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Raj: Come on, dude, we’ve been friends for years. Sheldon: So, that's what you wear to an interview? Sheldon: Obviously, waitressing at the Cheesecake Factory is a complex socioeconomic activity, that requires a great deal of analysis and planning. Leonard: What could she possibly be talking about for so long? Sheldon: I'm not suggesting we really make her jump out of a pool. By this time next week, I believe I can have her jumping out of a pool, balancing a beach ball on her nose. Sheldon: There's just no pleasing you, is there, Leonard? You weren't happy with my previous approach to dealing with her, so I decided to employ operant conditioning techniques, building on the work of Thorndike and B.F. Sheldon: Bazinga! None of you ever see my practical jokes coming, do you? Sheldon: You know, I’ve always wanted to go to a goth nightclub. Sheldon: Flash-frozen brown rice, not white? Sheldon: Did you bring the dehydrated low-sodium soy sauce? Even in my sleep-deprived state, I’ve managed to pull off another one of my classic pranks. It appears that Penny secretly wants you in her life in a very intimate and carnal fashion. Once again, you've fallen for one of my classic pranks.
Sheldon: You actually had it right in the first place. The Big Bang Theory episodes using the term "Bazinga" The phrase originated in the Young Sheldon episode " A Stunted Childhood and a Can of Fancy Mixed Nuts".
2 The Big Bang Theory episodes using the term "Bazinga". On January 4th, 2011, Warner Bros, the company behind the making of The Big Bang Theory, filed for a registered trademark for the catchphrase, becoming effective on April 24th, 2012. She waited a few moments for the Bazinga, but was wrong. Penny used it after Sheldon mentioned that he planned to have sex with Amy. Though not a true Bazinga, it was mentioned once in Season 9. Jim Parsons has been quoted as crediting former The Big Bang Theory writer Stephen Engel as the one who came up with the word Bazinga for Sheldon's catchphrase. Now we're even.") and S03E14 " The Einstein Approximation" (Leonard unsuccessfully tries to pull Sheldon out of a ball pit, Sheldon keeps bobbing his head up to taunt Leonard with "Bazinga!" before hiding back down in the ball pit). Notable episodes with Bazinga! include S05E07 " The Good Guy Fluctuation" ( Leonard, who had just broken up with Priya via laptop camera/microphone, then gets frightened by Sheldon rising from his hiding spot under the cushions "Bazinga, punk. (Seasons 6 and 7 are devoid of it.) By this time Sheldon has developed a mediocre sense of humor and instead uses a peculiar form of laughter instead – both literally and sarcastically. The word "Bazinga" was first used in the season 2 season finale, " The Monopolar Expedition" and last in Season 12 episode 4, " The Tam Turbulence". In later seasons, it becomes something of a catchphrase. The ball pits are disappearing, “Because it’s a sanitary issue,
right?” Galecki asks.Sheldon mimics Bernadette and Penny's conversation by asking Howard about his shoes.īazinga (spelled " Buzzinga" in the subtitles of DVD releases) is a word used by Sheldon Cooper to signal that what he said immediately before this utterance was to be taken as a joke. At one point they said we
have a truck coming down from San Francisco, but
we don’t know if it will be here in time.” “They said this is all the balls in
Southern California. And we’re
looking at the set, and we kept saying ‘More balls!’ “ “Ball pits are kind of on the way out,” says executive producer Bill Prady.
”They don’t really make them anymore. They could have caught the giant plaything at the end of an era, though. Cheese’s in Los Angeles,” creator Chuck Lorre says. “I think we emptied every bin at
every Chuck E. “And we had disinfectant spray for
one another,” Galecki says.įor the producers, the problem was to fill the ball pit. “It was good for my hair, though,” Parsons says. Then I wiped my clean hands on a
towel, and it would be damp, and I brushed it over
my face, and there would be this swath of pink and
gray. I washed my hands, and the sink was
black water. “He’s looking at me and I’m like, ‘Have you showered today?’ It was like a film of black across his face.” Kaley Cuoco says she remembers Parsons coming in for the next scene. “That was the dirtiest thing I’ve ever done as an actor,” Parsons says.
“Once they cleaned the balls, it was fun.” Because, he explained “they were filthy.” His co-star Johnny Galecki corrected him. The cast of “The Big Bang Theory” was asked Wednesday on one of their most famous scenes – cavorting in a big ball pit last season in an episode called “The Einstein Approximation.”