But Georgieâs joke is also a wink through the fourth wall at the CBS sitcomâs own in-studio audience. After making his name with multi-camera comfort food like âTwo and a Half Men,â co-creator and power producer Chuck Lorre has taken a detour into a more polished, single-camera style â not just with âYoung Sheldon,â but latter-era efforts like âThe Kominsky Methodâ on Netflix and âBookieâ on Max. With âGeorgie & Mandy,â Lorre (along with co-creators Steven Molaro and Steve Holland, both of âYoung Sheldonâ) is back in both his and his audienceâs comfort zone, a shift the show makes explicit in less than a minute of screen time.
âGeorgie & Mandyâ even brings back other âYoung Sheldonâ cast members to translate their appeal into this new, or rather old, rhythm. In the final episodes of âYoung Sheldon,â Georgie fell in love with and impregnated Mandy (Emily Osment), a local news anchor 12 years his senior. âGeorgie & Mandyâ sees the couple and their newborn move in with Mandyâs parents, judgmental Audrey (Rachel Bay Jones) and car shop owner Jim (Will Sasso), who takes Georgie under his wing and gives him a job. We know from Jerry OâConnellâs appearances as Georgie on âThe Big Bang Theoryâ that he will thrive in this line of work, but for now, he and Mandy are seriously strapped for cash. Mandyâs brother Connor (Dougie Baldwin), a music obsessive, is a socially awkward nerd whose presence evokes Sheldon and his future roommates for extra cross-franchise commonality.
Though Mandyâs family is the primary focus, the rest of the Coopers are still around, allowing Zoe Perry, Annie Potts and Raegan Revord to reprise their roles as Georgieâs mother, Meemaw and sister. (Sheldon has already departed for grad school at CalTech in Pasadena.) Without a physics genius as its focal point, âGeorgie & Mandyâ has an even folksier feel, grounding itself in the struggles of young working parents to keep themselves afloat. Some storylines, like grieving the recent loss of Georgieâs father to a heart attack, are carried over from âYoung Sheldonâ; others, like an abortive attempt to rent an apartment directly abutting a train track, are more specific to the new show.
âGeorgie & Mandyâ is just starting to carve out its own identity within the universe (pun very much intended) started by âThe Big Bang Theory.â Critics received only two episodes in advance, so itâs hard to deliver any definitive verdict on that effortâs success. But Jones is an enjoyably snarky presence, and Jordan shares a chemistry with Osment thatâs sweet enough to make one forget about the age gap until someone points out Georgie isnât technically old enough to drink. The credits sequence has the two tango through a mood-lit kitchen, their infatuation elevating their plain surroundings.
For viewers, âGeorgie & Mandyâ is a double dose of nostalgia. Itâs an extension of Cooper family lore, a fruitful seed planted by Jim Parsonsâ first âBazinga!â. But itâs also a throwback to the âRoseanneâ school of plainspoken, working class family sitcoms, with some modern add-ins like a subplot about Georgieâs anxiety. âGeorgie & Mandyâ is proud to be a âlaughinâ show,â even if those are out of fashion.
The first episode of âGeorgie & Mandyâs First Marriageâ will air on CBS and stream on Paramount+ on Oct. 17 at 8 p.m. ET, with new episodes airing weekly on Thursdays.