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Related Videos. See more ». Official Sites: Cameo Instagram See more ». Children: None. Parents: Radnor, Alan Radnor, Carol. Relatives: Radnor, Melanie sibling See more ». Edit Did You Know? Personal Quote: Well, I stopped drinking. That was actually a big deal. I didn't go through any harrowing rock-bottom experience.
I just made a decision to stop drinking. Trivia: He was an extra in the movie Cigarettes where he appears for a few seconds at the entrance of a punk club 30th min 19th sec of the movie. He doesn't have a line. Star Sign: Leo. Getting Started Contributor Zone ». Edit page. Clear your history. Robin tells him that she does not want to mess up their friendship.
She then asks if they still have their "forty-deal", but Ted says that he can't do that as he doesn't want to leave any hope of them ending up together. He asks her if she loves him and she says no. Marshall then goes to Robin and tells her that she has to move out, which she does. Later, Ted gives the apartment to Marshall and Lily which they gladly accept, being bored of their life in the suburbs.
When Ted, Marshall and Barney embark on another "trilogy time", Ted thinks that there is something wrong with him, as he still hasn't settled down with someone. But Marshall comforts Ted, saying that he has a good feeling about Ted's life in In a flash-forward to , Marshall and Barney set up for another "trilogy time". Though Barney complains that Ted is breaking their tradition by bringing a girl, he and Marshall make an exception because Ted loves the girl, who is revealed to be his infant daughter.
After the birth of Lily and Marshall's baby , Ted talks to Robin about how he wants a family. She encourages him to go after the one who got away, Victoria. He gives her a call and invites her to MacLaren's. When she arrives, she is in a wedding dress. Victoria tells him that today is her wedding with Klaus, but she has always had. Ted in the back of her mind. After deliberating with the gang, he takes her into the car, seemingly to driving off into the sunset with her. However, he tells her "I was left at the altar and it almost killed me.
You're someone's fiance, and I have to respect that", and says he's going to drive her back to the church. Once he gets near the church, he sees flashbacks of Victoria and drives past the church, where Ted and Victoria hold hands and drive off into the sunset. Season 8 Ted starts to go out with Victoria. He dates her over the summer, while Barney and Quinn plan their wedding, Marshall and Lily raise Marvin, and Robin starts to date her secret crush Nick.
Victoria wants Ted to takes things more seriously, in the fall of Ted proposes to her and she says yes but he has to stop being friends with Robin. Ted thinks he can do that but realizes he can't and breaks up with Victoria.
Later The GNB tower opens. Ted asks Robin to be his date. She accepts but later Ted tells her that Barney is proposing to Patrice. He convinces her to stop him.
She finds out that Barney actually was proposing to her, and he does. She says yes. Robin asks Ted to help her find her locket. The two can't find it. She thinks it is a sign that she shouldn't marry Barney. Ted calls Stella and she says it could be in her storage unit in Los Angeles.
Ted flies out there to retrieve the locket. Ted doesn't find it so he calls Victoria. She has it and over nights it to Ted. But Ted's crazy ex-girlfriend intercepts it and throws it into the pond in Central Park. Ted dives in to retrieve it. Ted shows up at the Farhampton Inn, and gives Robin a picture of the gang. Ted reveals to Lily, Barney, and then Robin that he is moving to Chicago. He helps Robin look for a drunk Barney on the wedding day. He finally lets go of her.
Robin starts to panic on her wedding day. She tells Ted that she should be with him. Ted says I don't want to hear that. Robin decides to marry Barney. He stays in New York which stuns Marshall and Lily. He asks Tracy out on a date. On the date she reveals that she just broke up with her boyfriend, and isn't ready to be dating, but charmed by Ted, she makes an exception.
A year later Ted takes her back to the Farhampton Inn and proposes. In The mother tells Ted that they can't get married in September because she is pregnant with their daughter Penny. Robin reveals that she and Barney got divorced.
In , Ted is on vacation with Tracy. She goes into labor with their son Luke. In , Ted meets Barney, Lily, and Marshall at the bar. Marshall reveals that he is going to be a judge. Barney hits on girls.
In , the gang minus Robin is at Robots Versus Wrestlers, and Marshall asks Ted if he is going to tie the knot and Ted says he will soon.
In , Ted runs into Robin with Penny. They are very excited to see each other. Later that year Ted re-proposes to Tracy. Robin shows up at the wedding. Ted gets finally gets married. In Ted, tells his kids the story of how he met their mother. The kids realize the story is really about how their dad loves Robin. They encourage Ted to ask out Robin, because their mom has been gone for six years now. Ted shows up at Robin's with the Blue French Horn and she smiles as the series ends.
A deleted scene confirmed that they rekindled their romantic relationship. Ted of is the one narrating the entire series and telling the main plot to his kids of how he met their mother. It was revealed in Wait For It that the kids already knew the short version of how their parents met.
The detailed story seems to be his way of telling the kids how much Robin has meant to him over the years. Future Ted is voiced by Bob Saget. Ted can be easily described as a hopeless romantic, being a strong believer in destiny and constantly searches for his soul mate believing that fate will eventually cause their meeting.
This has led to Ted believing that most of the women he has had relationships with could be "The One" and this has also led to many failed relationships, perhaps his most notable one being with Robin.
Ted's belief in finding "The One" can often come across as being hopeless and even idiotic. He has believed that most women he has gone out with he was destined to be with while almost every single one, led to bitter disappointment yet he never seems to learn from these mistakes. He always goes into a relationship full of optimism that this one will be different than the last only to have this belief destroyed and crushed. These constant attempts to find "The One" for him often result in the annoyance of the rest of the group and can make Ted look incredibly stupid.
For example, in the case of Jeanette Peterson , Ted constantly tried to justify the woman's blatant attempts of stalking him as being romantic, a fact everyone told him was obviously false.
Another example of Ted's short-sightedness when it comes to relationships would be his relationship with Zoey , who was protesting the destruction of a building to make way for Ted's first major architecture achievement. This led to her sabotaging his career, manipulating him, arguing with him and generally ruining his life. Yet despite all these facts, Ted's solution was to start going out with her.
This relationship came across as illogical and not going to end well by almost everyone except Ted. This short-sightedness is notable in almost every relationship he had before meeting The mother and was mainly caused by Ted's hopeless belief in finding "The One. Ted has several flaws like correcting grammar and he is pretentious as well. In Not a Father's Day , Robin points out how Ted already acts like a father to the group: always making weird jokes and doesn't tip really well.
Only Robin and Barney are people you would want to hang out with, and even then you would get tired of being with Barney within about 20 minutes. That the show is as likeable as it is, despite these characters, is a testament to the jokes and storytelling format. The show is funny, but that How I Met Your Mother is so watchable is not because of its characters, but despite some of them. Lily is the decider, it seems. Lily also does not tell her fucking husband about her massive credit card debts and shopping addiction.
Unlikeable Ted Mosby is an architect, or by now I suppose a professor of architecture, and judging by the size of his New York apartment, he is financially successful. Matt Damon appears to be a cool person and seemingly everybody who meets him is willing to back that up, while Katherine Heigl kind of seems like a terrible person, which Judd Apatow and Seth Rogen seem to go out of their way to mention.
We have seen Damon as everything from an uber-serious spy with a social conscience to a goofball conjoined twin, and since he is an actor with enough success to be able to pick and choose his parts, we can sort of imagine that Damon himself falls somewhere between those two characters. Due to an overwhelming lack of evidence or an abundance of it, depending how you look at it , we can sort of judge Radnor as a similar type of person to Mosby. But while Mosby only occasionally talks about wanting to write some short stories, Radnor seems to be able to actually convince people to read his screenplays.
Josh Radnor not only plays Sam, but he also wrote and directed the movie, and likely sent out mix CDs with the script featuring the indie music he wanted playing during each particular scene. The movie is a textbook case of the Look at How Indie We Can Be syndrome that has become prevalent in every movie written and directed by the lead on a network sitcom, but is also commonly found in indies directed by people who never acted on CBS or ABC. The interesting aspect of doihavetotypethistitleagain actually comes in how similar Ted Mosby and Sam Wexler are.
Sam seems exactly like how Ted would have ended up if Ted gave up a career in architecture to pursue a career writing or hosting a new version of his Dr. X radio show. Both Ted and Sam are annoying in the same way, and they each seem to have an inflated sense of self, although Sam even more so than Ted.
At one point, Sam explains to his love interest Mississippi that he refuses to go see her sing because he once saw his college girlfriend act in a play, hated her in it, and was then forced to break up with her because the college girlfriend actually believed she had talent. As such, Radnor positions his happythankyoumoreplease character in a predictably arrogant role. While Ted Mosby is professionally successful, he seems to harbour slight regrets about never becoming a writer, while Sam Wexler did just that but is not as successful as Ted.
Ted Mosby, like most sitcom leads, is an everyman character, one who is meant to remind us of ourselves. But what these characters, and actor, show is kind of a crossroads of sorts.
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