TMC
07-27-2025, 06:13 PM
https://jacksonupperco.com/2025/07/23/the-ten-best-how-i-met-your-mother-episodes-of-season-one/
My main critical interest in this show, however, is how it encapsulates its era. Like Arrested Development, The Office, and 30 Rock, Mother combines “traditional” low-concept sitcom tenets with flashy, “modern” high-concept trappings that provide this type of show a contemporary mid-2000s sexiness, allowing it to distinguish itself from both its peers and its predecessors while offering a fresh hook to viewers who’d otherwise be tired of such familiar fare. Its traditional elements are obvious – for this is, again, another “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com that was common in the wake of Friends’ mainstream success, when every broadcast network was looking to find the next iteration. And its application of the comfortable multi-camera look often associated with these kind of shows only further linked it to this subgenre. It’s a bond that nowadays makes Mother nostalgic in its own right, with a continuity to Friends that suggests an evolution, but during the original run was perhaps a hindrance, forcing comparisons that emphasized clichés, and at a time in our culture when the multi-cam aesthetic was heavily falling out of favor with critical tastemakers, becoming synonymous with overdone hokum and mediocrity, based on the lack of great samples (i.e., Two And A Half Men had nothing on The Office). But that’s where the modern part of Mother kicks in – it’s got a high-concept presentation of its situation that balances the traditional low-concept design and gives this series its unique, individual flavor. It’s nothing metatheatrical, like we’ve seen on so many other named examples from this point in the decade (which winked about their own identities as filmed projects), but it similarly has to do with the show’s storytelling – the way its weekly stories are told. For starters, the title seems to imply the premise: How I Met Your Mother. That is, this is not any ol’ “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com about hot people coupling and uncoupling as they search for their happy romantic endings – it’s a “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com where the lead tells us what its endgame is, as the central character promises to cover an explicitly stated subject: how, he, Ted, met the mother of his future kids.
My main critical interest in this show, however, is how it encapsulates its era. Like Arrested Development, The Office, and 30 Rock, Mother combines “traditional” low-concept sitcom tenets with flashy, “modern” high-concept trappings that provide this type of show a contemporary mid-2000s sexiness, allowing it to distinguish itself from both its peers and its predecessors while offering a fresh hook to viewers who’d otherwise be tired of such familiar fare. Its traditional elements are obvious – for this is, again, another “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com that was common in the wake of Friends’ mainstream success, when every broadcast network was looking to find the next iteration. And its application of the comfortable multi-camera look often associated with these kind of shows only further linked it to this subgenre. It’s a bond that nowadays makes Mother nostalgic in its own right, with a continuity to Friends that suggests an evolution, but during the original run was perhaps a hindrance, forcing comparisons that emphasized clichés, and at a time in our culture when the multi-cam aesthetic was heavily falling out of favor with critical tastemakers, becoming synonymous with overdone hokum and mediocrity, based on the lack of great samples (i.e., Two And A Half Men had nothing on The Office). But that’s where the modern part of Mother kicks in – it’s got a high-concept presentation of its situation that balances the traditional low-concept design and gives this series its unique, individual flavor. It’s nothing metatheatrical, like we’ve seen on so many other named examples from this point in the decade (which winked about their own identities as filmed projects), but it similarly has to do with the show’s storytelling – the way its weekly stories are told. For starters, the title seems to imply the premise: How I Met Your Mother. That is, this is not any ol’ “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com about hot people coupling and uncoupling as they search for their happy romantic endings – it’s a “singles in the city” ensemble hangout rom-com where the lead tells us what its endgame is, as the central character promises to cover an explicitly stated subject: how, he, Ted, met the mother of his future kids.