Scrubs' short-lived 2009 web series,Scrubs: Interns, fleshed out the sitcom’s world in some really interesting ways, but it also made one of the show’s most confusing JD gags even more unclear. The 12-episode spinoff ran alongsideScrubsseason 8 and was originally only available on the ABC website. Then, it was released on theScrubsseason 8 DVD sex, but it’s also available on producer Jesse Schiller’sVimeochannel.Zach Braff briefly reprises his role as JD inInterns, but it’s actuallyNeil Flynn’s Janitorwho makes matters confusing.

Although the web series is very rarely discussed, it’s quite obviously set in the same canon asall nine seasons ofScrubs. So, although theScrubsrevivalhas no real obligation to acknowledgeScrubs: Interns, it’s still a nice addition to the larger world in which the sitcom is set. With Braff presumably set to return as JD whenScrubsseason 10 enters production, there’s an old trope the character will almost definitely bring back, but the original run (andInterns) would often also make this running gag difficult to track.

Zach Braff as JD in Turk’s back in Scrubs

The web series weirdly replicated JD’s imagination

Scrubs: Internsbrilliantly pays off a joke fromScrubsseason 7, episode 10, “My Waste of Time.” After watching the Janitor and Ted (Sam Lloyd), JD muses to his son that the pair “should have their own sitcom.” Then,Braff’s character conjures up what the show in question would look like in his head, complete with a theme song. JD mentions the cleverly namedLegal Custodiansjust once more in the episode, butInternsreally doubles down on the joke by the Janitor and Ted trying to shoot a TV pilot under the same name.

TED: I’m a lawyer.

JANITOR: I’m a janitor.

BOTH: Together, we adopted a cute little kid. We’re Legal Custodians. Get it?

Although it’s a great piece of fan service, it opens up an incredibly meta plot hole. Firstly, JD is never shown explaining the premise of the show to anyone else in any real detail. Secondly,Legal Custodians' opening sequence that’s shot inScrubs: Internsis exactly the same as the version that JD sees in his fantasy in “My Waste of Time.” So,it’s very unclear how the Janitor and Ted seemingly dragged the images from JD’s mindand into theirLegal Custodianspilot.

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JD’s bizarre (and increasingly detailed) fantasies wereScrubs' primary method of injecting a healthy dose of fantastical chaos into the show. Generally, the events in JD’s head would often be so removed from reality that it would make the hospital’s real-world antics seem positively grounded by comparison. However,Scrubsgradually started to lose track of what should happen in fantasy sequencesand which events should take place in the sitcom’s physical setting.

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There are a few instances where a scene comes across very much like it’s going to flash out from a fantasy into a “real” moment, but the show never actually presents the scene that way. For example,JD somehow sneaks into the movie theater by cramming himself into Turk’s backpackinScrubsseason 5, episode 1, “My Intern’s Eyes.” While very funny, this would have been far more at home in a fantasy, which was whereScrubswould usually shine in its irreverent comedy.

Zach Braff looking confused as JD in Scrubs

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