Alex on How I Met Your Mother, and what the actor who plays Ted Mosby means for a generation.<\/em><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Years ago, two close friends told me about an idea they had been discussing that involved each of us coming up with a list of 10 media products that sort of represent who we are, media that have had a big effect on our lives in some way. Walking home from their apartment, I was surprised at how easy it was; I had my list complete by the time I got home. I wouldn\u2019t change any of the list or their accompanying explanations now, and these were television shows, movies, and music that were important to me to the point that they almost certainly shaped who I am now. This blog probably doesn\u2019t exist without that list, much like it definitely doesn’t exist without a certain book on that list, nor is it the same format without an important movie. And that\u2019s why Ted Mosby terrifies me.<\/p>\n How I Met Your Mother is, all things considered, a wildly underrated show, probably due to its multi-camera sitcom format and its occasional slips into all-out corniness. The show is primarily about Ted Mosby\u2019s (Josh Radnor) quest to find \u2018the One\u2019 (see what I mean about the corniness?), but it is also about his more general life experiences with friends Marshall Erikson (Jason Segel), Lily Aldrin (Alyson Hannigan), Robin Scherbatsky (Cobie Smulders) and Barney Stinson (Neil Patrick Harris). And while How I Met Your Mother may appear to be a typical laugh track sitcom, it is also funny in semi-unique ways, as well as being interesting in a way that seems to be wholly original for sitcoms.<\/p>\n The reason the show is as funny as it is has much to do with the way its writers use phrasing and wordplay, particularly in the way the show employs an incredible amount of puns. An article I read months ago (that I can sadly no longer locate) realistically compared the show to Seinfeld in the way many of its characters\u2019 phrases, such as \u2018yadda yadda yadda,\u2019 are often used reflexively by the show\u2019s fans in their own lives. While How I Met Your Mother will never resonate culturally like Seinfeld did, and it\u2019s doubtful any sitcom ever really will again, the same general idea applies. A How I Met Your Mother fan will find that a simple word like \u2018awesome\u2019 becomes an integral part of their vocabulary for the first time since they were twelve, and this same fan might have also reflexively saluted upon reading the term \u2018General Idea\u2019 in the previous sentence. These are terms that stick with the viewer like seemingly no other show\u2019s dialogue does. How I Met Your Mother\u2019s best jokes and recurring ideas are essentially the comedy version of ridiculously catchy pop songs; these lines will be in your head until the world ends.<\/p>\n That is not to say that all How I Met Your Mother jokes are as disposable as your average Britney Spears song, however, and quite often the show\u2019s writers simply put a name to a common aspect of normal human life. Think revertigo, which explains how Lily reverts back to a younger version of herself when she is hanging out with a friend specific to that period in their life. She suddenly walks, talks and acts completely differently, presumably in accordance with how her and her friend Michelle acted years ago. Not only is the show funny and memorable, it is often sometimes helpful when explaining aspects of your own everyday life.<\/p>\n This isn\u2019t the only way that dialogue in this show generally seems to ring truer than most sitcom dialogue. Even though the show exists in a multi-camera sitcom set-up with a laugh track, elements that inherently remove realism, the characters in How I Met Your Mother still seem to speak like one would expect a 20-something to speak. Modern media references abound, as do references to lost media of the characters\u2019 childhoods. There also tends to be more realistic discussion of sex, friendship, break-ups and a variety of other things than you would find on most modern sitcoms. The producers and actors even seem to go out of their way to make sure the audience not only sees how characters look when they say a line, but also how the other characters are reacting to that line. And while they might do this to the point where it is a fault, it still enhances the show; most sitcoms only show the reaction of the next character to speak while the others sit stoically, but How I Met Your Mother realizes that\u2019s not how people actually react in group conversation. A silent glance between two people can be loaded with meaning, and this show seems to recognize that. And like How I Met Your Mother is good at explicitly discussing and showing aspects of a regular life, it is also surprisingly good at implicitly reflecting other aspects.<\/p>\n A couple of summers ago, after having already watched the first four seasons of the show once, I became obsessed with How I Met Your Mother for a few months. Obsessed is a word that always sounds like hyperbole, but I assure you this was legitimate obsession, as defined on Wiktionary. I wouldn’t go to sleep, no matter how late I got home or how early I had to get up for work, without at least watching one or two episodes. The night I was asked by my friends to come up with my list of ten influential media products, I probably ate a sandwich and watched a few episodes when I got home. I went through the show four consecutive times before I finally tired of it; I was probably half an inch away from writing fan fiction for a musical episode where Robin and Barney join the New York Knicks (complete with a Walt Frazier cameo). The level of enjoyment I got from this show confused me at the time, as its shortcomings are painfully obvious even when you only watch each episode once. I explained to a friend that I didn’t know why I loved the show as much as I do, and her response was a semi-perturbed, “I like it because it’s funny<\/em>,” which might as well have been \u201cshut up, stop trying to break down why you like everything.\u201d I do like How I Met Your Mother because it’s funny, but it’s not like it is 30 Rock funny, or even Archer funny. What sets the show apart, and allows me to obsess over it, is the way Ted Mosby\u2019s story is told. Each episode seems to take place in the present, but the entirety of the show to this point has actually taken place in the year 2030. We\u2019re not watching Ted experience these stories; we\u2019re watching him tell his kids about them decades after the fact. We\u2019re being shown not how these events actually happened, but how Ted remembers them happening and visualizes the memories. It is this penchant for time shifting that allows sitcom fans like myself to treat How I Met Your Mother like it\u2019s fucking Lost. (This probably makes MacLaren\u2019s bartender Carl the show\u2019s version of the Smoke Monster.)<\/p>\n