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If you are anything like me, you can’t watch a TV show without wondering how much money the main characters make. This question is naturally followed wondering how much their flats cost, how much their parents must be funding their lifestyles, and whether any of this is realistic at all, especially with shows taking place in New York City or Los Angeles.
From all the main comedy sit the last 30 years, “how I met your mother” could be one of the least realistic. At least “friends” explained that Monica’s luxurious flat She was rented and illegally subled from her grandmother, but “Himym” never explains how Ted and Marshall (the latter of which are still a student for the first two seasons) can afford that beautiful apartment on that western side. Combine this with the tranquility of Barney’s career (it makes “16 crap loads” a year basically doing nothing) and a Popstar background as a teenager, and it is clear that “himym” doesn’t want us to think seriously about the characters’ finances.
This “Don’t Think” method is most obvious with Lily’s financial situation in season 2. For the first six episodes, she’s just forced to find a new home in NYC with a nursery teacher salary and tens of thousands of dollars in credit card debt. This must have been stressful, but the show never deals with what she goes through. The show is once jokes that Marshall is the “settler” in his relationship with Lily, but Lily’s marriage to him is the only thing that saves her from complete financial ruin.
The only character whose financial position is somewhat based is Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor). We can kind of understand why Ted can afford that apartment because he actually has a solid work as early as the pilot. Still, exactly how much income Ted goes home each season as an architect, and does his lifestyle throughout the show actually check?
In season 1, Ted is a graduate architect, and According to ZiprecruitorThat would likely have won somewhere from $ 42,000 (25th percentile) to $ 104,000 (75th percentile). My bet would be at least $ 80,000 in season 1 (adjusted for inflation), which is enough to enjoy drunk in a bar every night in the mid -2000s NYC.
One thing that helps go out is that it comes from what appears as a higher middle -class family, one that was likely to help with its student loan situation. TED’s spent-heavy spent habits throughout the early seasons, let alone buy a new car, despite living in the least car-friendly area in the whole nation, certainly suggest that this is not a man who emphasizes money.
In season 2 Ted is being promoted to a senior position in his architecture company, a promotion that takes place after its unique building design saves the company from losing a large client on its own. By this point, Ted is certainly approaching (or past) the six -figure pay mark. It is not Don Draper Money Or anything, but Ted is still doing well.
Seasons 3 and 4 are where things become difficult, because during this time, the show is not interested in Ted County or how it affects the rest of its life. “Himym” stops exploring the role of Ted as a boss in his company, and the big story of the next big architect for Ted means he was screwed over on a project for Goliath National Bank. This leads to Ted quitting his job (well, being fired) and spending half the back of season 4 trying to build his own company from the floor up.
As with Lily in season 2, Ted short period of seeking self -employment us Being waking up in the middle of the night with severe cold sweats, but a casual viewer can easily watch several late -season episodes without noticing Ted’s career in pig feet. By the end of season 4, Ted’s career as an architect appears to be over. Fortunately, thanks to his former Stella’s fathers to leave him at the altar to boot with profitable connections, Ted’s career heads in an exciting new direction in season 5.
Season 5 sees Ted becoming a supplementary teacher at the University of Columbia. Much like architects, a teacher is one of those jobs that vary wild in pay, so it’s impossible to once again say with any certainty what Ted is doing at this point. Based on the way Ted talks about his new job though, his main selling point seems to be his stability rather than his salary. Ted probably makes $ 80k- $ 90k by this point; That’s a great salary of course, but not what Ted’s season 2 would have predicted for himself.
In season 6, Ted gets his big break: he is employed to build a skyscraper for Goliath National Bank. Again, it is not at all clear how much Ted paid for this (such as Architects will tell youIt depends on many factors that the show never elaborates), but it was certainly nothing. It is a big project, years long, that costs the company hundreds of millions of dollars. By season 7, Ted is doing at least six figures off his job on a GNB building only, all while continuing to teach in Columbia.
What is particularly striking is that Ted, at the age of 33 at the time, becomes the youngest architect ever to design a large skyscraper in NYC. By season 7, Ted is rich (or at least, right comfortable) and still has an unprecedented promising architecture career before him. In fact, everyone in the main gang “Himym” ends with a career that maybe a little also Good to be true-Lily even goes from a school teacher to a successful high-class art consultant in an 8-but Ted rise is the most impressive. His job as flash as Barney may not clash with the Feds or Robin becoming a big TV journalist who travels a world, but still makes it absurd.
Fans may argue How happy was the end of Ted’s love of loveBut Ted’s career story ended on a large high note (*salute*).