The Standard Journal

‘Big Bang Theory’ exits with emotional episode

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr.

“The Big Bang Theory” closed out its run as television’s top-rated comedy with an emotional final episode that saw some big changes for the show’s group of geeky misfits.

The long-running series on CBS concluded with two final episodes, “The Change Constant” and “The Stockholm Syndrome,” in an hour-long finale Thursday evening. The series exited the TV airwaves with the most episodes for a multi-camera series ever with 279 episodes. It edged past NBC’s “Cheers,” which aired for 11 seasons and 275 episodes.

“The Big Bang Theory” debuted in 2007 and overcame early doubts to become a cult classic after some questioned the show’s chances of survival. The show was led by a crew of nerdy misfits starring Jim Parsons, Kaley Cuoco, Johnny Galecki, Mayim Bialik, Simon Helberg, Kunal Nayyar and Melissa Rauch.

Thursday’s finale was followed by a behind-the-scenes look at the show in “Unraveling the Mystery: A Big Bang Farewell” with Galecki and Cuoco as hosts.

The series began about geeky physicist roommates portrayed by Parsons and Galecki and expanded to include their friends, girlfriend­s and then wives. It inevitably made being nerds and comic book lovers a cool phenomenon in pop culture.

During its tenure, “Big Bang Theory” won 10 Emmy Awards. Parsons took home four of those trophies, including lead actor in a comedy series in 2014.

The final episodes were filled with a few surprises, a pregnancy, cameos and a speech about the importance of friendship in the series’ emotional conclusion.

Parson’s character Sheldon and Bialik’s Amy anxiously awaited the decision on whether the married couple would win the Nobel Prize. The final episode also highlighte­d the fate of the broken elevator, which has been nonfunctio­nal for much of the series.

It included a scene in which Bialik, who is a neuroscien­tist in real life, urges young girls to pursue careers in science. “Little girls who dream about science” should pursue it as a career and ignore naysayers, she said.

The comedy leaves on a high as one of television’s most popular shows. Last week’s episode was the mostwatche­d program on broadcast or cable TV with 12.5 million viewers, beating out HBO’s “Game of Thrones,” which ends its series on Sunday after an eight-year run.

Parsons had said the end of the series feels like a “real rite of passage moment,” which was full of memories and some tears. Galecki said the show has touched “so many hearts.”

A federal judge will let a jury decide whether conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Infowars website had a legal right to sell a poster featuring the image of Pepe the Frog, a cartoon character that became hijacked by farright extremists.

U.S. District Judge Michael Fitzgerald refused Thursday to throw out a copyright infringeme­nt lawsuit that Pepe’s creator, California-based artist Matt Furie, filed against Infowars over its poster sales.

Lawyers for Furie and Infowars both said they were pleased by the ruling, which clears a path for a jury trial to begin July 16 in Los Angeles.

Louis Tompros, one Furie’s lawyers, said his client looks forward to asking jurors to hold Infowars accountabl­e for misappropr­iating Pepe, the anthropomo­rphic frog he created in the early 2000s.

“This is a case about making sure nobody (else) is making money off Pepe the Frog,” Tompros said Friday.

Infowars’ attorney, Marc Randazza, said the decision preserves his client’s key free speech defenses against Furie’s claims and limits any possible award to a maximum of roughly $13,000.

“We are fighting this case because we think it’s a free speech issue,” Randazza said. “(Jones) is doing it as an act in the public interest instead of his own interest.”

Jones faces other costly litigation. Relatives of children killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre filed defamation suits against Jones after he questioned whether the shooting rampage was a hoax.

Jones livestream­s his show on Infowars’ website, but he has lost access to other platforms. Twitter and Facebook have permanentl­y banned him.

Jones also uses his website to sell a diverse range of products. Furie’s lawsuit says he didn’t authorize the site to sell a “MAGA” poster that depicts Pepe alongside images of Jones, President Donald Trump, far-right agitator Milo Yiannopoul­os and other right-wing figures.

Infowars’ lawyers argued the poster’s depiction of Pepe is “fair use.” Fitzgerald ruled the jury must decide that question.

Infowars was selling the Pepe-adorned poster for $29.95. Gross revenues from sales of the poster totaled more than $31,000, the judge’s ruling says.

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 ??  ?? Jim Parsons won an Emmy for Outstandin­g Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in both 2010 and 2011 for his portrayal of Sheldon Cooper in “The Big Bang Theory.”
Jim Parsons won an Emmy for Outstandin­g Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in both 2010 and 2011 for his portrayal of Sheldon Cooper in “The Big Bang Theory.”
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