90 users online
 
12.08.
Show us your room! 16:36
and win a prize!
Bones 15:55
Season 1
Amber Benson 15:47
on MySpace
Musicvid 15:34
Angel and Spike
The 10 best Marvel Comics 10:38
Astonishing X-Men is on the list
FanArt Special 00:12
Buffy's Surprise Party
Another guest at BE Blow... 00:03
Guess who it is...
11.08.
New Michelle pics 21:29
She was on a party yesterday
Musicvid Special! 20:02
Today about "Cruel Intentions"
Michelle Trachtenberg 19:01
Small Mention on Access Hollywood
Bunnies! 18:45
BUNNIES!
Michelle Candids 18:07
"New Old Pictures"
Eliza Dushku 17:44
in HQ!
The Rock 16:28
And his film career
Cordy & Xander figures 11:13
From The Wish and Chosen
Summer in Australia 06:13
Summer for Supanova Again!
10.08.
Michelle Candids 20:16
New Michelle Trachtenberg Pics
Sarah Candids 20:07
Older SMG Candids
Nathan Fillion Is ... 18:43
.. The Next Bruce Campbell?
Musicvid Special! 18:17
Faith out of control
 


 

How I met your mother - most catchphrase happy show!

New York Magazine names Alyson Hannigan's shows, "How I Met Your Mother", the most catchphrase-happy show on TV.
How I Met Your Mother, on CBS, is a charming, smartly crafted sitcom; it’s also the most catchphrase-happy show on TV. The characters, led by the wiseacre Barney (Neil Patrick Harris, pictured), fling undercooked phrases at the screen just to see which ones will stick. Along with Barney’s twin battle cries, “Suit up!” and “Legendary!,” the show has field-tested, in one episode alone, “the lemon law” (a five-minute rule for rejecting a date), the “self-click” (clinking your own glass for a toast no one accepts), and “bro-by-extension” (your best bud’s fiancée). This isn’t a comedy, it’s a televised glossary.


It used to be enough for a sitcom to launch one lunchbox-friendly catchphrase, be it “What you talkin’ about, Willis?” or “Dy-no-mite!” In fact, that corny, here-it-comes moment when an actor turns one eye to the audience became such a cliché that shows in the eighties, like Family Ties and Cheers, steered clear of self-conscious coinages. Then came Seinfeld. The show’s main joke—venerating minutiae—turned it into a catchphrase factory: man-hands, sponge-worthy, not that there’s anything wrong with that, etc. Or rather, yadda yadda yadda.


How I Met Your Mother takes this approach to a ludicrous extreme—which, it turns out, is both funny and a canny act of self-preservation. Blogs and online forums are written in an ever-evolving patois, stitched together from inside jokes between fans. (The Simpsons alone has spawned its own quasi-language.) So a catchphrase that actually catches on can make a show part of the cultural conversation, literally and instantly. Back when sitcoms had a whole season to find an audience, they could afford to lure people in with funny characters. Now shows have about two episodes to hook you, and catchphrases are much flashier bait. The catchphrase–as–punch line is simple evolution: It’s survival of the glibbest.


[by Róisín (NY Metro) ] [0 comments]

You have to be logged in to comment. 
 

LOGIN

User:    

Pass:    

   

Login Problems?
Signup (Member)

COMMUNITY

  [GER] Board
  [ENG] Board
  [ESP] Board
  Add News
  News Archive

  Imprint

AD


  
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox. Angel-The Series, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox.Other Series, their characters and logos are property of the proper right owners.
(c)Slayerverse 2006 [Imprint]