Fresh Air - Neil Diamond Noah Wyle On The Pitt
Episode Date: January 11, 2026The new film ‘Song Sung Blue’ is about a Neil Diamond tribute band and stars Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson. Before Diamond began recording his own hits like “Solitary Man,” “Cherry, Cherry,�...� “America,” and “Sweet Caroline,” he wrote songs for other musicians, including The Monkees. Diamond spoke with Terry Gross in 2005. Also, the hit HBO medical drama ‘The Pitt’ is back for season two. Noah Wyle plays the veteran attending physician in a Pittsburgh emergency room. The actor/producer spoke with Dave Davies about his tenure on ‘ER’ and putting scrubs back on for ‘The Pitt.’ Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Dave Davies.
In the new film Song Sung Blue, Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson play a couple who form a Neil Diamond tribute band.
You know, Neil is special, and I just want everyone.
I'm gonna get that feeling I get when I listen to America and Forever Blue Jeans.
Oh, sweet Caroline.
Sweet Caroline, yeah, but I'm never gonna be the real McCoy.
I mean, I don't really look like Neil.
I don't even really sound like Neil.
I gotta be Neil, but I've just gotta be me, too.
Yeah, you don't wanna be a Neil Diamond impersonator.
You wanna be a Neil Diamond interpreter.
I was looking for the right way to say it,
and you just came right out and said,
a Neil Diamond interpreter.
Today we're going to listen to our interview with Neil Diamond.
In the 1960s, he started out writing songs for a music publishing company,
hoping someone would record them.
He wrote The Monkey's hit I'm a Believer.
But it was Diamond himself who made most of his own songs famous.
Here's a sampling.
The time that I found her, holding Jim, loving him.
Then Sue came along, love me strong, that's what I thought.
Me and Sue, I bet I'd do.
Then I saw her face, touching hair.
As a lot of Neil Diamond's contemporaries fell off the charts, he moved from teen pop to adult pop.
He recorded a duet with Barbara Streisand, had hits from his remake of the jazz singer,
and dressed in spangles for his sold-out concerts.
In 2022, his life in music became the subject of the hit Broadway musical A Beautiful Noise.
Neil Diamond is now 84 years old.
Let's listen to Terry's interview with him, recorded in 2005.
I think it's fair to say your first big break, correct me if I'm wrong,
was when you had recorded a demo, and the songwriters,
Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry heard the demo,
liked you. And some of their songs are
De Du Run Run, Chapel of Love.
Be My Baby. Be My Baby, yeah.
So
how did they
hear you? I was
making a demo. Usually
when you sold a song to a publisher,
they would allow you to go in and make
your own demo, which was
invaluable experience to me.
But I went and made the demo and
hired Ellie as a back-up
singer, which she did,
the fact that she was having huge hits.
She liked to sing in the studios with the other girls.
And so I hired her for this session,
and she liked something about what I was doing,
my writing or my singing.
And she brought me to her husband, Jeff,
and he liked something about what I was doing.
I don't know if he liked the writing or the singing,
but one liked one, and the other one liked the other.
So we started a working relationship.
We were both working for the same music publisher, and I kind of got let go by that music publisher, and I asked Jeff and Ellie if they were interested in producing me.
In the first session that you did with them, you recorded Solitary Man. Did you like the idea of horns on this?
I like the idea of anything on those records. I was just thrilled to be there.
Well, let's hear Solitary Man, which I have to say, I think it's really a terrific.
recording.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So, okay, let's hear it.
This is your first hit, yes?
Yes, if you can call it a hit.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
Okay, so this is Neil Diamond, solitary man.
The Linda was mine till the time that I found her.
Holding Jim, loving him.
Then Sue came along, love me strong, that's what I thought.
me and the shoe
but I die to
and finally
I've added to hear
me.
Now did you write this song
for yourself or for somebody else?
No, I wrote this for myself.
I had a contract with Jeff and Ellie
and I started to focus in on just what I wanted to do
and so Solitaire Man was written for me
and for the first sessions that I was to do with Jeff and Ellie.
There's this, like, urgency in the song and in the way you sing it.
And I think of you in a way as kind of specializing in some of your work in that urgency.
Is that something you've been conscious of that you think really, like, works especially well for you as a songwriter and as a singer?
Well, I can tell you that I wasn't conscious of it until you just mentioned it.
I've never thought of my songs having that sense of urgency.
but I'll listen again and maybe as an objective observer you can pick up on that stuff.
But I never felt that there was an urgency, a sense of drama, sense of yearning, lots of things, but not urgency.
But you may be very right about this.
I'm going to listen again now.
So how did solitary man change your idea of what you wanted from your musical life?
Once I had a chart record of my own, I was no longer a kid knocking around on the streets.
I was now, well, we didn't call them artists at that time. We called them vocalist, but I was a vocalist.
And it was a whole different thing. I was writing for myself.
so I had to really dig in and write as well as I possibly could.
And I have to say before that time,
I don't know if I was doing that.
I was just writing and writing and writing,
maybe just to get an advance from a publisher.
But there was not a lot of me in those songs,
and Solitary Man was the first of a long line of me songs,
my experience songs.
When you were working as a songwriter,
for publishers writing for other people.
Were you writing for specific people?
Were you writing with specific singers in mind?
Well, that's usually how it went back then,
although I was never a good enough writer to kind of write
for some other singer to understand what they did best.
The keys, the kind of song.
Usually you were told that so-and-so is coming up
for a session in three weeks,
and they need a song of this type,
and it was usually as close as possible
to the song that they had previously,
which was a hit, if it was a hit.
And you had to write kind of like a copy of that in a way,
because that's the way it worked in those days.
You have a hit record,
and your next record sounds,
should sound as much like the hit record as you can make it.
But I wasn't very good at it.
That's probably why I spent eight years down there in Tim Pan Alley and had very little success.
Nothing more really than selling a song and taking a small advance for it to get me through the week.
Now, the monkeys did a couple of your songs.
I'm a believer in a little bit, me, a little bit you.
Did you write those with them in mind or for yourself?
I'm trying to think of what the chronology was.
Like you start recording in, what, like 67?
66.
66.
Okay, and what year are the monkeys?
Like, is that after that?
I think 67, something like that.
I recorded a couple of songs,
including Solitary Man and Cherry Cherry,
which was a big hit.
And because of that hit,
the people who were producing the monkeys
called and said,
we like Cherry Cherry,
do you have any other songs?
I said, well, I don't have anything
like Cherry Cherry,
but I have an album coming out soon,
and I'll send it over and take your pick.
You know, it's funny, the common wisdom goes when telling the story of, like, songwriters from the Brill Building and the Beatles, is that the Beatles changed everything.
After the Beatles' band started writing their own songs, it drove out the professional songwriters.
But, of course, the monkeys are a band that's, you know, a kind of fabricated band copying the Beatles.
And you have this tremendous success writing for them.
and in that sense, like the Beatles success inadvertently really helped you as a songwriter.
Oh, yeah, no question about it.
But it was not only in the sense of the monkeys doing a couple of songs.
It was in the sense that the doors began to open for songwriters who were able to sing.
And I just happened to be one of them who'd been knocking around the streets for years.
And now suddenly was getting a new and fresh listening to my work.
So the Beatles made an enormous change.
As did Bob Dylan.
They brought the songwriter up to the front of the line
and said, you know, you guys do it.
And it had a devastating effect on the music publishing business
in Tin Pan Alley.
But it opened up many doors for people like me.
My guest is Neil Diamond.
Here's his version of I'm a believer.
I want to ask you about another of your songs,
and this is also an earlier song.
It's Girl, You'll Be a Woman soon,
and the urge-overkill version of this was used by Quentin Tarantino in Pulp Fiction.
Can you tell us the story behind the song?
Behind the song was pretty basic.
I was playing mostly to teenagers, teenage girls, when I first started.
and so going through that period,
I just wrote a song for the audience to do,
for me to do in the show,
and for the audience, which was, as I say, teenage girls.
And girl, you'd be a woman soon,
was something I wrote for them and recorded it myself.
How did you find out that Quentin Tarantino
was going to use a version of this song,
for Pulp Fiction?
Well, first they have to request
the right to use it.
But I got a request
and a part of a script
to be used
in this movie called Pulp Fiction.
And I've always held
to a very tenuous line
as to what I wanted my songs
to be used as.
And I wouldn't let them be used
in cigarette
commercials or alcohol commercials and this the script that I read was way out there it was
you know beyond what I would turn down normally and I did turn it down I heard almost
immediately from my publisher who said you know you shouldn't turn this down this this guy's a
tremendous director and you should just do it and let them do it which I did and
And of course, I've never regretted it because it was an entirely different way of seeing that song.
But that's basically how it happened.
So what did you think of the movie?
Oh, I loved the movie.
I was amazed by the movie.
I've seen it.
How come you love the movie but didn't love the script?
What was different actually seeing it?
Well, I didn't get the whole script.
I only got a few pages of the script in which the song would be used.
I don't know if you remember the scene, but she was, Umma Thurman, was very heavily into a Coke binge.
And she went unconscious and unconscious and had to be taken for some quote unquote special treatment.
And, you know, it just seemed too strong for my own taste.
and I turned it down on that basis.
Well, here's a song you wrote to please your teenage fans,
and now it's going to be used in an overdose scene,
in a drug overdose scene.
Not what you had in mind.
Not at all, but I would have reacted the same
to any of the other songs I had written.
But it was very effective in the film.
It was very effective, and it was a lesson that I learned, you know.
See who else is working on it.
See how serious they are.
Don't take it at face value,
and don't take your prejudices into this kind of discussion.
Why don't we hear your version of the song?
Here it is.
Great.
You'll be your woman soon.
And all the ways I die for you, girl,
and all they can say is,
is not your kind,
and I come around,
but I'm going to find her.
Don't let them make up your mind.
Don't you know
I'm taking my hand
I want to ask you about another song that you wrote and recorded
A big hit for you, Sweet Caroline,
which is now played at Red Sox Games
At Fenway Park
And maybe you know the story of why
Of why that is
But let's start with the song itself
Is there a story behind the writing of the song?
Yeah, I think so
I was heading down to Memphis
for my first recording session down there
There were some producers I wanted to work with,
and I only had two songs written,
and in those days, a session was three hours,
and you usually had three songs that you recorded.
So the night before the session,
at some motel in Memphis,
I knocked out this song, Sweet Caroline.
It was one of the fastest songs I've ever written,
and we recorded it the next day,
and it became one of my biggest songs,
if not the biggest song.
But songs usually don't come like that.
There's usually had a lot of work and teeth gnashing
and agony and torment over any of these songs.
But that one just popped out and there it was
and here it is now.
Still, people can sing it.
It's also sung a lot in bars.
Well, the fact is that it's fun and easy to sing with.
And I think that that's the bottom line
as far as that song is concerned.
It's easy to sing.
It's fun.
People like to sing it.
And that's why it's popular in bars
because anybody can sing it,
no matter how many drinks you've had.
Well, Neil Diamond,
thank you very much for talking with us.
My pleasure, Terry.
Where it began,
I can't begin to knowing,
but then I know it's growing strong.
Wasn't the spring
And spring became the summer
Who'd have believed you'd come along
Touching hand
Reaching out
Touching me
One of Neil Diamond's biggest hits
Cherry Grove spoke with Neil Diamond in 2005
The new film's song sung Blue
Stars Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson
as performers in a diamond tribute band.
Coming up, Noah Wiley, on his HBO Mac series, The Pit.
I'm Dave Davies, and this is Fresh Air.
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Our next guest, Noah Wiley,
is an executive producer, writer, star, and director.
director of the HBO Mac series The Pit, which gives viewers an inside look at the chaos and drama
of a big city hospital emergency room. Season two premiered last night. The pit earned critical praise
for its engaging storylines, intelligent dialogue, and well-drawn characters, and its gain
to following of real-life emergency room doctors, who praised 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 later 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 starred in the TNT series Falling Skies and the Librarians and appeared in many movies.
He's also been active in the organization's Human Rights Watch and Doctors of the World.
We're going to listen to some of my interview with him,
recorded last April when season one of the pit was airing.
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 experience pro, there are all these others who are less experienced,
residents and training and medical students, on their first day, I believe, in their
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 play Dr. Michael Rabinovich, who is several decades into his medical career
and probably should have retired a couple of years ago. But like many practitioners,
post-COVID, felt pressed into service and out of the increasing need. And because he's really good
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 going to be a Trojan horse that was going to introduce all this young talent to your living room.
And they're great.
Well, let's listen to a 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.
Tacky at 120,
pull-sox borderline at 90.
We'll buy it, 15 liters for now.
Neck plet fusion, larynx.
Larynx shifted to the right, no prepidence.
War of morphine.
I'm going to stick something in your nose
to stop the bleeding.
No hemo-timpanum.
Inflate the balloon.
How about now, Ben?
What's up?
Good vitals.
A&O. Let's have a look.
And that's a scene from the pit
where our guests know Wiley is a star.
Offly intense.
Tough to get the impact of that clip on radio,
but that was a Lafort three 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 it to the 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 Sacks, who is a board-certified emergency room position.
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, you know, 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.
I mean, 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 the audience understands,
and more important that the audience sees that the doctors know what they're talking about.
It's competency porn.
Well, the other thing that's interesting about those scenes is everybody's moving, and all
of these different actors are barking these observations and commands, and they've got to be careful
not to talk over each other so much that you can't hear it. So it's got to be crisply delivered
and well-miked. I imagine this took some pretty meticulous rehearsal. The rehearses are
extensive, especially for the medical scenes. We often rehearse those 24 hours in advance of shooting
them so we can come in with it pretty well in our muscles already and then figure out how we
want to photograph it on the day we shoot.
In terms of how the dialogue is overlapped, that's intentional because that's real.
You know, you've got four or five people in the room all are working simultaneously trying
to do their own thing and record their own thing in the medical record.
So a lot of times the sound is really cacophonous.
The effect is impressive.
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, you know, 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 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 of 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 in 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 that stethoscope around my neck and just felt right at home.
But now you have a beard.
I mean, you were a callow young kid when you started that show
and then you were eventually an attending physician.
Now you're a guy with a lot of miles on you.
Yes, yes.
Ironically, I'm 20 years older than Anthony Edwards was playing the attending 30 years ago.
So that makes me sound ancient.
Right, right.
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 a real distinction.
Very much so.
Different city, different character.
You know, we had started down a reboot road, and then it 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 boot camp for everybody, myself included,
to kick some rust off and to re-familiarize myself with how much has changed in health care,
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 him.
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 threes ate together.
That's fourth year residence.
Second year residence. Second year residence.
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 to 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 present and just sort of heightening them a little bit.
Noah Wiley recorded last year talking about the HBO Mac series The Pit, its second season premiered last night.
We'll hear more after this short break.
This is fresh air.
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In Venezuela and beyond, questions about the changing role of America on the world stage.
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There is an argument that knowledge is power and many families would like to know everything,
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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,
sister, played here by Rebecca Tilney and McKenzie Aston, are at the hospital with their elderly
father who has pneumonia. The father has, you know, left instruction 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 is 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 to bypass.
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 what 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 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't recover from us.
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 of two parents who just can't accept the fact that their son who came in with a fentanyl overdose is brain dead.
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 oftentimes 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 at 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 learn that early on. And then you want to
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
of COVID, you know, he had to be put on. And then ultimately in our backstory, 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, no, I can't stop thinking about last week's episode
in 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, you know, 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.
Noah Wiley recorded last year talking about the HBO Mac series The Pit.
Its second season premiered last night.
We'll hear more after this short break.
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Right, the next clip I wanted to play
is a painful moment in the emergency room
where a young child has died.
And in this case, she drowned,
I think after jumping into a swimming pool
to try and save her sister who survived, right?
Yes.
Right.
So after the child dies,
you gather the medical students
and residents into a room for a moment
and let's listen to what you say.
That's as hard as it gets.
We do these debriefs to try to give a sense of closure or meaning to difficult cases so that they won't linger.
But trust me, the kids you'll lose will linger.
So what do you do?
I did my residency at Big Charity in New Orleans.
And day one, I got a kid, five-year-old boy, accidentally shot by his brother, playing with dad's gun.
worried he was going to get in trouble,
right up until he coded and died.
Then I asked myself, like,
what do I do with this kid?
Where do I put this feeling?
And I found myself walking all night.
I was walking and walking and walking.
I found myself back at the gates of Big Charity Cemetery,
and I'm looking at all those mausoleums and those crypts,
and I'm thinking to myself, okay, that's what I need.
I just need a safe place where I can put these feelings.
You got patience throwing punches and chairs.
Okay, everybody.
Let's get back to it.
Just remember the employee assistance program is available as are a key R and myself if anybody needs to talk.
What an interruption.
You wrote this scene, didn't you?
This was your episode, right?
Yeah, that was one of the two episodes I wrote.
Your speech about how to overcome a loss like this is interrupted.
It's because they say patients are throwing chairs and fists.
And it turns out to be two women who are fighting because one has in the waiting room,
yes, one woman has asked another woman to mask her coughing child.
and the other mom calls her a Fauci zombie and slugs her.
This is one of the many topical issues that you get into in this series,
which weren't even around in ER.
I mean, people listen to their doctors.
They didn't, you know, resist vaccines and masks then.
You know, we had a bit of a mandate.
Let's not be too biased.
You know, the fastest way to get people to turn the channel is if they feel like we're preaching to them
or we're being dogmatic.
So what we wanted was accuracy.
and realism. We wanted to just be presentational with what emergency rooms look like. I wrote that
episode and I couldn't resist. Just taking one stance, which I thought was fairly benign, which is to talk
about the efficacy of masks in cutting down the transmission of disease and germs, which shouldn't be
a political statement and shouldn't even be called into question. And yet it has been the last
couple of years. And it's a great sort of metaphor for all the distrust that's been
seated between us and our doctors. And it's really, I think, incredibly unfortunate.
And I don't know if by the time this airs how much worse the situation is going to get,
but there were so, that 20% of the NIH was just laid off. We're going to be seeing the tale of
that decision-making for years and years and years to come.
Yeah. And you'd have an episode later about
a measles outbreak.
Well, that was what was so funny
as we wrote these episodes
almost a year ago.
And so when we did a storyline
about neurosistic circosis,
we had no idea
that RFK Jr. was going to be
diagnosed with neuroscystic circosis.
Nor did we think when we did a measles
storyline that it was going to be
as topical as it is right now.
Nine months ago, it wasn't.
But it wasn't hard to look
into your crystal ball
and see what was going to happen
if vaccine rates continued to drop.
And we live with an international community
that travels all the time.
Like, we are as vulnerable as the next incoming plate.
You know, one of the things that I like about the show
is that it is set in a real place.
It's in Pittsburgh.
And we're in Philadelphia.
I've traveled around Pennsylvania a bit.
And if you listen carefully, you can hear a lot of Pittsburgh stuff.
I mean, Promonti sandwiches, which is a thing there.
And when the charge nurse breaks up this fight between the two women,
there's this moment where she says,
what are you doing?
What are you doing?
where do you think you are?
This ain't Philly.
It's a hospital.
I really appreciated that.
Oh, I'm glad.
I've gotten some mail from Philly that didn't appreciate it.
I know.
I meant it is sort of a compliment because when I grew up, I grew up from L.A.
And, you know, when the Lakers would play the Sixers or when I would see Rocky or the Broad Street bullies, like, you guys were tough.
They were tough.
Yes.
So I just thought that's almost an homage to Philly to say it's the tougher of the two.
Well, Noah Wiley, thank you so much for speaking with it. It's been fun.
Oh, this has been a pleasure. Thank you.
Noah Wiley recorded last year. He's an executive producer, writer, director, and star of the HBO Mac series The Pit. Season 2 premiered last night.
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