- Network: ABC
- Series Premiere Date: Jun 26, 2008
- Season #: 1
User Score
8.7
out of 10
Universal acclaim- based on 27 Ratings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 24 out of 27
-
Mixed: 0 out of 27
-
Negative: 3 out of 27
Review this tv show
-
Your Score10 out of 10
-
Please sign in or create an account before writing a review.
-
-
Submit
-
Check Spelling
-
Characters remaining: 5000 out of 5000
- User score
- Most active
- By date
- Most helpful
- Most Clicked
-
BrianP.Jul 3, 20089The raw feeling of health care. Relationships, real life trials and virtues, without the overly-dramatized script.
-
-
PennyB.Jul 7, 20089A fascinating and poignant look at the lives of the doctors and patients in and out of the hospital. The real drama of the show, not scripted makes it all the more addictive.
-
-
RandallS.Jul 10, 20089I never give a show such a high rating, but the proliferation of reality TV is making us all stupid, and its only getting worse. This is a fantastic show that uses Cinema Verite (TRUE reality TV) to tell stories. This is how TV should be, educational and telling a great story.
-
-
GeorgeJ.Jul 18, 20081A terrible show, completely unrealistic. How come nurses can complain about doctors being stupid, when they are truly the dumbest ones in the hospital?
-
-
bethgJul 10, 20089
-
-
SharK.Jul 5, 20089
-
-
PattiS.Aug 14, 200810Show was great!
-
-
SamM.Aug 25, 200810Best new show on ABC. I wonder how long it will last? ABC needs to keep this winner.
-
-
JohnKJul 18, 200810This may be one of the best shows I have seen in a long time. Great look into the best hospital in the world. You can be cynical about doctors all you want but when a life is on the line very few of us could do what they do. I am very fortunate that my daughter starts her studies at Johns Hopkins University this fall.
-
-
DominiM.Jul 31, 20089I Had open heart surgery and my experience in the hospital was much like at HOPKINS. real life is so much more dramatic,sad,funny,stressful and demanding just like the show HOPKINS portrays the real patients,the real staff and the real life and death situations. i hope it comes back in the fall. all my friends just love it.
-
-
LindaE.Sep 1, 200810Love it! love everything about it. doctors, patients, stories, music. It's all great!
-
-
GuidoS.Jun 27, 20082One of the most boring TV shows I've seen. Besides the female urologist, the other surgeons are arrogant and self-indulgent.
-
-
GaryG.Jun 27, 20089Engaging, fascinating, compelling, poignant. Great show!
-
-
FeebE.Jun 29, 20081This episode was the media drumming up sympathy for the illegal aliens. He displaced some unsuspecting and deserving LEGALLY entitled student from slots in College, Medical School, residency and Fellowship, and he isn't even grateful! I wouldn't be his patient on a bet!
-
-
AnnetteD.Jul 23, 20089I am mesmerized by the series. I'm an RN and have worked in the ER before and see this as depicting hospital life in the most realistic manner I've seen. I enjoy getting to know the backgrounds of the staff and find it most educational as well as entertaining.
-
-
J.D.Aug 31, 200810You can't bring it back soon enough for me. It's an awesome show and I'm disappointed that it isn't on anymore. It is inspiring and exhilarating. Please bring it back there are so many that miss it!!
-
prev
next
Page:
- 1
-
80The deeper bow to the dictates of prime-time storytelling in this return to Hopkins by executive producer Terence Wrong and his ABC News documentary team isn't a bad thing. In fact, the choices made by Wrong and his digitally armed filmmaking troops result in a faster-paced, more engaging series.
-
80As a follow-up to the groundbreaking summer series "Hopkins 24/7" that ran nearly eight years ago, this revisit to the medical center is, if anything, even more grounded in authenticity and honesty, even if it sometimes feels compelled to pile on the soapy elements.
-
70The new version bears less of a resemblance to "ER"-styled medical drama of the 2000 "Hopkins" than it does to "The Hills," the MTV sensation that introduced a whole new visual vocabulary to unscripted TV. The stories still involve people being treated at Hopkins, of course, but what's striking is how much time is spent outside the hospital with the docs and their families.