‘How I Met Your Mother’ Soundtrack Will Finally Release Best of Robin Sparkles


Best of Robin Sparkles

July 30 2012, 7:29 PM ET
by Kory Grow

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Finally, the complete discography of Canada’s teen mall queen Robin Sparkles will be downloadable with the release of a How I Met Your Mother soundtrack, due to hit iTunes September 24 — the same night Season Eight premieres. The collection, tentatively titled How I Met Your Music, will last 40 minutes and contain 20 tracks from the sitcom, including “Let’s Go to the Mall” by Robin Sparkles (the alter ego of the show’s Robin Scherbatsky, played by Cobie Smulders), the Neil Patrick Harris-led anthem “Nothing Suits Me Like a Suit,” and reupped versions of some other fan favorites. “We are going to do a fully produced version of the ‘Bang-Bang-Bangity-Bang’ song,” Craig Thomas, one of the show’s co-creators told the media at a recent press conference, according to HitFix. He added, “Perhaps with a slight New Orleans theme.”

The reason why the disc is coming out now, it seems, came from a state of worry about when the show would end, as producers are entering talks about making a ninth season. “We’ve been asked by the fans for years, ‘When is a soundtrack going to come out?’ ” Thomas said. “We’ve never been able to make it happen. Finally, we decided, ‘Look, it could be the last year of the show; we don’t know if there could be more. This is the time to do it.'”

There’s no time like the present… to go to the mall! Right, Robin Sparkles?

http://www.spin.com/blogs/how-i-met-your-mother-soundtrack-will-finally-release-best-robin-sparkles

‘How I Met Your Mother’ producers ‘optimistic’ about season 9


Originally published: July 29, 2012 9:38 PM
Updated: July 30, 2012 7:27 AM
By VERNE GAY  verne.gay@newsday.com

BEVERLY HILLS — “How I Met Your Mother,” TV’s shaggiest dog story, enters its eighth season in September, but how much longer this tale keeps spinning has been of concern to fans and CBS alike. Co-creators Carter Bays and Craig Thomas have said there’s an endpoint for this hugely successful series. They just haven’t said when, nor has CBS.
But at Sunday’s TV critics tour here, CBS Entertainment chief Nina Tassler said the network is “in early conversations” with the producers “and we’re pretty optimistic” about a ninth season.
She added that “they have a very strategic wrap-up to the show [and] they know we want the show to come back” in 2013, so “we are having conversations right now about extending it.”
CBS News to keep ‘Face the Nation’ hourlong format. “Face the Nation” was launched nearly 58 years ago, but over much of its history trailed “Meet the Press.” No longer — it’s been Sunday’s most-viewed network public affairs show in recent months, thanks in part to an hour expansion that began in the early spring on a trial basis. On Sunday, CBS News announced the program would be permanently expanded to an hour.
Separately, CBS News chairman Jeff Fager, who is also executive producer of “60 Minutes,” was asked if there were plans to add a new commentary segment to “60,” replacing Andy Rooney’s popular feature, which aired from 1978 until just before his death in November. “We’re in no hurry” to find a replacement, Fager said, adding that the show will add more viewer mail, feedback and updates next fall instead. “We don’t have anybody in mind for that position.”
Fager also deflected a question about last week’s abrupt replacement of Erica Hill with Norah O’Donnell on “CBS This Morning.”
“It really is about Norah and her abilities. I feel like where we are going with the broadcast, she’s just a perfect fit.”
Jason O’Mara tweaks Fox over ‘Terra Nova’ cancellation. It’s rare that a star raps a competing network at one of these events but Jason O’Mara, starring on CBS’ new drama “Vegas,” couldn’t help himself. Fox, he said, took “an awful long time to make what was ultimately a premature decision” — canceling “Terra Nova,” which he also starred in.

http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/tv/how-i-met-your-mother-producers-optimistic-about-season-9-1.3869189

Victoria Returns for Multi-Episode Arc


Jul 27, 2012 10:01 AM ET
by Sadie Gennis

How I Met Your Mother‘s Ted and Victoria may have driven off into the sunset together in the Season 7 finale, but will they live happily ever after?

It looks like we’ll have a chance to find out. Ashley Williams, who plays cupcake connoisseur Victoria, is set to return for a multi-episode arc in Season 8, according to TVLine.

Report: CBS in talks for ninth season of How I Met Your Mother

The Season 8 premiere will pick up right where Ted (Josh Radnor) and Victoria left off, with Victoria leaving her fiancé on their wedding day. But once Ted, who was jilted himself, realizes Victoria didn’t even leave a Dear John note, he insists they head back to the church to make things right.

Victoria isn’t the only love interest returning to woo a member of the MacLaren’s gang. Michael Trucco will reprise his Season 6 role as Robin’s crush for a good part of the upcoming season.

How I Met Your Mother premieres Monday, Sept. 24 at 8/7c on CBS.

http://www.tvguide.com/News/How-I-Met-Your-Mother-Season8-Victoria-Ashley-Williams-1050576.aspx?rss=news&partnerid=spi&profileid=05

‘How I Met Your Mother’: Michael Trucco Will Return as Robin’s Love Interest in Season 8


Jenn Lee
Staff Writer, BuddyTV

While we still don’t know whether season 8 of How I Met Your Mother will be its last, we do know who will be playing Robin’s love interest this season–Michael Trucco (of Fairly Legal) will be reprising his role as Robin’s crush.

Trucco appeared briefly on HIMYM in the season 6 episode “Crush.” The Battlestar Galactica star was supposed to return in a larger role in season 7, but due to conflicts with Fairly Legal, Trucco was unable to fill the commitment. Robin found romance, instead, in Kal Penn’s character Kevin.

According to show co-creator Craig Thomas, Robin (Cobie Smulders) will set her eyes on a romantic interest early on in season 8. Trucco’s character (who was simply referred to as Crush) will have a significant arc, appearing in a good “chunk” of the season, according to TVLine. 

Trucco’s HIMYM casting might be a sign of Fairly Legal‘s uncertain renewal. The USA legal drama just finished its second season in June, and there has been no announcement regarding a season 3. 

It will be interesting for fans to ponder how Robin’s relationship with Trucco’s character will eventually lead her to Barney (Neil Patrick Harris), who will begin the season engaged to Quinn (guest star Becki Newton). Perhaps Barney, who last made a plea for Robin’s heart when they were both seeing other people (Barney with Nora, Robin with Kevin), will be motivated in the same way this season when he sees Robin with someone else. But knowing the length of the season, this process might take a while.

However Trucco’s role is played into the story, let’s hope his character and Robin don’t get along too well (in the way that some fans got attached to Quinn last season), because we all know it will be Robin and the Barnacle at the end of the day/season/series.

CBS starts talks for ninth season of ‘Mother’: Net in negotiations with 20th for more of hit comedy


July 16, 2012|Andrew Wallenstein | Variety

CBS and 20th Century Fox TV have begun negotiations on ordering at least one more additional season of “How I Met Your Mother.” The series’ unexpected ratings rejuvenation last season renewed interest from both sides in extending its run beyond the upcoming eighth season CBS already committed to, but that could be tough given all the dealmaking that needs to get done: Contracts for creators and exec producers Carter Bays and Craig Thomas don’t extend beyond the 2012-13 season, nor do deals for any of the five stars. CBS’ two-year license deal with 20th expires next May as well. Reps for CBS, 20th and Bays and Thomas declined to comment. At this point, sources caution CBS and 20th have engaged in only preliminary talks, with no timetable in place for getting all these deals wrapped up. But the good news for “Mother” fans is that they’re even talking about the future, which wasn’t the case until relatively recently. While in some years past the Eye held off on renewing “Mother” until May, the net will have to move much earlier this time around to give the show’s producers time to put the creative plan in place that will either extend or wrap up the series’ plotlines. Bays and Thomas already know how lead character Ted Mosby will meet the love interest alluded to in the series’ title and are prepared to get the endgame going either at the end of this season or the next. Writers haven’t yet begun work on the show’s coming season. Complicating the closure of those deals will be the cost to CBS given that 20th is no longer on the hook, as is customary: Studios typically don’t get billed after the first five years of a series’ run in exchange for deficit-financing the production. It’s expensive enough to absorb the rising costs in any long-running series, but with “Mother” coming off its second-most watched season to date, the cost to CBS may have increased. It’s rare for a series to experience a ratings resurgence this late in its run, but last season “Mother” averaged 8.5 million total viewers and a 3.4 rating in adults 18-49 — reversing a fade in place since its peak season in 2008-09. That number would probably have been even higher had NBC not scheduled hit franchise “The Voice” against the show in the midseason. And “Mother” is currently CBS’ youngest-skewing series — and with the median age of its viewership at 45.7, it’s the Eye’s only show under 50. But whatever lift those numbers provide to the “Mother” pricetag may well be worth it. CBS is heading into a transition year for the powerhouse Monday comedy lineup “Mother” has anchored for years given the departure of “Two and a Half Men” to Thursday for what may be its last season. As lead-in to new 8:30 p.m. comedy “Partners,” “Mother” is being counted on to repeat the success it had last season with “2 Broke Girls,” which is taking over the “Men” timeslot. The prospect of losing both “Mother” and “Men” in the same season may be too much for even CBS, which spreads its ratings wealth across its sked far more evenly than rival nets. The Eye boasted 16 of the 25 series in 2011-12 among total viewers, including TV’s top rated comedy, “The Big Bang Theory.” While the series’ creative team needs to know as soon as possible whether this season is its last, CBS may have its reasons for waiting to complete negotiations until after the season starts. If CBS successfully launches some new comedies while maintaining the health of its others, its dependence on “Mother” would be diminished. Under those circumstances, it’s possible the added expense to keep “Mother” wouldn’t be worth it. But it could also be in CBS’ best interest to determine sooner than later whether this season is “Mother’s” last because that fact could be built into the show’s marketing this season, just as ABC hyped the finale of “Desperate Housewives” last season. Getting CBS and 20th to agree on a license fee will be the biggest issue. Series from “Friends” to “Everybody Loves Raymond” managed to squeeze out additional seasons due to the generosity of studios forced to pay a pretty penny to get the gang back together one last time. “Big Bang” may offer some means of comparison, with Warner Bros. TV agreeing in 2011 to fork over an estimated $4 million-plus per episode for three more seasons. Bays and Thomas are nearing the end of a three-year, eight-figure deal they signed in January 2010. Their interest in continuing could be affected by how their next series for the studio, Fox sitcom “The Goodwin Games,” fares in midseason. Even if they bow out of “Mother,” CBS could certainly keep the series going with different showrunners, though that isn’t seen as a likelihood. In January, Bays addressed the question at the Television Critics Assn. winter press tour but was noncommittal. “I would imagine, going into the final season of the show, we’d hint people to that,” he said. “It’s hard for us to say that on May 14, 2000-whatever, we will officially be out of ideas.” The future of “Mother” could hinge on the willingness of the talent to continue. Jason Segel, who has been moonlighting as a movie star in films like “The Muppets” and “The Five-Year Engagement,” has spoken openly of his interest in moving on, telling GQ in an interview earlier this year, “I think after eight years, I’ll feel like I honorably did my commitment.” Neil Patrick Harris has also stayed busy between award shows and other roles, while Josh Radnor has a budding career as an indie film director. Cobie Smulders and Alyson Hannigan have not been hurting for work, either. That said, “Mother” has been good to all of these actors as far as carving out time to pursue other interests, which could make it in all of their best interests to hang on for another season should CBS be willing to give them raises beyond the varying low six-figure sums each are said to currently earn per episode. It’s less likely that the show would continue without any of them, though it’s possible the busiest of the bunch could bump down to a recurring role. “Mother” has soldiered on without all five before, taping episodes without Hannigan while she was out on maternity leave in 2009. Last week, CBS demonstrated its willingness to reward top talent to keep a good thing going, getting the supporting cast of TV’s top-rated drama, “NCIS,” to sign contract extensions, including Michael Weatherly, Pauley Perrette and Sean Murray.

How I Met Your Mother Season 9!?!


If How I Met Your Mother is indeed waiting until the series finale to introduce us to the mother, then viewers might have to wait a bit longer for that.

A show source confirms to us that CBS and 20th Century Fox TV have started negotiations to order one more season of HIMYM, which would make it season nine…

 News of the talks were first reported by Variety. Even though the negotiations are very preliminary, both sides are expressing desire to add another season to their order, due primarily to the ratings uptick HIMYM saw last season. And though creators Carter Bays andCraig Thomas insist they have a plan in place for how they’ll wrap up the series, an early order for another season will give the HIMYM team time to alter storylines, if necessary.

For example, will we meet Ted’s wife and see them date before the end of the series? Or will the final episode introduce us to the mysterious mother?

“We have it worked out,” Bays said during the Winter TCAs in January. “We kind of know what the endgame of the series is. It’s obvious this show is around one central question, so that meeting will be part of the endgame of the show. How much the show will go beyond that, we can’t really say one way or the other.”

Most likely the cast will also sign on for a ninth season, even as their careers outside HIMYMcontinue to build upward. Cobie Smulders recently starred in the box-office smash The Avengers, and Jason Segel is snatching up leading roles right and left. But Segel assured fans that he is definitely on board should HIMYM get more seasons. “I really agree that I’d like to see the story come to its natural end, whether it’s eight years or nine years,” he told reporters in January. “I was so relieved when I found out there was an actual plan!”

CBS has no comment on the reported negotiations.

Do you want nine seasons of HIMYM? Or would you rather see the series end with season eight?

http://www.eonline.com/news/330869/how-i-met-your-mother-here-comes-season-nine