Sheldon revisits some Christmas memories during a game of Dungeons and Dragons, while Penny, Bernadette and Amy try to find a girl for Koothrappali when he joins the girls for ladies' night.Download Video The Big Bang Theory Story The Santa Simulation Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch The Big Bang Theory Story Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.Leonard and Sheldon are brilliant physicists, the kind of "beautiful minds" that understand how the universe works. But none of that genius helps them interact with people, especially women. All this begins to change when a free-spirited beauty named Penny moves in next door. Sheldon, Leonard's roommate, is quite content spending his nights playing Klingon Boggle with their socially dysfunctional friends, fellow CalTech scientists Wolowitz and Koothrappali. However, Leonard sees in Penny a whole new universe of possibilities... including love.
If you don't, that's completely fine. I'm just telling you up front because I love Wil Wheaton and I loved this episode a disgusting amount because of him.
We spend most of this episode with Sheldon, and while Sheldon-centric episodes tend to be either bit hits or big misses, this one definitely works for me even if it is a rehash of the same Sheldon/Amy plotline we've seen a dozen times before. (Sheldon does something insensitive that most men would know not to do to their girlfriends! Amy gets upset! Sheldon doesn't think he should apologize and blunders about as he tries to figure out all these silly relationship rules!)
Showing an actual sense of continuity, the writers remembered that Sheldon has a web series called Fun With Flags and for his current episode, he's bringing on Evil Wil Wheaton to talk about the flags of Star Trek. (Side bar: is he still "Evil Wil Wheaton" now that he's nice to Sheldon? Is he now just Wil Wheaton? Where did the fourth wall go and who are these people providing a laugh track?)
Amy, acting as director for the show, decides that she finds Evil Wil Wheaton "wooden," and when he gets upset, the two have a fight. Naturally, Sheldon asks Amy to leave, and then proceeds to have what sounds like a very nice dinner with Evil Wil Wheaton. All due respect to Amy, if the reward for taking Evil Wil Wheaton's side is getting to have dinner with him... I'm taking Evil Wil Wheaton's side there, so I can't blame Sheldon one bit.
Her anger, however, leads to Sheldon seeking out Penny for advice, which leads to Penny giving him a Long Island iced tea, which leads to hilarity. There's pretty much nothing funnier than Sheldon showing up at Evil Wil Wheaton's house drunk and trying to fight him, only to find his effort useless once Wil proves that there's no longer an Evil in front of his name by apologizing quickly and sincerely for arguing with Amy.
And then Sheldon vomits in the bushes, taking breaks to complement Wil's acting, while Wil watches and hates his life and questions his decision to befriend his fans, probably not for the first time.
The network that produced such classic sitcoms in the past as "All in the Family" and "The Munsters" does it again with "The Big Bang Theory," a tremendous success for Chuck Lorre following his drastic failure with "Dharma & Greg".
"BBT" follows the witty and sarcasm-soaked misadventures of Leonard and Sheldon, two socially awkward scientists thrust full-force into standard sitcom story lines-- themes of rejection, friendship, and pride, among others.
The important thing is, the standard sitcom story lines feel new for the first time in decades, mainly because the mile-a-minute dialogue now comes with gloriously incomprehensible techno-babble and high-level jargon that could send Kissinger screaming from a room.
If you don't, that's completely fine. I'm just telling you up front because I love Wil Wheaton and I loved this episode a disgusting amount because of him.
We spend most of this episode with Sheldon, and while Sheldon-centric episodes tend to be either bit hits or big misses, this one definitely works for me even if it is a rehash of the same Sheldon/Amy plotline we've seen a dozen times before. (Sheldon does something insensitive that most men would know not to do to their girlfriends! Amy gets upset! Sheldon doesn't think he should apologize and blunders about as he tries to figure out all these silly relationship rules!)
Showing an actual sense of continuity, the writers remembered that Sheldon has a web series called Fun With Flags and for his current episode, he's bringing on Evil Wil Wheaton to talk about the flags of Star Trek. (Side bar: is he still "Evil Wil Wheaton" now that he's nice to Sheldon? Is he now just Wil Wheaton? Where did the fourth wall go and who are these people providing a laugh track?)
Amy, acting as director for the show, decides that she finds Evil Wil Wheaton "wooden," and when he gets upset, the two have a fight. Naturally, Sheldon asks Amy to leave, and then proceeds to have what sounds like a very nice dinner with Evil Wil Wheaton. All due respect to Amy, if the reward for taking Evil Wil Wheaton's side is getting to have dinner with him... I'm taking Evil Wil Wheaton's side there, so I can't blame Sheldon one bit.
Her anger, however, leads to Sheldon seeking out Penny for advice, which leads to Penny giving him a Long Island iced tea, which leads to hilarity. There's pretty much nothing funnier than Sheldon showing up at Evil Wil Wheaton's house drunk and trying to fight him, only to find his effort useless once Wil proves that there's no longer an Evil in front of his name by apologizing quickly and sincerely for arguing with Amy.
And then Sheldon vomits in the bushes, taking breaks to complement Wil's acting, while Wil watches and hates his life and questions his decision to befriend his fans, probably not for the first time.
The network that produced such classic sitcoms in the past as "All in the Family" and "The Munsters" does it again with "The Big Bang Theory," a tremendous success for Chuck Lorre following his drastic failure with "Dharma & Greg".
"BBT" follows the witty and sarcasm-soaked misadventures of Leonard and Sheldon, two socially awkward scientists thrust full-force into standard sitcom story lines-- themes of rejection, friendship, and pride, among others.
The important thing is, the standard sitcom story lines feel new for the first time in decades, mainly because the mile-a-minute dialogue now comes with gloriously incomprehensible techno-babble and high-level jargon that could send Kissinger screaming from a room.