The Pitt season 2 (Image via HBO Max)
Actor Jeff Kober guest-stars as Duke Ekins on The Pitt, season 2, episode 10. The actor has starred in countless productions since his 1985 debut. Some of his notable roles include The Walking Dead, Sons of Anarchy and General Hospital, among others. Jeff Kober has also appeared in the One Chicago universe, playing Doug Green in one episode of Chicago Med in 2024.
Ekins is a motorcycle engineer and Dr. Robby’s longtime friend in The Pitt.
The Pitt season 2 episode 10: Duke pays a visit to get his throat checked
It is seen that Robby soon calls Duke to remind him that it is his last shift for a while and that Duke needs to come in before 3:00, as they might have to run a few tests, and to remind him that they had a deal.
Turns out Duke has still not checked in after hours. Robby asks Donnie whether he has seen him. He later informs Dana that Duke never showed up. She later tells Robby that Duke might not come after all.
Duke finally comes for his checkup and gets into a humorous banter about their friendship. Duke tells the doctor he doesn’t want to go through so much hassle just for a sore throat. Robby introduced Duke to Whitaker as a good friend, while Duke calls him a “pain in the a**.” Whitaker suggests getting a chest X-ray, given his drinking history.
Will Robby actually go on a long break?
One of the questions viewers might be wondering about is whether Dr. Robby will be on a long sabbatical. Series creator R. Scott Gemmill has shed some light on the pressing issue. He told TV Line:
Dr. Abbott asks Robby if he doesn’t remember the last time he took a vacation before, to which Robby tells him:
“It’s going to be a lot of time to self-reflect. Sure, you can handle that? You just make sure you come back, and if it gets dark, make sure you call me. Are you listening?”
In season 2, Robby is seen telling Whitaker to house-sit, and he adds that if he does not come back, he will have a swingin’ bachelor pad all by himself.

The inclusion of Duke Ekins as a “legacy friend” for Dr. Robby serves as a narrative mirror to the protagonist’s own internal struggles. While Duke dismisses his chronic hoarseness as a mere inconvenience, Robby’s insistence on a chest X-ray—citing Duke’s drinking history and Whitaker’s professional intuition—reveals a doctor who is increasingly haunted by the possibility of losing yet another piece of his personal history. This tension between Duke’s reckless nonchalance and Robby’s clinical vigilance underscores the central theme of Season 2: the thin line between caring for others and failing to care for oneself. As the Fourth of July shift progresses toward its final hours, the lingering question of Duke’s health becomes a catalyst for Robby’s own reckoning, suggesting that his planned three-month sabbatical may be less of a vacation and more of an urgent retreat from a life that has become dangerously imbalanced.
