Draft:The Good Doctor season 2
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The Good Doctor | |
---|---|
Season 2 | |
No. of episodes | 18 |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | September 24, 2018 March 11, 2019 | –
Season chronology | |
The second season of The Good Doctor premiered on September 24, 2018, on ABC.
Plot
[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (March 2024) |
Cast
[edit]Main
[edit]- Freddie Highmore as Dr. Shaun Murphy
- Nicholas Gonzalez as Dr. Neil Melendez
- Antonia Thomas as Dr. Claire Browne
- Chuku Modu as Dr. Jared Kalu
- Beau Garrett as Jessica Preston
- Irene Keng as Dr. Elle McLean
- Hill Harper as Dr. Marcus Andrews
- Richard Schiff as Dr. Aaron Glassman
- Tamlyn Tomita as Allegra Aoki
Recurring
[edit]- Fiona Gubelmann as Dr. Morgan Reznick
- Will Yun Lee as Dr. Alex Park
- Christina Chang as Dr. Audrey Lim
- Paige Spara as Lea Dilallo-Murphy
- Jasika Nicole as Dr. Carly Lever
- Dylan Kingwell as Steve Murphy
- Elfina Luk as Nurse Dalisay Villanueva
- Teryl Rothery as Dr. Jan Lancaster
- Chris D'Elia as Kenny
- Sheila Kelley as hospital barista Debbie Wexler
Guest
[edit]- Sharon Leal as Breeze Browne
Episodes
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19 | 1 | "Hello" | Mike Listo | Freddie Highmore | September 24, 2018 | 7.35[1] | |
In performance reviews, Andrews, now president of the hospital, tells Shaun to learn to communicate, Claire to be more assertive, and Morgan to improve her teamwork. Jared, working his last day before moving to Denver, skips his. Jared and Shaun run a mobile clinic and meet Harry, a mentally unstable homeless man. When Shaun takes Jared's advice to spend time with Glassman, who is beginning his cancer treatment with Dr. Blaize (his last hire before being replaced), it leads Shaun to diagnose Harry with a brain tumor. Shaun has a communication breakthrough in persuading Harry (whose real name is Edward) to receive treatment, which is successful and enables him to reunite with his family. Shaun commits to standing by Glassman through his treatment. Andrews, following Allegra's advice that Glassman was manipulative, persuades Melendez to perform a risky heart surgery that could raise the hospital's public profile. Claire resolves a complication and Morgan encourages her to take credit. The procedure is a success and Claire acknowledges her innovation. Claire has a change of heart and asks Jared to stay, but he tells her they will both be happy apart before leaving for Denver. Lea unexpectedly greets Shaun outside his apartment. | |||||||
20 | 2 | "Middle Ground" | Steve Robin | David Shore | October 1, 2018 | 7.18[2] | |
Shaun and Claire assist Dr. Melendez in treating Paul, a hospital janitor Shaun has diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and one year to live. Paul's wife and adult children encourage him to have risky surgery; Paul agrees, telling Shaun he wants to please his family and advising Shaun to lie when the truth is unhelpful. Paul dies from a complication and his family begins to squabble over having coerced Paul; Shaun lies, telling them that Paul wanted the surgery. Dr. Lim treats Mara, a sixteen-year-old girl with scarring from female genital mutilation, risking liability in willfully ignoring Mara's fake ID. Mara experiences extreme pain, revealing live tissue; with her parents and Child Protective Services involved, Mara declines reconstruction in favor of clitoridectomy, but Lim performs the reconstruction without consent. Mara is apparently pleased with the result and Lim's discretion. Dr. Glassman delays picking a neurosurgeon, fearing he could survive but suffer permanent disability; at Dr. Blaize's insistence, Glassman undergoes surgery. Shaun avoids his houseguest Lea for days, telling Claire he doesn't understand his own feelings. He tells Lea she hurt him and he wants her to leave before she hurts him again. | |||||||
21 | 3 | "36 Hours" | Larry Teng | Thomas L. Moran | October 8, 2018 | 7.18[3] | |
On 36-hour shifts, Shaun and Morgan manage the emergency room in Dr. Lim's absence while Claire and Alex assist Dr. Melendez. Melendez performs surgery to treat a woman's endometriosis and restore her fertility. Her condition is more severe than realized and the planned hour-long surgery stretches to over 22 hours; tensions rise among Melendez, Claire, and Nurse Flores. When a risky procedure is the only way to avoid a hysterectomy, the patient's husband refuses to make a decision. He cedes the responsibility to Claire, who overrides Melendez's decision; they perform the hysterectomy. Called before Dr. Andrews over their bickering, Melendez, Claire, and Flores have only praise for each other. Shaun and Morgan safely extract a light bulb from a child's mouth and treat a young man whose priapism reveals an abscess. In traffic court, Lim fails to get a ticket dismissed and is jailed for contempt of court; she is later called away to operate on the abscess, interrupting a tryst with the prosecutor. Shaun apologizes to Lea, but she criticizes him for hurting her and failing to reciprocate her friendship. Glassman wakes from his successful surgery and has a vision of his dead daughter, Maddie. | |||||||
22 | 4 | "Tough Titmouse" | Steven DePaul | David Hoselton | October 15, 2018 | 6.68[4] | |
Mac, a boy with fragile X syndrome, injures himself and his mother, Nicole. Alex and Shaun believe Nicole should send Mac to a group home; at Melendez's recommendation, Nicole agrees. Shaun recalls living with a tough-loving foster mother who became terminally ill. Dr. Lim, Claire, and Morgan treat injured 18-year-old female free solo climber Kitty; her parents, disapproving a risky surgery that could preserve Kitty's athleticism, obtain a declaration of medical incompetence and authorize a safer procedure that may leave her disabled. Kitty disowns her parents; Claire tries to reconcile them, but nobody changes their decision. Claire and Melendez discuss how their baggage influences their advice. Claire struggled with her irresponsible mother and Melendez's developmentally challenged sister Gabi lives in a care home. Glassman's daughter Maddie, who became a heavy marijuana user as a teen, died when Glassman locked her out at night as punishment; Glassman has an emotional confrontation with the hallucination of Maddie and they confirm their mutual love. Shaun struggles to make amends with Lea, succeeding only when he asks what happened in Hershey. Lea is stunned to learn Shaun has rented a two-bedroom apartment for them to share. | |||||||
23 | 5 | "Carrots" | Sharat Raju | Liz Friedman | October 29, 2018 | 6.79[5] | |
Dr. Brown administers a Precordial thump. Dr. Lim treats Wade who, due to Crohn's disease and a fistula, must have his gastric bypass reversed. Wade keeps his past obesity secret from his husband, Spencer. Divorcées Alex and Lim disagree over marital honesty; Alex considers it more important. Wade tells Spencer he kept the secret because Spencer mocked their overweight friends. Spencer admits to Alex his unease at knowing Wade could regain the weight. Dr. Melendez treats Louisa, an anorexic mother suffering mitral regurgitation; her mental illness prevents the weight gain she needs before surgery. Melendez wants to operate despite the risks, rejecting Claire's suggestion of deep brain stimulation; she presents the option to Louisa, who requests it. Melendez is the review board's deciding vote for DBS, but he removes Claire from his team for not accepting his decision while telling her it was Andrews who voted against her. After DBS, Louisa wants to eat, but feels less bonded to her son, a risk she understood and accepted. Glassman is too self-conscious to attempt walking until Shaun brings Debbie to convince him, making Shaun doubt his importance to Glassman. Shaun and Lea talk through her fear that living together will damage their platonic friendship; she ultimately agrees to move into the new apartment with him. | |||||||
24 | 6 | "Two-Ply (or Not Two-Ply)" | Tara Nicole Weyr | Simran Baidwan | November 5, 2018 | 6.53[6] | |
Now working with Dr. Lim, Claire treats a teenage girl, Riley, for severe respiratory problems. Riley's parents believe she is making herself sick over their divorce, but Claire suspects a tumor. When Riley's condition worsens, Claire convinces her parents to allow exploratory surgery; Park initially doubts Claire, but ultimately helps her. They discover and remove an inhaled Lego from Riley's lung; her years-long illness was an immune response to the foreign object. Shaun and Morgan disagree over treating Jas, a violinist: Shaun believes she has flesh-eating bacteria which Morgan, a former archer, is reluctant to test for since, if wrong, it could ruin Jas' career. Morgan's hesitation leads to them being forced to amputate Jas' arm when her condition worsens. Melendez advises Morgan, devastated by her mistake, that she and Shaun have different strengths, as did he and Dr. Lim during their residency. Debbie helps Glassman recover at home, but he asks her to leave after he is injured when they attempt intimacy. Shaun and Lea struggle as new roommates. Glassman tells Lea, if she can't be Shaun's roommate, she should move out immediately; to Shaun's delight, Lea commits to resolving their conflicts and sharing the apartment. | |||||||
25 | 7 | "Hubert" | Marisol Adler | David Renaud | November 12, 2018 | 6.53[7] | |
Claire's college roommate Kayla has terminal ovarian cancer; Claire persuades Dr. Melendez to perform a pain-relief procedure and a life-extending treatment option emerges. At Kayla's insistence, Claire works on Melendez's team with Alex. Kayla asks her husband Dash and Claire to date if she dies, sending them to dinner together. Kayla wants Dash to be taken care of and Claire to open her heart. Claire accuses Kayla of being controlling; during the second procedure, Claire resolves a complication. Claire and Kayla make peace; Claire urges Kayla to focus on herself. Claire and Melendez commend each other, but agree to not work directly together. Dr. Lim, Shaun, and Morgan treat Santiago, who needs a kidney transplant. His perfect-match brother, Armando, will donate only if Santiago sells the family business, granting Armando economic freedom. Shaun leads the brothers to discuss their father's legacy. Armando donates the kidney condition-free, improving their relationship. Dr. Glassman suffers a memory lapse. Shaun and Lea's new fish Hubert dies; Lea is reminded of the failure of her professional and personal relationship with her brother in Hershey. Shaun comforts Lea by proving that Hubert died of a parasite unrelated to her caretaking; they get a new fish. | |||||||
26 | 8 | "Stories" | Michael Patrick Jann | Sal Calleros | November 19, 2018 | 6.84[8] | |
Morgan and Park treat Finn, whose parents don't believe in vaccines. Finn has diastematomyelia, a congenitally split spinal cord. During Finn's treatment, his mother Bethany allows Park to vaccinate him. Finn is treated successfully, but Bethany acted without her husband's knowledge, threatening their marriage. In a failed effort to reconcile them, Park emotionally tells the husband a story (which Park later claims is untrue) of a family that fractured when a couple failed to address the wife's dishonesty. Shaun and Claire treat Todd and Dawn, a couple whose car crashed. Dawn's miscarried ectopic pregnancy reveals her infidelity, as Todd had a vasectomy. Claire determines a tumor has eliminated Dawn's inhibitions; it is removed, but Todd only forgives Dawn after Claire points out that, despite acting on every impulse, Dawn never left him, showing she truly loves Todd. With Claire looking for other jobs, Dr. Andrews tells Melendez Claire's departure would endanger Melendez's promotion. So Melendez can avoid choosing between disobeying orders and looking weak, Claire extends an openly insincere apology; he restores her to his team. At Dr. Glassman's request, Shaun privately tests his memory. Glassman cannot remember Shaun's brother's name, confirming the lapses. | |||||||
27 | 9 | "Empathy" | Joanna Kerns | Karen Struck | November 26, 2018 | 6.67[9] | |
Claire and Morgan treat George, a pedophile who has never acted upon his urges. The hormones that suppress his urges have caused a stroke; he must discontinue them. He mutilates his scrotum and asks the doctors to castrate him. Claire and Morgan eventually agree, but they and Dr. Melendez must instead repair his testicles to prevent unsurvivably low testosterone. George commits suicide; Morgan suggests the outcome is satisfactory. Alex and Shaun treat Billy, a severely beaten juvenile offender. Alex wants to repair an old dent in Billy's forehead, caused by his father's abuse, which led to the beatings; Dr. Lim initially opposes the unnecessary cosmetic procedure, but accepts Shaun's simplified approach. Shaun rejects Billy's praise because Billy suffered a dangerous complication. Alex reveals Billy had been planning suicide; Shaun saved Billy's life and exhibited empathy, an area Shaun considers a deficiency. Allegra demands Andrews choose a new Chief of Surgery. After initially considering between Melendez and Lim, Andrews ultimately retains the title himself; Melendez and Lim later agree to be allies instead of competitors. Shaun takes away Glassman's driver's license. Lea teaches Shaun to drive, using flawed but effective surgical metaphors, so Shaun can transport Glassman. | |||||||
28 | 10 | "Quarantine" | Mike Listo | Liz Friedman & Lloyd Gilyard Jr. | December 3, 2018 | 6.12[10] | |
After sleeping together, Drs. Lim and Melendez agree not to do so again despite both having enjoyed it. The ER and its waiting room are quarantined after two patients, travelers returning from Malaysia, die of a viral respiratory disease. Those quarantined include Shaun, Morgan, Lim, and Alex's estranged son Kellan. Morgan treats Tyler, an infected EMT with whom she shares a developing romance; Tyler dies despite Morgan's impassioned efforts. Lim gets infected and isolates herself. Mall Santa Pete's bowel obstruction requires surgery without the benefit of standard equipment; Lim collapses while talking Morgan through a vital part of the surgery. Shaun also collapses, overwhelmed by sensory overload. Kellan suffers an asthma attack, causing panic when patients think he is infected with the virus. Elsewhere in the hospital, Melendez and Claire struggle to keep leukemia patient Chris alive. Chris' marrow donor, his estranged father Bob, is trapped in quarantine; Chris flatlines and Melendez & Claire struggle to revive him despite Chris' DNR. With Shaun unavailable, Lea takes Dr. Glassman for an MRI to check on the status of his cancer; his tumor is confirmed to have returned. | |||||||
29 | 11 | "Quarantine Part Two" | Mike Listo | Simran Baidwan & Mark Rozeman | January 14, 2019 | 6.26[11] | |
Morgan revives Shaun by getting him to focus on Santa Pete's condition; with Shaun's help, Morgan successfully completes the surgery. Melendez and Claire revive their patient and devise a way to perform the bone marrow transplant with Andrews' help. Park breaks quarantine to treat Kellan's asthma attack and extracts Bob's bone marrow with the help of retired veterinarian Esther; the transplant is a success, but Bob dies of complications. Esther later conveys Bob's final regrets to his son. Morgan treats Doctor Lim using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, which proves successful. Morgan realizes that Tyler's ripped mask led to him getting sick, so the virus is not airborne; no one else contracts the virus and quarantine is later lifted. Pregnant Viola suffers complications, forcing Shaun to perform a C-section. With the help of Kellan, Shaun saves both mother and child. Inspired by Bob's regrets, Park reconciles with Kellan and allows his ex-wife to comfort him when she arrives. Glassman discovers that his cancer has not returned, but that he has meningitis, explaining his memory loss. Glassman and Lea argue over telling Shaun and their respective roles in his life; Glassman chooses to tell Shaun the truth in the end and they share a rare hug. | |||||||
30 | 12 | "Aftermath" | Dawn Wilkinson | Thomas L. Moran | January 21, 2019 | 6.27[12] | |
In the aftermath of the quarantine, the governor orders a review of the hospital; the investigator expresses concern about Andrews maintaining his dual role and recommends Shaun, Lim, and Melendez to the medical board for license suspension over their actions. With the ER closed for cleanup, Park spends the day with his ex-wife Mia and son Kellan, Morgan and Claire spend the day helping Claire's mother pack up her apartment, and Shaun and Glassman spend the day with Lea. Park and Mia decide to work on repairing their relationship. Morgan and Claire confront Claire's mother's boyfriend, whom she claims beat her, only to learn that he never abused her; she is panicked because he proposed to her. Claire convinces her mother to work at the romantic relationship. Morgan admits she is sad about Tyler's death. Claire is impressed that Morgan, who once had a stalker, confidently carries a gun and doesn't back down. Glassman decides to speed up his treatment after a fun day while Shaun learns that Lea has a boyfriend, Jake. Lim and Melendez's night together complicates things for them; they ultimately admit to mutual feelings. Due to the legal proceedings, they decide to pursue a secret relationship. | |||||||
31 | 13 | "Xin" | David Straiton | Brian Shin | January 28, 2019 | 6.58[13] | |
Claire, Park, and Melendez treat an elderly patient, Sunny, with an estranged biological daughter Grace and a surrogate daughter Teresa. Sunny's mechanical heart is malfunctioning. With her condition deteriorating, the doctors are forced to operate rather than send Sunny to her doctor in China; the surgery is a success. Afterwards, with support from Park and Teresa, Sunny and Grace begin mending their relationship. At the same time, Lim, Morgan, and Shaun treat an autistic patient, Lana, whose brain aneurysm requires surgery during which Lana must be awake and talking so the doctors can gauge her brain function. Shaun and Morgan attempt to recruit Lana's roommate Javi, with whom she has a perfunctory sexual relationship. Javi, also autistic, overcomes his sensitivity to light to be present in the operating room, making the surgery a success; Javi admits his love for Lana. At the same time, Shaun struggles with Lea having a boyfriend. Shaun and Lea acknowledge they make each others' lives better; he agrees to give her needed privacy with Jake. Shaun's overbearing attempts to help an ill Glassman lead to a fight. Following Lea's advice, Shaun acts as a supportive friend rather than as a doctor, which Glassman appreciates. | |||||||
32 | 14 | "Faces" | Allison Liddi-Brown | David Hoselton | February 4, 2019 | 5.96[14] | |
A 14-year-old girl, Karin, is left brain dead following a car accident and Andrews asks Karin's mother Shannon to consent to a face transplant for Molly, whose face was destroyed by an accidental gunshot. Shannon consents only after Claire arranges for Shannon to encounter Molly. Melendez, Lim, Andrews, Morgan, Park, and Claire perform a successful transplant. Melendez and Lim question their relationship, as Lim is concerned that Melendez has uncharacteristically deferred to her to the detriment of their initial treatment of Karin; they decide against breaking up. Shannon bonds with Molly and her parents; Shannon and Molly's father both blame themselves for the harm their daughters suffered. Shaun takes the day off to help Glassman, leading to the two getting high on Glassman's medical marijuana. As a result, Shaun, Glassman, and an Uber driver undertake a successful quest to locate Robin, a woman Glassman was in love with in high school, so that he can apologize for an unkind comment he wrote in her yearbook. The experience causes Shaun to reexamine his own feelings for Lea and he admits to Glassman that he is "not all right" with Lea's relationship with her boyfriend Jake. | |||||||
33 | 15 | "Risk and Reward" | Freddie Highmore | Teleplay by : Liz Freidman & David Renaud Story by : David Renaud | February 18, 2019 | 6.23[15] | |
Glassman undergoes chemotherapy and rebuffs the social overtures of fellow patient Larry. He later embraces cancer as an identity and socializes with Larry and leukemia patient Candice. The hospital's new Chief of Surgery, Doctor Jackson Han, assigns Melendez to run tests on Minesh, a wealthy entrepreneur wanting a full workup. Melendez finds a spine tumor with a 95% chance of being benign but, if malignant, Minesh would soon die without risky surgery. Minesh decides to undergo surgery; the tumor is successfully removed, but Minesh will have a permanent limp. Minesh decides against learning the biopsy results; Melendez follows suit. Lim, Shaun, and Claire treat Persephone, a newborn with potentially fatal birth defects of the heart and bowel. Shaun tells Persephone's mother that her antidepressants may have caused the defects; Claire and Lim defend Shaun to an outraged Han. After a complex surgery is seemingly a failure, Shaun has a sudden inspiration that saves Persephone. Shaun's diagnostic skills impress Han, who transfers him to pathology - against Shaun's wishes - so he can save patients without interacting with them. | |||||||
34 | 16 | "Believe" | Alrick Riley | Sal Calleros & Karen Struck | February 25, 2019 | 6.36[16] | |
Glassman completes his chemotherapy and attempts to renew his relationship with Debbie. However, hurt by Glassman pushing her away while he was sick, Debbie rebuffs him. Melendez, Claire, and Morgan treat Clarence, a pastor with spinal cancer, who refuses a spinal fusion to fix his pain as he blames himself for a parishioner's suicide and thinks he deserves to suffer. After Clarence's cancer disappears without a medical explanation, Claire, who lost her faith at some point, convinces Clarence to have the spinal fusion. Lim and Park treat Sadie, a young woman who had a premonition that she would die and who appears to have an inoperable and aggressive brain tumor. Shaun, attempting to adjust to working in pathology, realizes that Sadie may have been misdiagnosed; he gets Han to retest her, proving Shaun's hypothesis that Sadie has a treatable parasite. Han publicly credits Shaun as the pathologist who saved a grateful Sadie's life. Shaun requests his old job back, but Han presents Shaun's unique ability to correctly diagnose Sadie as proof that Shaun belongs in pathology. | |||||||
35 | 17 | "Breakdown" | Mike Listo | Thomas L. Moran & Lloyd Gilyard, Jr. | March 4, 2019 | 6.73[17] | |
Han meets with the medical review board regarding the events of the quarantine and reaches a compromise where the hospital will pay some fines and Shaun, Lim, and Melendez will have to attend a few classes, but are otherwise clear of trouble. Glassman's final test results shows that he is completely cancer free; after Glassman gives her a personal gift in thanks, Dr. Blaize suggests that his ordeal has changed Glassman for the better. Lim treats the newborn daughter of her old friend Laura who displays signs of shaken baby syndrome; Shaun determines that it was a birth complication, not abuse. Melendez assembles a large team to treat Kenny, a young man with a 200-pound tumor encircling his body. When complications arise, Melendez insists on bringing in Shaun to consult; Shaun is able to come up with a way to complete the operation safely, but continues to be excluded from the surgery. Thanks to Shaun, the surgery is a success. Shaun suffers an emotional breakdown and demands his job back from Han in a way that leads to Han firing him. After Laura accuses her of a lack of vulnerability and commitment, Lim decides to make her relationship with Melendez public and goes to Andrews with him. | |||||||
36 | 18 | "Trampoline" | David Shore | David Shore & David Hoselton & Mark Rozeman | March 11, 2019 | 7.78[18] | |
Morgan and Park treat an elderly patient, Ida; Alex proves Ida is faking post-surgery symptoms, but he apologizes to her after Morgan researches Ida's sad, lonely life. Shaun skips a job interview to drink at a bar where his rambling causes another patron, Zack, to attack him; Zack then collapses. An embarrassed Shaun conceals the altercation; Carly, his old pathology colleague, discreetly helps him diagnose his own internal injuries. Shaun realizes that Zack has been misdiagnosed; Shaun collapses, seemingly saying "trampoline." With Shaun unconscious, Claire successfully replicates Shaun's thought process and diagnoses Zack with treponema, saving him. Shaun recovers. Andrews advocates for Shaun to an unmoved Han. At the risk of his own career, Andrews fires Han and rehires Shaun. Glassman proposes to Debbie; she declines, but later accepts. Claire coaches Shaun on how to ask a woman out and tells him he will grow from his failures. Shaun asks Carly out; she says yes. Lim and Melendez make their relationship public, but Han's firing means one of them may become Chief of Surgery, necessitating a breakup. They agree neither of them should decline the position. Melendez reveals he already knows Andrews has chosen Lim; Aoki calls with the offer. |
Production
[edit]In May 2014, CBS Television Studios began development on an American remake of the hit South Korean medical drama Good Doctor with Daniel Dae Kim as producer. Kim explained the appeal of adapting the series as "something that can fit into a recognizable world with a breadth of characters that can be explored in the long run".[19] The story of an autistic pediatric surgeon was to be set in Boston, and projected to air in August 2015,[20][21] but CBS did not pick up the project, and it moved to Sony Pictures Television with a put pilot commitment from ABC in October 2016. The series was developed by David Shore who is credited as executive producer alongside Kim, Sebastian Lee and David Kim.[22] ABC officially ordered the series to pilot in January 2017.[23]
On May 11, 2017, ABC ordered to series as a co-production with Sony Pictures Television and ABC Studios,[24] and it was officially picked up for a season of 18 episodes on October 3, 2017.[25]
Ratings
[edit]No. | Title | Air date | Rating/share (18–49) |
Viewers (millions) |
DVR (18–49) |
DVR viewers (millions) |
Total (18–49) |
Total viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Hello" | September 24, 2018 | 1.3/6 | 7.35[1] | 1.7 | 6.78 | 3.0 | 14.13[26] |
2 | "Middle Ground" | October 1, 2018 | 1.1/5 | 7.18[2] | 1.5 | 6.14 | 2.6 | 13.34[27] |
3 | "36 Hours" | October 8, 2018 | 1.1/5 | 7.18[3] | 1.4 | 6.04 | 2.5 | 13.22[28] |
4 | "Tough Titmouse" | October 15, 2018 | 1.1/5 | 6.68[4] | 1.3 | 5.76 | 2.4 | 12.44[29] |
5 | "Carrots" | October 29, 2018 | 1.0/5 | 6.79[5] | 1.3 | 5.87 | 2.3 | 12.66[30] |
6 | "Two-Ply (or Not Two-Ply)" | November 5, 2018 | 1.0/4 | 6.53[6] | 1.5 | 6.24 | 2.5 | 12.81[31] |
7 | "Hubert" | November 12, 2018 | 1.0/5 | 6.53[7] | 1.3 | 5.66 | 2.3 | 12.19[32] |
8 | "Stories" | November 19, 2018 | 1.1/5 | 6.84[8] | 1.3 | 5.64 | 2.4 | 12.50[33] |
9 | "Empathy" | November 26, 2018 | 1.0/5 | 6.67[9] | 1.3 | 5.55 | 2.3 | 12.22[34] |
10 | "Quarantine" | December 3, 2018 | 1.1/6 | 6.12[10] | 1.2 | 5.47 | 2.3 | 11.61[35] |
11 | "Quarantine Part Two" | January 14, 2019 | 1.2/6 | 6.26[11] | 1.5 | 6.16 | 2.7 | 12.42[36] |
12 | "Aftermath" | January 21, 2019 | 1.2/5 | 6.27[12] | 1.2 | 5.87 | 2.4 | 12.15[37] |
13 | "Xin" | January 28, 2019 | 1.1/5 | 6.58[13] | 1.4 | 6.22 | 2.5 | 12.80[38] |
14 | "Faces" | February 4, 2019 | 1.0/5 | 5.96[14] | 1.4 | 6.05 | 2.4 | 12.01[39] |
15 | "Risk and Reward" | February 18, 2019 | 1.1/5 | 6.23[15] | 1.3 | 5.92 | 2.4 | 12.15[40] |
16 | "Believe" | February 25, 2019 | 1.1/5 | 6.36[16] | 1.4 | 6.05 | 2.5 | 12.41[41] |
17 | "Breakdown" | March 4, 2019 | 1.1/5 | 6.73[17] | 1.3 | 5.74 | 2.4 | 12.47[42] |
18 | "Trampoline" | March 11, 2019 | 1.3/6 | 7.78[18] | 1.3 | 5.62 | 2.6 | 13.41[43] |
References
[edit]- ^ a b Welch, Alex (September 25, 2018). "The Big Bang Theory adjusts up, The Good Doctor adjusts down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 26, 2018. Retrieved September 25, 2018.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (October 2, 2018). "The Voice adjusts up, The Good Doctor and Dancing with the Stars adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on October 2, 2018. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ a b Andreeva, Nellie (October 10, 2018). "Manifest Edges The Good Doctor In Viewers After Nielsen Ratings Correction – 2nd Update". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on October 10, 2018. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (October 16, 2018). "Magnum P.I. and Bull adjust up, Dancing with the Stars adjusts down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on October 17, 2018. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (October 30, 2018). "Happy Together adjusts up, Dancing with the Stars and The Good Doctor adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on October 31, 2018. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (November 6, 2018). "Manifest, The Good Doctor, and Dancing with the Stars adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 7, 2018. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (November 14, 2018). "Arrow and Legends of Tomorrow adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 14, 2018. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (November 20, 2018). "Dancing with the Stars and The Good Doctor adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 21, 2018. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ a b Welch, Alex (November 28, 2018). "Great Christmas Light Fight and The Good Doctor adjust down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 29, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
- ^ a b Otterson, Joe (December 14, 2018). "Live+3 Ratings for Week of Dec. 3: Big Bang Theory Fall Finale Comes Out on Top". Variety. Archived from the original on July 21, 2020. Retrieved December 14, 2018.
- ^ a b Rejent, Joseph (January 15, 2019). "The Bachelor, The Neighborhood, Magnum P.I. adjust up, Bull adjusts down: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on January 16, 2019. Retrieved January 15, 2019.
- ^ a b Rejent, Joseph (January 23, 2019). "The Bachelor, The Passage, everything else unchanged: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 19, 2019. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
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