(continued from
Part 1)
Spock is different from Everyone Else. EVERYONE.
During Star Trek: The Original Series, Spock is the only Vulcan serving amidst humans on the Enterprise, making him a literal "alien." But his estrangement goes deeper than that. From all indications, he is the only half-Human, half-Vulcan in existence.
In other words, Spock
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Comments 25
"Significantly, Sheldon may not be able to read or easily show emotions, but he does feel them"
I think this is the point that divides people on Sheldon. Some see him as emotionless, a robot, and this would render love a near impossibility for him. But as Penny has noted, he is so "full of love", and it is just that while Sheldon doesn't know how to react to other people and their emotions, he still possesses his own.
Nice job!
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Exactly! And he's so egalitarian when he's saying something superior, it doesn't seem as if there's anything personal to it at all.
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So much agreement here! And it's not that any of us want them to sacrifice the funny in order to focus on character development. I just wish they would more often find the funny in the characterization, instead of sacrificing characterization for what is, in essence, too easy a joke. Like Sheldon not cashing paychecks. Where the heck did that come from? Penny knows from "The Financial Permeability" that Sheldon doesn't care about when he gets paid for things, so why did they have to take it further and make someone like Sheldon look stupid... or do they not realize that almost all businesses (especially colleges) use direct deposit, and that checks have a cash-by date? *sigh*
But I digress. Thanks for the comment!
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Yes, misquided story snippets like these have been in much abundance in S3. It was a minor aspect but this snippet left alot of us viewers thinking "what the %!#@ was that good for". The writers seem hell-bent on reinforcing yet another portrayal of buffoonery Sheldon and his antics.
I really liked your essay, it was comprehensive, well thought out and based on your conclusions it seemed that the writers in the past did take some careful consideration on this and/or accidently hit on something golden. Originally the humor was derived from solid intelligent characterizations. How this will fair in the future is still unknown. I feel BBT is treading on some dangerous waters where the breakout character will completely take over the show.
Let's hope we don't see future promos telling us to watch how kaos unfolds as Sheldon battles Sheldon-bot...oh the horror! (sarcasm)
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YES YES YES! This! And your label for what they're treading in too often now, "buffoonery." Thank you for the excellent insights.
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With regards to your comment about Sheldon being a jerk: I personally think that Sheldon is a jerk towards his friends (and others) sometimes and this has nothing to do with Aspergers or Autism. However, what I don't know (and would like to understand) is, if this is something that stemmed from childhood. A defence mechanism of some sort to protect himself from the bullies in the playground who saw his difference as something to poke fun at or probably from college - being a child incollege must have sucked big time. Or is he just a jerk because he considers inferior to him.
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