thinking out loud

so please don't judge me

0 notes

yey!!! i am very happy to see that my channel is gaining a lot of hits in YouTube… it was not my intention to have some honors for all the video clips that i uploaded there
but i was happy to know that my video ranked #1 today (January 29,2012) for my video about Raj visiting the office of Siri in an episode of the big bang theory.
well i guess it’s just my luck =)

yey!!! i am very happy to see that my channel is gaining a lot of hits in YouTube… it was not my intention to have some honors for all the video clips that i uploaded there

but i was happy to know that my video ranked #1 today (January 29,2012) for my video about Raj visiting the office of Siri in an episode of the big bang theory.

well i guess it’s just my luck =)

Filed under youtube most viewed happy

0 notes

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
1 Plays
Cover Me Quick!
Lagi Kang Tama

my favorite song at this moment…it took me 3 years to finally find it. I remember listening to this song years ago when Dj Tado played it during their show in Brewrats…


LAGI KANG TAMA by cover me quick (2007)


3 notes

‘The Big Bang Theory’: Anatomy of the 100th Episode


The concept for Thursday’s 100th episode of The Big Bang Theory — in which Leonard (Johnny Galecki) and Penny (Kaley Cuoco) reunite — started well before Thanksgiving with an email from Chuck Lorre to Bill Prady and Steve Molaro.

Lorre’s initial intention, Prady tells The Hollywood Reporter, was to bring the show full circle back to the pilot and tell a dual what-if dream story exploring what their lives could have been like if Leonard had asked Penny out upon meeting her when she first moved in across the hall.

“Chuck had proposed a very big dream sequence episode — possible futures — of what would happen if they married,” says Prady, who co-created the CBS comedy with Lorre. “It also had a Rashomon aspect to it because it was his dream and her dream. That was the starting place.”

STORY: ‘The Big Bang Theory’: From ‘Star Trek’ to ‘Lord of the Rings,’ the Show’s Nerdiest Moments

The result was “The Recombination Hypothesis,” a unique installment in which it’s revealed late in the episode that the on-again/off-again couple’s reunion took place in Leonard’s mind — until, that is, he turns it into a reality and asks Penny out on an actualdate, thus reuniting the couple.

Prady and executive producer Molaro agree the concept was a risky one, and reveal that none of the exec producers wanted to cheat the audience with a disposable dream sequence episode that was “big for big’s sake” and failed to advance the story.

“[It] would have not felt like an episode of our show,” Molaro says.

Prady recalls that the episode evolved to its current incarnation, with Leonard starting and ending the installment at the same place in the hallway where he first spied Penny in the pilot, because the EPs wanted the half-hour to have an effect on the couple’s storied relationship.

“Even with that imagining, he then moves forward and he asks her out, which is the action he takes at the beginning of the fantasy sequence,” Prady says, adding that stylistically, Penny and Leonard are wearing clothing that’s nearly identical to their wardrobe from the pilot.

(Another nice nod to the pilot? Leonard and Sheldon are coming up the stairs and see Penny unpacking an appliance box through her open apartment door, in what Prady calls another “mushy” moment.)

PHOTOS: ‘The Big Bang Theory’ Celebrates 100 Episodes

“The thought was, if despite what had happened between you and an ex, you had gone out, it had gone badly, it went up and down, if you somehow caught her in that same moment you initially saw — and we can all think about the moment we saw the person we’re with — and if you had that again, it would make you think,” Prady says. “You get to the point where Leonard stops and thinks, ‘What would happen if I ask her out again?’ “

“What happens is an episode of the Big Bang Theory, and it’s a legitimate, real episode in terms of structure and jokes,” Prady says, adding, “and then it didn’t happen, but he then goes and asks her out and begins a new story and a new chapter in dating Penny.”

It’s a moment that the EPs say was scripted carefully so as not to tease fans, noting the original plan was to cut to a commercial immediately after it was revealed the reunion was entirely in Leonard’s imagination before coming back to see the lovable nerd really asking her out. “Our feeling was no, he’s got to go immediately,” Prady says. “In the same moment that the audience is going, ‘Oh my God, that didn’t happen,” we have to say, ‘Yes, but thisis.’ ”            

STORY: ‘The Big Bang Theory’s’ 100th Episode: Is It a Dream?

“One of the most greedy things to do is sit down and say, “Can we have our cake and eat it too? Can we do something special out of the form and at the same time can we not cheat the fans of forward progress in the story?” Prady continues. “So that’s what we tried to do, and we hope it worked.”

-an article from the hollywood reporter

Filed under the big bang theory 100 episode tbbt story of tbbt 100 episode jim prsons the big bang theory news

7 notes

Behind the Scenes of Amy’s “Oh, It’s a Tiara!” Moment

Things you should know about “The Shiny Trinket Maneuver” AKA “Oh, it’s a tiara!”:

1. I only delivered the reaction to the tiara that way every single time we rehearsed it for five days. It was my instinct to do it exactly that way and I was never told to do it otherwise.

2. The original line was, “Oh my God, it’s a tiara!” but I don’t like to say God’s name “in vain” or in performance (since my “Blossom” days) so I just sort of vocalized my way out of the “my God” part and no one said anything to me so I kept doing it that way.

3. “Put it on me,” was scripted to be said five times, but the audience was laughing so hard I just kept it going to cover the time until the next line so Kaley Cuoco (who plays Penny) would not be left hanging and waiting.

4. I had no idea what the physicality of my performance looked like until I watched the scene at home. (I hate watching myself as I discussed in my review of “The Isolation Permutation” for Kveller.com.) I know what it felt like though; a total melting; a collapse; the conveyed intent was that Sheldon’s understanding of me was so deep and so perfect and so touching and so profound that it literally weakened my knees. I have been lucky enough to have that feeling a few times in my life of literally being weakened by a man’s affection, and I have found it powerful and comedic, even in its profundity and tenderness.

5. In one rehearsal, my “Of course I do [look beautiful]! I’m a princess and this is my tiara!” came out too intense. Our director, Mark Cendrowski, told me, rightfully, that I seemed angry. A point well taken. I adjusted it by backing off and making sure to gush instead of gloat.

6. Originally, Amy left the scene’s focus to admire herself in the mirror after kissing Sheldon. One of our executive producers suggested I embrace him after the kiss and linger in his arms awkwardly. I think it was a brilliant suggestion.

7. Jim didn’t put his hands on my back in every take to ‘embrace’ me after I hug him. Sometimes his hands just hovered, but obviously what you saw on TV was the version of the scene that our editors and producers liked best.

8. I never got to see Kaley Cuoco’s reaction to me during the scene because I was so all over the place and out of focus in the moment. I love how adoringly she looks at me after she puts the tiara on me.

9. The tiara moment was chosen by CBS as the #4 of the Top 10 Big Bang moments of the past 100 episodes. This blows my mind.

10. I love performing the words of our incredible writers. I couldn’t have written that scene if my life depended on it. But I will perform it–and others–for you as if it does.

from Mayim’s blog in http://www.kveller.com

Filed under mayim bialik the big bang theory amy's tiara behind the scene of tiara scene