Young Sheldon S01e20 Xvid May 2026

Meanwhile, Meemaw (Connie) visits and sides with Missy, telling Sheldon that winning isn’t everything. Sheldon, horrified by this philosophy, doubles down on his project.

Sheldon arrives with charts, graphs, and a live squirrel in a cage (caught with help from his father). Missy brings her clunky metal detector and a sign: "Find Your Lost Pet!"

The judges walk around. They’re impressed by Sheldon’s math but note the squirrel is chewing through the cage. They love Missy’s idea because it’s practical and heartwarming. Just then, a little girl starts crying that she lost her dog. Missy volunteers to help. Within minutes, using her detector (which really just finds metal, not dogs), she finds the girl’s dog’s collar — which the dog had buried under a slide. The dog is nearby, and the girl is overjoyed. young sheldon s01e20 xvid

April 12, 2018

Sheldon’s calm is shattered when Missy bursts in, holding a flyer for the school science fair. The grand prize is a $200 savings bond. Sheldon, who has won every science fair since kindergarten, is confident — until Missy declares she’s entering this time. And she intends to win. Meanwhile, Meemaw (Connie) visits and sides with Missy,

Sheldon sulks in his room, holding Fish’s bowl. He tells Fish that the world is illogical. Mary comes in and sits on his bed. She doesn’t try to cheer him up with platitudes. Instead, she says, "You know what I think? I think you’re sad because you wanted to win for you. And Missy wanted to win to help someone else. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to win. But there’s something special about wanting to help."

End credits. If you’d like a direct transcript or specific dialogue, I can point you toward legal sources like CBS or streaming platforms where the episode is available. Let me know how else I can help! Missy brings her clunky metal detector and a

The episode opens with Sheldon (age 9) in his room, methodically observing a fish bowl. His fish, simply named "Fish," swims in lazy circles. Sheldon has been tracking Fish’s behavior for weeks, concluding that its life is monotonous but predictable — and he likes predictability.