Young Sheldon | S03e09 Aiff
Sheldon, seeing the position as a logical challenge (and a way to enforce rules efficiently), agrees.
Later, a shy freshman named Emily admits she’s homesick and failing calculus. Sheldon—initially unempathetic—recalls Kevin’s words. He sits with Emily, helps her with derivatives, and quietly changes her dorm assignment to be nearer to the cafeteria (her main anxiety trigger). Word spreads. The students warm to him—not as a friend, but as a useful, quirky ally. young sheldon s03e09 aiff
She lets Georgie handle Pete. By the end, Pete has lost $80 without realizing he was being fleeced. Georgie pockets a $20 finder’s fee. Meemaw warns him: “Don’t let your mama find out. She’ll think I’m corrupting you.” Georgie laughs: “She’s been corrupting me since she taught me to shortchange the lemonade stand.” The Coopers have dinner at the dining table. Sheldon explains his failure as RA, still baffled by human emotions. Missy says, “So you tried to boss people and they hated you. Welcome to every day of my life.” George laughs. Mary tells Sheldon she’s proud he tried. Sheldon, seeing the position as a logical challenge
Meemaw wants to ban Pete. Georgie suggests a different approach: let Pete keep playing, but charge him a “stupid tax” (higher rake on each hand). Meemaw is impressed. “You’ve got the family gift—seeing the angle.” He sits with Emily, helps her with derivatives,
Then Georgie, smugly, offers to pay for everyone’s dessert with “tips from work.” Mary asks what work. Georgie says, “Helping Meemaw with… accounting.” Mary squints but lets it go—too tired to fight.
By the end, Sheldon decides he doesn’t want to be RA permanently. He tells Sturgis: “I improved their efficiency by 12%, but they preferred inefficiency with autonomy. Illogical, but consistent with human behavior.” Sturgis smiles and says that’s called learning . Back at the Cooper house, Mary is stressed. The church’s Thanksgiving play is a disaster, and she’s been put in charge of props. The script calls for a “blowtorch” in a scene about St. Dunstan (who, in legend, defeated the devil with tongs and a blowtorch-like tool). Mary can’t find a safe, convincing prop.
A senior student, Kevin, corners Sheldon and explains that being an RA isn’t about rules—it’s about trust. Kevin says, “You’re not our dad. You’re the guy we call when someone’s too drunk to find their room.” Sheldon is baffled but files this away.