The Big Bang Theory (season 2)
The second season of the American sitcom The Big Bang Theory was originally aired on CBS from September 22, 2008, to May 11, 2009, over 23 episodes. The Complete Season DVD was released September 15, 2009, and a Blu-ray version was reissued on July 10, 2012, with remastered surround sound audio, whereas the DVD version only had stereo. Season two starts immediately after the end of season one with Leonard and Penny's date.
The Big Bang Theory | |
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Season 2 | |
Second season DVD cover art | |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 23 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 22, 2008 – May 11, 2009 |
Season chronology | |
Jim Parsons submitted the episode "The Bath Item Gift Hypothesis" for consideration due to his nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series at the 61st Primetime Emmy Awards. In 2009, TV Guide ranked the episode the #60 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.[1] Christine Baranski submitted the episode "The Maternal Capacitance" for consideration due to her nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series at the 61st Primetime Emmy Awards.
Overview
Season two begins to deal with character development, including Sheldon becoming more and more obsessive. Leonard and Penny's relationship takes a turn for the worse when they break up, but this is quickly resolved. Soon their relationship progresses into a stronger friendship than before, while Sheldon and Penny's friendship slowly begins. In the season finale Penny hints at her true feelings for Leonard. Howard's character remains similar to that of season one in his attempts to seduce women, managing to start a short-lived sexual relationship with Leslie Winkle in the second half of the season. Meanwhile, Rajesh manages to briefly apologize to Penny for what he did in "The Griffin Equivalency" without having consumed alcohol. Barry Kripke played by John Ross Bowie makes his first appearance In the series starting with this season, He first appears in "The Killer Robot Instability".
Cast
Main cast
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Recurring cast
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Guest cast
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Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | US viewers (millions) |
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18 | 1 | "The Bad Fish Paradigm" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady Teleplay by : Dave Goetsch & Steven Molaro | September 22, 2008 | 3T7351 | 9.36[2] |
Following the Season 1 finale, Leonard and Penny return from their first date while Howard and Raj spy on them using a webcam in the hall between their apartments. Leonard, spotting the camera, suggests going over to her apartment, but she misunderstands him and tells him to "slow things down". The guys try to convince Leonard that the date went badly, which he denies. Penny later tells Sheldon that she lied to Leonard about graduating from community college, feeling he would not want to date a woman who is not smart, and makes Sheldon promise not to tell him. Sheldon cannot easily keep secrets, and moves out of the apartment to escape his inner conflict. He first stays with Raj, but after Sheldon criticizes Aishwarya Rai, comparing her unfavorably to Madhuri Dixit, Raj leaves him at Howard's house. Sheldon talks instead of sleeping, so Howard gives him Valium, which fails to work, and finally takes him back to the apartment. The drugged Sheldon tells Leonard the secret. The next morning, Leonard suggests Penny should join Pasadena City College, but after she asks, says he does not mind dating someone who is not smart, at which she slams her door in his face. Title reference: Howard calling Leonard a "bad fish" in his relationship with Penny. | |||||||
19 | 2 | "The Codpiece Topology" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre Teleplay by : Bill Prady & Lee Aronsohn | September 29, 2008 | 3T7352 | 8.76[3] |
After the guys return from a Renaissance fair and see Penny with her new boyfriend Eric, Leonard is approached in the Caltech canteen by Leslie Winkle, who proposes renewing their one-time "relationship". As she has grown out of one-night stands she suggests they take it slowly, first determining their compatibility on all levels before proceeding to full sex (if at all); Leonard can assume the "male role". During their dates, Leslie asks how many children they should have and evaluates Leonard's genetic defects. Penny dumps Eric after unsuccessfully using him to make Leonard jealous (including a competitive make-out session between Penny and Eric and Leonard and Leslie, Leslie helping Leonard make his point). Sheldon tells Penny he is uncomfortable with Leonard dating his arch enemy Leslie, but on Penny's advice he accepts the relationship. Almost immediately, however, Sheldon deliberately provokes an argument with Leslie over the validity of loop quantum gravity, which Leslie supports, and string theory, which Sheldon favors. Leslie expects Leonard to back her beliefs, but when he supports Sheldon, Leslie dumps Leonard, to Sheldon's relief. Sheldon then comforts Leonard with the fact that it's only nine months until Comic-Con. Title reference: Sheldon stating that the Renaissance Fair was just an excuse to wear a codpiece. | |||||||
20 | 3 | "The Barbarian Sublimation" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Nicole Lorre Teleplay by : Steven Molaro & Eric Kaplan | October 6, 2008 | 3T7353 | 9.33[4] |
Sheldon lets Penny wait for the locksmith in his apartment after she accidentally locks herself out. Penny, frustrated at making no progress in her acting career and not having had sex for six months, becomes curious on seeing Sheldon play Age of Conan. He helps Penny get started; she buys the game and soon succumbs to video game addiction, annoying Sheldon by persistently asking him for game tips night and day. In desperation he asks Leonard for help, who tries to talk with her in her apartment, but she practically ignores him. Leonard then tries approaching her character within the game, but she merely beheads his character. After listening to Leslie in the Caltech canteen, Sheldon is convinced that Penny needs to have sex to relieve her stress and restore her regular life. Sheldon attempts to fix Penny a date with the aid of an online dating service, but fails. In the end, Penny is horrified to realize she has accepted a virtual date with Howard, and promptly stops playing, thus overcoming her addiction. Title reference: Penny becoming addicted to playing the computer game Age of Conan set in Robert E. Howard's universe of Conan the Barbarian. | |||||||
21 | 4 | "The Griffin Equivalency" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Chuck Lorre Teleplay by : Stephen Engel & Tim Doyle | October 13, 2008 | 3T7354 | 9.36[5] |
Raj is included in People magazine's "30 Visionaries Under 30 Years Old to Watch" list for his discovery of the trans-Neptunian object 2008 NQ17, making his friends jealous, though Leonard finds that they should be happy for him. Raj becomes arrogant after receiving star treatment from Dr. Gablehauser and being given an assistant, so all the guys ditch him, and he invites Penny to his People reception. After the party, a very intoxicated Raj returns home with Penny, and via webcam he introduces her to his parents as his girlfriend. His parents object that she is not Indian, though his father likes Penny's resolute nature. She denies being Raj's girlfriend, and escapes after he becomes sick from overdrinking. The following morning, a sober and shy Raj attempts to give Penny a written apology, but she forces him to utter a barely audible "sorry" before forgiving him. Title reference: Sheldon wanting a griffin as his ideal pet and considering a substitute for Raj as a friend. | |||||||
22 | 5 | "The Euclid Alternative" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Steven Molaro Teleplay by : Lee Aronsohn & Dave Goetsch | October 20, 2008 | 3T7355 | 9.28[6] |
For several days Leonard works on an experiment involving a free-electron laser which is only available at night, so he cannot drive Sheldon to the university as usual. In succession, Sheldon asks Penny, Howard and Raj to drive him, but each in turn ejects him from the vehicle for being annoying. The group finally stage an "intervention" and tell Sheldon to get a driver's license and learn to drive. After a trip to the DMV results in Sheldon getting his learner's permit, the group sets up a driving simulator for him in the living room. However, Sheldon turns out to be an appalling driver, claiming to be 'Homo novus automobilis' and therefore too highly evolved to learn to drive, so he decides to live in his university office to avoid having to commute. Leonard finally reveals he actually finished his experiment a week earlier than he stated, to avoid having to drive Sheldon to work. Title reference: The Euclid Avenue that Sheldon is afraid of passing through on his way to work. | |||||||
23 | 6 | "The Cooper–Nowitzki Theorem" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Stephen Engel & Daley Haggar Teleplay by : Tim Doyle & Richard Rosenstock | November 3, 2008 | 3T7356 | 9.67[7] |
After a lecture by Leonard and Sheldon, a graduate student named Ramona Nowitzki is so impressed by Sheldon that she insinuates herself into his life as his platonic girlfriend/assistant/manager, to the puzzlement of Penny and the guys. Ramona proves to be a helpful influence on Sheldon's work, even bettering his rival Leslie Winkle in a verbal confrontation, but Ramona moves into his apartment to control him, prohibiting his usual recreational activities and forcing him to concentrate solely on his research. Eventually Sheldon realizes that he is in "some sort of relationship" with Ramona, and seeks help from Penny and Leonard to get rid of her, but without success. Sheldon eventually makes a research breakthrough he tells Ramona he would never have achieved without her, and gratefully asks how he can repay her. She suggests they share credit for his discovery by calling it "The Cooper-Nowitzki Theorem". He asks "Who is Nowitzki?" and at her answer he angrily ejects her. After another student reads a preprint of the new theorem, she approaches Sheldon in the same way Ramona initially did. Title reference: Ramona Nowitzki's suggested name for the theorem that Sheldon develops. | |||||||
24 | 7 | "The Panty Piñata Polarization" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Tim Doyle Teleplay by : Jennifer Glickman & Steven Molaro | November 10, 2008 | 3T7357 | 10.01[8] |
When Penny's TV cable is blocked after she fails to keep up with her monthly payments, she goes to the guys' apartment to watch America's Next Top Model, to Sheldon's despair and Howard's and Raj's delight. However, she accidentally touches Sheldon's onion rings and sits on his spot on the couch, thus scoring 'three strikes' including an earlier 'offense', so he banishes her from his apartment. She later refuses to serve him at the Cheesecake Factory. Their dispute escalates, with Sheldon blocking Penny's Wi-fi access and Penny sabotaging Sheldon's laundry night. Eventually, after Sheldon hangs her clean underwear on an outdoor telephone wire, Leonard gives Penny Sheldon's mother's phone number, "Sheldon's kryptonite", so Penny can complain to her about Sheldon. His mother forces him to apologize to Penny and give back her laundry. Meanwhile, Howard finds out that the models in America's Next Top Model are in a house in Los Angeles. Determined to enter the house, he and Raj search for it using all available technologies, legal and otherwise, and actually find it. Howard and Raj finally get in by posing as cable guys. Title reference: Sheldon hanging Penny's laundry from a wire and taunting her to play Panty Piñata. | |||||||
25 | 8 | "The Lizard–Spock Expansion" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady Teleplay by : Dave Goetsch & Jennifer Glickman | November 17, 2008 | 3T7358 | 9.76[9] |
Howard meets Dr. Stephanie Barnett at a bar and invites her to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to drive the Mars rover, but his plan fails when the rover gets stuck in a Martian ditch; he has Leonard smuggle his unauthorized lady visitor out of the building. She immediately likes Leonard, much preferring him to Howard, and makes out with him in his car. Howard subsequently destroys all security tapes and hard drives relating to the mission. Later, Stephanie tells Howard that she has started dating Leonard, but Howard forgives the pair when she invites him to meet her friend Lisa on a double date. In the end, Howard hears on TV news that the rover found water on Mars at the bottom of the ditch, but because he had all the security data destroyed, it could not be determined who was responsible for the discovery. Meanwhile, Sheldon and Raj play a game of rock-paper-scissors-lizard-Spock, "The Lizard-Spock Expansion" of the traditional rock-paper-scissors game, to decide who gets to watch what on TV, but they both choose Spock. They, along with Howard, then play the game for Leonard's dumpling. When, again, all choose Spock, they conclude that someone must stop playing Spock. They try to determine who by playing the game but, yet again, all choose Spock. Title reference: Sheldon's proposal to use the game "Rock-paper-scissors-lizard-Spock", an expanded form of the game "Rock-paper-scissors". | |||||||
26 | 9 | "The White Asparagus Triangulation" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Dave Goetsch & Steven Molaro Teleplay by : Stephen Engel & Richard Rosenstock | November 24, 2008 | 3T7359 | 10.19[10] |
Sheldon regards medical doctor Stephanie as the only "tolerable" girlfriend Leonard ever had, and also the ideal doctor for Sheldon's Enterprise crew, so he tries to help Leonard with his relationship, fearing Leonard will ruin it. However, Sheldon dismays Leonard by joining the couple when they have a romantic dinner and go to the movies. Believing that Leonard is losing Stephanie, Sheldon wants Leonard to open a recalcitrant jar of white asparagus in Stephanie's presence to emphasize his physical strength. However, Leonard accidentally shatters the jar, cutting himself. Stephanie gives him the necessary stitches at her hospital and later tells him she will not be sleeping with him that night as planned, as he needs rest. At home, Leonard finds Sheldon hacked his Facebook account and changed his status to "In a relationship" and yells at him for attempting to intervene in a relationship in which he has no experience. Howard says this, after only two weeks, makes Leonard appear desperate, but Raj then discovers Stephanie apparently changed her status to "Stephanie Barnett is in a relationship with Leonard Hofstadter". Sheldon, delighted at the improved developments in Leonard's and Stephanie's relationship at his intervention, proclaims "Dr. Sheldon Cooper for the win." Title reference: The content of the jar that Leonard breaks, and the relationship triangle (Leonard-Stephanie-Sheldon) that features prominently. | |||||||
27 | 10 | "The Vartabedian Conundrum" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre & Steven Molaro Teleplay by : Bill Prady & Richard Rosenstock | December 8, 2008 | 3T7360 | 10.80[11] |
Stephanie effectively moves into Leonard's and Sheldon's apartment, though Leonard does not acknowledge this. Stephanie gives Sheldon a physical examination as he claims to have tinnitus. Penny, initially unaware of Leonard's new relationship, shows up in the guys' apartment, and then searches Leonard's room with him, discovering various signs that Stephanie is indeed living with him. After Stephanie buys Leonard new clothes that he later hates, he realizes that his relationship with Stephanie is moving too fast for him. He repeatedly tries to tell Stephanie to move out, but each time she diverts him by initiating sex. Meanwhile, Sheldon sneaks into the hospital to test himself, as his tinnitus has not stopped. When Leonard next returns to the apartment, Stephanie has diagnosed Sheldon with a fake larynx inflammation and instructed him not to speak at all, a procedure she calls a "Sheldonectomy". Title reference: Sheldon cannot understand why the third-floor neighbor, Mrs. Vartabedian, dislikes him. | |||||||
28 | 11 | "The Bath Item Gift Hypothesis" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Richard Rosenstock Teleplay by : Stephen Engel & Eric Kaplan | December 15, 2008 | 3T7361 | 11.42[12] |
Leonard meets visiting researcher and fellow experimental physicist Dr. David Underhill. Though Leonard envies David for being handsome and a more successful physicist than himself, he jumps at David's offer to help him in his research. Things come to a halt when David meets Penny and the two start dating - though they quickly break up when Penny discovers nude photos of his wife on his phone. Leonard only learns this when he comes to Penny's apartment to yell at her about their own on-off relationship. When he realises his mistake, he and Penny cuddle each other to comfort each other. Meanwhile, Sheldon worries about the approaching Christmas holidays and his indecision about what to buy for Penny, as he needs it to match the value of her gift to him. After deciding on a basket of bath items he discovers a large selection, so not knowing what Penny will get him, he buys the entire range to cover all contingencies. Penny's gift to Sheldon is a napkin both autographed and used by Leonard Nimoy. Sheldon, overwhelmed since he now possesses Nimoy's DNA and can grow his own Leonard Nimoy, gives Penny all the gift baskets and also a rare "Sheldon" hug. Title reference: The gift that Sheldon gives to Penny and part of a line from the episode. | |||||||
29 | 12 | "The Killer Robot Instability" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Richard Rosenstock Teleplay by : Steven Molaro & Daley Haggar | January 12, 2009 | 3T7362 | 11.81[13] |
Howard designs a combat robot, M.O.N.T.E. (Mobile Omnidirectional Neutralization and Termination Eradicator) for the "Southern California Robot Fighting League Round Robin Invitational", which the guys plan to enter. When Penny arrives at the apartment, Howard begins to flirt with her but pushes it too far, and she furiously lashes out at him with some uncomfortable home truths. Hurt and depressed, Howard returns home and remains in his room, refusing to go to work or meet friends. Leonard persuades Penny to go to Howard's house and apologize. Howard tells Penny about all his failed romances, and she consoles him by saying that he is a good guy at heart and he just tries too hard to get girls. He thereupon tries to kiss Penny, who intercepts him with a punch that breaks his nose. Howard is left happy, feeling he is halfway to 'pity sex'. Meanwhile, the guys' co-worker Barry Kripke, who is also entering the competition, challenges Sheldon and the guys to a one-on-one fight between their robots. Sheldon accepts, but Kripke's robot turns out to be far superior to M.O.N.T.E. and, with engineer Howard indisposed, Barry can easily win. Sheldon refuses to concede defeat, and M.O.N.T.E. is destroyed by Kripke's robot. Title reference: The killer robot created by the guys. | |||||||
30 | 13 | "The Friendship Algorithm" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Richard Rosenstock Teleplay by : Chuck Lorre & Steven Molaro | January 19, 2009 | 3T7363 | 11.10[14] |
Sheldon hears that Kripke controls access to an Open Science Grid computer, so he plans to befriend him to gain access to it. The socially inept Sheldon struggles, and his current friends are of little help in this area so, in the hope of finding self-help literature on friendship, he has Leonard drive him to the bookstore. There Sheldon tries making friends with a little girl, but Leonard makes him exit quickly before he is picked up as a pedophile. A children's book from the store helps Sheldon design an algorithm in flowchart form for making new friends. This pays off when Sheldon goes rock climbing with Kripke, but Sheldon faints due to his fear of heights. Back at the apartment, Sheldon decides to cut off Raj as a friend to make room for Kripke. However, when Kripke reveals he does not actually control computer access, Sheldon dismisses him and restores Raj as a friend. Title reference: The algorithm created by Sheldon that he uses to make friends with Kripke. | |||||||
31 | 14 | "The Financial Permeability" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre & Steven Molaro Teleplay by : Richard Rosenstock & Eric Kaplan | February 2, 2009 | 3T7364 | 10.89[15] |
Penny is in financial difficulties and might even need to find a new place to live. After discussing this with her, Sheldon does the logical thing and lends her some money which she can repay at her leisure. When Leonard learns about Penny's problems, he tries to help her cut her expenses, and in the process learns that her ex-boyfriend Kurt owes her $1,800. Without telling Penny, Leonard and the guys go to Kurt's place to recover the money. They are unsuccessful, though Kurt writes "I owe Penny $1800, Kurt" on Leonard's forehead in indelible ink. Penny later repays Sheldon after Kurt unexpectedly repays her but, much to Leonard's disappointment, Kurt did not tell Penny about Leonard's visit, instead taking the opportunity to try to get back together with her. Title reference: Sheldon shows he is very willing to help his friends financially when he offers to help Penny. | |||||||
32 | 15 | "The Maternal Capacitance" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre & Bill Prady Teleplay by : Richard Rosenstock & Steven Molaro | February 9, 2009 | 3T7365 | 13.11[16] |
Leonard becomes worried when he learns his mother, accomplished psychiatrist and neuroscientist Dr. Beverly Hofstadter, is coming to visit. On arriving, Beverly meets Penny; by the time they have climbed the stairs to Leonard's apartment, Penny is in tears after being psychoanalyzed over her childhood issues with her father. Sheldon, on the other hand, immediately develops a comfortable relationship with Beverly, who turns out to be as strict and logical as himself. Howard and Raj meet Beverly too, but after learning that Howard still lives with his mother and Raj cannot talk to women, she is quick to declare that they are in an "ersatz homosexual marriage". Leonard later goes to talk to Penny and they comfort each other by discussing their respective childhood issues with their parents. After becoming drunk, Penny and Leonard end up in bed together, but Leonard ruins the moment by invoking psychiatric theory, implying that he is effectively having sex with his mom and she with her dad. Horrified about this, Penny throws Leonard out of her apartment. She wants to talk about it the next day, but Leonard assures her she never has to talk to him ever again. Title reference: Leonard's mother visiting him. | |||||||
33 | 16 | "The Cushion Saturation" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre Teleplay by : Bill Prady & Lee Aronsohn | March 2, 2009 | 3T7366 | 10.94[17] |
After a paintball match, Penny accidentally shoots several green paintballs at Sheldon's couch cushion, and she and Leonard try hard to fix it. Sheldon, still upset and dissatisfied with his eventually dry-cleaned cushion, team-kills Penny in the next paintball game, causing the others to surrender. Meanwhile, Leslie and Howard begin a relationship after having sex (twice) during the match. Leslie secures funds for his work and even invites him to a trip to the CERN Large Hadron Collider project in Geneva, but threatens to withdraw the invitation unless he accompanies her to a wedding. So sex is just Leslie's way of controlling Howard. Although initially reluctant, Howard later happily accepts his role as a "sex toy/arm candy" after Leslie comforts him. Title reference: Sheldon's cushion, which Penny "saturates" with paint. | |||||||
34 | 17 | "The Terminator Decoupling" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Bill Prady & Dave Goetsch Teleplay by : Tim Doyle & Stephen Engel | March 9, 2009 | 3T7367 | 9.46[18] |
The guys take a trip to a conference in San Francisco to meet guest speaker and 2006 Nobel Prize laureate Dr. George Smoot. On the train, the guys notice Summer Glau of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles is on their car. Raj drinks a beer before being the first to approach her, and they get on well until Howard discovers Raj actually drank non-alcoholic beer, which apparently had a placebo effect, and points this out to Raj who thereupon reverts to his usual selective mutism. Howard then takes over, but creeps Summer out with his awkward style. Leonard finally gets his chance, but Summer gets off the train before he can introduce himself. Meanwhile, Sheldon realizes he forgot the USB flash drive with the paper he wants to show to Smoot, and needs extensive help from Penny to find it and email it to him. At the conference, however, Smoot is not impressed by Sheldon, asking "With all due respect, Dr. Cooper, are you on crack?" Title reference: Summer Glau and George Smoot's guest-starring on the show. | |||||||
35 | 18 | "The Work Song Nanocluster" | Peter Chakos | Story by : Bill Prady & Lee Aronsohn Teleplay by : Dave Goetsch & Richard Rosenstock | March 16, 2009 | 3T7368 | 9.76[19] |
Penny develops home-made hair barrettes she calls 'Penny Blossoms' and aims to turn them into a profitable homebased business. With Sheldon's help, Penny develops an efficient assembly line, and Howard, Raj and Leonard later join in. Leonard designs the sales website, and they immediately get an order for a thousand Penny Blossoms from the East Rutherford, New Jersey Gay-Lesbian-Bisexual-Transgender Alliance. Despite their initial happiness, they realize Leonard accidentally included a one-day rush shipping option on the website, so the group has to work all night to fulfill the order. However, the next morning, they discover that the same group doubled their order, and the guys quit in exhaustion. Sheldon, drinking coffee to stay awake, races around the apartment dressed as The Flash while attempting to help Penny with the new order. Title reference: A song that Sheldon and Penny sing to synchronise the manufacturing process. | |||||||
36 | 19 | "The Dead Hooker Juxtaposition" | Mark Cendrowski | Steven Molaro | March 30, 2009 | 3T7369 | 9.77[20] |
The former tenants of the apartment above Leonard and Sheldon's move out. After an unsuccessful attempt by Howard to rent the apartment, an attractive blonde named Alicia moves in. Alicia, like Penny, is an aspiring actress; she obtains a role as a dead hooker in an episode of the TV series CSI. Apart from Sheldon the guys are fascinated by Alicia, and she takes advantage of this by having them help her move in and otherwise labor for her. Penny thus loses the guys' attention, and begins to resent the way Alicia exploits them. Penny tries to win her friends back by bribing them with Chinese food, offering to watch Battlestar Galactica with them, and even memorizing a quantum physics joke. After Alicia brags about her exploitation of the men, while also desiring their incomes, Penny confronts her. Alicia responds that Penny exploits the men just as she does, upon which Penny physically attacks her. After the fight, the guys take an injured Penny back to Leonard and Sheldon's apartment and learn that Alicia is sleeping with one of the CSI producers, leading Penny to comment that Alicia is a "dead whore on TV, live one in real life". Title reference: Penny's line summarizing Alicia's behavior as sleeping her way to success as an actress while playing a dead prostitute in the television show CSI. | |||||||
37 | 20 | "The Hofstadter Isotope" | Mark Cendrowski | Dave Goetsch | April 13, 2009 | 3T7370 | 10.13[21] |
When Penny accompanies the guys to the comic book store to buy a present for her nephew's birthday, the owner, Stuart, asks her out on a date, making Leonard jealous. To take his mind off the situation, Leonard asks Howard and Raj to take him to a bar to socialize with women, but neither he nor Howard succeed in finding a woman. Stuart's date with Penny goes well until they are intercepted at Penny's apartment by Sheldon, who starts an argument with Stuart about who should succeed Bruce Wayne as Batman, during which Penny falls asleep. Title reference: Leonard claims that Stuart is essentially the same person as he is. | |||||||
38 | 21 | "The Vegas Renormalization" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Jessica Ambrosetti & Nicole Lorre & Andrew Roth Teleplay by : Steven Molaro | April 27, 2009 | 3T7371 | 9.31[22] |
Leslie ends her 'friends with benefits' relationship with Howard, upsetting him. Leonard and Raj take him on a trip to Las Vegas, Nevada to cheer him up. There, a prostitute named Mikayla approaches Raj, and he and Leonard decide to hire her for Howard. Howard soon realizes she is a prostitute, but nevertheless thanks Leonard and Raj for setting up the "date". Meanwhile, Sheldon, who has declined to go to Las Vegas, is delighted to spend the weekend alone, until he forgets his apartment key. Penny reluctantly allows him to stay over in her apartment, where he spends the night in her bed (she sleeps on her couch, which Sheldon has rejected as being too short for him) and, as a result, thinks he has a better understanding of the term 'friends with benefits'. Title reference: The trip to Las Vegas that brought Howard back to his old ways. | |||||||
39 | 22 | "The Classified Materials Turbulence" | Mark Cendrowski | Story by : Chuck Lorre & Lee Aronsohn Teleplay by : Bill Prady & Steven Molaro | May 4, 2009 | 3T7373 | 9.25[23] |
Howard celebrates the launch of his latest invention, a zero-gravity human-waste disposal system (a space toilet) to be used in the ISS, by buying all of his friends new comic books. However, later Howard discovers he made a mistake that will cause the toilet to fail and burst after 10 flushes, so the guys convene to try and fix it (a la Apollo 13's Ken Mattingly), working for a whole night to find a solution and even testing the toilet with meatloaf from Howard's mother, all thewhile he treats it like it's a classified weapon. At the end of the episode, the ISS astronauts report to NASA that they are all going on an unscheduled "spacewalk", implying that Howard ultimately failed. At the comic book store, Stuart tells Leonard that he is having a second date with Penny and asks for advice. Leonard deliberately avoids Stuart for as long as possible, and finally gives him bad advice. The next day, Leonard feels guilty and goes to apologize to him. Stuart reveals the date went well until they started making out in his car and Penny accidentally called him "Leonard." Leonard is secretly delighted. Title reference: The classified "space toilet" that Howard and the guys try to repair. | |||||||
40 | 23 | "The Monopolar Expedition" | Mark Cendrowski | Eric Kaplan & Richard Rosenstock | May 11, 2009 | 3T7372 | 9.81[24] |
Sheldon wins a National Science Foundation grant to go on a three-month expedition to the Magnetic North Pole to detect magnetic monopoles and prove the validity of string theory. After some hesitation, he decides to go and wants Leonard, Howard and Raj to join him; they too initially hesitate as it would mean being locked in a cabin with Sheldon for three months, but finally agree. To prepare, Sheldon and the guys practise in the freezer room at the Cheesecake Factory, which however later proves unnecessary as they discover they will actually be spending their time in a warm cabin. On the night before the expedition, Leonard expresses doubts on going as it will mean not seeing Penny for the whole summer. He also believes Penny will miss him too, after she gives him a blanket with sleeves and a long hug. The next morning, when Leonard meets Penny again, she claims to have simply wished him a safe trip, but after he closes the door she sadly whispers "It means I wish you weren't going". The guys arrive in the Arctic and agree to abide by the same rules as in the apartment. Title reference: The guys' polar expedition to find magnetic monopoles. |
Reception
Compared to season one, the second season received critical acclaim. Jessica Paff of Screener wrote that "if they can keep the funny coming, I will keep watching",[25] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly praised the improvements to the character of Sheldon Cooper, writing that "Prickly Sheldon has become a character to love, and [actor Jim] Parsons is doing something rare on network TV: making intellectualism admirable, even heroic",[26] and James Chamberlin of IGN wrote that "Jim Parsons is a riot and is reason enough to tune in each week."[27]
References
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- Seidman, Robert (September 23, 2008). "Ratings Monday, September 22: First Night Wins to ABC, CBS & NBC". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 10, 2010. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- Seidman, Robert (September 30, 2008). "Monday Night Ratings: Wins for ABC, CBS and NBC". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 3, 2009. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- Gorman, Bill (October 7, 2008). "TV Ratings Monday: Dancing With the Stars, Two And A Half Men, Heroes Winners". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 4, 2009. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- Seidman, Robert (October 14, 2008). "Monday Night Ratings: Dancing With the Stars, Two and a Half Men Lead Night". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on June 7, 2009. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- Seidman, Robert (October 21, 2008). "Monday Night Ratings: Chuck, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles Languish". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on December 7, 2008. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
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- General references
- "The Big Bang Theory Season 2 episodes". TV Guide. Retrieved May 16, 2010.
- "Shows A-Z – big bang theory, the on CBS". the Futon Critic. Retrieved May 16, 2010.
- "The Big Bang Theory: Episode Guide". MSN TV. Archived from the original on September 2, 2012. Retrieved May 16, 2010.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Big Bang Theory (season 2) |
- The Big Bang Theory – list of episodes on IMDb
- The Big Bang Theory: Season 2 at Rotten Tomatoes