EPISODE
SEASON
ER - Season 2
The second season begins with a new series of events, with Carter receiving his first official patient at critical moments. Doug, on the other hand, appears to be treating a four-year-old Asian boy with AIDS. On the other hand, the disagreement between Susan Weaver reaches the point of collapse and perhaps Mark will intervene in the end.
1938, Manhattan, New York, USA
6 January 1969, New York City, New York, USA
15 July 1998, Rome, Georgia, USA
31 December 1928, The Bronx, New York, USA
6 December 1950, Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California, USA
8 May 1955, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA
12 June 1930, Santa Monica, California, USA
26 December 1955, Richmond, Virginia, USA
1936, Pidgeon Roost Holler, West Virginia, USA
25 March 1951, Newburgh, New York, USA
November 28, 2017
As we have seen innumerable times since, Clooney was up to the challenge, ditching his gala event, and refusing to give up on the trapped boy, because he's a doctor, dammit, and committed to trying to save a life, no matter the odds.
November 28, 2017
Few shows had the guts to portray doctors as falliable, stupid and petty at times, indifferent or unable to connect to patients and some times ill-tempered.
November 28, 2017
It took the arrival of the exceptionally cranky, annoyingly whiny, stodgily by-the-book, apparently humorless new chief resident, Dr. Kerry Weaver (Laura Innes), to reveal fully the strengths of ER.
November 28, 2017
The action-tracking format of NBC's "ER" injected the medical-show format with a compelling energy it never had had before, overcoming predictable plots and thin, if likeable, characters.
November 28, 2017
... you can actually pinpoint the exact second George Clooney became a star.

