Young Sheldon S03e09 R5 Exclusive Here

Here’s a feature-style breakdown for (aired as “A Parasite and a Butterfly’s Eggs” – production code T12.15608, part of the R5 DVD/Blu-ray release group): Feature Title “Sheldon’s Biological Clock Ticks in Two Directions” Or: How a parasite, a college admissions form, and a butterfly’s eggs nearly broke the Cooper household. Logline When 9-year-old Sheldon Cooper discovers he might be held back a grade due to a missed gym credit, he launches a campaign of ruthless academic efficiency — while Mary deals with a church parasite and Missy learns the hard way that life doesn’t come with a control group. Scene-by-Scene Synopsis (R5 version — no broadcast edits) Cold Open Sheldon narrates over a macro shot of a parasitic wasp laying eggs in a caterpillar. “In nature, parasites are efficient. In Texas, they go to church.” Cut to Mary listening to a church lady drone on about casseroles.

Mary finally confronts Brenda in the church parking lot — not with anger, but exhaustion. “I already have four children. I can’t adopt a fifth.” Brenda is genuinely hurt. They reach an awkward truce over stale donuts. Meanwhile, Missy helps Sheldon cheat on a sit-up test by counting his head bobs as reps. “You owe me,” she says. “Put that in your notebook.” young sheldon s03e09 r5

Sheldon returns from Medford High with devastating news: he’s missing a half-credit in physical education . The state requires it for promotion. George Sr. laughs. Sheldon does not. He petitions to replace PE with “theoretical locomotion studies.” Denied. Here’s a feature-style breakdown for (aired as “A

Mary’s church friend Brenda (not Sparks) invites herself over for dinner every night that week. Mary is too polite to say no. Meemaw arrives, immediately calls Brenda a “spiritual tapeworm.” Missy, watching from the stairs, asks, “Is that like a real parasite?” Meemaw: “Worse. She uses Tupperware as a conversation starter.” “In nature, parasites are efficient