"The Big Bang Theory" The Bat Jar Conjecture (TV Episode 2008) Poster

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7/10
A solid episode, but with some inconsistencies that cannot be easily forgiven
SLionsCricketreviews25 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
After the major slump in TBBT over the last few years, it feels good to come back to a time when TBBT was new, fresh and exciting. "The Bat Jar Conjecture" is a fine example of what this once great sitcom could accomplish, before it had to demote itself into the standard, sitcom garbage.

When it comes to watching the newer episodes, I find myself angry and lost for words. The episodes get everything wrong, from script to direction, character to acting, that re-watching earlier episodes only confirms for myself the problems I face with later seasons. "The Bat Jar Conjecture" is certainly well acted, especially by Jim Parsons as the then fascinating Sheldon and Simon Helberg as the hormonal driven Howard.

The script for the most part is quite solid, allowing for plenty of chuckles during the scenes where Sheldon pits himself against his friends for the Physics Bowl. Although I would normally find myself rooting for Sheldon (again, in earlier seasons), I surprisingly find myself on the side of Leonard with this one. As great a character as Sheldon was, his level of ego is perhaps a tad too high in this episode for me to want to root for him here. The episode certainly has a message about arrogance and co-operation, as obvious as that message is, but it also denies one of Sheldon's assumptions: that he, in himself, is smarter than all his friends put together. Whilst this may be true if it were not for the character of Leslie, the point remains the point. Sheldon needs to accept and understand it, and is something the character often has trouble deciphering.

Arguably the best moment of the episode is the final scene, which starts off 'meh' but soon advances into great! Penny returns to Sheldon's apartment, keen to conclude who is the smarter - Sheldon or Leonard - by asking questions of cultural significance. Amusingly enough, the two have no idea how to answer any of the questions. My personal favourite response was to the question: "Which actor holds the record of being named People Magazine's sexiest man?", to which Sheldon replies, "William Shatner" and Leonard reasons that it could not be him, but rather Patrick Stewart. This was a brilliant moment that sort of manages to sum up "The Big Bang Theory" in a nutshell.

However, "The Bat Jar Conjecture" has some inconsistencies with the "lore" established in this series. Early in the episode, during a trial run of the Physics Bowl, Sheldon is seated on a wooden chair next to Howard. This is clearly not his usual seating place, and I was baffled at how the writers could not keep this consistent with most episodes of the series. I also refuse to buy the poor justification for why Raj would be able to talk in front of women during the Physics Bowl, especially considering that he is seated right next to Leslie Winkle. It does not make much sense, but this aspect probably cannot be improved upon. Although I would usually be careful as to how I nitpick something like "The Big Bang Theory", I was shocked when the writers abandoned two key character traits that have been well established at this point: Sheldon's obsession with his seat, and Raj's inability to talk in front of women. At the very least, he should have been very slightly drunk!

In spite of all this, "The Bat Jar Conjecture" is a solid episode of the first season. Nothing truly outstanding, and nothing truly terrible, it manages to entertain for its duration.
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8/10
Great script but few plot holes
decc018 June 2022
Everything about the writing of the episode is great. However, there's a few things that have been overlooked and it makes it appear sloppy. Why is Raj able to talk here with Leslie but not elsewhere? Sheldon isn't in his spot and makes no fuss.
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8/10
The Bat Jar Conjecture (#1.13)
ComedyFan201022 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I loved the surprising moment when it turns out that the janitor was a physicist in USSR and answers the last answer correctly. This was a great idea. Sheldon choosing to lose over letting his answer pass is also great in showing Sheldon's personality. Howard celebrating the victory is another outstanding scene. And Sheldon saying that William Shatner or Patrick Stewart is the sexist man alive was a great joke relating to their nerdy characters.
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10/10
The Bat Jar Conjecture is another excellent episode of "The Big Bang Theory"
tavm27 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
As Leonard, Sheldon, Howard, and Raj prepare for the Physics Bowl with Penny moderating, Sheldon keeps giving the answers even when someone else buzzes first. To make his rejection from the team easier, Leonard gives Sheldon a Batman cookie jar as a gift. In picking a new team member, Leonard reluctantly asks his one-night-stand girl, Leslie Winkle (a welcome return from Sara Gilbert), to join. She refuses until she hears Sheldon is on the other team. On the big day, with Leonard, Howard, Raj, and Leslie representing the Pumonary Movement Sound (PMS) and Sheldon and three middle-aged ethnic custodial staff representing the Atom Ants (AA), the game is on with Dr. Gablehauser presiding. With Penny in the audience sleeping through the quiz show, PMS and Sheldon alone keep answering questions correctly making it a close game with one more challenge for either one to win. It involves a chart that neither PMS nor Sheldon can figure out. Fortunately, the Russian janitor in AA who was a professor in his home country figures its solution correctly. Unfortunately, Sheldon's ego is such that he can't accept it as the official answer since it wasn't his meaning he forfeits and gives victory to PMS, which Howard celebrates by taking off his shirt in front of several girls in the audience! Later, Penny challenges Leonard and Sheldon with her own Pop Culture quiz about "The Brady Bunch", Britney Spears, the two-time People Sexiest Man Alive, and Tweety Bird's catch phrase. Many of these are answered wrong with "Star Trek"-related things though Penny lets the last one, "I taught I taw a Romulan", fly making Sheldon the champion in his home while Leonard still shows off his trophy...This episode was on fire with Sheldon's arrogance once again making him venerable especially with Leslie (who once made him cry like a girl) challenging him. Great lines with just about everyone here with Gilbert especially hilarious in her put-down of Sheldon. My favorite part was the arguing about the team name when Sheldon was still part of them. Another team name suggested but rejected was The Bengal Tigers by Raj who, in rejecting Sheldon's Atom Ants, says Tigers don't get fried by a magnifying glass! Chuck Lorre, once again, you rock! With this and "Two and a Half Men" still going strong, you're certainly the renaissance man of sitcoms this season.
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10/10
No Competition
Hitchcoc1 October 2021
In the Physics Bowl, Sheldon circumvents the rules and get thrown of the team. This leads to separate teams with Sheldon answering all the questions for his team. I wonder if there is anyone watching this show that could answer a single question in the time presented. Leslie Winkle is great again as the substitute teammate for the PMS team. PM standing for perpetual motion.
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4/10
The Bat Jar Conjecture
studioAT27 April 2021
This for me is another episode that has a lot of promise in its premise, but never quite lives up to it.

It's still better than the majority of other sitcoms out there, but there have been stronger episodes in S1 than this.
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