The ‘Scrubs’ Gang Is Back at Sacred Heart Hospital in New Trailer for Revival Series
The OG crew of Zach Braff, Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, and John C. McGinley will be joined by several newcomers, including Vanessa Bayer
Scrubs fans have spent the past 16 years waiting for Zach Braff, Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, John C. McGinley, Robert Maschio, and Judy Reyes to suit back up and return to active duty at Sacred Heart Hospital. It’s finally happening on Feb. 25, when the first two episodes of the Scrubs revival series premiere on ABC.
A new trailer shows that while the doctors may be older, they’ve gained little wisdom during the long hiatus. They are, however, training a new generation of interns at the teaching hospital. One of them gets “a little woozy” during procedures and can’t keep his hand steady while administering a needle, while another nicks an artery during a routine incision and sends blood shooting out like a geyser.
The original cast members will be joined by several newcomers, including Vanessa Bayer, Joel Kim Booster, and Jacob Dudman.
On the ninth season of the show, back in 2009, most of the major characters departed, and the action moved to a new hospital. “[Scrubs creator] Bill Lawrence has said that he wishes [that season] had a different title,” Braff told Esquire last year. “It was meant to be a sort of spinoff, really. He always said he wishes he had called it Scrubs: Med School.… For years now, there’s been this feeling like Season Nine doesn’t really count, and I get people’s feelings about that. I think it would’ve been all easier if it had been called a ‘reboot/spinoff.’”
The revival brings the show back where it all started. And for Braff, who started a Scrubs rewatch podcast back in 2020, signing on was an easy call. “To us it was a no-brainer,” he said. “There were so many things to figure out, getting people on the same calendar and working out Bill’s deal because he’s under a Warner Bros. contract. That took literally years. I thought we might do a little miniseries kind of thing, like Psych has done. I never imagined it was going to be like, ‘No, you’re back at 8 p.m. prime time on ABC, with Hulu the next day.’ That shocked all of us.”
Scrubs joins a long list of beloved sitcoms that have come back on the air over the past decade or so. Some of them (Fuller House, Roseanne/The Conners, Will and Grace, Night Court, Girl Meets World) ran for several seasons, while others (Mad About You, Murphy Brown, BH90210) flamed out after just one.
It often works best with animated shows, since they don’t need to deal with the passage of time or aging actors. King of the Hill, however, took a novel approach by allowing several years to pass so that Bobby Hill could become an adult and the characters could grapple with present-day life. Beavis and Butt-head simply catapulted the idiotic duo through a black hole so they’d emerge in the present as teenagers.
From Rolling Stone US.


