These are public posts tagged with #bigbangtheory. You can interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse.
Per la seirie #VitaConiGemelli & #CoseBelle
Piccoli Sheldon crescono!
la sua maglietta preferita… senza aver mai visto The Big Bang Theory e, soprattutto, senza che sia stato il babbo a comprargliela! Giuro!
Top 5 séries que você precisa assistir antes de morrer
Um combo de nostalgia, comédia e reflexão sobre o mundo:
1. Friends
2. Dawson's Creek
3. The Big Bang Theory
4. Superstore (A Super Loja)
5. The Man in the High Castle (O Homem do Castelo Alto)
#Series #Top5 #Friends #BigBangTheory #DawsonsCreek #Superstore #TheManInTheHighCastle #Recomendações
Oh, and I did feel they did justice to the sensory sensitivity thing, in the one episode where they even mention it. The way they switch back and forth between the noise being blaringly loud for Sheldon, and completely absent for the other family members, felt all too familiar. The degree of effort he puts into silencing it was pretty spot on, too.
Of course, if it were a real autistic person they were writing about, sensory sensitivity would have at least one mention in every single episode.
@actuallyautistic
#ActuallyAutistic
#TwiceExceptional
#2e
#gifted
#BigBangTheory
#Sheldon
The episode where he sends mail to NASA... I did that, too, with a design for a shuttle. What I did not do is follow up w/ a trip to the office and show off my ground breaking higher-level math; I was in 3rd grade and my "design" was an utterly useless 3rd grader's drawing. It didn't even have 3D perspective.
My favorite so far, though, is when the physics prof that Sheldon idolizes mentions to his SO while eating vanilla ice cream that some vanilla "extracts" are actually extracted from beaver anal glands. I laughed especially loud at this one because I have literally shared this same factoid with exactly the same bad timing. :D
@actuallyautistic
#ActuallyAutistic
#TwiceExceptional
#2e
#gifted
#BigBangTheory
#Sheldon
I'm watching Young Sheldon. It's very clear to me at this point that whoever invented the lead character had a lot of experience with someone twice-exceptional, but only a superficial understanding of why we are the way we are. The character is too rich to be made up out of thin air, but too shallow for the writers to have really understood it. It's also very much a highly exaggerated caricature. Still, even as I cringe at the kind of impression of 2e people that folks might be taking away from the show, I've gotten a few good laughs and I see a lot of myself in the show.
@actuallyautistic
#ActuallyAutistic
#TwiceExceptional
#2e
#gifted
#BigBangTheory
#Sheldon
Die Schauspielerin Mayim Bialik spielt in der Serie #BigBangTheory die Neurobiologin Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler. Der Beruf Bialiks im wirklichen Leben: Neurowissenschaftlerin.
Rewatched parts of #bigbangtheory the other day, and sure ... born in 1974, my dad didn't spend any quality time with me either. I had do look up gutting a fish in a book, as I was doing it at as a 9yo.
So I never got that joke when Penny had to gut the fish in season 6. #genx
https://www.europesays.com/uk/43465/ Study says Big Bang isn’t real, universe formed in fleeting bursts #BigBangTheory #CosmicExpansion #Cosmology #DarkEnergy #DarkMatter #GravityWithoutMass #GroundBasedTelescopes #NegativePressure #Physics #Science #StructureFormation #TemporalSingularities #UK #UnitedKingdom
So, I know there's a lot of sexism and other problematic stuff in #BigBangTheory and #YoungSheldon, but I do enjoy watching those shows -- since I can really identify with #SheldonCooper. However, I'm also digging #HighPotential for similar reasons. Does anyone else in the @actuallyautistic enjoy these shows? Or am I in the minority?
#ActuallyAutistic
Your Dinosaurs Are Wrong is very entertaining. It's like Sheldon's "Fun with Flags" video series in "The Big Bang Theory" with a bit of "Mystery Science 3000" snark mixed in.
https://www.youtube.com/@YourDinosaursAreWrong
#YourDinosaursAreWrong #Dinosaurs #Paleontology #Science #Toys #BigBangTheory #MST3k
A question for the cosmologists. (I was going to say "Explain like I'm 5", but assume I've spent too much time listening to Katie Mack, Sean Carroll, Brians Greene and Cox, etc. and I have a bit of a clue... But I didn't study relativity, and have no experience with GR math).
Here goes...
Every time I hear "such and such happened at 10^-11 seconds, and a little later this thing happened at 10^-6 seconds" I wonder about the clock you're using.
At various times in the *very* early universe, the energy density was unimaginably huge. I'm assuming that has an effect on the flow of time, as well, no? I know there's no external clock to compare to, but what is the real meaning of these times, other than as a sequence of events, when the environment is undergoing such massive changes in energy density (or matter density, if we're talking a little later)?
I'm basically asking how those times are meaningful to me*, a guy thinking about it at this point in the universe, when the composition/distribution/volume of the observable universe does not faintly resemble that of the universe in the first fractions of a second that we're talking about.
(*Ignore for a moment that we can't comprehend those timespans even if the universe wasn't changing)
Please boost for reach if you are in the astronomy community, I'm not sure which hashtags to use for this...
#Cosmology #Astronomy #BigBangTheory #Relativity
BOOM. Raj Koothappali following the player playbook to a T. (Incl. the number check!)
#funny #bigbangtheory #dating
Question for the cosmologists:
As we look farther out in space, we look farther back in time. I'm under the impression that *very* distant galaxies show earlier stages of development.
How? Are their metallicities lower? Is it a structural thing? (Can we even resolve that kind of detail)?
I'm preparing to give a cosmology talk to a group of octa- and nonagenarians in a few weeks... The challenge is to give a digestible talk on Big Bang theory to a group of people who are intelligent but mostly uninformed on the topic... In 40 minutes!
When I was asked, I thought, "easy, I've done this for grade 9 students dozens of times" but then found out about the time constraint. I could spend more than 40 minutes just talking about how we came to measuring distances in the cosmos, never mind the evolution of it.
Never mind the technical details, I could spend 40 minutes just reviewing how our view of the universe has expanded from just our solar system, with a celstial sphere just beyond Saturn, to thinking the Milky Way *was* the universe, to where we are now, observing the vast billions-of-light-years-wide bubble that is our observatble universe.
Or how about talking about the evolution of tehcnology (never mind the evolution of the necessary mindsets!) that made the observations possible?
Geez, just explaining line spectra and redshift could take 40 minutes.
I'm tempted to prepare talks on everything and present the talk as a "choose your own adventure" book. Maybe they'll have me back to explore the paths not taken?
Any advice on how the astro communicators would approach this is welcome (or suggestions for perspcetives I might have missed!).
So. My husband thought he was marrying #MaryShelley, but instead ended up with #ShellyCooper / #SheldonCooper. Ooops! (I suppose he married both...)
@actuallyautistic
#BigBangTheory #YoungSheldon #Frankenstein
What a coincidence, just watched Episode 3 from Season 9 pf #BigBangTheory ;-) where the burned the van down in Mexico ;-)
https://astrodon.social/@startswithabang/113408813530156242
Attached: 1 image Why isn’t Richard Feynman your personal…
Astrodon - The Astro CommunityRe-watching #BigBangTheory and while many details are so perfect, why do they keep their #shoes on in/on the #bed?