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"A Fistful of Meg" is the fourth episode of the twelfth season and the 214th overall episode of the animated comedy series Family Guy. It aired on Fox in the United States on November 10, 2013, and is written by Dominic Bianchi and Joe Vaux and directed by Joe Vaux. [1]
[citation needed] The scene in which Stewie and Brian destroy the record is nearly identical to a scene in the 1999 film Office Space in which the characters destroy a printer, including use of the same song (Geto Boys' "Still"). [6] Peter makes Jesus admit that he is the messiah by threatening to urinate over albums of Christian artist Amy Grant.
The Parents Television Council, a conservative media watchdog group and frequent critic of MacFarlane-produced programs, called on the Federal Communications Commission to investigate Family Guy after the episode aired, citing the scenes where Brian is talked into eating Stewie's feces and vomit. PTC president Tim Winter said that, "Given the ...
Seth MacFarlane, shown here in 2012, created Family Guy, which premiered on January 31, 1999. Family Guy is an American adult animated television sitcom created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company. The series centers on the dysfunctional Griffin family, which consists of father Peter (MacFarlane), mother Lois (Alex Borstein), daughter Meg (Lacey Chabert in Episodes 1–9, then ...
"Roads to Vegas" is the twenty-first episode of the eleventh season, and the 209th overall episode, of Family Guy. It follows Brian and Stewie as they head off to Vegas using a teleporting machine, which malfunctions and creates clones of themselves.
“Family Guy” devoted Sunday’s entire episode to mocking President Trump, with one scene in particular bringing poor Meg into the mess. While “Trump Guy” included jokes both big (a minute ...
In a sequence unconnected to the remainder of the episode, Stewie prevents Osama bin Laden from sending a hostile message to the United States by attacking him and killing several of his henchmen (though before that happens, the terrorists were messing around when Laden was unable to recover from a slip of the tongue when first making the video), and (in a parody of the opening scene from The ...
The scene, which references the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, shows the character Peter Griffin standing beside a protester in front of Chinese tanks, mirroring the iconic “Tank Man” image.