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Joe Swanson's Fiona Apple tribute video is a parody of her 1997 song "Criminal". [1] When Peter talks about him and Lois having "phone sax", a cutaway shows them playing songs on the saxophone via the phone. Peter plays "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty while Lois plays "You Can Call Me Al" by Paul Simon. [2]
21st episode of the 11th season of Family Guy "Roads to Vegas" Family Guy episode Episode no. Season 11 Episode 21 Directed by Greg Colton Written by Steve Callaghan Production code AACX20 Original air date May 19, 2013 (2013-05-19) Guest appearances Alexandra Breckenridge as Woman/Girl in Park #2 Ralph Garman Gary Janetti Joe Lomonaco as Weenie Patrick Meighan Emily Osment as Tina (Deleted ...
The bottle episode breaks from the show's usual set-up and is the only episode of the show not to feature any music or cutaway gags, with Brian and Stewie being the only two characters featured in the entire episode. In repeats of the episode there is no main title sequence, nor is any music played over the end credits.
Before producing the episode, writer Stephen King was approached by the Family Guy production team to create the episode, and obtain his written permission to create it; with King agreeing to allow the show to create the parody. [1] King later stated that he enjoyed the episode and found it funny. [citation needed]
It was the last Family Guy season to be broadcast in 4:3 and in standard definition. The season received negative reviews from critics, who cited a lack of original writing. [ 1 ] More positive assessments revolved around the "tail end of the season," which "threw out all its old conventions and tried something remarkably different."
MacFarlane won the Outstanding Voice-Over Performance award for his performance as Stewie, [4] MacFarlane and Walter Murphy won the Outstanding Music and Lyrics award for the song "You Got a Lot to See" from the episode "Brian Wallows and Peter's Swallows", [4] Steven Fonti won the Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation award for his ...
"Something, Something, Something, Dark Side" is a direct-to-video special of the animated series Family Guy, which later served as the 20th episode of the show's eighth season, and is the second part of the series' Star Wars parody trilogy Laugh It Up, Fuzzball.
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 ...