Hulu has canceled “How I Met Your Father” starring Hilary Duff, after two seasons, TheWrap has learned.
At the end of the second and now final season, Duff’s character revealed who the father of her child was. The finale landed July 11.
Kim Cattrall, who recently reunited with her “Sex and the City” castmates in a cameo during the Season 2 finale of “And Just Like That,” “How I Met Your Father” narrates the spin-off series as the 58-year-old version of Sophie, portrayed in the flashback plot by Duff. Sophie tells her son how she met his father, taking viewers all the way back to the beginning with her younger self navigating love, life and becoming alongside her friend group.
Kim Cattrall in “How I Met Your Father” (Patrick Wymore/Hulu)
In addition to Duff, the Hulu comedy starred Christopher Lowell, Francia Raisa, Tien Tran, Tom Ainsley and Suraj Sharma. Josh Peck,...
At the end of the second and now final season, Duff’s character revealed who the father of her child was. The finale landed July 11.
Kim Cattrall, who recently reunited with her “Sex and the City” castmates in a cameo during the Season 2 finale of “And Just Like That,” “How I Met Your Father” narrates the spin-off series as the 58-year-old version of Sophie, portrayed in the flashback plot by Duff. Sophie tells her son how she met his father, taking viewers all the way back to the beginning with her younger self navigating love, life and becoming alongside her friend group.
Kim Cattrall in “How I Met Your Father” (Patrick Wymore/Hulu)
In addition to Duff, the Hulu comedy starred Christopher Lowell, Francia Raisa, Tien Tran, Tom Ainsley and Suraj Sharma. Josh Peck,...
- 9/1/2023
- by Dessi Gomez
- The Wrap
“How I Met Your Father” has been canceled after two seasons at Hulu, Variety has confirmed.
The Hilary Duff-led “How I Met Your Mother” spinoff concluded its second (and now final) season July 11 without revealing who Duff’s character, Sophie, ended up having a child with. The show debuted in January 2022 and aired 30 episodes overall.
Here’s the comedy’s synopsis: “In the near future, Sophie (Duff) is telling her son the story of how she met his father: a story that catapults us back to the present where Sophie and her close-knit group of friends are in the midst of figuring out who they are, what they want out of life, and how to fall in love in the age of dating apps and limitless options.”
While it was a separate story from the 2005-2014 CBS hit “How I Met Your Mother,” which starred Josh Radnor, Neil Patrick Harris,...
The Hilary Duff-led “How I Met Your Mother” spinoff concluded its second (and now final) season July 11 without revealing who Duff’s character, Sophie, ended up having a child with. The show debuted in January 2022 and aired 30 episodes overall.
Here’s the comedy’s synopsis: “In the near future, Sophie (Duff) is telling her son the story of how she met his father: a story that catapults us back to the present where Sophie and her close-knit group of friends are in the midst of figuring out who they are, what they want out of life, and how to fall in love in the age of dating apps and limitless options.”
While it was a separate story from the 2005-2014 CBS hit “How I Met Your Mother,” which starred Josh Radnor, Neil Patrick Harris,...
- 9/1/2023
- by Jennifer Maas
- Variety Film + TV
Barney’s back.
Neil Patrick Harris is set to reprise his star-making role of Barney Stinson on the upcoming mid-season finale of the Hulu original spinoff series “How I Met Your Father.”
Harris was a main cast member and a fan favorite on the original CBS comedy series “How I Met Your Mother,” which ran for nine seasons after debuting in 2005. Harris earned four Primetime Emmy Award nominations for outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series over the course of his tenure with the show, in 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.
Harris will appear in next week’s two-episode mid-season finale of “How I Met Your Father,” which debuts on Hulu on March 28. After the duo of installments, the series will take a hiatus for a few weeks before continuing its 20-episode second season on May 23.
“How I Met Your Father” centers on Sophie (Hilary Duff) and how she met the father of her child.
Neil Patrick Harris is set to reprise his star-making role of Barney Stinson on the upcoming mid-season finale of the Hulu original spinoff series “How I Met Your Father.”
Harris was a main cast member and a fan favorite on the original CBS comedy series “How I Met Your Mother,” which ran for nine seasons after debuting in 2005. Harris earned four Primetime Emmy Award nominations for outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series over the course of his tenure with the show, in 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.
Harris will appear in next week’s two-episode mid-season finale of “How I Met Your Father,” which debuts on Hulu on March 28. After the duo of installments, the series will take a hiatus for a few weeks before continuing its 20-episode second season on May 23.
“How I Met Your Father” centers on Sophie (Hilary Duff) and how she met the father of her child.
- 3/22/2023
- by J. Kim Murphy
- Variety Film + TV
Twenty years ago, there was much ado about nothing — or more specifically, the TV sitcom that was famously about nothing — when “Seinfeld,” then a groundbreaking ratings juggernaut and pop cultural phenomenon, aired its much-anticipated series finale.
Concluding nine seasons of micro-observational humor, complex but absurdist intertwining plotlines, dialogue that became overnight water-cooler catchphrases and a game-changing “no hugging, no learning” approach to network comedy, star and executive producer Jerry Seinfeld turned to his co-creator Larry David, who’d left the series two seasons prior, to craft an ending that would, in established “Seinfeld-ian” style, neatly tie disparate threads of the series together. Living up to the hype fanned by network NBC preceding its airing on May 14, 1998, was a lesser concern.
“Larry and I were so good together, if we both thought something was funny, that was good enough for us,” Seinfeld recently told host David Letterman of their overall shared...
Concluding nine seasons of micro-observational humor, complex but absurdist intertwining plotlines, dialogue that became overnight water-cooler catchphrases and a game-changing “no hugging, no learning” approach to network comedy, star and executive producer Jerry Seinfeld turned to his co-creator Larry David, who’d left the series two seasons prior, to craft an ending that would, in established “Seinfeld-ian” style, neatly tie disparate threads of the series together. Living up to the hype fanned by network NBC preceding its airing on May 14, 1998, was a lesser concern.
“Larry and I were so good together, if we both thought something was funny, that was good enough for us,” Seinfeld recently told host David Letterman of their overall shared...
- 5/15/2018
- by Scott Huver
- Variety Film + TV
Publisher's Note: This is not a routine practice, but a local drinking friend of mine and the only Phish fan I know in the world, was kind enough to offer his perspective on Phish 3D, currently in theaters, thus saving any one of the regular critics here from having to share air space with dirty hippies and possibility of contracting impetigo. This is his review. -- Dr
Why would someone go to a Phish concert? 1) To see ass kicking music? 2) to hang with your phriends and phamily? 3) to be where the party is, dude? Why would someone go to see Phish 3D? Because I wanted to see great music, and I didn't get to go to the Festival 8 last Halloween, which is where the movie was filmed.
Phish 3D. Do you really need the glasses? From the opening shot of Page's piano in the foreground, you knew the 3D was worth it.
Why would someone go to a Phish concert? 1) To see ass kicking music? 2) to hang with your phriends and phamily? 3) to be where the party is, dude? Why would someone go to see Phish 3D? Because I wanted to see great music, and I didn't get to go to the Festival 8 last Halloween, which is where the movie was filmed.
Phish 3D. Do you really need the glasses? From the opening shot of Page's piano in the foreground, you knew the 3D was worth it.
- 5/5/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
I will say this upfront to avoid the inevitable flames from the Phish Nation: I am not a Phish fan. I don't have anything against the godhead jam rock quartet from the great Northeast. I just missed the train to Weekapaug Junction in college and dug deeper into old school punk when so many of my Madison, Wisconsin contemporaries were getting their spin on.
I've seen the group twice before: Once near the very beginning of their career explosion when they played a small theater in Madison around 1990 (complete with their old shtick of trampoline jumping and vacuum cleaner solos) and then again in 2000 at Radio City Music Hall in a gig I vaguely recall being way more intricate and massive than the Hoover days.
And then I saw them again on Saturday (November 21) night at U.S. Bank Arena in my hometown. See, I have an inordinate amount of...
I've seen the group twice before: Once near the very beginning of their career explosion when they played a small theater in Madison around 1990 (complete with their old shtick of trampoline jumping and vacuum cleaner solos) and then again in 2000 at Radio City Music Hall in a gig I vaguely recall being way more intricate and massive than the Hoover days.
And then I saw them again on Saturday (November 21) night at U.S. Bank Arena in my hometown. See, I have an inordinate amount of...
- 11/23/2009
- by Gil Kaufman
- MTV Newsroom
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