Fans should listen closely during Sheldon’s nightmare sequence. The voice of the pool water trying to lure him in is uncredited, but it is officially Kaley Cuoco (Penny from TBBT).
Released on , through Warner Archive , this season is a must-have for those building a complete physical library. Unlike many modern releases, this set focuses on quality presentation, ensuring fans have the highest fidelity version of Sheldon's childhood journey.
This episode plants the seed. When Sheldon gets his computer, he doesn't want to play games. He wants to calculate . He realizes the machine can do math faster than his brain. For a narcissistic genius, this is the first time he looks at a piece of technology and thinks, "I have competition." young sheldon s03e10 bluray
In this episode, Sheldon’s germaphobia is pushed to the limit when he is faced with a mandatory swim test at school. Terrified of the pool—which he describes as "teenager soup" due to the bacteria and secretions—he decides to fake being sick to avoid the water.
If you are a fan of The Big Bang Theory , you know that young Sheldon Cooper is a closed book made of logic, rules, and a strict bathroom schedule. But every so often, a single episode comes along that cracks that book wide open. Unlike many modern releases, this set focuses on
However, the episode’s MVP is Lance Barber as George Sr. His reaction to the fire—specifically his relief that his children are safe followed by his grounded, frustrated disciplinary action—adds a layer of realism that The Big Bang Theory often lacked. It reminds the audience that while Sheldon is the protagonist, the Coopers are a functioning (albeit messy) family unit.
If you are a completionist, absolutely. The Season 3 set isn't just a disc; it's a time capsule. The deleted scenes for this episode are gold—specifically a 90-second cut where Sheldon tries to teach the live chicken how to play chess. He wants to calculate
is that episode.
Let’s set the scene. The episode juggles two wildly different plots:
There is a moment where Sheldon eats fried chicken (gasp!). Not a "chicken nugget"—a bone-in, greasy, southern fried leg. The look of pure disgust on Iain Armitage’s face is funny on a phone screen, but through the Blu-ray’s lossless DTS-HD Master Audio, you hear the squelch of the skin. You hear his gulp. It is horrifying and hilarious in equal measure.