While treating the bee-sting boy, Dr. Early orders an I.V., D5W, started and 1mg epinephrine I.V. push. When Roy says there's no improvement to the boys pulse and respiration, Dr. Early then orders 50 mg Benadryl I.V. push. Johnny repeats the second order back on the biofone to Dr. Early as 1mg epinephrine I.V. push instead and Early replies in the affirmative. Then the boy improves.
On the very first run, there's an interior shot of the station as the squad unit starts moving forward as the garage door opens. The squad moves under the door as soon as it has enough room, but in the immediately following exterior shot, the garage door is suddenly fully open.
When Roy was on the Quiz show, Gage tries to get the TV tuned in to the channel & only had "snow" visible, but yet the TV had clear audio. In actuality, there would've been little to no audio. It was a ploy by the Emergency producers not to show Roy's wife. Gage also calls the TV a "machine" when it didn't have a signal.
After the Hospital scene with the Mom recovering after the removal a clot on the brain that caused her to hit her son & have headaches, Roy & Johnny are back at the station talking about the show before Roy & his wife are going on later that evening.
The Station alarm sounds with an alert of vehicle accident with injuries, and ending the alert, time out 3:02.
This is daytime meaning 3:02 PM. The dispatcher would normally say time out 15:02.
When the team arrives at a fire involving kerosene (barrels of it clearly labeled) the for is sprayed with lots of water. This would cause the fire to spread an the kerosene would float and continue to burn.