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Aug 1, 2024, 11:58:08 PM8/1/24
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How I Met Your Mother is coming back to Netflix! The beloved CBS sitcom left the streamer back in 2017, and fans were likely not very pleased with it. Although the series is currently streaming in full on Hulu, it will soon return to Netflix. According to TVLine, HIMYM is set to make its grand return to Netflix on June 3. Disney has licensed 14 shows to the streamer on a non-exclusive basis, meaning whatever Disney-owned platform, such as Hulu or Disney+, the show is streaming on will continue even while on Netflix.

HIMYM, which ran for nine seasons, was produced by Disney-owned 20th Television. The new deal will last for 18 months for each series, meaning that How I Met Your Mother should be remaining on Netflix at least through the end of 2025 unless the deal is extended. Since the show won't be coming to the streamer until June, that is still quite some time. However, at least fans will now have something to look forward to in the new year, and it's going to be exciting to have it back.

News of HIMYM coming to Netflix come not long after its reboot was canceled. Starring Hilary Duff, How I Met Your Father had a similar plot to its predecessor, only it was Duff's Sophie trying to find "The One" and her future self, portrayed by Kim Cattrall, explaining on-screen to her off-screen son how she met his father. Hulu canceled the series over the summer after two seasons despite so much more still needing to be told. As of now, it doesn't seem like the series has found a new home, and it's unknown if it was even being shopped around. However, now that Duff is pregnant, it seems to have been the better decision so she can focus on her family.

Other shows that will be coming to Netflix either in 2024 or early 2025 include The Wonder Years reboot, This Is Us, My Wife & Kids, The Resident, Reba, Lost, Home Improvement, and more. It's still going to be a while for How I Met Your Mother's return to Netflix, but at least the series is streaming on Hulu, so those with a subscription are able to watch it as much as they want. Make sure to stream HIMYM on Netflix when it finally drops on the streamer on June 3, 2024.

How I Met Your Mother was one of the most popular sitcoms on Netflix but why did the show leave the streaming platform, and will it return someday? How I Met Your Mother debuted in 2005 and put together a great comic ensemble, including Neil Patrick Harris, Jason Segel, and Alyson Hannigan (Buffy The Vampire Slayer). The show is set in Manhattan and has a unique premise for a sitcom, where main character Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor) narrates from the future to his children how he met and fell in love with their mother.

It didn't take long for How I Met Your Mother to become a success and the show ran for nine seasons, ending in 2014. The show played up the mystery of who Ted would eventually fall for, with Robin - played by Cobie Smulders (The Avengers) - being the most obvious suspect. The finale of the show proved somewhat controversial to fans when it revealed Ted eventually married a woman named Tracy, who died prior to Ted recounting his story to their children. His kids then point out he's obviously still in love with Robin and he should tell her. Some felt the finale disregarded a lot of character development for the sake of putting Ted and Robin together in the end, which prompted a vocal backlash.

With over 200 episodes, How I Met Your Mother is a very bingeable series, which is why it found a comfortable home on Netflix. The streaming platform has perfected the art of binging a show, but sadly for fans of HIMYM, the show departed the platform in November 2017. Following a 2017 deal between Hulu and Fox, most of the latter's major shows, including How I Met Your Mother and Futurama, wound up as Hulu exclusives.

Netflix is aiming to build a library of exclusive content that can't be found elsewhere, so if How I Met Your Mother is available to stream on another service, then its unlikely to return to Netflix in the near future. Classic TV shows have become big business to streaming platforms as they're consistently popular with audiences. This is why Netflix paid a handsome $100 million figure to retain evergreen sitcom Friends.

Following reports The Office might be leaving Netflix, the platform clarified the Steve Carrell series will remain until at least 2021. Fans of HIMYM can currently find the show streaming on Hulu, alongside series like Bob's Burgers and Seinfeld. It appears that for the foreseeable future, How I Met Your Mother is unlikely to return to Netflix.

The series was loosely inspired by Thomas and Bays' friendship when they both lived in New York.[1] The vast majority of the episodes (196 out of 208) were directed by Pamela Fryman. The other directors were Rob Greenberg (7 episodes), Michael Shea (4 episodes), and Neil Patrick Harris (1 episode).

Known for its non-contemporary structure, humor, and incorporation of dramatic elements, How I Met Your Mother was popular throughout its run. It received positive reviews initially, but reception became more mixed as the seasons went on.[2][3][4] The show was nominated for 91 awards and received 21. In 2010, Alyson Hannigan won the People's Choice Award for Favorite TV Comedy Actress. In 2012, seven years after its premiere, the series won the People's Choice Award for Favorite Network TV Comedy, and Neil Patrick Harris won the award for Favorite TV Comedy Actor twice.

The series follows the adventures of Ted Mosby (played by Josh Radnor) and his love life as a single man. His stories are narrated by Bob Saget as Ted Mosby 25 years later as he tells them to his adolescent children - Luke and Penny.

The story goes into a flashback and starts in 2005 with 27-year-old Ted Mosby living in New York City and working as an architect. The narrative deals primarily with his best friends. These include the long-lasting couple Marshall Eriksen (Jason Segel), a law student and Lily Aldrin (Alyson Hannigan), a kindergarten teacher, who have been dating for almost nine years when Marshall proposes, as well as womanizing playboy Barney Stinson (Neil Patrick Harris), and Canadian news reporter Robin Scherbatsky (Cobie Smulders). All of the characters' lives are entwined. The series explores many storylines, including a "will they or won't they" relationship between Robin and each of the two single male friends, Marshall and Lily's relationship, and the ups and downs of the characters' careers.

The show's frame story depicts Ted (voice of Bob Saget, uncredited) verbally retelling the story to his son Luke (David Henrie) and daughter Penny (Lyndsy Fonseca) as they sit on the couch in the year 2030. This future-set frame is officially the show's "present day", and How I Met Your Mother exploits this framing device in numerous ways: to depict and re-depict events from multiple points of view; to set up jokes using quick and sometimes multiple flashbacks nested within the oral retelling; to substitute visual, verbal, or aural euphemisms for activities Ted does not want to talk about with his children (sexual practices, use of illicit substances, vulgar language, etc.).

While the traditional love story structure begins when the romantic leads first encounter each other, How I Met Your Mother does not introduce Ted's wife (Cristin Milioti) until the eighth-season finale and only announces her full name, Tracy McConnell, during the series finale. Her first name, Tracy, is mentioned in the first season, at the end of episode nine.

How I Met Your Mother was inspired by Carter Bays and Craig Thomas' idea to "write about our friends and the stupid stuff we did in New York", where they previously worked as writers for Late Show with David Letterman, among others.[1] The two drew from their friendship in creating the characters. Ted is based loosely on Bays, and Marshall and Lily are based loosely on Thomas and his wife.[5][6] Thomas' wife Rebecca was initially reluctant to have a character based on her but agreed if they could get Alyson Hannigan to play her. Hannigan was looking to do more comedy work and was available.[5] Josh Radnor and Jason Segel, who were cast as Ted and Marshall, respectively, were not well known, although Segel had been a cast member on the short-lived Freaks and Geeks and a recurring guest star on Judd Apatow's follow-up show, Undeclared. The role of Barney was initially envisioned as a "John Belushi-type character"[7] before Neil Patrick Harris won the role after being invited to an audition by the show's casting director Megan Branman.[8] Pamela Fryman invited Bob Saget to be the voiceover narrator, Future Ted, explaining to him that the show would be like The Wonder Years but "kind of into the future".[9] Saget either went to the television studio and recorded the narration while watching the episode, or did so separately and rerecorded with the episode if necessary.[10] He normally did not attend table readings but did so for the last episode.[11]

According to an Entertainment Weekly article, the writers adopted facets of each main actor's personality and incorporated them into their characters. This includes Neil Patrick Harris' skills with magic, Jason Segel's passion for songwriting, Alyson Hannigan's absent-mindedness while pregnant, and Josh Radnor's intellectualism.[14]

MacLaren's, an Irish bar in the middle of New York City, in which a lot of the show is set, is loosely based on four favorite bars of Bays, Thomas, and others' from the Late Show staff. Others include: McGee's, a Midtown tavern near the Ed Sullivan Theater where the Late Show is taped; McHale's, a legendary Hell's Kitchen bar which closed in 2006; Chumley's, a since-closed historic Greenwich Village pub; and Fez, another closed bar on the Upper West Side.[15] McGee's had a mural that Bays and Thomas both liked and wanted to incorporate into the show.[16] The name for the bar is from Carter Bays' assistant, Carl MacLaren; the bartender in the show is also named Carl.[17]

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