The NBC primetime medical drama "New Amsterdam" creators included a storyline
about the overturning of Roe v. Wade, all while pushing their extreme pro-
abortion viewpoint.
The recent episode, "Maybe Tomorrow," explores a world with restricted access
to abortion. Showrunners spoke with TV Line about their motivations and aims
for the episode, which had leftist fans applauding, and conservatives
swearing they were done with the series forever.
The episode begins with a montage showing hospital staff realizing Roe v.
Wade had been overturned, which was presented as a catastrophic event. Each
character then dealt with the aftermath in their own way. Dr. Lauren Bloom
(Janet Montgomery) admits she had an abortion in the past which "was not a
big deal."
One doctor punches a protestor outside the hospital, and "New Amsterdam"
staffers panic because he's gay and they're concerned about the courts
outlawing same-sex marriage. At various points in the episode, Max inquires
about opening an abortion clinic on a military base and setting up a floating
clinic to circumvent new laws.
"These kinds of issues, both in our country and the healthcare industry, is
why I wrote the show to begin with, is why I created New Amsterdam,"
showrunner David Schulner told TVLine in an interview. "As depressing and
horrifying as it was, the show was made to tackle these issues. And so, we
all put in everything we had into the episode."
Promo 5.07 "Maybe Tomorrow" #NewAmsterdam
pic.twitter.com/lEX8n1H4hI
-- ??Nessi?? (@nesssinhamatos) October 26, 2022
The executive producer said he was surprised NBC allowed them to tackle the
topic at all.
"Because my worry was they weren't going to let us do this episode," Schulner
said, "and the response when we handed it in [was], 'We were waiting to see
what you would do with this.' So that's the kind of support we got, and [we]
couldn't be more grateful for that, to have partners like that."
Schulner also said he related to the character Dr. Max Goodwin (Ryan Eggold)
on a personal level because he was thinking own children while conceiving the
storyline. The showrunner repeats the erroneous belief that restrictions on
abortion will also ban procedures related to miscarriage.
"I will speak to Max's character as a parent myself, raising two small
children. I would never let my kids go to a college in a state that outlawed
abortion," Schulner continues.
"We used to spend Thanksgivings in Texas every year. I don't want to go to
Texas anymore. If you have an ectopic pregnancy, if you're having a
miscarriage, doctors are afraid to save your life because they can be
prosecuted. We are not safe."
The interviewer asked Schulner if there was any debate in the writer's room
between staffers with pro-life and pro-abortion beliefs. His answer was
unsurprising.
"Our room is, I would say, primarily pro-choice, if not entirely pro-choice.
But the discussions that we had were basically how do we dramatize not just
this decision, but what are the repercussions that this decision is going to
have for the other characters?" he said.
In the episode, the character Max laments about a world without abortion to
his young daughter. "A sad thing happened today. Not just to me, to
everybody. And I guess it made Daddy a little sad, a little mad, and a little
frustrated," Max says. "I wanted to make the world a little better for you. I
couldn't do it."
Luna asks, "Maybe tomorrow?" to which Mac replies, "maybe not even tomorrow,
but I'm not going to stop trying. No matter what."
--
Let's go Brandon!