Archive for Scrubs Season 9
Scrubs episodes are missed by its fans. The craze of Scrubs was so much that fans still follow the life of its cast as to what recent projects they are doing.

Scrubs TV series was a series with a great fan following but after Scrubs Season 8 episodes the viewership started to fall leading to downfall in the ratings. And Scrubs Season 8 finale episode winded up all the stories of that times ongoing characters.
Soon Scrubs episodes got another chance that was renewal of Scrubs Season 9, but fans saw major changes in the new season. The location was changed and even the main cast was also changed. Fans of Zack Braff, who played Dr. John “J.D” Dorian in the series, were very disappointed as his main regular role was cut short to just 6 episodes in Scrubs Season 9. Roles of Doctor Perry Cox (John C. McGinley) and Christopher Turk (Donald Faison) were changed to teachers in the Med School. The episodes of Scrubs Season 9 were totally based on lives of students of the fictional Winston University. And new cast Kerry Bishe had entered the series as narrator.
Due to all these changes and low ratings the show was cancelled. But no need to be upset as you can always get back to these episodes and for that watch Scrubs online.
Zach Braff of the Scrubs episodes fame will be seen in a movie, “The High Cost Living”. He is very much excited about this project as he plays the role of a drug dealer who hits and runs a pregnant woman, which proves fatal for her unborn child and rest of the movie is what all he does for his guilt. He will also be seen in a play “All New People” this summer.
Fans of Scrubs episodes must be missing another character Chris Turk (Donald Faison). Donald was recently seen in “Blu Ray” movie, though it did not do well. But fans can still watch him in a short film “Cease and Deseased” and a comedy sitcom “The Exes”.
But if you still want to catch them in Scrubs episode, watch Scrubs online.
After last week’s seemingly out-of-order interlude with J.D. and Elliot, we’re back to the purity of following the med students around, and I have to say, this was the best of those episodes to date.
Given the proper elbow room, you can see even some of the more one-note characters, like Lucy and Drew Cole, grow and change. And, given the fact that even Bill Lawrence thinks it’s a 70/30 shot against renewal, it’s a bit of a shame; episodes like this make me want to get to know these characters a little more and follow them through their med school trials and tribulations.
Again, the pacing of the episode was slower, and we didn’t see as many flashbacks and fantasy sequences. Which is fine with me; I want to get to know these characters with regards to how they interact with each other, not how they fantasize.
So the cheating scenario, where Cox keeps everyone from that med student study group in the same room until one of them admits to cheating on the exam, was very helpful in that regard. Nothing like having all the main characters in the same room for an extended period to see how everyone bounces off each other. It’s why there always seems to be one bank robbing / hostage scenario episode on every show.
Here’s what we learned: Lucy is overwhelmed, and she chews her hair when she lies, among other things. Drew Cole is actually noble, willing to take the hit for Lucy, especially because everyone expected him to be the cheater, anyway. Hottie Maya really, really has the hots for brainiac Tran (“You’re smothering me” might be the funniest line in the episode).
Finally, all the students are going to pull for each other because med school is tough enough and they all feel overwhelmed — and Drew is the king of second chances. So they’ll take Cox’s wet re-exam that probably asks who won the 1952 World Series, mainly because they all know they could have been the ones cheating.
I’m really liking Drew and Denise as a couple. Interesting how it was Lucy, horse lover and Denise’s polar opposite, that finally convinced Denise to reciprocate Drew’s “I love you.” Though even Cox is afraid of Denise’s “murder eyes,” people are starting to see the normal, vulnerable person underneath. Yes, it’s a shocker that Denise is capable of love, but if she can match up with anyone, a guy like Drew, whose parents are convinced is dead, seems to be perfect.
Even the Cox-Turk story was fun, because it’s interesting to see the peer dynamic develop between the two, especially their deal involving lunchtime pages and hip-hop handshakes. Oh, and it was fun to see Nadine Velasquez in any role, even if it’s in a hospital bed. And, good to get some extended face time with The Todd. You knew that with lesbians in the area, it would have been criminal for him to have the day off.
I still don’t know what they’re doing with Ken Jenkins. Kelso is just randomly hanging around the hospital now, talking about the “good old days” when doctors used to talk to their patients? I seem to recall Chief of Medicine Kelso hated talking to patients. Maybe he was more of a conversationalist in those heady, sexual harassment filled days of the sixties and seventies.
Like I said, this one was fun to watch. Hopefully, the last three episodes will build on this.
Watch “Our True Lies” Episode Online
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