Grey’s Anatomy Season 17 Will Feature COVID-19 Pandemic

As we already reported, Season 17 of Grey’s Anatomy will be a little different than planned, in light of the pandemic.

Now, the show is delving into the ways that COVID-19 is shaping not only the production, but the story itself.

Grey’s Anatomy is absolutely going to address the COVID-19 pandemic.

Showrunner Krista Vernoff spoke to Entertainment Weekly about the ways in which the real world crisis will shape Season 17 of the ongoing series.

“There’s no way to be a long-running medical show and not do the medical story of our lifetimes,” she acknowledges.

“Every year, we have doctors come and tell us their stories,” Vernoff remarks.

“And,” she observes, “usually they’re telling their funniest or craziest stories.”

Vernoff expresses: “This year, it has felt more like therapy.”

“The doctors come in,” Vernoff describes, “and we’re the first people they’re talking to about these types of experiences they’re having.”

“They are literally shaking and trying not to cry,” she details.

“They’re pale,” Vernoff notes, “and they’re talking about it as war — a war that they were not trained for.”

“And that’s been one of our big conversations about Owen,” Vernoff notes, referring to the fictional doctor, Owen Hunt.

She continues: “is that he’s actually trained for this in a way that most of the other doctors aren’t.”

That has a lot of potential for his eventual interactions with other doctors.

Vernoff correctly notes that Grey’s Anatomy, given the subject matter of the show, has a clear obligation to address the pandemic.

“I feel like our show has an opportunity and a responsibility to tell some of those stories,” she states

Vernoff adds: “Our conversations have been constantly about how do we keep alive humor and romance while we tell these really painful stories.”

Season 16 was not able to conclude filming of the season.

Because the COVID-19 pandemic shut down production, the season’s final four episodes could not film.

It’s a real shame, too, because they missed some crossover potential.

Station 19 image

Station 19, on which Vernoff is also a showrunner, was able to conclude filming the season before the pandemic ended.

The two shows were intended to have intersecting storylines in a crossover, given that they share a fictional universe.

Sadly, plans for this had to be postponed in light of the pandemic’s realities. Safety of actors and crew must come first.

Obviously, covering the COVID-19 pandemic is a complicated matter. This isn’t a fictional situation.

Unlike the infamous “Code Black” episode from very early in the series, this is something that impacts many people.

Many of us already know someone who has tested positive for COVID-19. By the time that Season 17 airs, things will have gotten much worse.

That said, if any show can handle this pandemic well, we hope that it will be Grey’s Anatomy, and not just because it’s a hospital show.

Thinking back to George O’Malley’s little monologue to a proud nazi after Dr. Bailey saved his life, we think that such a story could be in very capable hands.

But what form might the stories take?

Our guess? At least one “ripped from the headlines” episode based upon the diehard COVID-denier who died regretting his previous doubts.

That, we imagine, would come later, assuming that the season appropriately allows an extended arc for the pandemic.

As we have all experienced for ourselves, COVID-19 has not limited itself to a single “episode,” particularly within the United States.

TV Renewal Scorecard: Which Shows are Coming Back?

This ought to go without saying, but we’re gonna go ahead and say it anyway:

No one has any idea what will happen to the television world in the months ahead.

Not when a dangerous virus is making its way around the globe, halting almost all filming on almost all television shows in the process.

When might Hollywood return to any sort of normal? When can shooting begin on various sitcoms and dramas?

We don’t know. It’s as simple as that.

And yet: Broadcast networks are at least planning to air a regular fall and spring schedule, having made a number of recent announcements regarding the returns of their most popular programs.

Did yours make the cut? Which series have been renewed so far and which have been canceled?

Scroll down to find out!

1. The Good Doctor – Renewed

The good doctor picture
This ABC medical drama was named the most-watched drama in the world. It makes sense then that it is coming back next season.

2. Grey’s Anatomy – Renewed

Greys anatomy finale scene
Meredith Grey will continue to get into love triangles for at least one more year at ABC.

3. American Idol – Renewed

American idol season 16 cast
ABC’s weird revival of this once-hot franchise will be back. But no deals are in place for any of the current judges to return.

4. Station 19 – Renewed

Station 19 still
This Grey’s Anatomy spinoff showed some signs of life with a new showrunner. It will be back for a fourth season.

5. Reef Break – Canceled

Reef break title card
Poppy Montgomery’s return to the small screen was short… and pretty terrible.

6. How to Get Away With Murder – Ended

Viola davis for abc
After six seasons of outlandish murders, How to Get Away with Murder ended… with several more murders.

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13 TV Spinoffs No One Asked For

The entertainment industry has no shame when it comes to scraping the bottom of the barrel for ideas. 

By the time many series are over, the fans are ready to move on. 

Unfortuntately for these series, network execs were looking for a cash grab. 

These 13 shows served little purpose, merely being made to cash in on the success of the original series. 

That’s why many of these series struggled to pull in viewers. 

1. 9-1-1 Lone Star – FOX

9 1 1 lone star
We struggle to take the original 9-1-1 seriously at the best of times, but this poorly acted and written spinoff is just asking to be put out of its misery.

2. Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists – Freeform

Pretty little liars spinoff
The conclusion of Pretty Little Liars was unsatisfying. It was filled with plot holes, and viewers were tired of the franchise by the time the second spinoff arrived. Ratings were bad and it was swiftly canceled.

3. Fear the Walking Dead – AMC

The clark family on fear the walking dead
At the time Fear the Walking Dead was ordered, the parent series was stuck in a creative rut. The spinoff charted the time when the world went to crap. Unfortunately, the spinoff has largely failed to live up to the hype.

4. Legacies – The CW

Legacies the cw
Following the adventures of Hope Mikaelson, as well as twins Lizzie and Josie Saltzman, Legacies was supposed to follow the trio as they try to keep their powers in check. Hope’s powers were stifled for storytelling purposes, and the twins bickered at every turn. The series then tried to bring in players from The Vampire Diaries and The Originals, ruining the legacy that came before the show.

5. Once Upon a Time in Wonderland – ABC

Ouatiw
ABC execs wanted to capitalize on the success of Once Upon a Time, so they tried out a spinoff about Alice in Wonderland. It was absurd.

6. Station 19 – ABC

Station 19 still
This Grey’s Anatomy spinoff is not good. Private Practice had a compelling arc, but Station 19 features some of the most unlikeable characters on the small screen.

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Grey’s Anatomy Says Goodbye to Alex Karev: Prepare to Cry!

Prepare the Kleenex, Grey’s Anatomy fans.

Get the tissues out.

Just get ready to all-out bawl, okay?

About six weeks after Justin Chambers stunned the television universe by announcing his departure from this beloved ABC hit, the series is preparing to officially say goodbye to Dr. Alex Karev.

The last time we saw Chambers — who had been a full-time cast member since the very first episode — on the show was back in November.

He simply said he was leaving to care for his mother at the time, with very little information given on air after that. There was no formal farewell or anything, that’s for sure.

We were later told by the Grey’s Anatomy showrunner that closure was planned for Karev, but we not told what this meant exactly.

And the promo released by ABC on Thursday night didn’t really answer this question in any meaningful way.

“After 16 seasons, we’re saying goodbye to Dr. Alex Karev. Next Thursday, she how his story ends,” the promo says.

Could the series actually kill off yet another fan favorite once again? Just as it did with George and McSteamy and McDreamy and Meredith’s sister?!?

We doubt it. But you never know when it comes to Grey’s Anatomy.

At the end of the Thursday, February 27, episode, Jo (Camilla Luddington) got her hopes up when there was a knock on her door.

However, it ended up being Link (Chris Carmack) — not Alex — and she broke down as a result.

“I called his mom. He wasn’t there. He’d never been there,” Jo said, before bursting into tears. “I think he woke up one day and felt the need to escape his life and me.”

We’ll soon find out precisely what Alex felt the need to do, and if the program would really end the life of yet another long-running character, this time off-screen.

ABC confirmed back in January that the November 14 installment was Chambers’ final episode, so it’s likely that we will not actually see new footage of Karev next week.

“There’s no good time to say goodbye to a show and character that’s defined so much of my life for the past 15 years,” Chambers said in his statement last month, adding:

“For some time now, however, I have hoped to diversify my acting roles and career choices.

And, as I turn 50 and am blessed with my remarkable, supportive wife and five wonderful children, now is that time.”

Watch the emotional promo now… if you’re ready to do so.

It’s about to get very dusty in here, people.

Greys anatomy says goodbye to alex karev prepare to cry