

For no good reason, Peter opts not to go grocery shopping and, instead, buys a brain-damaged horse. “Family Gay” certainly has one of Family Guy’s most ridiculous premises, which is why we love it so much. The one he’s “been working on for three years,” the one that should have “a compelling pro-tagonist,” and with a narrative in which “some friends become enemies, some enemies become friends.”īest Cutaway: Peter reasons that becoming a medical guinea pig will, thankfully, prevent him from having to "take that job as Matt Damon's neck," in which he'd heckle the actor with, "Ben Affleck married Jennifer Garner, but you married a bartender with a kid." In the episode’s final moments, Stewie amazingly skewers Brian, with a voice that gets higher in pitch as he carries on, for his lack of dedication to the novel he’s always talked about writing but never actually sits down to write. However, any ardent Family Guy viewer knows, though, that the funniest sequence in “Brian the Bachelor” has nothing to do with The Bachelorette.

Brian decries so-called “reality” shows as much as the next reasonably intelligent person (or dog), but when Quagmire wins a spot on the latest season of The Bachelorette, Brian ends up joining him, and consequently falling in love with the bachelorette in question only to learn, after winning the show, that she’s just an actress and doesn’t give a damn about him. Written by Matt Barone ( Date: June 26, 2005īest Cutaway: In a hilarious, albeit brief, revival of the old cartoon Snorks, a male snork gets aroused by a female one and the appendage atop its head extends.įor its sharp digs at reality television alone, “Brian the Bachelor” deserves a high placement on this countdown. In honor of MacFarlane’s impressive leap to the big screen (we’ve seen Ted, and it doesn’t disappoint), Complex presents The 50 Best Family Guy Episodes, pulled from the show’s 188 total contenders, and 10 seasons’ worth of amusement. Put all of their personalities together and you’ve got one of the best animated televisions shows of all time, as well as the reason why MacFarlane was able to make Ted in the first place. Like The Simpsons, a clear influence, Family Guy’s rogue’s gallery of non-Griffin characters is also strong, from Glenn Quagmire (MacFarlane, once more), Peter’s endlessly horny friend, to wheelchair-stricken Joe Swanson ( Patrick Warburton), Peter’s other best bud. There’s Peter (voiced by MacFarlane), the well-meaning but obese, usually drunk, and senseless patriarch Lois ( Alex Borstein), his stay-at-home wife with a heart of gold Chris ( Seth Green), the chubby and dim-witted son Meg ( Mila Kunis), the neglected, nerdy daughter who can never catch a break Stewie (MacFarlane), the wise-beyond-his-years baby who speaks with an English accent and dreams of taking over the world and Brian (MacFarlane, again), the brainy, boozing, atheist family dog. Outside of MacFarlane and his squad of writers, the credit largely goes to the show’s central family, the Griffins. Today, it’s an entertainment empire, airing constantly via multiple syndication deals and regularly scoring high DVD sales figures. Debuting on January 31, 1999, the provocative, domestic comedy, set in the fictional Rhode Island city of Quahog, has endured through an early lack of confidence from Fox executives, an 11-month cancellation (from August 2000 through November 2001) and endless attacks from critics and good-taste pundits.

With its offensive, provocative humor and sporadic references to seemingly random pop culture items (get ready to remember the 1980 superhero flop Flash Gordon in all its campy glory), Ted shrewdly captures the Family Guy spirit without relying upon that sense of familiarity.Īnd who can blame MacFarlane for retaining the show’s vibe? As the 38-year-old shotcaller put it in our recent interview, Family Guy is “the mothership” from which all of MacFarlane’s other properties ( American Dad, The Cleveland Show) benefit.
TOP 10 BEST FAMILY GUY EPISODES SERIES
This weekend, Seth MacFarlane, the king of Sunday night animation thanks to his massively successful Fox series Family Guy, will make his feature film directorial debut with Ted, the story of a 35-year-old dude ( Mark Wahlberg) who’s still best friends with his talking, bong-hitting, skirt-chasing teddy bear, Ted (voiced by MacFarlane himself, who also co-wrote the film).
