-
They just left you hanging with to many story lines left unanswered..like what happened with that lady who had the heart transplant?
We never saw them go tell the husband his wife died from child birth, the drunken girl whats happened with her...almost like they would be back next week to continue but we no they wont!!
The only time I cried was when Carter was talking about his son and his wife walked in.
-
it wasnt the greatest endings but it was sure different then most show endings.......I cried when the elderly lady died and when Carter was talking about his son...... what bugs me the most is how his wife acted and they left us to come up with what happens to them lol All in all I am really going to miss this show.....nbc only gets watched on Thurs. nights at my house so now that E.R is no longer on the channel wont be getting watched any more....they have to many dumb shows imo.
-
I was just plain bored. I only watched this last season of ER because I had watched all the previous ones. (I kept hoping it would get better. Some episodes were good, most weren't) It had gotten to be like so many other series on TV ...same ole, same ole week after week. I'm glad it's over. I really wish Chicago Hope had lasted this long and not ER.
-
I was very loyal the last 15 years of the show. Each clip and scence was good.
I thought the the Banfield and Greene story line was gonna go way BETTER then it did. I thought that the baby was like Rachel Greene baby and she was gonna give it up and it happened to be to her.
-
I loved it an am sad to see it go, I'm glad most of the goodbyes ended around 10:30 they kind of got that out of the way and then went on with storylines about everyone else going on. I like the way they didnt have everyone saying goodbye in the very end it was a neat way to do it. An the end with "are you coming Dr. Greene" I loved it took me back to the beginning, I'll miss the show, its on again tonite at 8pm if anyone missed it or wants to see it one more time
-
It wasn't as great as it was hyped up to be. But then again, what show is anymore?
They could have given George Clooney more screen time.
-
More than 16 million watch 'ER' finale
April 3, 2009, 1:04 PM EST
NEW YORK (AP) -- An estimated 16.4 million people paid one last visit to the "ER" on Thursday, as the last piece of NBC's once-mighty "must-see TV" lineup signed off after 15 years.
It was the biggest audience for a drama series finale since "Murder, She Wrote" on CBS in 1996, Nielsen Media Research said on Friday.
The two-hour finale brought back vintage "ER" stars Noah Wyle, Eriq La Salle and Laura Innes alongside current cast members John Stamos and Angela Bassett. It was a typical few days at Chicago's mythical County General Hospital — a woman who dies in childbirth, an AIDS patient who learns he has cancer — ending on a hopeful note. The 22-year-old daughter of Anthony Edwards' character, Dr. Mark Greene, is enthralled by the action and wants to be an emergency room doctor.
Video: Watch the final episode of "ER"
Vintage "ER" producer John Wells wrote the final episode in another reminder of when "ER" ruled prime time. It has been overshadowed in recent years by other medical dramas, "House" and "Grey's Anatomy."
The audience Thursday night was up sharply from the 9.5 million people who watched on an average week this season. Yet it's still half as many people who watched "ER" at its peak in the mid-1990s.
When "Cheers" exited the NBC Thursday night lineup in 1993, there were 45.5 million people watching. The end of "Seinfeld" drew 41.3 million people in 1998, Nielsen said. Comedy show finales tend to draw bigger audiences than dramas.
"Friends," the last big piece of NBC's Thursday schedule, had 29.2 million viewers for its 2004 finale.