Just like the season that preceded it, Rub Season 9 introduced several figures into the sitcom formula, but left out one of Season 8’s brilliant new characters who would have improved the divide Faculty of Medicine was. As fans will remember, not all nine seasons of Rub were the same, as the show’s final airing received a drastic overhaul that would have originally been planned as a spinoff rather than the 9th season of the same sitcom. Rub‘final era caused its cancellationbut it could have been improved by keeping one of the newer characters in the game.
ONE Rub the revival has been heavily talked about for some time. While it hasn’t been officially confirmed yet, key members of the original cast and crew have been very vocal about the plan to bring the show back and the likelihood of it happening soon. Showrunner Bill Lawrence went so far as to confirm a Rub revival is”so close“, and that a deal to allow him to remain on Apple TV+ while also returning to Disney to make Rub looks promising. If so, Rub season 10 may finally redeem the mistakes of the Faculty of Medicine episodes.
Aziz Ansari’s Ed From Scrubs Season 8 Is Out Very Soon
Ansari only appeared in 4 episodes of Scrubs
Perhaps as an experiment to see what the series would be like with a new cast, Rub season 8 brought a new crop of interns to end the sitcom’s run in its most beloved format. Although Eliza Coupe’s Dr. Denise Mahoney moved from season 8 to season 9, she was the only member of this new group to do so. One of Denise’s fellow interns at Rub Season 8 was Aziz Ansari’s Dr. Ed Dhandapani. However, Ansari only appeared in four episodes and left in Rub Season 8, Episode 8, “My Lawyer’s in Love.”
Aziz Ansari’s 4 episodes of Scrubs as Ed |
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Title |
Season |
Episode |
IMDb score |
“My idiots” |
8 |
1 |
8.0/10 |
“My Last Words” |
8 |
2 |
9.3/10 |
“My ABC” |
8 |
5 |
8.2/10 |
“My lawyer is in love” |
8 |
8 |
8.3/10 |
Ed also appeared in 2 episodes of the forgotten ABC web series, Scrubs: Interns |
Although frustrating and intentionally unpleasant, Ed was a great addition to the comedy. His exaggerated arrogance and abrasive personality made the few episodes he was in even better. At first, it seemed that Rub he had a huge redemption arc ready for him, but his departure not even halfway through season 8 made that impossible. It’s also possible that he followed Denise into the sitcom’s new format, which would have created a stronger connection between Rub seasons 8 and 9, and Ed could have been a brilliant character involved in the Faculty of Medicine was.
Why Ed left Scrubs shortly after their debut
Ansari was cast in a much bigger role in another sitcom
Aziz Ansari was a big loss for the Rub cast. That said, there’s a good reason why Ed didn’t stick around for long, and that has to do with Ansari’s career away from medical comedy. Although he was already an active actor at the time of his Rub debuting in 2009, being cast as Ed was still a huge moment and arguably his biggest project yet. Ansari’s good fortune continued, as in the same year he appeared in Rub, he then debuted as Tom Haverford as a member of the main cast of Parks and Recreation.
Ansari played Tom in all seven seasons of Parks and recreationtotaling 120 participations between 2009 and 2015.
Ansari played Tom in all seven seasons of Parks and recreationtotaling 120 participations between 2009 and 2015. Rub it was highly unlikely that it would continue to function as long as Parks and recreation I ended up doing it, and Tom was a much bigger part of his show than Ed was in his. Therefore, it was the right decision from Aziz Ansari’s professional point of view. Fortunately, Bill Lawrence and company gave the actor a befitting response Rub leaves, and even though we know why Ansari’s character leaves so early, it still feels incredibly organic.
Bringing Ed back for Scrubs Season 10 wouldn’t make any sense
Ed didn’t seem like the type of character who learned from his mistakes
Ed was a naturally talented intern who, by Dr. Cox’s own reluctant admission, was doing “better than most.” The problem with Ed’s talent was that he had no desire to study, as he believed he could keep up with the fast-paced field of internal medicine without burying his head in books. When this begins to impact Ed’s internship, John C. McGinley’s character gives him an ultimatum that highlights Ed’s laziness, and Cox uses his ability as the new Chief of Medicine to fire Ansari’s character when he’s sure Ed won’t change.
Since then, It’s hard to imagine Ed better in another hospitalthen bringing it back Rub Season 10 would be illogical. While he could have gotten his act together or moved into an adjacent career, both seem unlikely. Additionally, Lawrence’s plans to combine new and old Rub the revival’s characters leave no room for Ansari’s return. He wasn’t established enough to be considered an old character and wouldn’t be new if he returned. In short, bringing back such a secondary character as Ed would unfortunately only take up space in new Rub episodes.
Scrubs is a sitcom and medical comedy/drama created by Bill Lawrence that follows a group of medical students through their daily lives at Sacred Heart Teaching Hospital. The series stars Zach Braff, Sarah Chalke, and Donald Faison as they progress as medical interns while juggling all sorts of hospital shenanigans.
- Cast
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John C. McGinley, Robert Maschio, Donald Faison, Christa Miller, Neil Flynn, Judy Reyes, Aloma Wright, Zach Braff, Sarah Chalke, Sam Lloyd, Ken Jenkins
- Release date
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October 1, 2001
- Seasons
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9
- Presenter
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Bill Lawrence