So Lily and Marshall moved to the suburbs, 46 minutes away from the gang by train. The booth at McClaren's lacked a certain married couple. Ted, Robin and Barney were in a state of shock. Barney, of course, moved quickly to appoint himself the leader of the gang. The night took them to a strip club where they ran into doppelganger Lily and her hulking boyfriend. Barney immediately dubbed them new Lily and new Marshall. Ted spent the evening calling and leaving voicemails for Marshall and Lily because he missed his friends so much. Robin and Kevin were involved in early relationship stuff in which neither wanted to appear as the boring never-do-a-damn-thing person.
Meanwhile, Marshall and Lily were settling into their new home. Mickey hadn't left the city yet, so he assisted his daughter and son-in-law settle into their home. Mickey, though, struggled letting go of the house he used to live in. In each room, at each outlet, Mickey reminded Marshall about his experiences in the home. Eventually, Marshall tires of the overbearing father-in-law and orders him out the next day. Unfortunately, Marshall plugs a lamp into an outlet which causes the power to go out in the entire home. You see, Marshall chose not to listen to Mickey and paid for it. The story turned into a parody of Paranormal Activity and Gamemaster. There were funny bits throughout the story. Chris Elliott and Jason Segal are very funny individuals who will usually make something work even if it shouldn't (e.g. Elliott's entire role in Scary Movie 2). The heart of the story was cheesy (even the show poked fun at itself) about the importance of knowing one's home and one's family or something. Mickey just wanted to feel included, to belong; and Marshall just wanted to feel like a homeowner, his own man, not someone in the shadow of his wife's father. Both got what they wanted, and Mickey even created his only lucrative board game through the experience (as Future Ted informed us).
The Ted/Robin/Barney story was simple and effective. The empty booth at McClaren's represented the emptiness they felt with their friends in Long Island. There were jokes and good fun before the characters arrived at the emotional heart of their story, which was distance does make the heart grow fonder but it's also no reason for them not to see Marshall and Lily as often as they would in Manhattan. Future Ted told us that none of them would remain within walking distance of McClaren's for the rest of their lives. Indeed, as people grow and change, friends move to different areas, and nothing lasts forever; however, the place where friends meet and converse and enjoy one another's company isn't important as much as just meeting and conversing anywhere is important. As Future Ted said: the McClaren's booth didn't matter as much as just having a booth.
I thought the stories worked. HIMYM's been effective when telling these universal stories of adulthood. I'm not sure how significant "46 Minutes" will be in the grand scheme of the series though. At the TCA panel, Bays and Thomas declined to commit to an end-date. The show runners are prepared to run the show beyond the end of their current contract. If the show has 3 or 4 years left, I'd like the series to continue expanding, to move away from the bar scene and into other areas of adulthood. The characters are aging, changing, confronting parenthood and issues of marriage. They're becoming too old for the lives we watched them lead in season 1.
One other thought:
-There were two alternate credit sequences. One featured Barney Stinson as the leader of the gang; the other depicted the gang with New Lily and Marshall.
THE YOUTUBE CLIP OF THE WEEK
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