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Family Guy is an American animated comedy multimedia franchise originally conceived and created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company, primarily based on the animated series Family Guy (1999–present), its spin-off series The Cleveland Show (2009–2013), and the film Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story (2005), based on his 1995–1997 thesis films The Life of Larry and Larry & Steve.
The New York Post singled out Michael's performance saying that his character "might be the most spineless, loathsome character ever created for this show." [ 4 ] In 2011, Michael portrayed the role of Thomas Edison in History Channel 's series America: The Story of Us , scoring the highest viewership ratings in network history.
How Loathsome is a series of goth, LGBT comics by Ted Naifeh and Tristan Crane. Originally published in 2003 in four separate issues, the series was released in a graphic novel format in 2004 by Comics Lit / NBM .
Pages in category "Fictional characters from the 20th century" The following 198 pages are in this category, out of 198 total.
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The loathly lady can be found in The Adventures of the Sons of Eochaid Mugmedon, in which Niall of the Nine Hostages proves himself the rightful High King of Ireland by embracing her, because she turns out to personify the sovereignty of the territory (and is therefore sometimes referred in scholarship as a 'sovereignty goddess').
Christopher Julius "Chris" Rock III (played by Tyler James Williams and voiced by Tim Johnson Jr.), is the ambitious, normal, responsible, intelligent, and kind-hearted, but troubled, unlucky, unpopular, untalented, nonathletic, underachieving, hapless, awkward, nerdy, vulnerable and put-upon eldest child and protagonist of the series.
Gay male characters were portrayed as flighty with high voices, existing merely as buffoonish supporting characters. [ 198 ] A rare example of a homosexual character not being portrayed in the standard effeminate way, albeit still negatively, was the villain "Murder Legendre", played by Bela Lugosi in White Zombie (1932), the Frenchman who ...