Cruciferous Vegetable Amplification
| Cruciferous Vegetable Amplification | |
| Writers | Bill Prady (Story), Lee Aronsohn (Story), Steve Holland (Story), Chuck Lorre (Teleplay), Steven Molaro (Teleplay), Jim Reynolds (Teleplay) |
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| Director | Mark Cendrowski |
| Starring | Steve Wozniak as Himself, Janet Hill as Herself |
| Air Date | 30 September 2010 |
| Vanity | Card #294 |
| Guide | Episode #402 |
| Quotes | Episode #402 |
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| Robotic Manipulation . . . << Cruciferous Vegetable Amplification >> . . . Zazzy Substitution |
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Contents |
Summary
Sheldon realizes he won’t live long enough to download his consciousness into a robot body, and attempts to extend his lifespan. His first attempts involve eating Brussels sprouts instead of pizza and starting to jog. Each of these efforts fails, so he instead starts to use a robotic "virtual presence device" to hang out with the rest of the gang, go to work, go to restaurants, and so on. The episode ends without his dilemma being resolved.
Episode Outline
I. Living room
- Sheldon calculates when he is going to die.
Title and Opening Themes
II: Living room, Thursday evening
III. Leonard's bedroom, Thursday night
IV. hallway in front of apartments, Friday
V. Living room
VII. Leonard's car
VIII. Physics department
- Penny refuses to serve food to the virtual Sheldon, when he spots Steve Wozniak. Steve Wozniak offers to sign Sheldon's vintage Apple computer, if he was there in presence.
X. hallway in front of apartments
- Sheldon runs down the stairs with his computer and slips.
XI. hallway in front of apartments
- The virtual Sheldon knocks on Penny's door and asks her to sing Soft Kitty.
Resources
List of entries from this episode
David Saltzberg's science blog about this episode
Notes and Trivia
Still to come
Timeline
This episode most likely starts on a Thursday morning. Towards the end we see the guys in the Cheesecake Factory, where they usually go on Tuesdays (see Schedule). The final scene either plays on the same night or the following day.
Title
Cruciferous vegetables include cabbage, broccoli, brussels sprouts, horseradish, radishes, and cauliflower. The name comes from the shape of the flower, (Cruciferae, New Latin for "cross-bearing"), whose four petals resemble a cross. Cruciferous vegetables tend to cause gas and therefore flatulence, as Sheldon found out the hard way.