This is one of the most re-watchable shows. I’ve gone through it so many times and it still makes me laugh out loud.
The amount of times I've seen each season varies as I always did rewatches whilst the show was still going, but I'd guess I've watched seasons 1-3 10 times each, season 7 3 times, and the others are all somewhere between that. I see myself rewatching it in the future too. It's just funny and lovable to me that I can't see it getting boring any time soon.
It's definitely in my rotation (30 Rock, The Office, Parks, New Girl,Friends, HIMYM). I just keep rotating through those over and over again.
I just realized the cabin from the episode Cabin in season 2 is totally the same cabin from The Office in season 8 when Andy goes to break up with his girlfriend so he can be with Erin
Tran is legitimately one of my favorite tv characters of all time and all he does is sit there and smile. Incredible.
Also Merrit Wever is an incredible actress and her first scene, where she talks about why her and Schmidt broke up initially, is stunning. I hate your hair.
"Why dont you tell that to Howard Hughes, the inventor of the Loose Goose." "That was the Spruce Goose and it didnt work!" "It did work! It flew for over a mile at an altitude of 72 feet" "How on earth do you know that information and not know the name of it!"
I always thought it was strange that they set up trans granddaughter as the EXACT same character she played on high maintenance.
"I didnt choke, I'm just careless! And that is my biggest weakness YA BITCH. --- I'm so sorry dude, I'm sorry dude, I didnt even mean that, dawg I didnt mean that at all man." "Dont look at me. Look away. OR, or look RIGHT at me."
"Hey, when's the last time you had mono? Tomorrow you're gonna say yesterday." Martin Starr's character was amazing and I can't believe he was only a one-shot.
Nick's scream in the haunted house is also great. That episode in general is incredible. Schmidt trying to headbutt Robby and as he casually eats a corn dog.
The line that she has that's like "hey, i'm not the idea of a person, i'm an actual person" always stuck out to me as unexpectedly profound.