The Big Bang Theory

A super hot chick named Penny (Kaley Cuoco) moves in next to two geeky scientists named Sheldon (Jim Parsons) and Leonard (Johnny Galecki). As you might imagine, she coaxes them out of their shells while they teach her about quantum indeterminacy principles. Or something like that.

The Pitch:Imagine "Revenge of the Nerds" in which the Nerds do not experience revenge, but rather naked, painful longing.
When It’s OnMondays at 8:30 PT/ET, CBS
When It StartsMon 9/24
What It’s Up AgainstDancing with the Stars (ABC), Chuck (NBC), Prison Break (Fox), Aliens in America (CW)
Starring...Kaley Cuoco, Jim Parsons, Johnny Galecki
Cliche-o-MeterGeeks
I'm Not Wearing Pants
Guys named Chuck
Fandom FactorCold
Do Not Adjust Your Set:The slender premise -- borax-spewing poindexters are tongue-tied in the presence of their hot-hot neighbor -- might make you think you've stumbled into a time-warp and landed back in 1983, but trust us -- it's still 2007. Whether that's a good thing depends on the quality of your home loan, we guess.
Why It Will Be First To Go:It makes "Two And A Half Men" look like a Moliere comedy by comparison.
Why It Won't:As the non-"How I Met Your Mother" portions of CBS' slate of Monday night comedies suggest, this network's audience is not exactly a demanding lot.
Odds of Failure:3-1
Show's official web site

(A TeeVee/TV Barn top 10 notable show.)

Full Review

It's not hard to see why the sitcom is in such dire shape. Everything about the form seems stuck in another era: the pacing of jokes unchanged from the 1940s; the insistence in some cases on adding laughter to the audio track; and above all, the contrived attempts at community seen in the proponderance of apartments, workplaces, and bars where the same six or seven people meet and interact constantly. Nobody bowls alone on sitcoms, and while this could be seen as a form of escapism, aesthetically it's seem as a sign of creative torpor. To survive in an age when reality shows (though no less contrived) seem fresher and funnier than comedies done by script, a sitcom needs a couple of special ingredients. "The Big Bang Theory" has one that most sitcoms can only dream of: a cherished "hammock" time slot between two established hits on the last bona fide night of sitcoms on any broadcast network. CBS just keeps reloading its Monday night schedule with promising, if not terribly exciting, sitcom ideas. Another is the presence of a guy, Chuck Lorre, who knows how to churn out scripts for CBS, dating back to his years on the "Cybill" sitcom. As author of sitcomedy's biggest hit this decade, "Two and a Half Men" (which follows "Big Bang Theory" at 9), Lorre brings life to what is already looking like a shopworn idea: nerdy guys come into close proximity with hot chick. The show isn't to stop traffic, but thanks to its time slot it's likely to experience a lot of traffic. And given the relative strength of the pilot and the people involved (notably Kaley Cuoco as the good-natured, if oddly un-self-conscious, blonde bombshell), this show has a chance of prolonging the sitcom's funeral by a few years.--A.B.

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