'The Pitt' trailer shows Season 2 kicking off with fireworks and fresh faces

'The Pitt' trailer shows Season 2 kicking off with fireworks and fresh faces
By: Entertainment Posted On: August 21, 2025 View:

HBO Max has released the official teaser for Season 2 of The Pitt.

Released on Thursday, the minute-long trailer sees Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch, played by E.R. veteran Noah Wyle, clocking in for a new shift at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center’s emergency room.

As chaos begins to erupt around him, Robinavitch quips, “And so it begins.”

Led by Wyle, the first season of the John Wells-produced show premiered in January of this year and cataloged each hour of a 15-hour shift at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. Praised by health care workers for its honest portrayal of working in the field, The Pitt follows Robinavich, the chief attending physician on duty, as he trudges through a hectic and at times treacherous workday alongside the hospital’s nurses, residents, interns, security staff and administrators.

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On Tuesday, Wyle shared an exciting update on Instagram: He’ll also be directing an episode of Season 2.

“Never want to wake up from this dream,” he wrote alongside a photo of a slate on set.

Over the course of the first season, The Pitt explored a variety of social issues, including drug addiction, gun violence, abortion and vaccinations. Wyle spoke to Variety in August about how the show is able to portray sometimes controversial topics from different perspectives.

“We have a certain safety net in just being a realistic drama by trying to depict what it looks like in a hospital,” he said. “You’re not making value judgments. You’re just painting a picture, and if it’s accurate enough and it’s representative enough, it becomes a bit of a Rorschach test. You see what you want to see in it, and you draw your own conclusions from it. If it looks like the system is untenable, unfair and skewed toward one population over another, maybe it is.”

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The inaugural season of The Pitt nabbed 13 Emmy nominations, including Outstanding Drama Series and Lead Actor in a Drama Series for Wyle.

Below, we’re taking a look at everything we know so far about Season 2 of The Pitt.

Wait. What happened last season?

Langdon gets thrown out of the hospital after Robinavich learns that he’s been abusing drugs, Collins has a devastating miscarriage midshift, and Dana gets assaulted by an angry patient.

An already grueling 15-hour shift culminates in a mass-casualty shooting at a nearby music festival, which leaves the staff scrambling to attend to several patients at once. Robinavich hits a breaking point and has an emotional breakdown behind closed doors, before eventually soldiering on and finishing the shift.

When will Season 2 debut?

Season 2 will debut in January 2026, HBO Max has confirmed.

Is the original cast returning?

Yes! Wyle will be returning, along with much of the Season 1 cast: Patrick Ball (Dr. Langdon), Katherine LaNasa (Dana Evans), Supriya Ganesh (Dr. Mohan), Fiona Dourif (Dr. McKay), Taylor Dearden (Dr. King), Isa Briones (Dr. Santos), Gerran Howell (Whitaker), Shabana Azeez (Javadi), Shawn Hatosy (Dr. Abbot), Ayesha Harris (Dr. Ellis) and Ken Kirby (Dr. Shen). Hopefully, we’ll see more of Jalen Thomas Brooks (Mateo), Kristin Villanueva (Princess) and Aimeelynn Abellera (Perlah) too.

Noah Wyle, far left, and Supriya Ganesh, far right.

Noah Wyle and Supriya Ganesh. (Warrick Page/HBO Max)

One actress who is not returning for Season 2 is Tracy Ifeachor (Dr. Collins). Collins has a miscarriage halfway through the first season, and Robinavich sends her home to rest and recuperate after the loss. As a result, she’s absent from the final episodes. The news of Ifeachor’s departure from The Pitt was confirmed in July 2025.

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“Listen, there is going to be an amazing cast in Season 2 — just as there was in Season 1. I’m just going to leave it there,” Ifeachor told Us Weekly, adding that she “didn’t choose to leave the show” and doesn’t know of “any doors being closed” on whether she could return in the future.

Ifeachor also posted a cryptic message on Instagram that same month, thanking fans for watching and supporting her.

Will there be any new characters?

There certainly will. Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) will be joining the staff at Pittsburgh Medical Trauma Center. Al-Hashimi, according to Entertainment Weekly, is an attending physician who comes from the VA Hospital in Pittsburgh, where she worked with King and Mohan.

Sepideh Moafi.

Sepideh Moafi. (Warrick Page/HBO Max)

"She's gonna be someone who's very progressive in her approach to medicine and believes in the modernization of the medical field," R. Scott Gemmill, the show’s creator, told the outlet on Wednesday. "And Robby's a little bit more old-school, and there'll be a little bit of, let's just say, tension as they try and figure out how to work together.”

What do we know about the plot?

Like the first season, The Pitt’s sophomore season will take place over the course of one 15-hour shift in the emergency room. Season 2, however, will pick up 10 months later, on July Fourth, which happens to be Langdon’s first day back to work following a stint in rehab.

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Wyle told TV Line in August that Robinavich would prefer not to work with Langdon, who betrayed him by stealing pills from patients.

“Robby can be petty, and forgiveness is sometimes harder for some than others. And, yeah, betrayal is a big deal,” Wyle said. “Like anybody that has walls up, if they let their wall down for you and you are one of the few that get to share an intimacy, and then that turns into any kind of betrayal, the wall goes up twice as high as it was before, and that’s what we’re going to play with probably.”

Patrick Ball.

Patrick Ball. (Warrick Page/HBO Max)

While chatting with Variety in August, Wyle, Gemmill and executive producer John Wells revealed that they’ll be incorporating Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” and Medicaid changes into the plot for Season 2.

“When people have less finances from the government to help them with their health care, they’re going to get less health care, and that means they’re going to end up in the only place where they can get free health care, which is the ER. So the ER is just going to get busier and busier and become more of a safety net, and it’s already broken, so the system is destined for a tipping point,” Gemmill told the outlet.

Has the cast said anything else?

LaNasa, who earned an Emmy nomination for her portrayal of Dana Evans, an ER charge nurse on The Pitt, told Variety that the second season will be even gorier than the first.

“There was something I did already [for Season 2], and I told the producer that I think I needed some jewelry for it. Like he needed to give me some diamonds,” LaNasa said. “You’ll see. It’s in Episode 2. It’s disgusting.”

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