The Slap Bet is
one of the more popular running gags/storylines in the series, so in the final
season Bays and Thomas want to give closure to the fans on this long-running
thread. In this episode, viewers learn about the history of the slap set as a
homage to kung-fu movies and mythic Eastern thought. The episode is notable for
one reason: Marshall’s nonsense throughout the episode is for the sake of
nonsense. No stirring third act epiphanies happen to Marshall or Barney or to
any of the other characters. Marshall wants to slap Barney, wants Barney to
anticipate it, fear it, dread it. Marshall slaps Barney. It hurts. The End.
Marshall’s
mythic tale of slap apprenticeship, which he undertook to make more memorable
the slap though the mere telling of the tale makes the memorable since nothing
Marshall tells happened, is silly nonsense. Barney reacts badly to each part of
the story, its dramatic turns, its frightening bits of slapping trees and slaps
so fast one can pour tea and eat noodles before the one slapped realizes what
happened. The gang backs up Marshall’s story with affirmative nods of the head.
I though it all nonsense, which isn’t necessarily a criticism since I enjoy
nonsense. Barney’s spasmodic dysphonia to each change in the story enhanced the
drama and also was in-character for the character. Barney’s stuck with the
mindset of a freshman frat boy. I wouldn’t doubt the writers to talk themselves
into Barney believing the story, even though he’s made up similar tales of feat
and adventure and triumph so he should’ve called Marshall on that. I soon
realized Barney complied with a role he needed to fill for the memory Ted draws
from in telling the story to his children. Marshall’s story has three
characters with specific roles to fill for his role as the willing student, the
learning student, like the karate kid. Along the way he meets his
guides/teachers, who are integral to his development into the Kung-Fu Panda, or
whatever.
At the end, and
after the slap, Barney makes known his knowledge that Marshall spun his grand
tale for the sake of a memory. Of course, he recoils upon Marshall reminding
him of the last slap Marshall has to use. Bays and Thomas get to tell another
slap story, which isn’t great, because “Slapsgiving 3: Slappapointment in
Slapmarra” isn’t a good episode. The story-within-the-story is pointless, the
actual story is meaningless filler, and it continued HIMYM’s use of
stereotypical foreigners. It took the gang back to the bar again, but MacClaren
episodes have been terrible this season (but that’s every episode but one). As
always, I didn’t laugh. Telling funny jokes is the minimum requirement for a
sitcom.
I didn’t care
that Marshall delayed his Important Conversation, because of the slap bet, nor
did I care about the absence of Cristin Milioti’s The Mother. Lily and Marshall
will kiss and make-up next week. The Mother will give Robin a ukulele made of
flowers or something like that. The best news about How I Met Your Mother
during the holiday break was that its finale airs March 31.
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