Cleaning House

Cleaning House
"Cleaning House"
How I Met Your Mother episode
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 2
Directed by Pamela Fryman
Written by Stephen Lloyd
Production code 6ALH02
Original air date September 27, 2010 (2010-09-27)
Guest stars

Ben Vereen as Sam Gibbs
Frances Conroy as Loretta Stinson
Wayne Brady as James Stinson
Riley Thomas Stewart as Young Barney
Michael Earl Reid as Post Master General

Season 6 episodes
  1. Big Days
  2. Cleaning House
  3. Unfinished
  4. Subway Wars
  5. Architect of Destruction
  6. Baby Talk
  7. Canning Randy
  8. Natural History
  9. Glitter
  10. Blitzgiving
  11. The Mermaid Theory
  12. False Positive
  13. Bad News
  14. Last Words
  15. Oh Honey
  16. Desperation Day
  17. Garbage Island
  18. A Change of Heart
  19. Legendaddy
  20. The Exploding Meatball Sub
  21. Hopeless
  22. The Perfect Cocktail
  23. Landmarks
  24. Challenge Accepted

"Cleaning House" is the second episode of the sixth season of the CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother, and the 114th episode overall. It originally aired on September 27, 2010.

Contents

Plot

Barney is with the gang at MacLaren's telling another story of romantic conquest when he decides to not end the story due to his sadness that his mother is moving out of his childhood home. Barney then tells the gang that they will be helping him move it all over the next two days. Despite their protests, they show up, meeting Barney's mother, Loretta, and brother, James, at the house in Staten Island.

While the gang goes through Barney's childhood room, they find evidence of his lonely childhood, which was all covered up by Loretta's elaborate lies, like the fact that Bob Barker was his father. Lily finds a basketball jersey, and Barney tells the gang that he was asked by the coach to quit the team because he was too good. James backs Barney up at first, but the second he is out of earshot, he tells them that Barney was awful, but their mother covered it up with the story that he was too good to be on the team. James was lied to as well, and when Lily picks up a white glove, James says that Michael Jackson sent it to him for his birthday. Realizing this is not true, he curses and walks out of the room with the gang laughing. Barney seems to accept these delusions at face value, until he and his brother find an un-mailed letter to a "Sam Gibbs," with a photo of the two of them, with the words "your son" on the back.

The gang immediately heads over to the address. Barney explains that he realizes that Bob Barker is not actually his father, and that he's ready to face the truth. An elder black man answers the door. James realizes that Sam is his father, and the two embrace, crying. But Barney joins the hug, under the impression that this man is his father. He then proceeds to feed into the idea that he is African-American, even interrupting Sam and James' duet of Ben E. King's "Stand by Me."

Back at his mother's house, Barney sits in his room with Loretta who gives him a note to the identity of his real father. While they talk, Barney puts together all the work his mother did for him as a child. Barney tears up the note and realizes that she's all the father he'll ever need.

Meanwhile, Robin tells Ted that she has been promoting him to a hot makeup artist at work, but when she describes her selling points, Ted is worried that she oversold him. Over the course of the day, she sends a series of text messages to try to balance out this faux pas. Near the end of the episode, Robin receives a text from the woman which says she is still interested in meeting Ted. Ted then realizes that Robin has possibly oversold the woman to him.

Music

Continuity

  • The gang first came to the Stinson house in the season 4 episode "The Stinsons".
  • There is a picture of Grant (also from "The Stinsons") in Loretta's living room.
  • The gang rides to Sam Gibbs' house in a "Move This" truck. "Move This" was the name of the moving company Ted hired to carry his belongings to Robin's apartment in the season 2 episode "Moving Day".
  • Barney's opinions on lies and being lied to was also touched in the episode "Zoo or False".
  • The episode features a reshot scene of a flashback about Barney's mom pointing to Bob Barker as his father. Flashback in this episode is very different from the one in the season 2 episode "Showdown".
  • Ted refers to his mother, who married Clint in the season 5 episode "Home Wreckers".
  • James Stinson, Barney's brother, returns in this episode. He first appeared in "Single Stamina", of season 2. He also mentions his adopted son, and pulls out a photo of him in a suit. Also at the end of "Single Stamina", James' son is seen wearing a suit.
  • Ted uses his Teddy Westside alias from the season 5 episode "Rabbit or Duck".
  • Marshall's apparent interest and pseudo-expertise in the supernatural was demonstrated in this episode, with him referencing the beliefs in Santa Claus and in the Easter Bunny.
  • Lily often acts as a disciplinarian to Barney's antics. This is shown with her dragging Barney off the screen twice when he was interfering with James' bonding moment.
  • Barney is often seen to perform magic. In his childhood bedroom, he has a 'Magic Tonight' certificate.
  • Barney says the 'you' of 'thank you' in a high-pitched tone, mocking Ted's habit of saying it in that manner.
  • Robin mockingly calls Ted "quite the detective," a callback to the episode the episode "Dowisetrepla" in which it is revealed that Ted fancies himself as somewhat of a detective. He and Barney attempt to determine what Lily and Marshall fought about, and it Ted claims the he and his sister (a.k.a. "The Mosby Boys") "cracked a lot of cases" as a kid.

Barney's blog

In his blog, Barney presents news article relating the story of how he rescued the mayor's dog during his stay in Yourson, North Dakota. [1]

Cultural references

  • When Barney initially refuses to tell the gang of his problems, Robin brings up the Discovery Channel show Deadliest Catch to fill up the conversation.
  • Ted illustrates to Robin about the dangers of overselling oneself by describing the end of The Karate Kid.
  • Ted mentions that he has toys G.I. Joes in his room.
  • James believed that a glove Lily's holding actually came from Michael Jackson.
  • Barney had always believed that Bob Barker, the former host of The Price Is Right was his father. James mentions that at different times his mother told him that his father was Flip Wilson, Bill Cosby, James Earl Jones, and Meadowlark Lemon.
  • Barney owns a fake autographed baseball that was erroneously signed by a "Frank Aaron". This is a reference to home run king Hank Aaron.
  • Ted says that abstract painter Salvador Dali was needed to capture the bizarre reunion.
  • Marshall says "unsubscribe" in response to Barney's offer to clean his house. This is a term that is related to social networking stations, blogs, tweets, and video sharing.
  • Robin mentions to Ted that the girl she is setting him up with looks like Robert de Niro in the movie Cape Fear.
  • At one point during Sam and James' duet, Barney jumps in with Scat singing. In the last scene, he additionally uses Auto-Tune.
  • A Diabolik poster is seen on display in Barney's childhood room.

Critical response

Donna Bowman of The A.V. Club gave the episode an A- score. She said that while the episode had no real innovations aside from recurring characters and meeting relatives for the very first time, Barney's acceptance of the truth was not long in coming. She also took note of the way Barney joined in the duet between James and his father.[2]

James Poniewozik of Time.com noted Barney's attempts to feel like a black man with respect to Sam and James was akin to the behavior of Navin Johnson, Steve Martin's character in the film The Jerk.[3]

Robert Canning of IGN gave the episode a rating of 6.5 out of 10.[4]

DeAnn Welker of Television Without Pity gave the episode a C+ score, saying there was not much of a storyline for the other four main characters.[5]

References

External links


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