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After he was unable to ask the actors any questions at a Q&A session, Stewie builds a transporter in his bedroom to beam the cast over and spend the day with them. Meanwhile, Meg becomes a born-again Christian and tries to convert the atheist Brian to Christianity. The episode received mixed reviews from critics and received a 4.8/7 Nielsen rating.
4th episode of the 7th season of Family Guy "Baby Not on Board" Family Guy episode Episode no. Season 7 Episode 4 Directed by Julius Wu Written by Mark Hentemann Production code 6ACX07 Original air date November 2, 2008 (2008-11-02) Guest appearances Jon Benjamin as Carl Joe Flaherty Jacob Pressman Episode chronology ← Previous "Road to Germany" Next → "The Man with Two Brians" Family Guy ...
"Mind Over Murder" is the fourth episode of the first season of the animated comedy series Family Guy. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on April 25, 1999. [2] [3] The episode features Peter after he is placed under house arrest, and decides to open his own bar in the family's basement.
Omri Katz joins the supporting cast as the second actor to play John Ross Ewing III, and Alexis Smith (Lady Jessica Montford), Glenn Corbett (Paul Morgan), Barry Jenner (Dr. Jerry Kenderson), Martin E. Brooks (Edgar Randolph), Daniel Pilon (Naldo Marchetta), Bill Morey (Leo Wakefield), Shalane McCall (Charlie Wade), Pat Colbert (Oil Baron's Club hostess Dora Mae), Anne Lucas (Oil Baron's Club ...
The Dick Van Dyke Show is an American television sitcom. The series ran for five seasons on CBS, lasting 158 half-hour episodes, all filmed in black-and-white.Creator/writer Carl Reiner had told the cast from the beginning that if the show made it through five seasons, that would be its maximum run.
Eric Thurm of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C−, saying ""Grimm Job” has just enough time to run through the basic beats of each story, doing the most superficial possible version of a Family Guy fairy tale. Not only does that reduce the quality of many of the jokes, it also reduces the room in the episode for cutaways (I counted only two ...
Kevin McFarland of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C+, saying "I liked a lot of the throwaway lines and cutaway material packed around the central plot, but when Family Guy goes all in on one plotline without any other runners, it’s a make-or-break choice. This question about Brian and Peter’s owner/pet relationship didn’t really need ...
"Family Gay" was executive producer Richard Appel's first writing credit during his time on Family Guy. "Family Gay" was written by at the time Executive Producer and future co-creator of the Family Guy spin-off The Cleveland Show, Richard Appel. This episode being his first and to date his only writing credit on the show. [2]