7.20 The Relationship Diremption Technically the A-story (the story referenced in the title) is Sheldon’s and, typically, Leonard, Penny and Amy are essentially reduced to supporting players in Sheldon’s story. Sheldon has what is essentially a mid-life crisis when Kripke asserts that string theory, which both have dedicated their careers to proving, is in fact unprovable. Kripke isn’t bothered by this at all, for he is, as he puts it, a ‘string pragmatist’ and is quite happy to take the funding and run with it. However, Sheldon has genuinely dedicated the past twenty years of his life to proving it and is thrown into turmoil when suddenly confronted with the idea that such a thing is impossible. Sheldon confides in Penny about this problem, and as ever the pairing of these two is both sweet and effective. He ends up taking her advice and viewing the situation as a relationship break-up. He then reads up on how to deal with relationship break-ups from Cosmopolitan, resulting in him contemplating burning his books (an idea rejected because it is, he says, too reminiscent of East Texas picnics) asking Penny to re-style his hair, drinking and deciding to enjoy his freedom and wait for a new area of research to come to him rather than actively looking for one. Now, we know what you’re going to say – this is a sitcom and we shouldn’t require it to be completely realistic. This is, after all, the show that sent Howard Wolowitz – a man who broke the Mars Rover trying to impress a date – into space. But there is a level to which we can suspend disbelief, and then there is a point at which it starts to get stretched a little. Still, in The Big Bang Theory’s defence, this is hardly the worst or most extreme example of sitcoms’ general tendency to have a fairly loose relationship with reality, especially when it comes to employment. Characters in sitcoms have always displayed a remarkable ability to pick up jobs easily, leave jobs and come back to them when they change their mind, get jobs they are clearly in no way qualified for etc., so perhaps we should go easy on the show in this case. Whatever the reasoning, Sheldon’s concerns about wasting his life are certainly easy to identify with, making this a Sheldon story in which he is almost entirely sympathetic and not driving everyone else up the wall, which is always nice to see. The relationship-break-up analogy isn’t entirely convincing, but it gets Sheldon to where the writers want him, which is getting drunk and waking up next to a geology textbook (someday someone will have to write a sitcom about a geologist, just so they can get their own back for twenty years of mocking from first Friends, and now The Big Bang Theory). The B-story does also provide some more for Raj to do despite being focused on Howard, as we learn that he tried the same ‘honesty’ tactic with Lucy that had worked so well with Emily, and that in Lucy’s case it didn’t go so well, which does at least mean he no longer has the problem of dating two women to worry about. He’s also quite concerned about Howard meeting Emily, telling him, “No jokes about how close I am with my dog. Or the truth about how close I am with my dog.” Bernadette is, once again, mostly reacting to things other people are doing, but her horror at Emily’s assertion that she likes cutting into people is not only nicely underplayed, but the fact that Bernadette, the quietly scary one, is so disturbed by it really underlines how disturbing it is. Whether this is a throwaway gag or something that will become a real issue remains to be seen. The episode culminates in Sheldon and Howard sitting down and commiserating with each other. It’s great to see the strengthening of their friendship over the last few episodes continuing to develop, though Sheldon’s comforting story over Howard’s ‘Number 2’ incident may be slightly barbed, since telling him ‘this too shall pass’ is surely a pun at Howard’s expense. On another show, a crisis as serious as Sheldon’s here might be more deeply felt, but on The Big Bang Theory, it’s not given much more weight than Howard’s digestive embarrassment. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, more a choice to use what could be a serious character moment as a set-up for a series of gags based on the relationship analogy instead, keeping the episode (and the show) light and consistently producing laughs. For example, the revelation that Sheldon drunk-dialled Stephen Hawking is funny enough in itself and the actual message, which plays over the tag, is brilliant. We would happily watch a show about Sheldon and Stephen Hawking solving crimes. It would be like True Detective with physics instead of psychoanalysis. Read Juliette’s review of the previous episode, The Indecision Amalgmation, here. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.