Barney Stinson Im Single Again Gif

Fictional character on the CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother

Barney Stinson
How I Met Your Female parent character
Barney Stinson HIMYM.jpg

Neil Patrick Harris every bit Barney Stinson

Kickoff appearance "Pilot (2005)"
Terminal appearance "Concluding Forever (2014)"
Created by Carter Bays
Craig Thomas
Portrayed by Neil Patrick Harris
Tanner Maguire
Riley Thomas Stewart
In-universe information
Full name Barnabus Stinson
Nickname The Barnacle
Crawly
Swarley
Gender Male
Occupation PLEASE...! (Provide Legal Exculpation and Sign Everything)[1]
FBI informant[1]
Lifestyle blogger[2]
Family Loretta Stinson (mother)
Jerome Whittaker (father)
Cheryl Whittaker (step-mother)
James Stinson (maternal half-brother)
Jerome "J. J." Whittaker, Jr. (paternal half-brother)
Carly Whittaker (paternal half-sister)
Spouse

Robin Scherbatsky

(m. 2013; div. 2016)

(circulate ending)

(1000. 2013; div. 2016)

(thousand. 2020)

(Alternate DVD catastrophe)
Children Ellie Stinson (daughter, built-in 2020)
Relatives Tom (blood brother-in-law)
Robin Charles Scherbatsky Sr. (father-in-law)
Geneviève Scherbatsky (mother-in-constabulary)
Katie Scherbatsky (sis-in-law)
Eli Stinson (nephew)
Sadie Stinson (niece)
Nationality American

Barnabus Stinson is a fictional character portrayed past Neil Patrick Harris and created by Carter Bays and Craig Thomas for the CBS television series How I Met Your Mother (2005-2014).

One of the show's master characters, Barney is known for his brash, manipulative and opinionated personality. He is a womanizer known for his love of expensive suits, light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation tag, and Scotch whisky. The character uses many 'plays' in his 'playbook' to help him have sex with women. In later on seasons, he has a few serious relationships, then marries, divorces, and has a kid with an unnamed woman from a one-night stand, and then marries the same woman once again(as implied in the alternating ending). Barney's catchphrases included "Suit up!", "Become for Barney", "What up?!", "Stinson out", "Legendary", "Wait for it" (ofttimes combining the ii equally "legen—wait for information technology—dary!"), "Daddy's abode" and "Challenge accepted".

Critics accept praised the grapheme and credited Harris' functioning for much of the show'southward success. Barney is considered the evidence's breakout character.[3]

Development [edit]

The show'south creators envisioned Barney as what Trophy afterwards described as a "big, John Belushi-type grapheme";[4] nonetheless, Megan Branman, the casting director for How I Met Your Mother, invited Harris to audience. He assumed that he was invited solely because the two were friends and did not believe he had a hazard of winning the function. Harris afterwards said: "Since I considered myself in the long shot, I didn't care that much, and I think that allowed a liberty." His audition centered on a scene playing laser tag, and Harris attempted a dive whorl, accidentally knocking over a chair and slamming into a wall in the process. CBS executives enjoyed his playing and soon offered Harris the office.[five] The grapheme is named for a heroin dealer in the James Ellroy novel L.A. Confidential.[ citation needed ]

Character [edit]

Barney Stinson is one of five main characters on How I Met Your Mother. He is a manipulative, oversexed businessman in his thirties who ever wears a adjust, likes women with "daddy bug" and is frequently willing to offering his (sometimes hypocritical) opinion.[5] Throughout the before seasons, Barney is a huge womanizer, and has been described as a "high-functioning sociopath" by his best friend, Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor). Barney has a plethora of strategies and rules designed to meet women, slumber with them, and discard them.[5] Through several seasons of the evidence, four of the main characters are couples, as Ted began dating Robin Scherbatsky (Cobie Smulders) and Ted's roommate Marshall Eriksen (Jason Segel) becomes engaged and after married to Lily Aldrin (Alyson Hannigan). This leaves Barney the only single grapheme, and, according to Harris, Barney is "resentful" that the other characters accept paired upwards. Later on, in season 5, he dates Robin. They terminate up breaking up not long after, in one case they both realize they are making one another miserable.

Harris describes Barney as a homo who "likes to create crazy situations and and so sit back and watch information technology all become down."[vi] He is an opportunist who manipulates any situation so that it goes his way. He is too highly competitive, and will take on "challenges" to complete outlandish tasks in order to prove his worth past oftentimes announcing "Challenge Accepted". He is proud and stubborn, and attempts to stand up past his word no affair what. In "I Heart NJ", for example, he refuses to put down his fist unless someone offers him a fist bump. Past the finish of the episode, he has the same fist elevated in a sling after struggling to keep his fist up throughout the episode. In "Lucky Penny", when the others practise non believe that he can run the New York City Marathon the next twenty-four hours without training, Barney immediately agrees to do then. Although he succeeds, he is unable to walk afterwards. Although he thinks of himself as worldly, Barney is sometimes extremely naive, believing many lies his mother told him well into adulthood, such as assertive that Bob Barker is his father.

Barney, like Harris himself, is an illusionist. His favorite types of magic tricks involve fire, as seen in the 10th episode of the second season, "Single Stamina" and in the fourth episode of the quaternary season, "Intervention". Barney uses magic tricks generally to pick up women. His nearly common method of picking up women is telling them elaborate lies well-nigh himself, oft using an alias. Many of his schemes for picking upward women are in a book he has written called "The Playbook", which is exposed in the episode "The Playbook". He has commitment issues, as evidenced in his reluctance to put a label on his human relationship with Robin and the fact that she is one of the few women he has actually dated since the testify started.

Barney is very well-connected and is the most affluent fellow member of the group. He oftentimes buys expensive items—such as a last-minute aeroplane ticket to San Francisco, thousands of dollars in postage stamps, or two televisions specifically for smashing in frustration—in the spur of the moment. He is also something of a metrosexual; he waxes his chest, enjoys manicures and has an extensive knowledge of designer labels and gourmet food. However, he is also seen to have a gambling problem that he occasionally gets nether control, but to relapse as seen in several episodes such as "Atlantic Urban center", where he has gambling buddies in the Chinese Triad, and "Monday Night Football game".

Although The Early Testify described him as "Utterly devoid of morality", Barney lives by the "Bro Code", his own code of ethics.[seven] Despite his overall questionable graphic symbol, according to creator Craig Thomas, Barney is "a pretty fragile character who's really afraid of being alone. He just wants people to like him, to be important to people, and to accept disciples who follow his discussion."[8] He has displayed a softer, kinder side on several occasions, nevertheless, such as preventing Marshall from sleeping with other women when he and Lily suspension upwardly, and persuading Lily to come back to Marshall.

In "The Slutty Pumpkin Returns", Barney finds out he is one-quarter Canadian due to his grandmother's Canadian beginnings, much to his horror and embarrassment.

Throughout the series, i major character development is apparent in Barney: At the offset of the prove, his character is a womanizer who completely objectifies sex and women and wants nothing to do with dating and relationships. Although he does date Robin in Flavor 5, he resumes his promiscuous lifestyle immediately after they break up. In Seasons six and 7, however, he begins to confront his personal problems, like his relationship with his estranged father and his fright of commitment. Past the time belatedly Flavor 7 rolls around, Barney has finally "grown upward," and has now warmed to the thought of a delivery and marriage, culminating in his proposal to his girlfriend, Quinn. Although he briefly retreats to his escapades after he and Quinn break upward, he does brand one major last bound in his maturity when he burns The Playbook and proposes to Robin in Season 8's two-part episode "The Final Page," after finally admitting to himself that he is still in love with her. Robin accepts and they program their wedding in the second one-half of the season.

The terminal season revolves effectually Barney and Robin's hymeneals weekend. After some apprehension on both their parts, they go married in "The End of the Aisle" later he vows to e'er be honest with her. The series finale, "Last Forever", reveals that, three years after their nuptials, they become divorced because Robin'due south hectic travel schedule prevents them from spending whatsoever time together. Barney returns to a lifestyle of meaningless sexual practice with multiple women for several years afterward, reasoning that if he could not class a lasting relationship with Robin it was non going to happen with anyone else, until he gets one of his i-night stands meaning. He hates the idea of existence a father until the twenty-four hours his child – a girl named Ellie – is built-in. He falls in love with her at start sight and becomes a devoted father, turning away from his player lifestyle for proficient. The series' alternating ending implies that post-obit Ted's wedding, Barney and Robin somewhen got back together. [nine]

Childhood and family [edit]

A few references have been offered to identify Barney'due south Birthday: In "Natural History", Barney claims he was vi years old on July 23, 1981. This puts his altogether somewhere between July 24, 1974 and July 23, 1975; in "Zoo or False", Ted says Barney was built-in seven years afterward the moon landing (which occurred in July 1969), In "Columns" set in 2007, Barney gives his age as 31, further confirming his birth year is 1976. In "The Boozer Train" Marshall states Barney is a Scorpio which places his birthday betwixt October 23 and November 21, 1976.

He was raised in Port Richmond, Staten Isle, by his female parent Loretta (younger version voiced by Megan Mullally, played by Frances Conroy), who was apparently very promiscuous.[v] His father proved to exist an ongoing mystery in the series. When Barney was young, he asked his mother who his father was, and as The Price Is Right happened to be on TV at the time, she pointed to Bob Barker and replied, "Oh, I don't know. That guy." Barney believed the lie wholeheartedly. Years afterwards, as portrayed in the flavour 2 episode "Showdown", he appears on The Price Is Right with the intention of naming Barker every bit his father on national television receiver until he panics at the last minute and cannot go through with it. Every bit a child, Barney was terrible at sports, and from various episodes, it is shown he had few friends (one scene shows that no i attended his birthday political party). In the episode "The Leap," Lily reveals that Barney planned on beingness a violinist when he was young.

In "Natural History", Barney finds out that a man named Jerome Whittaker, whom Barney believed to be his uncle, signed a form claiming to be Barney'due south father. Barney finally meets Jerome (John Lithgow) again in the episode "Legendaddy" and learns that he is in fact his male parent. Upon meeting, Jerome feels pressured to act similar the hard-partying womanizer he once was in order to print Barney, and too because Barney refuses to see him any other way. Barney somewhen breaks down and accuses Jerome of walking out on him. Jerome, who can offering no excuse, apologizes and pleads with Barney to permit him to be a part of his life. Later in the sixth flavour, in "Hopeless", Jerome tries to impress Barney past acting like his erstwhile self, but afterwards reveals he was just pretending. Barney, nevertheless, willingly listens to communication from Jerome about settling down. Barney as well learns of his Canadian heritage, when he finds out that Jerome's female parent was built-in in Manitoba.

Barney has three half-siblings: James (played by Wayne Brady), from his mother's side, a gay African American who is married to a homo, with whom he has an adopted son and daughter (as revealed in the season seven episode "The Rebound Girl"); Carly (played by Ashley Benson), a university student from his father's side, whom Ted dates in the episode "Band Upwards!", and Jerome Jr. (JJ), from his father's side, who is 11. He also has a female cousin named Leslie, with whom he accidentally grinds in a nightclub, as seen in the episode "Okay Awesome".

Education [edit]

Throughout the series Barney has claimed to take attended MIT; In the last season, Barney explains that MIT is an acronym for the Magicians Institute of Teaneck, not the Massachusetts Constitute of Technology. He has worn a Cornell Big Cherry T-shirt,[10] indicating that he may have gone there, instead. Equally evidenced in Season ii "Atlantic Urban center", Barney learned at to the lowest degree conversational Korean, both Mandarin and Cantonese, Japanese, also as some French. He's also spoken Ukrainian (actually Russian) to his tailor. His musical skills include playing the drums, piano and violin, dancing the tango, and singing. He is besides skilled at juggling and laser tag.

Adult life prior to 2005 ("Pilot") [edit]

"Game Night" reveals that Barney had once been an innocent, idealistic fellow who wanted to join the Peace Corps with his offset serious girlfriend, Shannon. When she left him for a conform-wearing womanizer, James arranged for the 23-year-erstwhile Barney to lose his virginity to their mother's friend, Rhonda "the Man Maker" French.[11] After he slept with Rhonda and was led to believe he satisfied her, he became a similarly accommodate-wearing womanizer, even going then far as to adopt some of his rival'southward catchphrases. He lives by a strict code known as the Bro Code.[12] [ better source needed ]

Barney is also revealed to have had a gambling problem, enabled by his mother, who is a bookmaker. However, he assures the group that information technology is non a problem considering he is and then adept at it. He revealed in "Atlantic Metropolis" that he lost his entire life savings playing a Chinese game. He has also apparently lost every one of his many bets on the Super Basin. He will become to any lengths to win a bet, fifty-fifty if information technology takes one yr for just $ten.[13]

In the series (2005–2014) [edit]

While Barney'southward softer, more than generous side is not often apparent,[eight] it is non e'er relegated to flashbacks. When Marshall and Lily interruption their engagement in flavour 1, Barney lures women away from Marshall then that he tin remain faithful to the woman he truly loves.[half dozen] Information technology is revealed that information technology was Barney who convinced Lily to come up back to New York, even buying her a aeroplane ticket home. Barney's relationship with women evolves throughout the series; in the later seasons, he begins to desire a more conventional human relationship, every bit evidenced past his subsequent proposals to both Quinn Garvey and Robin Scherbatsky. He is also known to write a blog.[14] In an allusion to Harris' office in Doogie Howser, G.D., the music played during his blogging sessions is the theme vocal from the testify.

Career [edit]

Throughout the serial, Barney frequently refuses to say what he does for a living, brushing off any questions nearly his job with a dismissive "Please."

Barney is apparently quite wealthy, He lives in an upscale apartment he calls the Fortress of Barnitude, located at 100 on an unspecified street, and is rich enough to own ii 300 inch televisions shipped from Nihon likewise as expensive memorabilia, including an Purple Stormtrooper costume from the Star Wars films.[15] Barney is also shown to be a fan of the stone groups Air conditioning/DC, Van Halen and Bon Jovi.

In his blog, he writes that he is the Managing director of WHO DID THIS.[16] The company he works for, Altrucell,[17] advertises itself every bit the world's largest producer of the felt covers of tennis balls; however, Hereafter Ted implies that the company's chief profits come from other, less innocent sources, such every bit logging, oil drilling, small arms, tobacco farming and missile construction. Barney states in "Cupcake" that, as a lawyer for Altrucell, Marshall would make more than money in three months than he and Lily make in a year because his company has and then many lawsuits against it.[7] In the season 3 episode "The Bracket," he says that he is good enough at lying to avoid perjury charges. Every bit of Season 4, his visitor is involved in a hostile takeover of Goliath National Bank (GNB) and consequently shifts him to the direction squad of the bank, but he remains a powerful executive and continues to apply the same part he has had since it was first shown in Season ane. Despite this, he has suggested there is the possibility he will one day wash up on shore with no teeth or fingerprints and supposedly has come up under assail past ninjas in the by during work. In Flavour four, during the episode "Happily E'er After", Barney states to a woman that he is an "Attorney in Law", though this was probably just office of a option-up line equally he immediately followed information technology with "Let's talk about getting you off". His video resume was published in Flavour 4 episode "The Possimpible".[18] In a season 8 episode, it was implied that the total extent of Barney's career might never be revealed.

In the Flavour nine episode "Unpause", he drunkenly reveals that his job is to "Provide Legal Exculpation And Sign Everything" (P.L.Due east.A.S.East.), setting him up to be the fall guy for his company's nefarious activities. Unknown to his company, he has been conspiring with the federal regime as role of a long-term programme to become revenge on his boss, who stole his girlfriend prior to the showtime of the series.

Friends [edit]

Ted Mosby [edit]

Ted is Barney's self-proclaimed all-time friend and "fly man". They meet in 2001 at MacLaren's, and Barney takes it upon himself to "teach Ted how to alive". While Ted is often annoyed by Barney'due south antics, he considers him a good friend, and in "Miracles," says that Barney is like a brother to him. Their friendship has been tested, notwithstanding; in "The Goat", Ted finds out that Barney and Robin slept together and ends their friendship, and refuses to speak to him for several episodes. In the third-season finale, "Miracles", all the same, Ted forgives Barney after Barney severely injures himself while trying to help him. They remain an important part of each other'southward lives for the rest of the serial, with Barney comforting Ted afterwards he is left at the chantry in "Shelter Island" and Ted education Barney how to be a skilful young man to Robin in "Robin 101". Ted is the best man at Barney's wedding, and, along with the other main characters, is nowadays for the birth of his child.[2]

Marshall Eriksen [edit]

Barney meets Marshall effectually the aforementioned time as Ted, and takes it upon himself to give Marshall unwanted communication on picking up women. While Marshall makes fun of Barney'southward promiscuity and ethical lapses, even so, Barney has helped him many times throughout the series. For example, Barney gets him an internship at Altrucell in "Life Among the Gorillas", keeps him from sleeping with other women in "The Scorpion and the Toad", persuades Lily to come dorsum to him in "Bachelor Political party", and gets him a chore at Goliath National Bank in "The Best Burger in New York". Barney is "co-best human being" with Ted at Marshall's wedding. Forth with the other main characters, Marshall is present for the nascence of Barney's daughter. In the episode "Slap Bet", Barney loses a bet with Marshall and agrees to allow Marshall slap him five times at random occasions "throughout eternity". This is later extended to eight slaps in the episode "Disaster Averted". Marshall administers these slaps in the episodes "Slap Bet", "Stuff", "Slapsgiving", "Slapsgiving 2: Revenge of the Slap", "Slapsgiving iii: Slappointment in Slapmarra", and "The End of the Alley".

Lily Aldrin [edit]

Barney makes many unwelcome sexual advances toward Lily throughout the serial, and frequently implies that Lily is secretly attracted to him, despite all show to the opposite. Nevertheless, he considers Lily a confidante, seeking her advice on winning Robin over and telling her deeply personal secrets, such equally his failed ambition to be a concert violinist. He also admires her skill at lying and manipulating people, considering it to be on par with his own. While Lily calls Barney "the world's biggest pervert" and a "womanizing creep", she also considers him i of her best friends. Throughout the series, it is evident that while Barney is good friends with Ted and Marshall, Lily is actually the one who helps him most as a person. Along with the other principal characters, Lily is nowadays for the birth of Barney's daughter.[2]

Romantic relationships [edit]

Robin Scherbatsky [edit]

Barney and Robin start out as friends, but he falls in beloved with her after they impulsively slumber together in "Sandcastles in the Sand". Throughout Season 4, he struggles with his feelings for her, until they finally get together in the season finale "The Jump". They get a full-fledged couple in season five, but they break up in "The Rough Patch" when they find that they are making each other miserable. They never truly go over each other, nonetheless, even while they are dating other people. In the 8th flavour, he launches an elaborate plan to win Robin'south heart (encouraged by Ted'due south future married woman) that ends with Barney proposing to her. She accepts, and they get engaged. The last flavor revolves around their wedding weekend. After much doubt and soul-searching, they get married in "The Cease of the Aisle". The serial finale, "Terminal Forever", reveals that, afterwards three years of marriage, they get divorced because Robin'southward work schedule prevents them from spending any time together. They do not see each other once more for several years, until Ted's nuptials;[2] the series' alternating ending implies that following Ted's wedding, Barney and Robin eventually got back together. This shows that Barney always loved Robin and always will as she is the one who got him to settle down in the kickoff place and that it is never too tardily for them.[9]

Others [edit]

Barney has ii other serious girlfriends throughout the series: Nora (Nazanin Boniadi), on whom he cheats with Robin, and Quinn (Becki Newton), a stripper to whom he proposes, but with whom he breaks up upon realizing that they do not trust each other.

Appearances outside How I Met Your Mother [edit]

In 2008, the book The Bro Code, ostensibly written past Barney, was published. Three other books ostensibly written by Barney, Bro on the Go (2009), The Playbook (2010), and Bro Code for Parents: What to Look When Y'all're Awesome (2012), were also published.

In 2010, Barney was featured in a Super Bowl commercial that showed him in the stands at the Super Basin with a sign stating "Hey Ladies Call Barney Due southtinson 1-877-987-6401." A recorded message by Neil Patrick Harris was played if the number was dialed.[nineteen]

Catchphrases [edit]

In the show's pilot, Barney starting time utters the phrase, "Suit up!", as he tells others to dress like him to get out. The phrase "Conform upward!" came from an ad for a adapt auction in a later episode about his past with Shannon. According to creator Thomas, this is a sign that Barney "idea of his suit as some kind of superhero outfit that separated him from the pack."[8] The phrase is repeated in many episodes, and is often modified to fit whatever clothing Barney is wearing, such as "Flying suit up", "Snow suit up", and even "Altogether adapt up". He as well uses the give-and-take "awesome" to describe annihilation that he finds remotely pleasing, and invents different kinds of "high-fives" for every occasion. Barney's invented high-fives include "The Self-5" (in which Barney high-fives himself), "The Prayer-5" (in which Barney and Robin discreetly motility their hands in a motion replicating the Sign of the Cross -up, down, left, right- earlier making contact with the backs of their hands while sitting in a pastor'southward role), and "The Almighty-5" (in which Barney supposedly receives a high-five from God himself).[20]

Withal, Barney's arguably well-nigh famous catch phrase is "Legendary!" which he uses to describe annihilation and everything fun and exciting (In fact, Ted says that he over-uses information technology). When saying something is legendary, he typically says "information technology'south going to be Legen... await for it... dary! Legendary!" He also says "wait for information technology" quite often, and uses the word "Prissy" to express when he enjoys something or someone.

In the show Barney frequently approaches bonny women with Ted in tow and asks "Haaaaaave you met Ted?" as a way to beginning a conversation with strangers. Thomas says that this phrase is based in real life, as a one-fourth dimension friend of his oft used a similar line to meet women.[8] He is likewise decumbent to proverb "Daddy's Home" as either a chat-up line or for 1000 entrances, and "True Story" as an catastrophe to stories or theories that are generally erroneous.

Barney ofttimes uses the phrase "Challenge accustomed" when someone mentions an outlandish chore that supposedly cannot be done; he takes this as a personal challenge and attempts, commonly successfully, to perform the chore.

Reception [edit]

According to The Early on Show, Barney is one of the main reasons that the prove has been a success.[vii] Maclean's stated that Barney is the prove's most popular character and explains that the almost likeable characters are often those with the best catchphrases.[viii] In 2006, Boob tube State named Barney'south "Suit Up" one of the 100 Best Catchphrases. Barney's signature phrase is one of simply four from contemporary television shows, equally writers are now less likely to have a graphic symbol repeat a phrase in many episodes.[8] In June 2010, Amusement Weekly named him one of the 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years.[21] Paste included him in their list of the 20 All-time Characters of 2011, ranking him No. 4.[22]

From 2007 to 2010, Harris was nominated for a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Player in a Comedy Series for his work playing Barney.[23] In 2008, Fireside published The Bro Code. Ostensibly written past Stinson, although actually penned past Matt Kuhn, a writer for the show, the book reveals the lawmaking by which the grapheme supposedly lives his life (though he has been shown disregarding and/or violating a big portion of the articles in the volume).[24] Oxford Dictionaries recognized Stinson as "the quintessence of a certain iteration of the contemporary bro" and noted how his linguistic communication uses the word literally.[25]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Unpause". How I Met Your Mother. Season 9. Episode 15. January 20, 2014. CBS.
  2. ^ a b c d "Last Forever". How I Met Your Mother. Season 9. Episode 24. March 31, 2014. CBS.
  3. ^ Zoromski, Brian (January 8, 2010). "How I Met Your Mother: Girls vs. Suits Review". IGN. San Francisco, California: j2 Global. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  4. ^ Sullivan, Brian Ford (January 8, 2010). "Live at the Paley Center for Media: "How I Met Your Mother"". The Daybed Critic . Retrieved June ten, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d Barney, has a good sense of humour, and fabricated one of his catchphrases, "Truthful story", an Internet viral meme.Dransfeldt, Jeffrey (Apr 26, 2008). "Harris is enjoying Barney's adventures in How I Met Your Female parent". Ventura County Star. Archived from the original on March xiv, 2009. Retrieved May 2, 2008.
  6. ^ a b Pierce, Scott D. (September 3, 2007). "Legen-dary!". Deseret Morning News. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved May 2, 2008.
  7. ^ a b c "Neil Patrick Harris on Playing a Cad". The Early on Show. Oct 9, 2006. Archived from the original on May 9, 2008. Retrieved May ii, 2008.
  8. ^ a b c d due east f Weinman, Jaime J. (December 25, 2006). "Why Barney is the new Fonzie". Maclean'southward. Archived from the original on Dec 5, 2008. Retrieved May 2, 2008.
  9. ^ a b Kreps, Daniel (September 6, 2014). "Watch the Happier 'How I Met Your Mother' Alternating Catastrophe". Rolling Rock.
  10. ^ "How Lily Stole Christmas". How I Met Your Mother. Season 2. Episode 11. December 11, 2006. NBC.
  11. ^ "The Yips". How I Met Your Mother. Season three. Episode 10. November 26, 2007. CBS.
  12. ^ Weather & Fourth dimension (Apr 2, 2012). "Barney Stinson's Bro Lawmaking". Chacha.com. Archived from the original on July 29, 2012. Retrieved July thirteen, 2012.
  13. ^ "Ten Sessions". How I Met Your Mother. Season 3. Episode 13. March 24, 2008. NBC.
  14. ^ "How I Met Your Mother Community". CBS.com. Retrieved July xiii, 2012.
  15. ^ "How I Met Your Mother: "Third Cycle" Review – A potential threesome ... for Ted, non Barney". Archived from the original on July 17, 2010. Retrieved March four, 2010. ... we know he's a geek at heart. He does have a life-size Stormtrooper in his living room later on all.
  16. ^ How I Met Your Mother Season Premiere Monday September 24, 8/7c (May fifteen, 2012). "Barney's Blog: Interrogation Room, Sweet Interrogation Room – How I Met Your Mother". CBS.com. Retrieved July thirteen, 2012.
  17. ^ "Life Among the Gorillas". How I Met Your Mother. Flavor 1. Episode 17. March 20, 2006. NBC.
  18. ^ "Barney Stinson's Video Resume". Barneysvideoresume.com. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  19. ^ "Super Bowl: Telephone call Barney Stinson at 1-877-987-6401". Zap2It. Tribune Digital Ventures.
  20. ^ Russo, Cam (December 31, 2020). "The LEGENDARY Barney Stinson Loftier-Five Playbook". Kizaz . Retrieved January 11, 2021. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ Adam B. Vary (June ane, 2010). "The 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years: Hither'south our full listing!". Entertainment Weekly. Time Inc. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  22. ^ Jackson, Josh (December 5, 2011). "The 20 Best Boob tube Characters of 2011". Paste . Retrieved June 30, 2012.
  23. ^ "And the nominees are". The Daily Telegraph. September xiv, 2007. Retrieved May ii, 2008.
  24. ^ Michael Esposito (Nov 8, 2008). "5 things nosotros learned from "The Bro Code"". Chicago Tribune (in Japanese). Archived from the original on April 19, 2009. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  25. ^ Martin, Katherine Connor (October 9, 2013). "The rise of the portmanbro". Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on April 5, 2014. Retrieved April five, 2014.

Bibliography [edit]

  • Stinson, Barney (2008). The Bro Code. New York: Fireside. ISBN978-1-4391-1000-iii.
  • Stinson, Barney (2009). Bro on the Go. New York: Fireside. ISBN978-1-4391-7313-8.
  • Stinson, Barney (2010). The Playbook: Suit upwards. Score chicks. Be awesome. New York: Touchstone. ISBN978-1-4391-9683-0.

External links [edit]

  • Barney Stinson on IMDb
  • Barney'southward Blog

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barney_Stinson

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