Sepideh Moafi as Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi in Season 2 of 'The Pitt.'

Ten months after the conclusion of its groundbreaking first season, returns in all its emergency room drama glory (and gore) for a season that takes viewers along for the wild ride of a Fourth of July weekend shift at an emergency room.

Created by ER alum R. Scott Gemmill, The Pitt stars veteran TV doctor Noah Wyle (also an executive producer, writer, and director) as Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch, a chief attending physician at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center who is responsible for overseeing the doctors, nurses, residents, interns, and medical students tasked with caring for the teaching hospital’s emergency department patients. However, this time around, Robby, still suffering from pandemic-induced PTSD, is one shift away from a three-month leave that he plans to spend on a cross-country motorcycle trip.

“He’s created a sort of self-help version of a mental health plan where he could fix up this old motorcycle and take it on this slightly romantic, slightly literary odyssey-trip of self-discovery,” Wyle told the of his character’s mindset.

But as Robby is (supposedly) on his way out, some fresh faces are navigating their very first day in the chaos of the Pitt. Here’s your guide to the new doctors and nurses emerging in Season 2 of everyone’s current medical drama obsession.

Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi

Overriding Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi), Dr. Robby (Noah Wyle) encourages Samira (Supriya Ganesh) and Garcia (Alexandra Metz) through a procedure in 'The Pitt' Season 2.

With Dr. Robby set to take off on a three-month-long sabbatical-cum-motorcycle pilgrimage after one final shift, Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi of The Deuce, The L Word: Generation Q, and Blackbird) has been brought in to take over as PTMC’s new chief attending physician in his absence. Naturally, the two have some difficulty adjusting to each other’s differing medical philosophies, with Robby preferring to maintain a more old-school approach to running the ER while Al-Hashimi is a proponent of introducing new technological initiatives like “patient passports” and AI charting tools. Robby clearly has his guard up where Al-Hashimi is concerned, but their tension also seems to sometimes verge on flirtatious—even if Moafi claims romance isn’t necessarily in the cards for the pair.

“I can assure there will be no broom closets involved,” she told . “The way I envisioned it when I read the scripts was that we’re two animals in the wild sort of circling and sniffing each other out. Sometimes they stop and stare, and they’re curious. That’s the dynamic. Something explosive, but all under the surface. She’s used to high stress and men undermining her. There’s something about Dr. Robby that’s unique.”

Joy Kwon

Noah Wyle as Dr. Robby, Irene Choi as medical student Joy Kwon, and Fiona Dourif as Dr. McKay in Season 2 of 'The Pitt.'

Played by recurring Community guest star Irene Choi—who has, more recently, appeared in Truth Be Told and Pam & Tommy—Joy Kwon is a third-year medical student working under the mentorship of Dr. Dennis Whitaker (Gerran Howell) who has a rather clinical outlook on patient care. That is to say, she doesn’t seem all that interested in treating them at all. Unfortunately for her, apathy doesn’t appear to be part of the formula for a long and successful career at PTMC.

James Ogilvie

Gerran Howell as Whitaker and Lucas Iverson as Ogilvie in 'The Pitt' Season 2.

Whitaker’s other protégé, fourth-year med student James Ogilvie (Lucas Iverson, who has appeared in The Gilded Age), comes across as an arrogant know-it-all whose overconfidence and lack of empathy seem like they’re probably going to end up getting him into trouble. The Pitt definitely feels like the type of workplace where conceited doctors-in-training are pretty much guaranteed to quickly get taken down a notch.

Emma Nolan

Laetitia Hollard as Emma in 'The Pitt' Season 2.

Compared to her medical student peers, recent nursing school graduate Emma Nolan (Laëtitia Hollard in the Juilliard alum’s first major on-screen role) is a breath of fresh air. Hailing from upper Michigan—practically Canada—the bright-eyed trainee of Nurse Dana (Katherine LaNasa) has a can-do attitude but a lot to learn. Although she may seem a little naive, we’re trusting she’ll eventually find her feet in her new high-stress role.