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Sophia Bush, Jason Isaacs can’t save stale CBS medical drama

There’s nothing you haven’t seen dozens of times before in “Good Sam,” a new medical drama premiering Wednesday (Jan. 5) at 10 p.m. on CBS.

That doesn’t mean it’s not worth sampling, but be prepared for the same-old-same-old: soapy romance, predictable hospital staffers and patients with rare conditions whose lives are saved at the last minute through Sherlock Holmes-type medical deductions. You’ve seen it all before on “Grey’s Anatomy,” “The Resident,” “The Good Doctor,” “Chicago Med” et al.

The inherent conflict at Lakeshore Sentinel Hospital lies between brilliant, arrogant, bull-headed heart surgeon Dr. Robert “Griff” Griffith (Jason Isaacs) — the chief of surgery who drives a vintage Mustang — and his daughter, Dr. Sam Griffith (Sophia Bush), who’s whip-smart but lacks Griff’s years of experience. She’s also his chief resident and they clash repeatedly; it’s his way or the highway. (He snidely refers to Sam’s residents — the arrogant one, the insecure one, the earnest one, etc. — as “a drum circle.”) Oh, and Sam’s mother and Griff’s ex-wife, Vivian (Wendy Crewson), just happens to be the hospital’s chief medical officer. More family drama awaits, and we’ll find out how Sam’s visible heart-surgery scar plays into the fractured father/daughter relationship.

Jason Isaacs and Sophia Bush as Dr. Rob “Griff” Griffith and his daughter, Dr. Sam Griffith, in “Good Sam.”
CBS

“Everything changes,” to quote those old “Grey’s Anatomy” promos when, in the series opener, Griff is gunned down in the hospital by a lunatic just as Sam is thinking of leaving for a job at the Cleveland Clinic. He lapses into a coma, and — cut to six months later — awakens with his faculties remarkably intact but his pride/ego dented. Sam has now replaced him as Lakeshore Sentinel’s chief of surgery and he’s been downgraded to one of her underlings as she monitors his progress before he’s legally allowed to operate on another patient.

It’s all cookie-cutter (or is that scalpel-cutter?) stuff, which is fine, if that’s what you’re looking for in a primetime medical drama. There are several subplots, including Sam’s growing relationship with Malcolm Kingsley (Edwin Hodge), the son of Lakeshore Sentinel’s chief donor who — surprise! — is transferred to the hospital as its chief financial officer. She’s also still sort of dating one of her residents, Dr. Caleb Tucker (Michael Stahl-David), who’s hiding a secret, and she’s peeved to learn that her best friend, Dr. Lex Trulie (Skye P. Marshall), was rolling in the sheets with Griff (pre-coma). So there’s that.

Left to right: Davi Santos as Dr. Joey Costa, Omar Maskati as Dr. Isan Shah and Skye P. Marshall as Dr. Lex Trulie have a word with Sam.
CBS

I watched the two “Good Sam” episodes that CBS made available for review, and the second one, “Natural Order,” is in line with the series premiere, so not much changes as the tension between Griff and Sam ratchets up, a baby is saved by a surgery that seems like science fiction (but isn’t, apparently) and we learn a little more about the history of Griff and Sam’s dynamic. The cast hits its marks and does its best, but I just don’t see “Good Sam” as a keeper in an already-overcrowded genre.

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