Halloween Costume Guide
The best damn agent the FBI never actually had.
Andy Dwyer goes undercover, and Burt Macklin is who shows up. The alter ego of Parks and Recreation’s resident loveable goofball, Burt Macklin is a self-appointed FBI agent with absolute conviction and no actual authority. He was created by Andy when April needed his help with something he could justify treating as a mission. Chris Pratt played Andy Dwyer across all seven seasons of the NBC sitcom, which ran from 2009 to 2015 (Wikipedia). The costume is recognizable to anyone who watched the show, and reads as “confident guy in an FBI jacket” to everyone else, which is not a bad position to be in at a party.
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The jacket has to be open enough to show the FBI lettering on the chest. That is the only styling note that actually matters. Everything else, the tie position, the badge placement, whether the sunglasses are on or in your hand, is secondary. If someone walks up and cannot immediately read “FBI” on your chest, the costume is not working yet. Adjust the jacket zip and check it in a mirror before you leave the house. The one mistake that kills this costume is wearing the jacket zipped to the collar.
There is a scene where Andy introduces himself to a stranger as Burt Macklin and explains that he was the best agent the FBI ever had, until he let the president’s nephew’s wedding ring roll off of Air Force One. He says all of this with complete calm and total conviction. That is the character. At the party, introduce yourself as Burt Macklin every single time. Do not break. Andy never breaks.
Keep the badge where you can reach it
The badge is only useful if you can produce it quickly. A badge buried in a pocket that requires unzipping the jacket to access will go unused. Clip it to the belt so it is visible, or keep it in an outer jacket pocket. The bit depends on having it ready. If you have to dig for it, you will stop using it after the first hour, and the costume loses its main interactive element.
The sunglasses indoors question
People will ask why you are wearing sunglasses inside. The correct answer is: “I am not at liberty to discuss that.” Do not take them off to explain. Burt Macklin does not take off the sunglasses. If you take them off to be comfortable, that is reasonable, but the costume reads stronger with them on. The indoor aviator thing is part of the joke and part of the character.
Couples Idea
Excellent couple concept, and the only one on this page that comes directly from the show. Burt Macklin and Janet Snakehole are Andy and April’s alter egos, and they run their undercover operation together in the episode where this bit becomes a full costume scenario. It is the canonical Parks and Rec couple Halloween costume. If your partner has done the Janet Snakehole build, this is the obvious pairing.
Group Idea: Pawnee Parks Department
Excellent group for anyone who watched Parks and Rec together and wants to go as a unit. The cast contrast is strong: an overachieving bureaucrat, a man who wants the government to cease to exist, a goth who works for the government despite hating everything, and a fake FBI agent. Every costume is visually distinct and immediately readable to fans. At a general party, the Parks and Rec read requires about two seconds of context, which is about the right amount.
Group Idea: Incompetent Sitcom Sleuths
Strong group if everyone commits to the specific characters. Michael Scarn is Michael Scott’s action hero alter ego from the Threat Level Midnight film within The Office, so that costume is a layer on top of an already well-known character. Dwight Schrute is immediately readable. Jake Peralta from Brooklyn Nine-Nine is an actual detective, which adds a useful contrast to three people who are absolutely not detectives. At a TV-literate party this lands. At a general crowd, some of the specifics will need explaining.
Group Idea: Chris Pratt Live-Action Roster
Strong concept for a film and TV crowd. The through-line is the same actor across four very different genres, which is the actual joke. A fake FBI agent from a sitcom, a space outlaw, a raptor trainer, and a Navy SEAL walk into a party together and they are all the same person. Someone in the group needs to be comfortable explaining the concept when people ask, because not everyone will make the connection on sight. James Reece from The Terminal List is the least recognised of the four, which affects how quickly the group concept lands.
Group Idea: Iconic Sitcom Alter Egos
Might work, but the group requires everyone in the audience to know both the original character and the alter ego. Burt Macklin and Janet Snakehole are Parks and Rec. Duke Silver is Ron Swanson’s secret jazz musician persona. Regina Phalange is Phoebe Buffay’s fake name from Friends, recognizable to most people who watched the show. The concept is clever, but explaining that all four people are playing fake identities of other characters takes longer than most costume explanations should. This one is for a crowd that will get it immediately, or it stops being funny.
This is one of the simpler builds on the site. No wig, no contacts, no specialty materials. The hardest part is sourcing the right jacket, and the list above has that covered.
Andy Dwyer plays Burt Macklin with complete sincerity. There is no winking at the audience. He believes it fully, and that is where the joke lives. Commit to the character or the costume just becomes a guy in an FBI jacket.
Start with the FBI windbreaker jacket over a short-sleeve shirt and stripe tie. Add grey fit pants, black leather dress shoes, aviator sunglasses, and an FBI badge holder. The jacket does most of the recognition work. The badge is what makes it read as Burt Macklin specifically rather than a generic FBI agent.
Parks and Recreation ended in 2015 but holds strong on streaming, and Burt Macklin specifically benefits from being a joke costume within the show, which gives it a meta layer that works even for people who only half-remember the series. At a general party, anyone who watched Parks and Rec will get it immediately. Anyone who did not will see a confident man in an FBI jacket, which is fine on its own.
The two that matter most are his introduction line: “The name’s Macklin. Burt Macklin, FBI.” and his deadpan backstory: “I was the best damn agent the FBI ever had, until I let the president’s nephew’s wedding ring roll off of Air Force One.” That second one lands because it is delivered with complete conviction by someone who is very clearly not an FBI agent.
Burt Macklin is the alter ego of Andy Dwyer, played by Chris Pratt in Parks and Recreation. Andy adopts the persona whenever he decides the situation calls for undercover FBI work, which it usually does not. Chris Pratt played Andy Dwyer across all seven seasons of the NBC sitcom, which ran from 2009 to 2015 (Parks and Recreation Fandom).
The FBI jacket is non-negotiable. The aviator sunglasses are close to non-negotiable. Everything else is optional. Skip the tie, skip the belt, skip the badge stickers if you want a simpler build. The jacket and sunglasses alone are enough to signal the character.
Janet Snakehole is April Ludgate’s alter ego, a wealthy widow with a mysterious past. April and Andy invent their personas together in the show, so Burt Macklin and Janet Snakehole is the canonical couple costume from Parks and Recreation. It is the strongest duo option on this page.
Yes, and it works well at any event where people know film and TV broadly. Star-Lord, Owen Grady from Jurassic World, and James Reece from The Terminal List all share the same actor, and the contrast between a goofy FBI wannabe, a space outlaw, a dinosaur trainer, and a Navy SEAL is part of what makes the group interesting. Someone needs to be comfortable explaining the concept, because not everyone will make the connection on sight.
There is a ready-made Burt Macklin costume listed at item 12 above. It is a faster option if you want the whole thing in one order. Building it from individual pieces gives you a more accurate look and items you can actually wear again, especially the aviator sunglasses and the dress shoes.