I don’t know anything of the show other than the clip that **BigT **posted, but I would watch that show. I thought the kid did a great "Young Sheldon’; there were a couple points in that clip where I thought he mimicked Jim Parsons’ mannerisms and speech style perfectly.
The casting of Sheldon’s mom is, as has already been noted, pretty much perfect.
The kid was just in the HBO hit Big Little Lies, with Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman. He played Shailene Woodley’s kid. No acting experience?
An interview I read with Lorre says they moved to a one-camera format because doing a live-audience 3-cam sitcom with kids so important to the cast was too tough.
I have no clue how this will do. I find TBBT a bid of random comfort TV. This is going for a Wonder Years feel.
I don’t really find it disturbing or cringy, but I do wonder how long they can keep the joke going. Constant rejection by classmates and consternation by teachers will get old pretty fast.
Regarding growth, as Loach said, they can’t really show much growth and still have Sheldon be Sheldon; yet right at the beginning, before the show even airs, the ads show growth regarding handholding.
Are they going to show growth that suddenly stops, or reverts?
I haven’t seen any commercials or clips for it. I used to really enjoy TBBT but I think it really leaves much to be desired anymore. Now I just watch more out of habit than anything else so I really don’t understand the point of spinning something else off of it. I really doubt I’ll watch it.
Exactly. If this show was about the growth of a boy genius we’ve never seen before then it might possibly work, but we know the endpoint here. This can’t be some heartwarming tale of personal growth without being a contradiction.
Slight hijack: a friend of mine who is an expert model maker in L. A. (and a great photographer, too), was asked by the Young Sheldon crew to customize the locomotive Sheldon is seen playing with in some of the trailers. He did a beautiful job, making it look very realistically weathered, as great modelers do (and as requested by the production team). You can see it starting at about 0:30 in this video.
After admiring his work, I realized that young Sheldon would never have done that kind of work to his models: he’d want a spotless new Lionel engine. I pointed this out to my friend, who said, “Shhhh! I gave them what they paid me for.”
However, as much as I admire my friend’s work, I don’t have a good feeling about the long term chances of the show.
I’m not so sure it would be a non-starter. In the excellent The Opposite of Sex (1998), an 18-year-old Christina Ricci played a very sex-mad 16-year-old. Just depends on how you approach it. True though, that was a movie and thus not governed by federal broadcast regulations, but I’d bet there would be some way around it.
The ONLY reason I’m going to watch is because Laurie Metcalf’s daughter plays Sheldon’s mother and I think the comparison will be interesting. I’m pretty sure the interest will only be for one episode, however.
Well, it’s half over, and it’s not as bad as I thought, although I still don’t think that young Sheldon jibes well with what we know of older Sheldon.
Also, IME, it’s true that in general, advanced children are also advanced in social skills.
However, Sheldon, in particular, appears to have NOT autism, but Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder. I worked with autistic people on all ends of the spectrum for more than 10 years; I know more than 100 autistic people, and I can say that Sheldon has never struck me as autistic in the least.
RE: the show, I do like the family: I think Mary jibes well with Laurie Metcalf’s older “Mom,” and Sheldon’s dad is great. I like the brother and sister as well. “Ever since he could talk, I quit having any choices!”