Poll: Vote for this episode
This poll is closed.
3 Penny Blossoms
0%
0 0%
2 Penny Blossoms
0%
0 0%
1 Penny Blossom
0%
0 0%
The Neutral Zone
0%
0 0%
1 Dirty Sock
0%
0 0%
2 Dirty Socks
100.00%
2 100.00%
3 Dirty Socks
0%
0 0%
Total 2 vote(s) 100%
* You voted for this item. [Show Results]

9.07 The Spock Resonance
#1
"While being interviewed for a documentary about Spock from "Star Trek," Sheldon struggles to suppress his emotions about his recent break-up with Amy. Also, Wolowitz and Bernadette butt heads over remodeling his childhood home." Morlock 

[Image: 107265_WB_0424b_FULL_zpsywtpzjve.jpg]


Photos and promo

http://www.spoilertv.com/2015/10/the-big...spock.html
Reply
#2
(10-29-2015, 04:53 AM)Tuesday Pajamas Wrote: "While being interviewed for a documentary about Spock from "Star Trek," Sheldon struggles to suppress his emotions about his recent break-up with Amy. Also, Wolowitz and Bernadette butt heads over remodeling his childhood home." Morlock 

Photos and promo

http://www.spoilertv.com/2015/10/the-big...spock.html

That sounds dreadful on all fronts. The house thing REALLY hits a nerve with me and pisses me off.  I think I'm gonna take a leave of absence for all of November. I'm trying to write fic for NaNoRiMo and I don't want to be influenced or discouraged by the canon. Peace out.  Sad Blossom

ETA: This is the second or third time that these lazy as*holes have used the word "Resonance."
The following 1 user Likes Louise's post:
  • Kimk26
Reply
#3
Since she wouldn't even let him keep one frackin' room in the house as a man cave (if she had that whole TARDIS disaster would have ended differently) I already know this is Bernadette gets whatever she wants. The "argument" will be just another melodramatic, overused plot for this couple.

I thought this was just a theory, but dull, beigeness really can be caught if you're with Amy. It's the only reason I have for Sheldon looking like a lackluster Tax Adjuster.
“There are no scenes more fun to do, I feel like, than the ones between Sheldon and Penny. They are such a wonderful odd couple.” - Jim Parsons
The following 4 users Like Nutz's post:
  • Louise, Kimk26, Jomi25, Gamma
Reply
#4
WHEATON! Wine

[Image: 2im01sw.jpg]
(thanks to Toad for the pic of Wil's apparition)
"WHERE THE HELL'S MY PARACHUTE?"
The following 3 users Like Idle Miscreant's post:
  • Kimk26, wellplayedpenny, Gamma
Reply
#5
Wheaton makes everything better.   Wine
"The mark of mediocrity is to look for precedent."   Norman Mailer
The following 1 user Likes Kimk26's post:
  • Idle Miscreant
Reply
#6
Quote:"While being interviewed for a documentary about Spock from "Star Trek," Sheldon struggles to suppress his emotions about his recent break-up with Amy. Also, Wolowitz and Bernadette butt heads over remodeling his childhood home."

Oh dear. Rolleyes 

Sheldon + the "feels" for Amy & the same old sh*t from H&B = Sock Sock Sock  episode.

EDIT: btw, the (unfinished) formula r=... on the whiteboard looks like the correlation coefficient. I wonder if Sheldumb and Co. even know what that means anymore...
Man darf nicht das, was uns unwahrscheinlich und unnatürlich erscheint, mit dem verwechseln, was absolut unmöglich ist. - Carl Friedrich Gauß
The following 2 users Like Berliner's post:
  • Toad, Tuesday Pajamas
Reply
#7
9.7 The Spock Resonance

I've had moments in my life when I realized that somewhere along the line I really fucked up. When these epiphanies hit, and they pack a wallop, they are the harbingers of choice as I'm faced with continuing as I was doing or else make a change. This is what Sheldon faces in tonight's episode.

In the late Leonard Nimoy's documentary about Spock, Sheldon is interviewed to give his input about what Spock means to him. He remembered the first episode he saw and how Spock's devotion to unemotional logic fascinated him. Spock didn't let things like bullying brothers or nasty neighbourhood kids get in the way of his pursuit of knowledge. Young Sheldon found kinship in this, someone relatable to as opposed to those who surrounded him in East Texas. Sheldon's devotion to physics got him out of there and he has never looked back. Until now.

While praising Spock, he opens his safety deposit box and reveals among other things the engagement ring he had for Amy. When pressed about it, he snaps at Penny to just let it be before he returned the topic back to Spock. But the subject of Amy returns and Sheldon storms out of the room after all but admitting that he's not over her.

Given the Sheldon I've been exposed to since s5, the fact that Sheldon has fallen in love with Amy isn't shocking as that's the way the ham-fisted writing has steered the boat. This has become the moment where Amy supersedes Spock as the most important person in his life. The 'a-ha!' moment people who follow the Sheldon and Amy romance have been waiting for.

What really struck me, however, is how much the writers simplified Spock, making him out to be nothing more than a half-human fraudster that fooled a young Sheldon into thinking that one can exist without emotions. It shows that they don't understand Spock, and, by extension, Sheldon.
Spock always said that he didn't have emotions but we, through Jim Kirk, knew better. Spock's emotions were deep and powerful, which is why he practiced kolinahr. Through their friendship we got to see what true love was: Spock could appreciate Kirk's passion without succumbing to it (most of the time), while Kirk admired Spock's intellect (although he enjoyed teasing him). Yes, there was a chance for both to learn from each other, perhaps even influence each other, but neither asked the other to go against who they fundamentally were.

We have a similar window in which to see Sheldon's passion, and her name is Penny. Penny who made him screech into a phone when she called him 'Moonpie' and flash a look of death when she used all the laundry machines. Even more remarkable is that she's the one who made Sheldon cry. His lips trembled as he gently handled the Leonard Nimoy napkin before he darted off to his room to fetch her Christmas presents. Sheldon, who cried when Penny called M.O.N.T.E. a toy robot. Or Sheldon, who out of concern for Penny violated his own policies and drove her to the hospital despite the threats of a fiery death and lethal germs.

The Penny and Sheldon interactions in tonight's episode are natural and telling of their close bond. Hearing his stories of how he was mistreated as a kid made her want to go over and hug him. Perhaps the message the writers are trying to make is that, yes, we are aware of Sheldon's emotions but Sheldon isn't. I've got one word for you—Meemaw. The one woman whose passing he knows will leave him inconsolable. The one person he will not tolerate anyone talking smack about. He's her Moonpie and he unabashedly accepts this.

Perhaps the most significant part for me is the Nimoy napkin, which Sheldon keeps in a wall safe. Penny's gift is THE moment for BBT fans as it was the first time we got to see a genuine Sheldon Cooper hug. But that's not all Sheldon has locked away as Amy's ring is also in the safe. Perhaps the message is that she is just as precious to Sheldon as Spock is—and that's just sad.

Because Amy is all about change, but for her benefit. We watched Sheldon continually deflect Amy's sexual advances until she wore him down, suggesting that she knows what he wants better than he does. This, above all else, is what is wrong with the show since Molaro took over because Sheldon has changed from the iconic character that he was, not to benefit his character, but to fulfill a pitiful attempt at maudlin romance. He's been worn down to the point where he no longer sees the wonder in Spock.

He no longer sees the wonder in himself.

I've always been in awe of Vintage Sheldon, the alien genius who was unapologetic for being himself. He was homo novus and one of the great minds of the 21st century who loved trains and Spock and comic books. He was different, proudly and arrogantly so (and with merit) and yet people accepted him, sometimes grudgingly like Howard—although you couldn't mistake the genuine friendship he had with Sheldon. Sheldon was simply Sheldon and that explanation was good enough for his friends and the viewers.

Being an outsider and yet being okay with that, okay with being you, that's what Spock is all about. It's what Vintage Sheldon is all about, which is why I will never give up on him. He's all kinds of awesomeness and his confidence and self-assuredness are things which I wish I had more of.

It's why I can unabashedly say that the Sheldon Cooper of the early seasons is my Spock.

And why I can say with absolute certainty that Molaro doesn't understand what that means.
Let's go exploring!
The following 12 users Like wellplayedpenny's post:
  • FlyingMonkey, Gamma, Kimk26, Jomi25, devilbk, Toad, Idle Miscreant, Nutz, Tuesday Pajamas, SpaceAnJL, Berliner, CassandraElise
Reply
#8
I don't even know anything intelligent or insightful to say about this episode. All characterisation complaints aside, isn't this supposed to be a sitcom? Parsons is a good actor, but he's playing it too straight. He does seem genuinely upset which just makes trying to write joke around it awkward as shit, even from a "watching it for black humour" sort of perspective. It's not fun (and they have made break-ups both impactful and fun before). And then the ending, good lord. He ~accidentally~ comes by just the moment she kisses her date? I might as well be watching one of the soap operas German TV drips on late afternoons by this point.

Overwrought dramatic main plot is dragged only further down by Howardette and their continued incompatibility on a fundamental level. Little as I like Bernadette, and much as I am also someone who wants children, it is kind of sad to see her being strongarmed into fulfilling the demands of society. You Must Have Kids, damnit, no other life choices are acceptable. I suppose it does make sense that she trades in her plans for her future for the good of the marriage, since her husband had to hand in his personality and hobbies.
The following 6 users Like A.D.A.'s post:
  • Del Fino, Kimk26, Tuesday Pajamas, wellplayedpenny, Berliner, CassandraElise
Reply
#9
Well the good thing about Howardette is that it'll be really hard for Bernadette to get pregnant considering she's already castrated Howard. No balls, no baby people. I wonder if she still has them or if she sold them in the Garage Sale along with his self esteem and dignity.
“There are no scenes more fun to do, I feel like, than the ones between Sheldon and Penny. They are such a wonderful odd couple.” - Jim Parsons
The following 2 users Like Nutz's post:
  • A.D.A., Kimk26
Reply
#10
Every couple on this show seems to be together because one manipulated/played emotional games with the other to get them. And it goes back and forth. Howard was emotionally manipulative with Bernadette tonight. Though she may deserve it, it's an ill-fitting look on this beloved character. Sigh.
"The mark of mediocrity is to look for precedent."   Norman Mailer
The following 2 users Like Kimk26's post:
  • A.D.A., Gamma
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)