How does scrubs season 8 end




















It featured a bunch of "Scrubs" Greatest Hits, whether it was Cox reciting the final lines of his greatest rant ever , or Turk giving J. He could really be Glenn, or Tony, or Jan I. It's all up to you to decide. It gave us that sweet J. It gave us a reminder that J. Mickhead, both the character Randall Winston the little person custodian and the producer Randall Winston as the hook-handed security guard , the studly gynecologist, Mrs.

Tanner repeating the advice she gave J. It was every bit the trip down memory lane I would have liked, without actually closing down the hospital or killing off anybody else major. And then the show that always used music so brilliantly did it three more times at the end, first with Peter Gabriel's "The Book of Love" playing over J.

We even get a cute little episode in the heads of The Todd, Ted, and Jordan. The janitor gets a two-part Bermuda wedding. Something we love is coming to an end.

As all of this change piles up, JD gets a job in a new hospital, so he can be closer to his kid. The lead character in a workplace sitcom gets a job someplace else.

The only thing that can come next is the series finale. And it is a thing of beauty, a two-part episode that uses the conceits of the show to pay off the promises of these characters and without being schmaltzy or sentimental. It is a master class. We can depend on the characters to be the same week after week, year after year. We need Marcia Brady to be jealous of Jan, and we need Leslie Knope to tackle another selfless project for her undeserving town. The finale of the sitcom itself goes all in on this premise, I think to great success.

If you were to reboot Seinfeld , it would just be the four of them sitting in that same jail cell, horrible people still incapable of introspection or growth. One of the things that elevates Scrubs for me is that this show lets its characters grow. But showrunner Bill Lawrence was committed to letting these characters grow right from the start.

Over the years, from dating to falling in love to marriage, babies and associated stresses, they grow with the relationship. The way Lawrence pays off this growth in these last episodes of season eight is what sets this finale apart. He says his literal goodbyes to the major characters—and the actors who play them—as he goes about his last day of doctoring. When Scrubs came to a tear-filled ending after the season 8 finale premiered, fans were ready for it to be over.

It ended with J. He walked out of Sacred Heart and had goodbyes with every major character even if they had died earlier on the show like Nurse Laverne Roberts and other patients that J.

Cox and Jordan while a heartwarming song played. Then, the series tried to come back for the 9th season and focused on a new group of med students with the main characters teaching, which had some of the lowest-rated episodes of the entire show. The 9th season finale muddled a lot of the ending that the former finale had covered.

Drew and Denise became close in the last season and their relationship is open to interpretation by the finale of season 9.

The two were similar characters so it made sense that their personalities matched and they were the main couple of the last season. In the finale, Denise breaks down the wall separating them, literally, and suggests that they move in together next year. It's safe to assume that the two stayed together and probably moved in together, but it's another loose end that the season 9 finale left. A lot of the 8th season focused on J. There were a few moments with Kim and his son in the final season, but a lot of the 9th season focused on Elliot being pregnant, without ever showing her giving birth, instead of J.

Register Don't have an account? My Finale. View source. History Talk Dan Stonewater. Jamie Moyer T. The Worthless Peons and The Gooch. Jason "Cabbage" Cabbagio. Ladinia Williams and Lloyd Slawski. Paul Zeltzer and Dr. Coleman "Colonel Doctor" Slawski. Ronald Snoop Dogg Attending. Jeffrey Steadman. Admit it! John Dorian was the first and only doctor I ever met who cared as much as I do, and you can forget about him being just an exceptional physician.

Because the fact of the matter is, he's a damn exceptional person. That's why people gravitated toward him, that's why I did. He was my friend. Cox on J. The truth is, you should consider yourself lucky if you even occasionally get to make someone - anyone - feel a little better.

After that, it's all about the people that you've let into your life. Season Eight Episodes.



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