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‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Episode 9 Recap: Jiggle the Cable

@glennganges Published March 5, 2026, 9:51 p.m. ET Where to Stream: The Pitt Powered by Reelgood More On: The Pitt ‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Episode 9 Recap: Jiggle the Cable What Time Does ‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Episode 9 Come Out? New On HBO Max March 2026, Plus What’s Coming Next (Now with Discovery+) ‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Episode 8 Recap: Tech No For Dr. Mel King, the realest part of this very long day has arrived. We know it’s been on her mind this whole season, but it’s now zero hour for the deposition in her malpractice case, and a stern hospital attorney has arrived to take her upstairs. It would freak anybody out. But Dr. King is particularly worried, which Robby recognizes and combats with more affirmations. And as if she wasn’t already consumed by overthinking on all the potential consequences – What if she lost her medical license? What if she could no longer support her autistic sister? – who drops into the ED from a very sweaty and crowded Chairs but Becca King (Tal Anderson) herself. Mel’s twin left her care facility because of a really bad bellyache, and is quite thrilled to meet in IRL so many of her sister’s colleagues. Dr. Langdon, for instance, who will treat her while Mel attends her deposition, has very nice hair. We can imagine the King sisters at home, with Mel explaining the characters in her hectic work life. (Which might be similar to “Dr. J.” and her work stories on TikTok.) When Becca meets the Pitt’s superhero charge nurse and co-senior attending, it’s like a celebrity red carpet event. “You’re Dr. Robby? Cool!”

The sails, masts, and rigging quickly assembled to steady The Pitt’s listing, under-threat-of-cyberattack ship are functioning. Haphazardly. “Take the T-sheet to the bedside! Not the whole chart!” Dana and Robby are fielding staff questions while keeping the concocted system afloat, but they need help. Which arrives in the form of Monica Peters (Rusty Schwimmer), a veteran clerk called in by Dana. Monica didn’t retire – she was “laid off by the digital revolution” – and within seconds she’s applied a sure hand and extra organization to the analog chaos of this day. To the two randoms tapped to run filing in the central work area, Monica says move. “Get out of my space and go do something you know how to do.” It’s natural that a supremely competent person like Dana just has a mental rolodex of other extremely competent people, who she can tap for a key assist. Even at 3pm on the Fourth of July.

Mr. Knox has returned from his run for tests with Dr. Abbot, and though his condition is serious, with a hole in his colon leaking bacteria into his abdomen, Dr. Garcia is confident he will recover after emergency surgery. The team also continues to go above and beyond. They located the patient’s sister in Arizona, and wheel him into the ambulance bay so the estranged siblings can FaceTime. It’s a nice bookend on Mr. Knox’s story from Episode 8, since he made such an impression on the staff. Now Abbot and Robby cross their fingers that the surgeons will get him through.

This episode of The Pitt actually features Dr. Garcia in a few different contexts. When she drops into the ED to make an assessment on a 12-year-old kid who blew off two of his fingers with an M-80, Garcia encounters Santos, who repeats her offer to hang out later. “We’re just keeping it casual, right?” asks Yolanda rhetorically, and says she made other plans as the elevator doors close on a disappointed Trinity. It looks like their respective takes on “casual” are a bit lopsided.

On Javadi, Dr. Garcia also unleashes the full volume of her flair for a turn of phrase. The half-measures filing system that’s replaced full hospital power has also misplaced one of Victoria’s patients, whose X-rays got lost in the shuffle. The woman will now require major surgery for something Garcia could have fixed in 60 seconds. Victoria apologies to the surgeon – she’s ashamed, humiliated, and worried for her patient, apologizes. None of which Garcia has time for. “Not good enough, nepo baby. You fucked up.” Ouch! If this happened to us we’d probably transfer workplaces, or at least walk into the sun.

Becca drives so much of Mel’s worry over the malpractice suit since, all at once, she’s trying to be a good sister, the primary caregiver, and their only breadwinner. And in another corner of the Pitt, a story with similarly trying parts. The kid who almost blew his hand off with fireworks also had booze on his breath, which prompted a visit from social services, and it turns out his overworked older sister has become his guardian, caregiver and surrogate mother. When their parents attended a standard immigration hearing, they were instead detained, then deported to Haiti. The injured boy is in danger of being sent there, too. Even though, like his sister, he was born in America.

While the situation has some promise – Dylan the social worker will work with the siblings to help them stay together – it’s a pain point that keeps recurring in The Pitt, where a damaged healthcare system meets destructive federal policies on the front lines of what counts as a safety net. It’s not right, Santos says, that the boy would be separated from his sister and guardian. Like Becca and Mel, they are all they have. But Robby can’t offer much more than a veteran caregiver’s jaded assessment. They will continue to apply their best efforts, even with faulty fax machines and handwritten charts. But. “A lot of what happens to people around here isn’t right.”

Johnny Loftus (@johnnyloftus.bsky.social) is a Chicago-based writer. A veteran of the alternative weekly trenches, his work has also appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, The All Music Guide, and The Village Voice.

Read original at New York Post

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