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Charles Haid returned to the series for the first time since the first season to helm two episodes. New director Darnell Martin was the season's only other repeat director with two episodes. Other directors making their series debut with the fourth season were executive producer John Wells, Christopher Misiano, T.R. Subramaniam, and Sarah Pia ...
From season 4 to season 6 ER cost a record-breaking $13 million per episode. [22] TNT also paid a record price of $1 million an episode for four years of repeats of the series during that time. [23] The cost of the first three seasons was $2 million per episode and seasons 7 to 9 cost $8 million per episode. [22] [24]
The series follows the inner life of the emergency room (ER) of fictional Cook County General Hospital in Chicago, and various critical issues faced by the room's physicians and staff. During the course of the series, 331 episodes of ER aired over fifteen seasons, between September 19, 1994, and April 2, 2009.
Noah Wyle revealed that there was almost an ER revival — until there wasn’t. “This has not been talked about, but that’s kind of the road we had started down,” Wyle, 53, said on the ...
On Sept. 19, 1994, the first episode of ER premiered on NBC, launching one of the most popular and influential network TV dramas of the ’90s. Critics praised the episode for its unprecedented ...
"And in the End..." is the series finale of the American medical drama television series ER. The two-hour episode, which serves as the 22nd episode of the fifteenth season and the 331st episode overall, was written by John Wells and directed by Rod Holcomb and aired on NBC on April 2, 2009. It was preceded by a one-hour retrospective special.
The eighth season seems to have ushered in the beginning of the end with a major shake-up when Megan Boone's character Liz Keen departed the Washington DC crime world in the season finale.
"Ambush" is the premiere episode of the fourth season of the American medical drama ER. The 70th episode overall, it was written by executive producer Carol Flint and directed by Thomas Schlamme and it was first broadcast on NBC on September 25, 1997, as a live episode, filmed twice for the East and West Coast.