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The Pitt Season 2 Finale Seals Dr. Mohan’s Fate as Supriya Ganesh Exits the Series

The Pitt Season 2 Finale Seals Dr. Mohan’s Fate as Supriya Ganesh Exits the Series
Image credit: Legion-Media

The Pitt’s Season 2 finale sticks the landing with a decisive goodbye, as Supriya Ganesh exits and Dr. Samira Mohan’s wavering is settled in one fate-defining final conversation.

Alright, 'The Pitt' just finished its second season, and if you were rooting for Dr. Samira Mohan (played by Supriya Ganesh) to finally sort her life out, good news: she kind of did. But don’t expect fireworks or a dramatic walk-off — the show closes her arc with the most normal, almost mundane scene possible. Honestly, that might be what makes it land.

Dr. Mohan: Chronic Indecision, Meet Your End

All season, Mohan has been stuck. She’s a capable doctor, but can’t pick a specialty. Her mother nags her, she can’t get decisive, and she’s seemed on the verge of either changing her life or just burning out. In the finale, things finally come to a head — not with a big speech, but with a conversation in the ambulance bay at the end of a wild Fourth of July shift.

Here’s how it plays out:

  • Noah Wyle’s Dr. Robby (Michael Robinavitch, for completists) is about to head off on a three-month sabbatical.
  • He catches Mohan at the end of the shift and straight-up asks if she’s picked an elective yet. (If you’re allergic to medical jargon, that means she hasn’t picked her specialty for residency, and it’s starting to get awkward.)
  • Mohan admits: No, she hasn’t. But she’s thinking… maybe geriatrics? (For those keeping track, that is the path Robby himself suggested earlier in the season.)
  • Robby weighs in: 'Smart choice.'

A Goodbye Without Big Dramatic Gestures

This is where things get — maybe intentionally — very unglamorous for a character exit. Robby, maybe sensing Mohan’s nerves, opens up about his own disappointments: marriage, kids, a pond he always thought he’d have but never did.

'I know that life can be challenging, especially when it doesn’t work out the way you expect it,' he tells her.

Mohan (ever the optimist, or at least pretending to be) replies, 'It’s never too late.' Robby immediately flips her logic back: does she really believe that for herself, or is she just trying to make him feel better? Her answer is basically, 'Touché, you got me.' Before it can get too sappy, Robby checks in about her mother — Mohan says they’re not talking and awkwardly apologizes for bringing drama to work.

And then — that’s it. There’s no big hug, no soapy twist, just a goodbye that feels a lot more like real life:

'Have a good trip. Please be safe. We need you here, even if you can be a d--k sometimes. Good luck.'

The Verdict

Not every show has to send a main character out with explosions (literal or emotional), and 'The Pitt' lives up to that by letting Dr. Mohan finally move forward in the actual, boring way most of us do. It’s a low-key but satisfying exit for Supriya Ganesh, closing the chapter with no melodrama — just a hard-earned step forward, and an actual answer to the question: Will she ever pick a path? Turns out, yeah, eventually.