 15 seasons, where he earned nominations for
three Golden Globe and five Primetime Emmy Awards.
He started in the TNT series Falling Skies and The Librarians and has appeared in many
movies.
He's also been active in the organization's Human Rights Watch and Doctors of the World.
Noah Wiley, welcome to Fresh Air.
Thank you so much for having me.
You know, I mentioned in the introduction that your character, maybe I didn't, he's
the senior
attending physician in this emergency room.
And you know in addition to treating patients, you're really running this big organization
and it's a teaching hospital.
So while you're an experienced pro, there are all these others who are less experienced,
residents in training and medical students on their first day I believe in their rotations
as this thing begins. So there's a lot going on here. Tell us just a little bit more about your character, Dr. Robbie.
I played Dr. Michael Rabinovich, who is several decades into his medical career and probably
should have retired a couple years ago. But like many practitioners, post-COVID felt pressed into service and out of
the increasing need. And because he's really good at what he does and he really cares about the
people he works with, he's kept working. And it's taken a toll on him. He's seen a lot and done a
lot and he's been able to compartmentalize a lot of that. And today we are embedded with him for his entire shift
on the day that he's no longer able to do that.
Right, and things, he runs into some rough seas.
You know, he's surrounded by these young medical students
and I don't think I recognize any of the actors in this,
but they are just so terrific.
The casting process was laborious.
We were looking for people with theater backgrounds,
people who were really adept at memorizing
lots and lots of dialogue, very good with props,
who could do all sorts of things while doing a procedure
and walking backwards.
And we had to cast the show internationally.
We found actors in Australia, we found them in England,
we found them on the East Coast, West Coast,
but we found tremendous performers.
So while you haven't seen them before,
I knew early on that I was gonna be a Trojan horse
that was gonna introduce all this young talent
to your living room.
And they're great.
Well, let's listen to the scene
and get a little bit of a flavor of the show.
This scene is typical of many,
where a new patient is being wheeled in
by paramedics from an ambulance, and we hear them barking out critical facts as
they're rolling them in and then you hear this one two three as the team
coordinates lifting the patient from the ambulance stretcher to a hospital
gurney and then the team gets to work. Let's listen.
23 year old Ben Kemper, no helmet, got doored riding an e-scooter, neck versus
handlebar then face planted to the pavement.
Obvious facial fractures, but alert and oriented with good vitals.
Here we go.
One, two, three.
How we doing, Ben?
Come on.
Back in my throat.
That's probably from the nose bleed.
Short rapid rhino, please.
Tachy at 120, pulse ox borderline at 90.
We'll buy it 15 liters for now.
Neck contusion, larynx shifted to the right.
No prepidance.
Four of morphine.
I'm going to stick something in your nose to stop the bleeding.
No hemotemponym.
Inflate the blood. How about now, Ben?
Better.
What's up?
Good vitals, ANO.
Let's have a look.
And that's a scene from The Pit where our guest Noah Wiley is a star.
Awfully intense.
Tough to get the impact of that clip on radio, but that was a Lafort 3 floating face fracture,
which when you put your fingers on somebody's teeth and you pull their teeth forward, their
entire face comes with it.
It's rather dramatic.
You don't see it very often in an emergency room.
Right.
And you don't see it on the radio, but it is dramatic there.
But just the audio, I mean, you can hear the intensity of it.
And there's all this medical jargon flying by.
I mean, did you know all this stuff before you got into this series?
I knew quite a bit of it.
You know, after 15 years on a medical show,
you pick up certain things through osmosis.
The specifics of what each patient needs when they come in
is a total mystery to me.
And thankfully, we've got a great team of technical advisors
on the writing staff and on the set.
Our secret weapon is a man named Dr. Joe Sachs who is a board certified emergency room physician.
He was a technical advisor and a writer on ER and he is with us again.
And he is meticulous in his attention to detail.
And he basically does those trauma scenes.
He will sort of present what the appropriate medicine
and procedures are, what each person in the room's role is,
given their hierarchy in the hospital,
and even weighing in a little bit on emotionally
how they may be feeling given the circumstances
and stakes of the case.
Yeah, I watched this series with my wife
who's 25 years as a primary care physician.
She gets almost all of it.
I get maybe a third of it, but I don't feel like I'm missing much.
But I did wonder, you were a writer on the show, I know.
Do you think about maybe letting up on some of that or is getting all that in critical
to the authenticity of it?
One of the decisions we made early on was to not employ any soundtrack in the show. And by lifting the music out, we've sort of removed the artifice that says you're watching
a TV show and we need you to feel sad here because we're playing strings or exciting
here because we're using percussion.
We're letting the sort of symphony of the sound of the procedures in the room be our
cadence and a lot of that is the technical jargon that the doctors are
employing.
It becomes the soundtrack in the scene and the intensity with which they're delivering
those lines becomes the emotional equivalent of a score.
And it's really less important that the audience understands and more important that the audience
sees that the doctors know what they're talking about.
It's competency porn. You know, the origins of this show are interesting.
As I understand it, during the pandemic,
you began hearing from medical providers
and first responders who were dealing
with all this high-stakes, stressful demand on them.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was watching the news, but I was also
getting a lot of mail that was coming from first responders and some of it was, you know, hey Carter, we could use you out here.
Carter was the character you played on ER, right?
It was, yeah. And a lot of them were sort of thanking me for inspiring him to go into a career in medicine, but also telling me how hard it was at that moment. And I was sort of overwhelmed being a lightning rod for that at that time.
And so I pivoted a lot of that mail to John Wells,
who executive produced ER and said,
outside of the birth of my kids,
this is probably the best thing I ever do with my life
because we inspired a generation of practitioners to go
into the work that is saving lives right now.
And then I went on to say that I think something's happening here
and if you ever want to make a show about what's happening here, even though we said we'd never do
it again, I might be ready to volunteer. And a couple years later, you know, after we saw how
this broke down over socioeconomic lines and racial lines and geographic lines.
There was a show to be told here.
What was it like for you to put on scrubs and a lab coat and get back in a hospital
setting again after all those years?
It was wonderful.
I think I spent 15 years avoiding, actively avoiding walking down what I thought was either
hallowed ground or traveled road.
And then finally I had an opportunity to come back and was excited about it and slipped
a stethoscope around my neck and just felt right at home.
You know, I should just mention it's been widely reported that there is some litigation
around this.
The estate of Michael Crichton, who was the creator of ER, has sued alleging that the
pit is an unauthorized reboot of the program. I mean, one of the differences between the two shows is that The Pit is the entire 15
episodes are one day in the life of this ER. There's an hour, essentially in real time,
an hour per episode is one hour of the day. And so you get to see these things develop just over
a day. So that's the real distinction. Very much so.
Different city, different character.
We had started down a reboot road,
and then that became an impossibility.
And so we pivoted as far away from it
as we could to come up with a new medical show.
I stand by we have.
You're the lead attending in this emergency room.
And in real life, you're also an executive producer and a writer
and an experienced actor among a cast which includes a lot of, you know, much younger actors.
Were you kind of a coach on the set in the same way?
You're a medical coach for these people, learning the craft?
In a way, you know, it's interesting.
We started with two weeks of medical bootcamp for everybody, myself included, to
kick some rust off and to re-familiarize myself with how much has changed in
healthcare, but also to bring everybody up to speed with where they needed to be
by the time we rolled the cameras.
And John Wells, who directed the pilot episode and executive produced, said to
me, don't be too nice to them.
And then he sort of segregated us where I was off by myself
and I ate lunch by myself and then the R4s ate together, the R2s and 3s ate together.
That's fourth year residents, second year residents, yeah.
Second year residents, fourth year residents. And the med students all ate together by themselves
and they all sat behind me. And then when we did our training rotations, the med students
learned what med students know,
and the R2s learned R2 stuff and so forth.
And I kind of walked around and did a little bit of everything.
But it set a kind of hierarchical tone and
differentiated us enough as
performers that when we started working, it carried over.
So whether it was a byproduct of the rehearsal or the fact that I am considerably older than the rest of the cast or that I've played
a doctor before, yes, there was a lot of meta energy where everybody was sort of
playing the dynamics that were that were present and just sort of heightening
them a little bit.
You know, we listened to a clip earlier that was an
intense moment in which a patient is being wheeled in and the staff is immediately getting to work on him. There are a lot of quieter
moments in this series where you are dealing with a patient or a relative and
have some tough issues to communicate. This is one I want to play now where a
man and a woman who are a brother and sister, played here by Rebecca Tilney and
Mackenzie Aston, are at the hospital with their elderly father
who has pneumonia.
The father has left instructions
he does not want to be intubated.
And they're talking to you as Dr. Robbie about it.
Dr. Robbie speaks first, let's listen.
Either his pneumonia's getting worse
or his heart couldn't handle the fluids
that we gave him to treat the sepsis.
His lungs are filling up with fluid.
Can't you take the fluid away?
Not without his blood pressure crashing
with very bad consequences.
So let's just hope the BiPAP works.
And if it doesn't?
Then I would need to know your decision
about using a breathing machine.
We're still talking about it.
Well, we know he expressed his wishes.
In writing, do not intubate.
We're thinking try it for a week. That would be a very painful week.
He wouldn't get a lot of rest with all the monitors
and all the blood tests.
He might need to be sedated.
He might need to be restrained
because he'd be in an unfamiliar place
with a very uncomfortable tube down his throat.
And he wouldn't really know what was happening.
Elderly patients can often develop psychosis.
But he might get better. Or he might get worse. What would you do? I didn't really know what was happening. Elderly patients can often develop psychosis.
But he might get better.
Or he might get worse.
What would you do?
I really can't answer that for you.
This is your father.
That's your decision to make.
I can guarantee you that we will keep him
as comfortable as possible if a natural death is
what you choose.
But he's not your father.
And he can recover from this.
What my sister means is that we're still
deciding the best thing to do well the sooner you decide the better I'm really
sorry I wish there was more that I could do I'm not sure that he has that much
time left and that is our guest Noah Wiley in a scene from the pit which is
now streaming on max there are a lot of these scenes where you're dealing with loved ones who just can't accept what's happening.
There's another one, two parents who just can't accept the fact that their son,
who came in with a ventanil overdose, is brain dead.
Do you want to just say a little bit about preparing for these scenes?
Well, first of all, it's really gratifying to be able to play a storyline over several episodes so that you can watch the gradation of acceptance and watch the different methods
and strategies that practitioners use to help families prepare.
And sometimes when you only have an hour to tell a story that has to have a beginning,
a middle, and an end, that feels like extremely hurried work and often times feels disingenuous
or inauthentic to the process.
So when you can have these things kind of arc over several hours, it feels like you
can kind of walk through those five stages of grief with these characters.
When we prepare for them, there's a lot of conversation about tone and about specificity
of point of view.
In this particular instance,
we have a brother and a sister
who have very different reasons
for wanting to keep their father alive
that have an emotional core to them
that gets revealed in subsequent episodes.
So you want everybody in these scenes
to have a real point of view
that's legitimate to who they are. And then when those three truths come out and they are in conflict
with each other as they often are, that makes for good drama.
The other thing that's happening in this story with your character is, you know, I
mentioned before that this series kind of the germ of it began during COVID when
you were hearing from first responders and the crises they were facing.
And in the show, your character, Dr. Robbie,
during COVID lost a mentor, another doctor.
And I believe this day that is the focus of the series
is the anniversary of his death, right?
I think we learned that early on.
And then you wanna just talk a bit about how his flashbacks, his PTSD, if you will,
is portrayed in the show.
This is the five-year anniversary of him taking his mentor off life support, which during the height of COVID,
you know, he had to be put on. And then ultimately in our back story, he had to be taken off the life support
to give it to another patient who had a better chance of survival, and then everybody died.
And it was a traumatic memory that my character has just not really ever dealt with.
He's moved on, and today is a day he probably should have stayed home, but today he went
to work, and as a result, he's just getting triggered by different things.
And those memories begin to come up with greater and greater frequency and greater and greater poignancy to the point where he becomes totally debilitated by them.
And the aggregate of all of that grief and all of that suppressed emotion just overwhelms
him.
And it was interesting.
My mother was an orthopedic nurse and an operating room nurse.
She worked for 20 years at a hospital in Hollywood.
And she came over for breakfast last Sunday and she came into the kitchen and within five
seconds of being there she said, you know, Noah, I can't stop thinking about last week's
episode and that scene where you were listing all the people who died.
And I think I had my own PTSD reaction.
I suddenly remembered everybody. I remembered
the four-year-old. I remembered the pregnant woman with the baby. I remembered the gang
member that I tried to keep alive by squeezing two units of blood. And she's just listing
these names and she's getting teary-eyed and she finishes and I said, my goodness, mom,
I was on a medical show for 15 years. You never told me that. And she said, well, that wasn't real.
I said, well, this one wasn't either.
And she said, but it felt real.
And it brought all that up for me.
Isn't that funny?
And so here I am in my own kitchen having this lovely sort of cathartic and catalytic
moment with my mother.
And I asked her, I said, the four-year-old, when was that?
She said, oh, I think your brother was probably about four at the time. I think that's why it
hit me. And then I thought to myself, oh, so you came home and you made us dinner that night and
you helped us with our homework. Wow. And she's carried that painful memory for all these years.
That's 35 years that's been in there. Came out last Sunday. Well, Noah Wiley, thank you so much
for speaking with us. It's been fun. Oh, this has been a pleasure. Thank you. Noah Wiley, thank you so much for speaking with us. It's been fun. Oh, this has
been a pleasure. Thank you. Noah Wiley is an executive producer, writer, and star of the
series The Pit, which is now streaming on Max. He spoke with Dave Davies. Fresh Air Weekend is
produced by Teresa Madden. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Mosely.