Scrubs finale aired in 2010. Now, after 15 years, Scrubs is returning to ABC with its original cast, including John C. McGinley. The actor recently opened up to PEOPLE about a mystery involving himself and one missing ornament.John C. McGinley is known to audiences as Dr. Perry Cox. He recently shared,"We had a Scrubs one [ornament] that I broke. It was perfect. It came in this box and I dropped it. I dropped it and it was made of glass. And I am going to find somebody on the reboot who's got, somewhere in the back of their closet, has two or three of these."He also added:"I am keeping it [the box] right on the godd**n desk. How is that for a priority? And I am going to find somebody, I'm like, 'Do you have any extra Scrubs Christmas balls, Christmas ornaments? Could I pay you for them? Could I have them?' I don't know who that person is, but I am going to find it, because I know someone has four or five."John C. McGinley's son, Max, has Down syndromeThe ornament's damage went against his household rule: no breakable ornaments. That rule is in place for his son Max, who has Down syndrome. He has spent years acquiring the fine motor skill practice of hanging ornaments on the Christmas tree.John C. McGinley shares:"It was a tactile fine motor skill exercise for Maxie at first to get the hook on the branches. Now he can do it in his sleep. Over a couple of days we put the ornaments on the tree and there is some ornaments that are 30 years old and there is some ornaments we got this year. None are made of glass anymore. When the balls drop on the floor, they bounce. No more of the ones we grew up with. There is no need."Scrubs first premiered in 2001 on NBC. The beloved show ran nine seasons across NBC and later ABC. It had a peak audience of nearly 16 million viewers in Season 2.The original cast included Zach Braff, Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, Judy Reyes, and John C. McGinley. Notably, John C. McGinley credits relatively younger viewers, who are seemingly discovering the show through streaming, as the OG reason behind this revival. He said,"It felt strange because I had these young adults who come up to me now who are 25 and 30, I am estimating, and they will say, 'I grew up watching Scrubs'. And I'm like, 'Well, you were a kid.' And I think the same thing, how it impacted my girls. And they are like, 'Yeah, we loved it. We loved it. It was funny.' Great, great. Because that group has been so fanatical that it's been the catalyst for a reboot, which is phenomenal."Scrubs is officially set to return on Wednesday, February 25, 2026, at 8 p.m. on ABC.Also Read: "I still feel like I'm maybe about 40 or 50": Jane Seymour says she feels decades younger at 74 as actress celebrates 20 years of Wedding Crashers"You cannot compare a photo of me from when I was 12": Sydney Sweeney shuts down cosmetic surgery speculation