![]() ![]() While Pratt is credited by series co-creator Michael. When they arrived the next morning at the Grand Canyon (!), we were treated to the kind of scene that Parks excels at: an unexpectedly touching moment that’s suddenly goosed by one perfect joke. During his time on Parks and Recreation playing the sweet clueless oaf Andy Dwyer, actor Chris Pratt was known to improvise lines occasionally. Andy was a lovable goofball but he proved himself as a worthwhile friend and co-worker. His role gradually expanded, causing him to be one of the primary characters and subsequently a fan-favorite. Noting that she could steal her dad’s car, April gave him the pep talk: “Look, this is a stupid idea but right at this exact second we have enough momentum to do something stupid before we realize how stupid it is.” And so they sweetly drove off together to wherever. Andy started Parks and Rec as Ann Perkins' immature boyfriend, and was a relatively minor character. Your favorite shows, movies and more are here. Andy nixed it at first, claiming their car would break down. He is the inventor of both the Super Straw and Andy's Mouth Surprise. (Two things: One, April and Jerry do hang out, Leslie! And two, “Ohhh, my face!!! My face… is fine, Mikhail Petrov!”) With these ridiculous exploits completed, April pointed out one unchecked item on his list. (Should Millicent be worried and Jerry be happy? Is Chris perking back up to Perkins?)Īfter making a pretty awesome the most amazing grilled cheese, April and Andy reenacted a thoroughly amusing Burt Macklin/Janet Snakehole scene from a Cold War action film, which involved Andy crashing through a sliding glass door, and rescuing Janet from the butter-knife clutching clutches of Jerry. Chris did, however, seem to enjoy Ann’s wise nugget that the problem with reincarnation is that you spend so much time focusing on the next life that you forget to enjoy the current one. (And for final exit music, you could do a lot worse.) Meanwhile, Chris, having speed-read two Reasonabilist books, engaged Herb in a reincarnation discussion that quickly scared him away (“This morning at dawn, you will take a new form - that of a fleshless, chattering skeleton when Zorp the Surveyor arrives and burns your flesh off with his volcano mouth”). In S4:E11 of Parks and Recreation, The Comeback. (The check-cashing exchange was pretty priceless.) While not quite a Duke Silver-level discovery, Ron performing “Symphony for the Righteous Destruction of Humanity in E Minor” with the Reasonabilists was a tiny revelation. Parks & Rec Chris Pratt exists within the P&R universe, as a separate person from Andy Dwyer. Sure, he stood for religious tolerance, but he also wanted to move some high-priced flutes from his woodshop, and the Zorpies featured them in their ceremonies. We knew he marched to the beat of a drum he made himself, but was he so offbeat that he was a friend of the Reasonabilists? (“Hail Zorp!” “Congratulations to all of us for reaching the finish line”). ![]()
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