The Pitt Season 2's Gilligan's Island Reference Explained
by Nina Starner · /FilmThis article contains a discussion of addiction and spoilers for "The Pitt" season 2.
In the penultimate episode of the second season of "The Pitt," newly minted doctor Dennis Whitaker (Gerran Howell) takes one of his coworkers to task by referencing "Gilligan's Island."
Allow me to unpack this for you. After Dr. Frank Langdon (Patrick Ball) is caught stealing drugs from the fictional Pittsburgh hospital where "The Pitt" is, appropriately, set, his disappointed and angry mentor Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch (star, executive producer, and Emmy winner Noah Wyle) kicks Langdon out of the hospital. Between seasons 1 and 2 of the series, we learn that Langdon spent 10 months in a rehabilitation facility and is trying to mend fences with his colleagues. This backfires with Whitaker, whose new status as a doctor (we met him as a fourth-year medical student in the debut season) makes him much more confident.
When the two cross paths in the break room, Langdon comments on Whitaker's newly ripped physique, but in a pretty patronizing way, and Whitaker erupts. "The sarcasm thing, the 'little buddy' routine, like you're the Skipper and I'm Gilligan?" he yells at Langdon. "Dude, you're not the Skipper." Langdon insists that Robby is "the Skipper," the captain of the S.S. Minnow on "Gilligan's Island" who's the de facto leader of the marooned group (Alan Hale Jr., in his favorite role). Gilligan himself, played by Bob Denver, is sort of a doofus.
Whittaker does clarify that Dana Evans, the charge nurse played by Katherine LaNasa, is the Skipper and Robby is the professor (Russell Johnson's Professor Roy Hinkley), but he has a larger point to make. "Play whatever part you like. Just don't pick mine for me," he tells Langdon in a confident and assertive moment — proving their dynamic has shifted.
This conversation is about the shifting dynamic between Langdon and his colleagues
This conversation is only tangentially about "Gilligan's Island" — as Langdon jokes to Whitaker, "Somebody's watched a lot of Nick at Nite," referring to a channel that used to show hours upon hours of classic TV shows — and much more about how much has changed as far as Langdon is concerned. Before his addiction was revealed to Robby, he was the golden boy of the emergency department and Robby's clear protégé, a role that is now apparently held by Whitaker. When Whitaker reveals that he's house-sitting for Robby during the senior trauma attending's three-month sabbatical, Langdon mentions that Robby's apartment is nice and that he's seen it before; it's easy to imagine that he would have been the person to house-sit if he and Robby weren't on the outs.
Even more importantly, though, this whole conversation brings these two doctors to a different place in their tenuous friendship. Somewhat cowed by the sudden emergence of his backbone, Whitaker apologizes to Langdon for his outburst, but Langdon won't accept it. "Don't apologize for standing up for yourself. It's a healthy habit," Langdon tells Whitaker, and the two part ways.
This kind of scene is precisely what makes "The Pitt" so great, honestly. Amid various crises and medical emergencies, two coworkers settle their differences and use a major cultural touchstone to express themselves ... in a way the audience immediately understands. "The Pitt" airs its season 2 finale on Thursday, April 16, at 9 P.M. on HBO Max.
If you or anyone you know needs help with addiction issues, help is available. Visit the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration website or contact SAMHSA's National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).