Big Bang Theory s03e21 Episode Script

The Plimpton Stimulation

[RAJESH SNEEZES.]
-Hold.
-What? Explain your sneeze.
-I'm sorry? -Do you have allergies? -No.
-Too much pepper on your salad? -I don't put pepper on salads.
-I've heard enough.
Sit over there.
Come on, I don't wanna sit by myself.
That's what Typhoid Mary said.
Clearly, her friends buckled.
Guys, help me.
-Sheldon, come on.
-Yeah, it's just one sneeze.
[RAJESH SNEEZES.]
-You're on your own.
-See you, buddy.
Oh, Leonard, I have something for you.
Per our roommate agreement, this is your 24-hour notice that I will be having a non-related female spending two nights in our apartment.
When you say non-related female, you still mean human, right? Well, of course.
Pets are banned by the agreement, with the exception of service animals such as Seeing Eye dogs and, one day cybernetically enhanced helper monkeys.
Are you planning on kidnapping a woman? -Sarcasm? -Yes.
But mixed with genuine concern.
For your information I'll be playing host to Dr.
Elizabeth Plimpton.
-Cosmological physicist from Princeton? -Yes.
And until you acquire a surgical mask please address your comments to me through a napkin.
We've been corresponding for years about our mutual interest in gravitational wave signatures of inflatons in the early universe.
Now she's under consideration for a position at our university.
Why didn't you tell me you knew Elizabeth Plimpton? I am a huge fan of hers.
I didn't realize I had to share my connection with things you're a fan of, but, very well.
You enjoy Canadian bacon.
I've been to Toronto.
-Okay, fine.
Where is she gonna sleep? -My room, of course.
Holy crap.
Holy crap.
-Yeah, I have a two-part question.
-Go ahead.
A, are you kidding me? And B, seriously, are you freaking kidding me? A, I rarely kid.
And B, when I do kid, you will know it by my use of the word "buzzinga.
" So you're saying the two of you are going to be sleeping in the same bed? Yes.
Buzzinga.
Leonard? Thank you.
Why is a renowned scientist staying in our apartment instead of a hotel? She doesn't care for hotels.
And who can blame her? Windows that don't open, multi-user linens keys shaped like credit cards.
As if one walks around with unassigned slots in one's wallet.
All right, I believe I have time for one more question.
[RAJESH CLEARS THROAT.]
Yes, Raj? RAJESH: When can I sit with you again? When I've seen two negative throat cultures spaced 12 hours apart.
You know the drill.
All right, if you'll excuse me I am off to start a prophylactic course of antibiotics.
I can't believe he's friends with Elizabeth Plimpton.
I can't believe they let him into Canada.
Whoa.
You heard the man.
Where's your throat cultures? -Kidding.
Sit down.
LEONARD: Ha.
[SNEEZES.]
-Hey, Sheldon.
-Oh, Penny, excellent.
I have a question about these maxi pads.
Are the wings truly functional or have I fallen victim to marketing hype? What? What are you doing with--? What? The stock boy at Walgreens was frustratingly uninformed on the subject.
Sheldon, what are you doing with maxi pads? SHELDON: I have a lady friend who will be staying with me for a few days.
PENNY: Oh.
What? SHELDON: I want her to feel at home.
I also bought scented soaps, pantyhose, Midol, calcium chews and what is apparently a yogurt specifically designed to regulate the female bowel.
Wait.
Wait, hold on.
Back up.
You're having a woman stay with you? Yes.
Why does that seem to flabbergast everybody? PENNY: No, no, no, I'm not flabbergasted.
I'm puzzled.
Yeah, let's go with puzzled.
SHELDON: A word of warning: My guest is a noted physicist and the leading expert on quantum cosmology so please try to avoid wasting her time with female gibber-gabber.
Female gibber-gabber? Shoe sales, hair styles, mud masks gossip about your friends, Brad and Angelina.
PENNY: No, they're not my friends.
SHELDON: Not surprised, considering how you talk about them behind their backs.
[KNOCKING ON DOOR.]
She's here.
She's here.
How do I look? Do I look smart? Oh, good grief.
This isn't about you.
Coming.
Now, listen, one of the great minds of the 21st century is about to play host to one of the other great minds of the 21st century.
So pay attention.
Years from now, my biographer might ask you about this event.
Well, I have so many things to tell your biographer.
Oh, Dr.
Cooper, thank goodness.
I completely forgot your address.
But then, I remembered that I'd written it on my hand.
Lucky I didn't confuse it with what I'd written on my other hand which are the coordinates for a neutron star.
Because if I tried to go there, I'd be crushed by hypergravity.
-Anyway, hello.
-Hello.
-Nice to finally meet you in person.
-I would imagine it is.
This is my friend and roommate, Dr.
Leonard Hofstadter.
Hi-lo.
Oops.
I started to say hi, and then I switched to hello in the middle.
It came out "hi-lo.
" Duh.
It's nice to meet you.
I've read both your books and your papers.
I'm Leonard.
I live here.
You're brilliant.
I apologize.
He's only an experimental physicist.
No need to apologize.
Some of my best friends are experimental physicists.
Well, not my best friends.
But I know them.
My best friend is a molecular chemist named Wendy.
I'm sorry, I'm rambling.
-Hi-lo.
SHELDON: Heh, heh.
Hungry? Can I offer you anything? If anyone should offer her anything, it should be me.
Elizabeth, can I get you something? Perhaps a feminine-hygiene product or a bowel-regulating yogurt? Interesting choices.
Based on my current needs, I guess I'd pick the yogurt.
Excellent.
If the yogurt works, I bought some delightful scented candles.
Look, it's you.
Thank you so much for opening up your home to me.
Well, who wants to stay in a hotel? Windows that don't open, those crazy card-shaped keys.
I'm so glad you understand.
No, he doesn't understand.
-I understand.
-I understand too.
You're just misappropriating my understanding.
[BLOWS RASPBERRY.]
I think any university would want you.
Except any university that already had you because they would've already wanted you before they, you know, got you.
From the mind that brought you hi-lo.
Let me show you to your room.
All right, I guess I am tired.
-Good night, Leonard.
-Sleep night.
I mean, obviously, good night.
I started to say sleep tight.
Then I changed my mind in the middle.
I swear to God, I'm smart.
Get it together, man.
All right, let me show you some of the features of the room.
First, windows.
Conventional.
Open, closed.
Open, closed.
Halfway open, or halfway closed depending on your philosophical bent.
Over here is my comic-book collection.
Feel free to browse.
There's a box of disposable reading gloves on the nightstand.
Good to know.
In here, you'll find emergency provisions.
An eight-day supply of food and water, a crossbow season two of Star Trek: The Original Series on a high-density flash drive.
What if there's a disaster that destroys all the USB ports? Then there's really no reason to live, is there? Can I ask you a question about your roommate? He's an odd duck, isn't he? What's his relationship status? Well, there was a misbegotten adventure with a waitress who lives across the hall.
It ended as inexplicably as it began.
They had very little in common except for carnal activity.
That's why I acquired these noise-canceling headphones.
If you decide to use them, please clean the earpieces afterwards with the Wet Wipes you'll find in the bathroom.
They're in the drawer labeled "Wet Wipes.
" -Okay.
-Good.
I'll leave you to your nighttime ablutions.
I've e-mailed you the morning bathroom schedule.
You'll also find a laminated copy in your welcome packet.
On the back of the emergency-escape-route diagram.
How thoughtful.
-Sleep well, my friend.
-You too.
Let me just get one thing.
It's my backup emergency supply kit.
The living-room escape route doesn't pass through here.
Now, good night.
And if there's an apocalypse, good luck.
[KNOCKING ON DOOR.]
Yes? -I saw your light on.
-Is everything all right? Yeah, I just couldn't sleep.
Me neither.
Look what I'm reading.
It's you.
-I thought you already read it.
-I did.
But it's been a while, and I wanted to sound smart over breakfast.
Aw, you're smart.
Oh, good.
I wasn't sure it was coming across.
What chapter are you on? Uh, six.
Ah.
The extragalactic distance ladder.
-Want to know a little secret? -Sure.
I wrote the section on the Wilson-Bappu Effect completely naked.
Really? Sure doesn't read that way.
Here, let me show you.
[ELIZABETH CLEARS THROAT.]
When we consider the brightness of pulsating variable stars we start to see a possible explanation for some of the discrepancies found in Hubble's constant.
Wow.
You really make science come alive.
[ALARM BEEPING.]
Vocal test.
Morning vocal test.
[CLEARS THROAT.]
Second vocal test.
Second morning vocal test.
-Morning, Sheldon.
-Morning.
-Morning, Sheldon.
-Morning.
-I trust you had a pleasant night? -More than pleasant.
[BOTH GIGGLE.]
[GIGGLES.]
Excuse me.
I'm going to relieve myself.
-How do you take your coffee? -Black.
Okeydoke.
SHELDON: Pee for Houston.
Pee for Austin.
Pee for the state my heart got lost in.
And shake twice for Texas.
[TOILET FLUSHES.]
Something his mother taught him.
All right.
Elizabeth, the bathroom is yours.
The seat is down and has been sanitized for your protection.
That's very thoughtful, but I think I'll finish my coffee first.
[KNOCKING ON DOOR.]
Ah, so the yogurt didn't work.
I'll fire off a critical e-mail to the manufacturer.
Oh, good, you're up.
My car won't start.
I need a ride to work.
Did you ignore your check-engine light? No, Mr.
Smarty-pants.
I ignored the fill-gas-tank light.
Leonard, Penny wants to exploit any feelings you have for her in order to get a ride to work.
Oh, uh, sure, let me just put this in a travel mug.
-Hello? -Hi.
Oh, Penny, this is Dr.
Plimpton, a leading expert on quantum cosmology.
Dr.
Plimpton, Penny is a waitress who doesn't understand the role gasoline plays in the internal combustion engine.
-Nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you too.
-Are you enjoying your stay? -Yes, very much.
Good.
Wonderful.
Meaningless pleasantries accomplished.
Elizabeth, Leonard's bathroom time is coming up and, believe me, you do not want to follow him.
Excuse me.
Okay, well, I guess I should get dressed so I can take everyone to work.
You and Sheldon and Sheldon's friend, Dr.
Plimpton, who you just met.
It'll be fun.
Like a clown car.
Heh, heh.
-Hang on.
-Hm, yeah? What? Huh? We just broke up.
You and me? Yeah, we did.
Not too long ago.
How are you doing with it? Not as good as you, apparently.
I don't follow.
You know, it's none of my business.
You wanna sleep with Sheldon's buddy right after we broke up, go for it.
-Well, now-- SHELDON: Excuse me.
I'm uncomfortable with you recommending Leonard pursue intercourse with Dr.
Plimpton.
Who, I assure you, has better things to do.
I'm not recommending it.
I'm saying it already happened.
Oh, that's preposterous.
Tell her, Leonard.
Well.
No.
Oh, come on.
It wasn't my fault.
The implication being that you somehow tripped and fell into her lady parts? I'm just gonna take the bus to work.
-Penny, I can still drive you.
-No, no, it's okay.
You might slip on a banana peel and get me pregnant.
I must say, I'm shocked by this betrayal.
I didn't betray Penny.
Not Penny, me.
How am I betraying you? Elizabeth's my friend, and you're playing with her.
Yeah, I guess I did.
What the hell are you doing? Relax, it's Nyquil.
-You still have a cold? -Maybe, but I don't care.
That's the great thing about Nyquil, it's like 10 percent booze.
I call it the nighttime sniffling, sneezing, coughing so-you-can-talk-to-girls medicine.
Are you having trouble sleeping? Because, boy, I was up all night.
Did you get a cold too? No, I was awake all night.
If you want, I can give you some of my mom's sleeping pills.
-She won't notice they're missing? -She doesn't know she takes them.
No, that's okay.
It was something else keeping me up last night.
And again this morning.
And I didn't mind.
I was up last night.
I was up this morning.
I didn't mind.
Those are your clues.
Ooh, ooh, did the pigeon on your windowsill have more babies? -No.
-Were you making another Lego movie? -No.
-Because let me tell you: It's not enough to make the Legos move.
They also have to capture your heart.
Okay, I'll give you one more clue.
It involved another person.
Did you get a Japanese love pillow? How is a Japanese love pillow another person? It is if you love her and give her a name.
Dr.
Plimpton, I'd like you to meet my colleagues.
Dr.
Rajesh Koothrappali.
-And not-a-doctor Howard Wolowitz.
-Hi.
-I'm a big fan of your work.
-Thank you.
And, of course, you've already introduced yourself to Dr.
Hofstadter.
-Hey, you.
-Hey, you.
Boy, I'm kind of tuckered out.
How are you feeling, Elizabeth? You know what? I am a little tired.
Would you be a dear and get me a cup of coffee? Sure.
Black, right? Actually, now I think I want it hot, brown and sweet.
Coming right up.
What? What do you mean, "what?" It's "Halo" night.
I can't.
I'm too sick.
[COUGHING.]
Go away.
That's why we moved "Halo" night here.
I brought my mom's chicken soup.
I'm not hungry.
ELIZABETH: Don't send him away.
Let him in.
-Who is that? -I bought a parrot.
Yeah, right.
-Dr.
Plimpton? -Hi.
-Howard, right? -Uh, yeah.
Can I ask you a question, Howard? Do you like role-playing games? Yeah, sure.
Heh.
In fact, I'm a dungeon master.
Not tonight.
Tonight, you are a deliveryman.
You've brought soup but, uh-oh, Raj and I don't have enough money to pay you.
So we'll have to come to some other kind of arrangement.
Beg pardon? You figure out the details.
I'm gonna change into something I don't mind getting ripped off my milky flesh.
What the frak? Go away.
She wants New Delhi, not kosher deli.
Besides, you have a girlfriend.
We broke up weeks ago.
-Why didn't you say anything? -I was waiting for the right time.
This is the right time.
Hey, who's ready for "Halo"? Oh, this is like a nightmare.
Get lost.
The numbers are shaky enough as it is.
I don't understand.
Oh, good.
Leonard's here.
Good? Elizabeth? What's going on? What's going on is you and Howard are my moving men.
And Raj is my new landlord.
And I don't have enough money to pay any of you.
Is she suggesting what I think she's suggesting? Yup.
Welcome to the Penthouse Forum.
Okay, show of hands.
Who's up for this? We'll all be naked in front of each other.
I'm out.
Everybody ready? Follow my lead.
Almost.
We're going to go out into the hallway and make a dramatic entrance.
Oh, good.
It's so much better when everyone commits.
Run, run, run.
Don't look back.
I thought we had something special.
So you say you can't pay your rent? -Oh, Leonard? -Hey.
I found these in the dryer.
I'm assuming they belong to Sheldon.
Thanks.
It's really hard to find these in his size.
So listen.
I've been meaning to talk to you about the other morning.
PENNY: You mean you and Dr.
Slutbunny? Yeah, I wanted to explain.
No.
You don't owe me an explanation.
-I don't? -No, you don't.
So you're not judging me? PENNY: Oh, I'm judging you nine ways to Sunday but you don't owe me an explanation.
Nevertheless, I'd like to get one on the record so you can understand why I did what I did.
I'm listening.
She let me.

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