Perry Cox

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Dr. Perry Cox
First appearance "My First Day"
Created by Bill Lawrence
Portrayed by John C. McGinley
Information
Gender Male
Age 47[1][2]
Occupation Doctor of Internal Medicine
Title Attending Physician of Internal Medicine and Residency Director (until My Waste of Time, Interim Chief of Medicine (since My Waste of Time
Family Paige (sister)
Spouse(s) Jordan Sullivan (ex-wife)
Children Jack Cox (son) Jennifer Dylan "J.D." Cox (daughter)

Dr. Percival "Perry" Cox, M.D.[3] (most commonly referred to as Dr. Cox) is a fictional character played by John C. McGinley in the American comedy-drama Scrubs.

Contents

[edit] Character profile

Dr. Cox is the former senior attending physician at Sacred Heart Hospital and Residency Director for the hospital, but now after Dr. Bob Kelso's departure is the Interim Chief of Medicine..[4] In a 2003 episode, it is established that he is 40 years old, which probably places his birth somewhere around 1963. However, in "My Growing Pains", which aired in 2007, he states his age at a more specific 47, making his birth year closer to 1960, within a year of McGinley's true birth date.

Dr. Cox is the sarcastic, bitter mentor of John "J.D." Dorian (Zach Braff), the show's main character. Dr. Cox routinely rants at and belittles J.D., though his rough treatment of J.D. is intended as conditioning for the rigors and horrors of hospital life, as well as an outlet for Cox's frustration in his own life. It is occasionally implied that he is secretly proud of J.D. and thinks he has the potential to become a great doctor.

Dr. Cox is sarcastic and narcissistic, with a quick, cruel wit. He is also very concerned about the way he is perceived in the hospital, often making very illogical and self-destructive decisions in order to keep his "bad boy" image. He works out extensively and thus is physically fit; he shows off his physique by lounging around his apartment shirtless. In "My Sacrificial Clam", he says that the "key to my exercise program is this one simple truth: I hate my body." In "My White Whale", Cox reveals he was circumcised as a baby; however, his son was not.

Even though he often complains about his job and calls Sacred Heart a "dump", work is one of the only things he truly loves. In "My Bad", his ex-wife Jordan Sullivan (Christa Miller-Lawrence) challenges him to name three places other than his apartment and the hospital that he has been in the past month, to which he answers "my car". In "My Fallen Idol", Kelso tells him to accept that he needs to be needed.

He uses nicknames for most of the other main characters on the show: he calls J.D. "Newbie" and a vast assortment of girls' names (in the episode "His Story", he is furious when he realizes that he used the name "Betsy" more than once), Chris Turk (Donald Faison) is "Gandhi" and "Turtle Head" and, most recently, "Gandidiot", Dr. Bob Kelso (Ken Jenkins) is "Bobbo" and sometimes "Bobcat", "Beelzebob" and even once "The Bobbotron", pathologist Doug Murphy (Johnny Kastl) is "Nervous Guy" or "Pee Pants", Sacred Heart legal counsel Ted Buckland (Sam Lloyd) is "Flop Sweat" or "Sweaty Teddy", Janitor (Neil Flynn) is "Stretch", "Jumpsuit", "Supercuts", and "Lurch", The Todd is "Beavis" or "Butthead" and Elliot Reid (Sarah Chalke) is "Barbie", "Bar-boo", "Blondie" and "Haircut". The only member of the main cast he always calls by her actual name is Carla Espinosa (Judy Reyes), a staff nurse.

Despite his brilliance, Cox has failed, for the most part, to rise up the professional ladder because he refuses to accept help from others and will not "play the game". Cox releases his anger once a year, when he flies off the handle about some minor event at work and goes out on a drinking binge, coming back the next day as if nothing had happened. [5]

In "My Mirror Image", Cox treats a patient named Mr. Slydell who is afflicted by hypertension and ulcers caused by his constant anger. Cox is visibly saddened when his patient dies, and sees the risks of his own anger reflected in Mr. Slydell.[6] The patient is also portrayed by McGinley, who wears makeup to appear older and partially bald. The patient's last name, Slydell, is a reference to "Bob Slydell", the role McGinley played in the film Office Space.

Dr. Cox is often seen drinking scotch and has acknowledged (humorously) that he has a drinking problem. In "My Mentor", J.D. fears that Cox will die of liver disease. In "My Fallen Idol", after making a mistake about a transplant patient that results in several deaths, Cox goes to work drunk, a behavior he had criticized J.D. and Turk for in a previous episode ("My Dream Job"). His son Jack's first full sentence is "daddy drinks a lot."[7]

Cox also hates private practice physicians, considering them to be "sell-outs" for choosing a career that pays more and has better hours instead of one that genuinely helps patients. This causes tension when Elliot chooses such a job in "My Coffee".[8]

Dr. Cox has an irrational hatred for Hugh Jackman. In the episode "My House" Dr. Cox says, "If you want to solve a real mystery, why don't you find out why anybody thinks Dane Cook is funny." He has stated in "My Own Personal Jesus" and "My Best Moment" that he hates Christmas.

Cox frequently wears a Detroit Red Wings hockey jersey (sometimes even to work), which he calls the best professional sports franchise in history. Cox is deeply attached to his various hockey, football and basketball jerseys, and also wears other paraphernalia, such as a Cheli's Chili shirt, from a restaurant that Red Wings player Chris Chelios owns. He has also worn a Jeremy Shockey New York Giants football jersey on multiple occasions as well as a Rutgers football t-shirt.[9] During the 2004-05 NHL Lockout, Cox replaced his traditional Chelios Red Wings jersey with a Chelios Motor City Mechanics jersey on at least one occasion.[10] Because he's from Pittsburgh, his favorite player is Jerome Bettis. J.D. once used this to his advantage by disguising himself as a Domino's delivery boy during Super Bowl XL and delivering a pizza to Cox's apartment. J.D. gains an invite by claiming to be a Bettis fan.

Cox can sometimes be seen wearing a blue and yellow Down's Syndrome awareness bracelet (McGinley's son has Down's syndrome, and McGinley served as the spokesperson for the 2006 Down Syndrome Buddy Walk).

Although Cox presents himself as an atheist, he occasionally talks to God when alone. ("God, my brilliance has now become a bit of a burden, get back to me"). He also says that luck, God, or some form of higher power will always play a bigger role in a patient's health than any doctor ever could. [11] In one episode when he's being irritated by Carla and Jordan, he says "God...Elevator", at which point the one behind him opens. He then says "God's got my back. Even if I don't technically believe in Him."

Cox has a very straightforward hate for all Republicans, and vehemently opposes the Iraq War, as shown in "His Story IV".

Dr. Cox has been compared to Gregory House by Kelso, who says, "Oh Perry, you are so edgy and cantankerous; like House without the limp." This is further explored in "My House", during which Cox acquires a temporary limp.

In the Season 2 DVD commentary of "His Story", series creator Bill Lawrence stated that one of Dr. Cox's quirks is that he knows if someone is standing behind him and who it is, without turning around to check. He is also a very good golfer, regularly besting Dr. Kelso.[12] Cox attends therapy on a semi-regular basis.[13]

According to McGinley, Dr. Cox's habit of often touching his nose is an homage to Paul Newman's character in The Sting.

[edit] Family life

Cox's Irish-American family is from Pittsburgh. He has a sister, Paige, (Cheryl Hines), who is a born-again Christian.[14] In "My New God" Cox reveals that their father was an abusive alcoholic and their mother did nothing to prevent the abuse. When questioned why his sister is so religious, he says "maybe the TV was broken so she picked up a Bible and found it to be just a darn good read, or maybe it has something to do with our mother's ability to watch silently as our dad drunkenly knocked us from room to room." He does state in another episode that his mother once knocked his father out with a frying pan (on his birthday). He and Paige have a strained relationship, ostensibly because neither can appreciate the religious and scientific viewpoints held by the other; it is ultimately revealed, however, that Paige reminds him of the unhappy childhood that he tries so hard to forget.

Cox is legally divorced from Jordan Sullivan (Christa Miller Lawrence) but the two have maintained an exclusive "married" relationship together since Jordan discovered she was pregnant. As revealed in flashbacks, the marriage appears to have started out strongly, but went downhill and eventually ended when Jordan slept with Dr. Cox's then-protegé Peter Fisher (Jay Mohr).[15] When J.D. — Cox's new protegé — first meets Jordan in "My Bad", he doesn't know of her and Doctor Cox's relationship, and they sleep together. In "My Last Day", Cox finds out, and J.D. is afraid of losing him, but in the end, they get through it. Cox and Jordan divorced shortly after The "Peter Fisher" incident and maintained an acrimonious relationship, which included a settlement involving Cox's paying alimony and agreeing to provide Jordan with sex whenever she wants it. In "My Fruit Cups", they rekindle their relationship and continue living together. In "My New Game", Ted Buckland, Sacred Heart's lawyer, reveals that the pair are not in fact legally divorced because of a paperwork error. After initially welcoming this change, the two get properly divorced as the revelation was beginning to undermine the positive aspects of their relationship. The two celebrate their divorce and maintain their unusual married-but-not relationship. In "My Long Goodbye", Jordan gives birth to their second child, a baby girl named Jennifer Dylan.[9]

Cox was also best friends with Jordan's brother, Ben (Brendan Fraser), who was diagnosed with leukaemia in "My Occurrence."[16] Thanks to Dr Cox, Ben's disease goes into remission. In "My Screw Up", Ben dies of cardiac arrest while under J.D.'s care. It takes Cox the remainder of the episode to overcome his denial and accept Ben's death.[17] The episode misdirects the viewer into believing J.D. is referring to another patient when he informs Cox of Ben's passing, as Fraser is in the scene and appears with Cox throughout the balance of the episode. However, it is not until J.D. and Cox converse at the cemetery at the end of the episode that it is revealed that Ben has been dead all along, and was only visible to Dr. Cox. A hint for this is when Dr. Cox questions Ben about his doing the "crazy camera guy thing" to which Ben responds, "Till the day I die". After J.D. informs Dr. Cox about the patient who has died of cardiac arrest, one can see that Ben is no longer wearing the camera around his neck.

He has two children with Jordan: a son named Jack and, after an unsuccessful vasectomy, a daughter named Jennifer Dylan (J.D). Jack is played by Andrew Miller and his twin brother (although in a cameo appearance in "My Missed Perception" he is played by Bill Lawrence and Christa Miller's son, William). When Jordan first becomes pregnant with Jack in "My Fruit Cups", she tells Cox that she had been impregnated by a Greek bellboy. At first, Cox feels nothing connecting him to the boy (who at the time has no name), but begins to feel a connection after the child responds to the name Jack (which Cox had been trying to impress upon him for some time). J.D.'s college friend accidentally tells Cox that Jack is in fact his child in "My Dream Job,"[18] and he takes on the role of father with much more sincerity. Cox has a very unorthodox way of raising Jack, often treating him like his "drinking buddy." Nontheless, Cox loves his son very much and tries fervently to be a better father than his own was. Cox often talks to Jack in lieu of a therapist.

[edit] Relationship with other characters

[edit] J.D.

Dr. Cox has served as a reluctant mentor to J.D. since he started at the hospital as an intern, though he refuses to let J.D. use the term. He constantly belittles J.D. and refers to him either as "newbie" or any girl's name he can think of, occasionally even going with themes, such as pop stars, ethnic names, or famous dogs, usually based on "days of the week" or events revolving around J.D. (He calls him "Dorothy" in "My Way Home", an episode that parodied The Wizard of Oz). In "My Karma", Cox literally calls him "Girl's Name". He is constantly irritated by J.D., and has claimed that his head fills with a low-pitched "a-oogah a-oogah" when J.D. opens his mouth.

One possible reason Dr. Cox is so hard on J.D. is the fact his former protegé, Pete Fisher (Jay Mohr), had slept with Dr. Cox's then wife, Jordan.[15] Once it is revealed to Dr. Cox that J.D. had slept with Jordan in "My Last Day", Dr. Cox wants nothing to do with him for a short period. J.D. is eventually forgiven, however; unlike Peter, he had no idea that Jordan was Dr. Cox's ex-wife. Dr. Cox was also still married to Jordan when she slept with Peter, leading to their split.[19]

He is actually quite proud of J.D.'s progress, even though admitting it freely is nearly inconceivable to him. On rare occasions, he praises J.D., such as when he praises his protegé's talent to Sacred Heart's Board of Directors in "My Fifteen Minutes".[20] In the episode "My Déjà vu, My Déjà vu", Cox admits to Elliot that not all of J.D.'s ideas are bad. Cox then shows her that he is wearing a "Welcome Back Coxer" t-shirt, which J.D. made to celebrate Dr. Cox's return to Sacred Heart, with Cox asking "Do ya love it as much as I do?" Elliot identifies J.D. as Cox's "go-to guy," with whom he confers on various patients throughout the series.[21] Cox even tracks J.D.'s independent activities closely, covering his back when he takes courses of action Cox deems unwise.

It is implied in "My Fallen Idol" that J.D. saves Cox from a deep depression fueled by the loss of three patients.[7] In "My Cake", a clearly uncomfortable Cox helps J.D. come to terms with his father's death by simply sitting with him, drinking beer and watching football along with J.D.'s brother, Dan (Tom Cavanaugh).[22]. In this episode, in one of his few uncharacteristic moments, Cox tells J.D. that he is proud of him. In "My Lunch", Cox goes out of his way to ensure J.D. doesn't ruin his career by needlessly blaming himself for the death of a patient he connected to but whose fate was out of his hands.[23] Although Cox attempts to keep J.D. out of his life wherever possible, J.D. still manages to attend most of the major events in Cox's life, such as his best friend's funeral,[17] Cox's divorce party[24], and the baptism of his son, Jack[14] J.D. is almost named the godfather of Cox's daughter, but that changes at the last minute after Cox bribes Jordan.[25] The daughter is named Jennifer Dylan (J.D.), much to Cox's dismay. It is also hinted in "My Fishbowl" that Cox does regularly read J.D.'s often depressing blog and even references it in a tough love speech.

Dr. Cox's habit of referring to J.D. by girls' names was McGinley's idea. He does the same thing in real life with his friend, actor John Cusack.[26]

The relationship between Dr. Cox and J.D. is the emotional center of the series. Dr. Cox is consistently insisting on his indifference to J.D. with remarks like "We're not friends" and "Repeat after me: Dr. Cox, you are not now, nor will you ever be, my mentor", but something happens almost every episode to reveal that the dependence is mutual. In "His Story", Dr. Cox takes J.D.'s advice and agrees to give Dr. Kelso a physical examination. When Dr. Cox tells his exasperated shrink about this, the therapist expresses astonishment that he "actually took the advice of another human being" and tells him he should do everything in his power to keep that person around because "he is nothing short of a genius". In "My Fallen Idol" when all the main characters are trying to pull Dr. Cox out of a depression brought on by guilt after the deaths of three patients, he only bounces back when J.D. tells him he's proud that Dr. Cox still cares after all these years.

As of Season 5, this central relationship loses some of its key ingredients because J.D. becomes an attending and so his mentor loses his seniority. This has an impact on J.D.'s relationship with Dr. Cox. For example, starting in Season 5, J.D. calls Dr. Cox by his first name, something he almost never does in the first four seasons.

[edit] Dr. Kelso

Dr. Cox's devotion to medical ethics is unquestionable, which regularly draws him into severe conflict with Kelso, who often seems to be primarily concerned with the hospital's budget or accompanying his personal needs like removing patients from their rooms so a friend of Kelso's can have that room. His clashes with Kelso have cost him a promotion within the hospital and have often put his career in a precarious position.[12] The two grudgingly respect each other, however, and Kelso sometimes acknowledges the necessity of Cox's position; in a rare moment of compassion in "My Fallen Idol", Kelso says, "The hospital needs you, Perry. I need you."

In "My Dream Job", Dr. Cox's hatred of Kelso reaches the point where Cox punches him in the face (to defend Elliot, whom Kelso is belittling). He does not lose his job, or even suffer serious consequences, as no one is willing to testify as a witness. In the next episode, Dr. Cox fixes Kelso's broken nose.[18] In "My Advice to You", Cox disagrees with Kelso just because Kelso has taken a particular side, even on trivial matters such as the weather.

Cox frequently calls Dr. Kelso "Bobbo" or other nicknames, such as "Bobcat" or "Beelzebob." He also frequently refers to Kelso as the devil and has called him a "pod person".

[edit] Carla

Dr. Cox refers to nurse Carla Espinosa (Judy Reyes) as the only person in the hospital who "gets him." Notably, she is the only main character in the series who Cox always calls by her real name, rather than the nicknames he has for most of the other main characters. From the end of the first season through the beginning of the second, he claims to be in love with her, a claim she rejects in "My Overkill", saying, "You're not in love with me, you idealize me"[19]. Some time before Turk started at the hospital, Cox and Carla went on a date that ended with Carla kissing him on the forehead.[27]

Even after he renews his relationship with Jordan, Cox continues to go to Carla as a confidante and is still rather protective of her. In "My New Old Friend" he admits that she is the one he relies on to stop him when he goes too far insulting patients. When Carla is hurt by Turk's unwillingness to communicate with her, Cox exacts revenge on him, explaining that "nobody hurts Carla and gets away with it." ("My Super Ego")

In "My House", Cox is the first to notice Carla's postpartum depression. Carla is also the first to help Dr. Cox through his depression after the deaths of three of his patients.[28] In "My Way Home", Dr. Cox gives Carla the courage to become a parent. Later in season 5 she returns the favour ("My Half-Acre"), convincing Cox he can become a caring father to Jack.

[edit] Elliot

Cox and Elliot do not normally get along well; Cox calls her "relentlessly annoying", which he says aggravates his "inability to tolerate relentlessly annoying people." Cox usually refers to Elliot as "Barbie". There have, however, been examples of him helping Elliot or respecting her as a doctor. In "My Blind Date," he relies on her as a replacement "go-to guy" when J.D. is busy. In "My Big Mouth" and "My Moment of Un-Truth," he helps her as a doctor, and in "My Ocardial Infarction" Cox even claims that Elliot is a better doctor than J.D. In "My Dream Job", he even goes as far as defending her from Kelso's wrath by punching him in the face.[18] While Cox is normally irritated by her, Elliot is often oblivious to his dislike for her, especially in early episodes, frequently mistaking his belittling rants as wise advice.

Nonetheless, he has helped Elliot on a few occasions, including telling her that a patient's death was not her fault in "My Old Lady". Also, in "Her Story", Cox helps Elliot to understand that the private life of her mentor Molly Clock (Heather Graham) should not influence Elliot's professional relationship with her. In "My Female Trouble", Jordan claims that Dr. Cox gets annoyed at the thought of Elliot not needing him, as she has improved as a doctor.[29]

In season five, Elliot and Cox go through a period of mutual hatred, with Elliot alleging that Cox has no respect for her in spite of her respect for him. In "My Déjà vu, My Déjà vu", Elliot even begins an "I hate Cox" chatroom, which ends up with just her, two interns and 14,000 lesbians. Cox mends that rift by admitting to her that he had humiliated her not because he hated her, but because he was still regaining his self confidence after the events of "My Fallen Idol", and needed to be seen as he was before - "bulletproof", noting that he hoped this made her feel more respected.[30] In "My Coffee", when Elliot treats a patient who is a doctor in private practice, Cox's teasing backfires when the doctor offers her a job with him, which she accepts.[8] Soon after, Cox accuses her of "selling out", and includes her in his general hatred of private practice doctors. Cox now calls Elliot "Private Practice Barbie", J.D. points this out in "My Friend With Money", when Cox takes another dig at Elliot, whom J.D. defends.[31]

[edit] Turk

Dr. Cox's general dislike for Chris Turk is a general reflection of his dislike for surgeons as a whole, whom he refers to as "cutters", "flesh-hungry butchers" and "scalpel jocks". Turk and Cox compete for Carla's attention in the show's first season. After Cox gets over Carla, however, they remain rivals for other reasons, such as when debating the treatment of a patient[32] or arguing over achievements.[33] In "My Big Brother", Cox and Turk clash about treatment of a transplant patient who had broken the rules.[34] Cox eventually acknowledges Turk to be correct and even passes a positive judgment about Turk to Carla, his then-fiancée. Cox and Turk finally find common ground in "My Rule of Thumb", when Cox finds out that they both need to be noticed for their accomplishments. Cox calls Turk and himself "two egotistical peas in an incredibly narcissistic pod". Dr. Cox gains a good deal of respect for Turk after Turk retaliates against him for sticking him with an annoying hypochondriac.[35] Cox often refers to Turk by the nickname "Gandhi" (in reference to Turk's shaven head), and occasionally as "Turtle Head."

Although the two are frequently at odds, Cox can occasionally give Turk some good advice, making him realize he needs a healthy ego in order to be a good surgeon ("My Drive-By") and later telling him that he needs to find his own level of truthfulness after telling the truth to a patient (against Kelso's advice) results in the patient's refusal to let Turk operate on him ("My Perspective"). In addition, he says that Turk is miles ahead of other surgeons after Turk works extremely hard to gain his approval.

[edit] Laverne Roberts

Nurse Laverne Roberts (Aloma Wright) appeared to be one of the few people in the hospital who could stand up to Cox. Professing himself as an atheist, he frequently insults and belittles Laverne for her fervent belief in God. In "My No Good Reason", they see eye to eye after arguing whether things in the hospital happen for a reason.[36] He joins the rest of the hospital staff in mourning her death in "My Long Goodbye".

[edit] Janitor

The Janitor seems to be another one of the few people who work in the hospital who can stand up to Cox, though he and Cox only seem to come into conflict when both are already angered over separate affairs. Cox and the Janitor were once roommates in an empty hospital room when they both needed somewhere to stay for their own reasons; Cox to get away from Jordan when she was pregnant and the Janitor to think about how many jobs his Ford Econoline supports. Because of a shared desire to torment J.D., at one point the Janitor and Cox become drinking buddies but ignore each other at work because the Janitor informs Cox that it's uncool for hospital staff to befriend doctors. Besides this they have been known to aid each other when they can both get something out of it. In "My Tormented Mentor" Janitor prevents J.D from escaping Cox after he lands Cox in a sexual harassment class by simply letting J.D run into his outstretched arm (a.k.a. the clothesline). In "My Own Personal Hell", when a local magazine names Cox the best doctor in the city, Janitor acts as his muscle in order to intimidate the rest of the hospital into acknowledging it. However, when Dr. Kelso refuses to admit it, it turns out Cox is paying the Janitor, giving him $20 to crack Kelso over the head.[37]

[edit] Production details

  • Neil Flynn originally auditioned for the role of Dr. Cox, but it went to McGinley. Flynn was then asked to play Janitor.

[edit] References

  1. ^ A 2003 episode establishes that he is 40 years old. Given that each season represents one calendar year, this means he would now be in his mid 40s.
  2. ^ In episode 5 of season 7, My Growing Pains, Cox responds to being asked how he's doing with: "Well, I'm 47 and recently lost the ability to breakdown dairy products. But otherwise I'm dandy. Thank you for asking."
  3. ^ RateYourDoc.org at Sacred Heart Hospital
  4. ^ "My Lucky Night". Scrubs. NBC. 2003-10-30. No. 04, season 3.
  5. ^ "My Heavy Meddle". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-02-26. No. 16, season 1.
  6. ^ "My Mirror Image". Scrubs. NBC. 2006-12-07. No. 01, season 6.
  7. ^ a b "My Fallen Idol". Scrubs. NBC. 2006-05-02. No. 21, season 5.
  8. ^ a b "My Coffee". Scrubs. NBC. 2006-12-14. No. 03, season 6.
  9. ^ a b "My Long Goodbye". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-04-05. No. 15, season 6.
  10. ^ "My Lips Are Sealed". Scrubs. NBC. 2005-04-05. No. 21, season 4.
  11. ^ "My Lucky Day". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-12-05. No. 09, season 2.
  12. ^ a b "My Two Dads". Scrubs. NBC. 2001-10-23. No. 05, season 1.
  13. ^ "His Story". Scrubs. NBC. 2003-01-30. No. 15, season 2.
  14. ^ a b "My New God". Scrubs. NBC. 2006-01-17. No. 05, season 5.
  15. ^ a b "My Own Private Practice Guy". Scrubs. NBC. 2003-03-13. No. 17, season 2.
  16. ^ "My Occurrence". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-05-07. No. 22, season 1.
  17. ^ a b "My Screw Up". Scrubs. NBC. 2004-02-24. No. 14, season 3.
  18. ^ a b c "My Dream Job". Scrubs. NBC. 2003-04-17. No. 22, season 2.
  19. ^ a b "My Overkill". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-09-26. No. 01, season 2.
  20. ^ "My Fifteen Minutes". Scrubs. NBC. 2001-11-15. No. 08, season 1.
  21. ^ "My Blind Date". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-01-08. No. 12, season 1.
  22. ^ "My Cake". Scrubs. NBC. 2004-10-12. No. 06, season 4.
  23. ^ "My Lunch". Scrubs. NBC. 2006-04-25. No. 20, season 5.
  24. ^ "My New Game". Scrubs. NBC. 2004-09-12. No. 03, season 4.
  25. ^ "My Point Of No Return". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-05-17. No. 22, season 6.
  26. ^ Johns, Anna (2006-05-16). John C. McGinley Interview. TV Squad. Retrieved on 2007-02-11.
  27. ^ "My Quarantine". Scrubs. NBC. 2005-02-08. No. 16, season 4.
  28. ^ "My House". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-01-04. No. 04, season 6.
  29. ^ "My Female Trouble". Scrubs. NBC. 2004-11-16. No. 10, season 4.
  30. ^ "My Déjà vu, My Déjà vu". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-05-17. No. 22, season 6.
  31. ^ "My Friend With Money". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-01-11. No. 05, season 6.
  32. ^ "My Big Brother". Scrubs. NBC. 2002-10-31. No. 06, season 2.
  33. ^ "My Drive-By". Scrubs. NBC. 2005-04-26. No. 24, season 4.
  34. ^ "My Rule of Thumb". Scrubs. NBC. 2004-01-22. No. 10, season 3.
  35. ^ "My Turf War". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-04-26. No. 18, season 6.
  36. ^ "My No Good Reason". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-03-22. No. 13, season 6.
  37. ^ "My Own Personal Hell". Scrubs. NBC. 2007-03-14. No. 14, season 5.
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