REVIEW: Young Sheldon Season 7 Premiere Hits the Ground Running

As successful as The Big Bang Theory was, it was once hard to believe Young Sheldon would make it very far. The spinoff began as a sitcom focusing on a younger version of Sheldon Cooper. But any show that features children is going to run into problems eventually — especially the obvious maturity of the children misaligning with the show’s timeline. These worries were quickly swept under the rug with Young Sheldon, which has made it to its seventh and final season thanks to an energetic spirit that keeps the ball rolling, even through its devastating moments.The Season 7 premiere, “A Wiener Schnitzel and Underwear in a Tree,” takes a slow approach to recover from Young Sheldon Season 6’s tornado that ripped through Medford, Texas. The episode starts almost immediately after the devastation that wrecked Connie’s house, in which she also lost thousands of dollars made from her illegal gambling business. Having had a brush with death, the Cooper family and their neighbors travel through different stages of grief and shock. Connie struggles with her material losses, while Missy takes up a new role in Mary’s absence. Mary herself feels helpless in Germany, and Pastor Jeff reckons with the sin of greed in light of a new purchase.For the past couple of seasons, Sheldon has been pushed to the background of his own show. Thanks to Georgie’s scandalous age-gap relationship with Mandy, Missy’s rebellious streak, and George and Mary’s cracking marriage, Sheldon has been left in the dust. Nonetheless, his story still impacts the big picture of Young Sheldon; Mary’s conflict about returning home in the Season 7 premiere rests on Sheldon’s stubbornness to leave. As always, he’s uprooted everyone’s life to achieve his own desires to succeed in life, a common theme throughout the series. But there’s some fault in his characterization in the premiere. As selfish and insensitive Sheldon is to people’s feelings, he’s almost never been that way with the women in his family. The boy called out a church crowd’s hypocrisy when his family was being insulted and rejected by the community. Viewers can say what they want about Sheldon Cooper, but he’s a family man. So for him to be so apathetic about his grandmother’s uprooted state of living is a bit out of touch, especially considering the close bond they share.

As successful as The Big Bang Theory was, it was once hard to believe Young Sheldon would make it very far. The spinoff began as a sitcom focusing on a younger version of Sheldon Cooper. But any show that features children is going to run into problems eventually — especially the obvious maturity of the children misaligning with the show’s timeline. These worries were quickly swept under the rug with Young Sheldon, which has made it to its seventh and final season thanks to an energetic spirit that keeps the ball rolling, even through its devastating moments.

The Season 7 premiere, “A Wiener Schnitzel and Underwear in a Tree,” takes a slow approach to recover from Young Sheldon Season 6’s tornado that ripped through Medford, Texas. The episode starts almost immediately after the devastation that wrecked Connie’s house, in which she also lost thousands of dollars made from her illegal gambling business. Having had a brush with death, the Cooper family and their neighbors travel through different stages of grief and shock. Connie struggles with her material losses, while Missy takes up a new role in Mary’s absence. Mary herself feels helpless in Germany, and Pastor Jeff reckons with the sin of greed in light of a new purchase.

For the past couple of seasons, Sheldon has been pushed to the background of his own show. Thanks to Georgie’s scandalous age-gap relationship with Mandy, Missy’s rebellious streak, and George and Mary’s cracking marriage, Sheldon has been left in the dust. Nonetheless, his story still impacts the big picture of Young Sheldon; Mary’s conflict about returning home in the Season 7 premiere rests on Sheldon’s stubbornness to leave. As always, he’s uprooted everyone’s life to achieve his own desires to succeed in life, a common theme throughout the series. But there’s some fault in his characterization in the premiere. As selfish and insensitive Sheldon is to people’s feelings, he’s almost never been that way with the women in his family. The boy called out a church crowd’s hypocrisy when his family was being insulted and rejected by the community. Viewers can say what they want about Sheldon Cooper, but he’s a family man. So for him to be so apathetic about his grandmother’s uprooted state of living is a bit out of touch, especially considering the close bond they share.

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