Movies News Talk
Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage: Why the Sheldon Problem Isn't What You Think!
CBS's Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage, the Young Sheldon spinoff, seemed destined for a "Sheldon problem." Everyone loves Sheldon, right? But his absence from this new show isn't the actual issue; and this is far from what viewers initially expected. Spinoffs struggle! Think Frasier or Joey – getting that unique identity, outside the shadow of the original is really, really tough!
Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage, however, has a great premise – that shouldn't require Sheldon, however this might be unexpectedly difficult to actually do effectively! To even further showcase how difficult this specific issue becomes; viewers need to recall how The Big Bang Theory ended. Sheldon was THE star. But, by the time Young Sheldon ended, it was a whole different story. People LOVED the Cooper family!
The major hook of the spinoff, exploring Georgie and Mandy’s earlier life? That actually really works independently. This doesn’t involve Sheldon! Yet that doesn't stop another surprisingly familiar, even though potentially unrelated challenge!
Here's where things get interesting. The show needed to transition. It could explore Georgie's character development – going from the Young Sheldon idealist to that more cynical Big Bang Theory version. This was intended to create an easy transition for those already well-accustomed to Sheldon, but the presence of that key figure in this particular storyline would have a certain negative impact for future story development!
The writers were in a bind: Ignoring Sheldon could upset longtime fans; but bringing him in could completely overshadow Georgie and Mandy. Their creative solution? Introducing Mandy’s brother, Connor (Dougie Baldwin), a total Sheldon clone! He’s socially awkward, a bit stiff, and his mom totally coddles him! It is both interesting yet very strange, even questionable as this similarity completely overshadows the key objective!
Fair enough; Young Sheldon (season 6, episode 12, “A Baby Shower and a Testosterone-Rich Banter”) already had that somewhat Sheldon-like character– the previous version played by Joe Apollonio. However, with the recasting in the new show– this became a total missed opportunity for something seriously new and fresh, a unique identity that stood apart. It seemed far simpler to merely recast this old character; reusing this existing premise and creating an even more Sheldon-like character might create a much easier initial storytelling setup, yet the resulting similarities between Sheldon and Connor could've resulted in overshadowing the new show’s unique personalities; something which could be reasonably prevented; yet they failed to effectively do this!
Even worse, that existing relationship between Connor and Audrey (Mandy’s mother), mirrors the dynamics of Georgie, Mary (Georgie’s mother) and Sheldon! It creates more similarities. This entire element simply failed, yet, to create something fresh, even if these aspects were already largely hinted in the initial Young Sheldon portrayal; simply emphasizing already-existing details could’ve improved these aspects significantly.
The issue isn’t Sheldon's absence! It's Connor's too-close resemblance to Sheldon! The new show needed originality!
The writing is actually already present, as these kinds of dynamics had already happened before in earlier shows, even from other characters who have had their share of awkward, early youth. Yet even more noteworthy is that those earlier character designs could've been made as models to show these kinds of experiences far more efficiently, while creating a different kind of awkward youth that was different from the existing Sheldon archetype. Those characters and experiences from other series, such as those interactions between Howard and Leonard from The Big Bang Theory could've greatly helped. They demonstrate that there already existed different character design possibilities that could've otherwise been avoided.
Making Connor distinct is possible; highlighting those aspects that completely separate these character designs; avoiding that constant reliance on existing, somewhat overly-familiar archetypes which only end in undermining their attempts to emphasize something brand-new and fresh.
Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage had huge potential. Yet, by making Connor too much like Sheldon, it misses the opportunity for originality. If the creators can course-correct— developing this brand new character without relying so heavily on that established archetype— they can still give us something truly special. Fingers crossed!