Penny again mentioned the word in The Opening Night Excitation , where she sarcastically said she was waiting for the "Bazinga" after Sheldon described one of his ideas for Amy's birthday present. Sheldon went to his local comic bookstore to buy practical joke paraphernalia and was directed to a stand displaying products from the Bazinga! Novelty Company. Sheldon returned home to play pranks on his family, he would say "Bazinga!
In the real world, a species of bee was named Euglossa bazinga by Brazilian biologists who recognised it was a distinct species that had previously been misidentified as Euglossa ignita. The biologists named the species bazinga, in honor of Sheldon's catchphrase, because the species had tricked them into thinking it was not a distinct species. Bazinga has been registered as a trademark by Warner Bros. This episode features the first mention of Bazinga.
Sheldon first uses it when he tricks Leonard into believing there was something wrong with his equations. Sheldon then pulls another of his "classic pranks" on Leonard by telling him that Penny secretly wants Leonard in her life in a "very intimate and carnal fashion". Finally, in the Arctic, Sheldon tricks Leonard into believing he forget to bring the flash-frozen brown rice.
Sheldon says Bazinga three times in this episode. First, Sheldon says it after telling Howard he's always wanted to go to a goth nightclub. Secondly, Sheldon says the Bazinga was implied when he suggested that with positive reinforcement he could have Penny "jumping out of a pool, balancing a beach ball on her nose". The word Sheldon Jim Parsons used to signify he was telling a joke was introduced at the end of Season 2 and became the catchphrase associated with the character and the show.
But the joke got old, and the show abandoned it by Season 8. It's been alluded to from time to time since then, most recently in the current and final season of the CBS comedy in a fantasy sequence where Leonard Johnny Galecki was imagining what his life would be like if Tam Robert Wu , not Sheldon, was his best friend.
But the joke hasn't been worn out on spin-off Young Sheldon , and Thursday's episode, "A Stunted Childhood and a Can of Fancy Mixed Nuts," showed the first "bazinga," another example of the prequel creating origin stories for where Big Bang bits came from. In the episode, Sheldon Iain Armitage was worried that being a precocious, serious child was going to make him grow up to be a maladjusted adult.
Bazinga pic. Iain put this sign up in his dressing room at YoungSheldon pic. One fan even had an alternate theory of where the word came from, which has a terrific scientific angle:.
We all know how much Sheldon loves the Table of Elements It has become wildly popular ever since. The origins of the term, though, are interesting in their own right. How did it work its way into the show? Did the show actually create the term which it has been often credited as doing?
Read on to find out! The term first showed up in the writers room at The Big Bang Theory. It was the catch phrase of writer Stephen Engel, who would use it whenever he played a prank on a fellow writer. The Big Bang Theory co-creator Bill Prady recalled a time that Engel gave him a grapefruit but when Prady went to eat it, it turned out to be hollowed out and carefully put back together.
Engel then said, "Bazinga! In the opening of the season 2 finale, "The Monopolar Expedition," Leonard Johnny Galecki is working on a problem on the whiteboard when Sheldon Jim Parsons tells him that he has made a mistake. Leonard looks for the mistake but can't find it. Sheldon then tells him, "You actually had it right in the first place.
Once again, you've fallen for one of my classic pranks.
0コメント