No one can get rid of Pitt’s sensation and how to take it off.
Hot medical drama is one of the greatest series of the year. Its realism, authenticity and ability are known as a true responder to a true medical hero while telling stories.
Pitt solidified an impressive talented man, playing a variety of engaging roles, and the audience responded immediately to it, with only interns, those who began the longest, most stressful first transition in history.
Seriously!
We had a chance to catch up with Shabana Azeez, who plays the socially awkward prodigy Victoria Javadi, about her journey in the series, the influence of playing characters like Javadi, and mass shooting activities.
Check it out below!
Pitt has achieved great success and is widely praised. So, what attracted you to the role and how did you react to positive reactions?
It’s crazy to see a positive reaction to it. I’m so grateful because it’s such a beautiful show and it’s not always. That’s it – all these lovely people get all the flowers….
This is also a very important show. As we get into these plots, there is a real message and I’m glad people get involved. I love a smart girl with Javadi, so I’m so happy to play with her.
I love her, too. She is a very compelling character.
How do you view her experiences because this divine shape of her even hinders her ability to manage the social components of her treatment patients and work with colleagues?
It’s really fun, she’s really fun as a performer. She is so smart, but has some deficits. The better someone, the worse other things are. This is a very exciting part for me.
Her social interactions, inability to read social clues or her new news about the community is fun and exciting.


She is so smart, but she lacks social consciousness. My second-hand awkwardness when she made me bury myself on the cover in the third round!
Oh, the shooting is embarrassing. Yes, about her unparalleled. She has been growing up around people older than her.
She has always been a parent’s party trick. I think it’s hard to say, “I’m going to try to act like our peers with these people who are much older than me.” How do I navigate?
And I’m not looking at other people because everyone else is the right age for them. But what is really special about Javadi is that it doesn’t stop her from trying.
She is someone who has been proven for being so good at it. It doesn’t matter. She is still able to fail, fail, and then try again, get up, try again, get up and then try again. I don’t know you can say that for many people.
I agree. Of course, we have seen her have a tense relationship with her mother.
Can you talk about her stress? I can never tell if she is trying to impress her mother, like her, to put herself with her or all of the above.
Yes, it’s anyway. all of the above. Everyone woves each other.
In my mind, Javadi graduated so young at high school and then put down his pace and said, “I want to go to college, I want to do medical school at the rate of completion. I don’t want to speed up these things.”
It is very important for her to find a community, build friends and connect. Aileen doesn’t necessarily understand that Javadi has to pay for her talent and how her mother can drive her to act faster, better, and impress. Javadi Exceed Impressive.


She just wants to be part of the team, which is why the first day of work is so important. By the end of the day, she was part of the team, which was huge for me.
But I hope that as time goes by and season two, her mom will learn to learn more about her and realize the cost of loneliness because she has been acting in the way her mother wants her to behave.
One of the most exciting aspects of the series is diversity. Feeling very real. There are a lot of incredible color characters. There are many neurological diseases. There are many languages. There is only everything.
What is it like to be a part of this project?
Isn’t it crazy? First, I was so shocked that I was auditioning for a role like this because she was a “young man”. The boy genius has always been a boy, just like Doogie Howser.
Always a Sheldon. Then, she is the one who pursues romantic connections, which is also something she is as embarrassed and clumsy as Seth Cohen.
She is a fusion of all these boyish things. Then they let me play with it, which was crazy for me. Besides that, I have to go to work and then I thought, “Oh, supriya [Ganesh] Here. ”


She is another brown woman. It is so rare to work with other brown women, not playing sisters or having people talk about it. “Oh, this isn’t so crazy that there are always so many brown people in the hospital?”
So that’s so cute. Like Noah, this is a proof for these men [Wyle]John Wells and Scott [Gemmill]our performers.
They opened the door for all of us, and they opened it wider than anyone who had opened it before. Yes, there is diversity. Then there is its layer, its depth and its meaning. It’s really beautiful.
We have held a large-scale shooting event. Can you laugh at that going forward? I’m already on the edge of this. Very stressed.
I’m really looking forward to seeing how people react to these plots. Performer Scott worked very hard and spent a lot of time figuring out how we would deal with this subject because it is unique American.
It was shocking for me to get into it and start studying gun violence because it wasn’t my reality at all.
I want people to treat it as sensitive as they should be to the subject. In the United States, this level of violence is desensitized. When I got there, I was shocked by it.
Because it’s frightening, weird and preventable to me, I like that we don’t focus on shooters. We have nothing to glorify.
We won’t go, “You know, there’s some sick part of us. I want to know why. I want to know who did that.” That’s OK. These are stories of people, in which they get up to work and often hurt themselves.
First responders experienced a strong PTSD from this incident. We’ve seen that with the Covid plot and the impact on Robby, Dana and Abbott in some way.
I’m glad people see how this kind of incident affects people who work. I don’t know we talk so much about culture, I don’t know people who are really focusing on bringing ambulances into these spaces.
Following up on this, how do you think about your perception of first responders just being such a show and being part of their experience?
A huge change has occurred. The more I learned, the more I went, “Oh, I don’t know what I need.” I hope the show can help people see what it looks like and have compassion for people.
The entire Doug Driscoll storyline is part of it, and people don’t have sympathy when people have their worst day. That’s the emergency room, right? For all patients who enter the emergency room, this is the worst day of their fucking life because they are injured, injured, painful, whatever it is.
And, when you go through the worst, you don’t do your best. I really hope people take it away from the show. I want people to see what it looks like and find the power to be a nurse or a doctor because these jobs are really powerful jobs, or at least value them.
Your proudest moment is part of this show?
Oh my god, what is my proudest moment? Honestly, just an accent. I am proud of myself, but it was my first American show.
I am proud to be such a beautiful place to work. In John Wells’ show, without such a system, you can’t have yourself or be a jerk.
We don’t have chairs to sit there. We all sat in a common room and talked to everyone. There is no hierarchy, we all work in background. Therefore, there is a real sense of family. Parts like this are special because the collection can indeed be hierarchies.
What is the most challenging thing for you?
Obviously, this is challenging in many ways, but I think everyone is working hard to make the experience easy. Actually, I don’t even have an answer. However, I have the best time.
For Javadi, the most challenging thing is the presence of a partner.
Sometimes, Mateo is used to depict those awkward scenes. I thought, “Why do you say I’m free on Sunday? Why do you say that?”
Those scenes, trying to market them in a truly real way, not to laugh and not play them, and really, honestly playing them. “He’s so pretty. I can’t concentrate.” That’s challenging.
We do these things and everyone starts to laugh at me. So even if I do, I’m like, “Okay, that’s really embarrassing.”
We’ll see the occasion of Javadi’s rise, maybe in some of the rest of the plot? Her time has been very good so far.
For me, due to her blood problems, I think this day was an achievement for her.
It’s also really fun because I think people are gone, “Oh, that kid’s prodigy.” They think she’s going to impress. And her yes So impressive. I think she shows it again and again.
But I think that, constitutionally speaking, her reflection is not the strongest. She just spent the day was huge for her. I hope she is proud of it. I hope her mom sees it, you know?


Yes. Overall, this is good news for this show. “Just spend the day.“
We also judge for ourselves what we are best at. We want to be as good as we do best. But Javadi is a great example of a smart person, but she doesn’t consider this now.
She is trying to build and build a community, and she isn’t very good at it. She also tried not to disseminate this massive casualties.
She is not that good at it. So I think those efforts, those worst things, like in our worst situations, I think it’s a huge achievement when we persevere.
We edited this interview for length and clarity.
By your side, Pete fanatic. What do you think of Javadi?
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