The Standard (St. Catharines)

Family Guy lives to lampoon

Animated comedy returns for new season on Sunday night

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK — As everyone must know by now, Fox’s animated series Family Guy lives to lampoon human nature and human frailties, and does so without fear or favour.

There’s something bracing about Family Guy as it blows its whistle on a society that seems to grow ever coarser and more mean-spirited, while individual­s squawk at any hint of disrespect directed toward them and wilt at every trigger word.

For anyone weary of today’s reflexive correctnes­s, the show, with its deft blend of the ingenious and the rude-and-crude, provides a counteract­ive safe space where no low blow, regardless of how low, is inadmissib­le.

And so it carries on, as porky patriarch Peter Griffin and his family and friends begin their 16th season on Sunday on City and Fox.

With that in mind, show runners Rich Appel and Alec Sulkin recently shared some details of what lies ahead — including the series’ 300th episode, which won’t be just a milestone, Appel promises, “but one of our best.”

The season premiere, said Sulkin, “will be our shameless grab to win a (best show) Emmy” — an itch so far unscratche­d by the Television Academy.

As Peter embarks on his own For Your Considerat­ion campaign, he will make Family Guy more like proven Emmy-winning shows, including not just comedy but also dramas and reality. Guest voices include Sofia Vergara, Ty Burrell, Julie Bowen, Louis C.K., Bill Maher, Christina Pickles and the late Adam West.

What else?

“We’ll have a special episode where (precocious toddler), Stewie is in therapy for the entire halfhour,” said Sulkin, “with the therapist played by Sir Ian McKellen.”

“Stewie actually learns something about himself,” said Appel — “as opposed to everyone else’s therapy.”

Another episode, titled Three Directors, will tell the same simple story — Peter losing his job — within the half-hour, “but each version is told in the style of Quentin Tarantino, Wes Anderson and Michael Bay,” Appel said.

“We have an episode where Brian (the erudite, articulate family dog), and Stewie go back to Victorian England and play Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson,” said Sulkin. “That seems like something we might have done before, but we actually hadn’t.”

The series, which premiered in 1999, was created by Seth MacFarlane, who handed over the reins as showrunner in 2010 to pursue other projects, including the two Ted films and, currently, his new Fox sci-fi series The Orville, which he created, wrote and stars in.

But he continues to voice a number of favourite Family Guy characters, “and while he’s recording if there are things that he doesn’t like, or DOES like, he will let us know,” Sulkin said.

One of MacFarlane’s signature elements in the show is its cutaway gags and comic asides.

Peppered through each episode’s 22 minutes, those cutaways are where some of its sharpest and most devilish comedy resides, and where the series takes its wildest flights of fancy.

“It’s one of Seth’s brilliant strokes,” said Appel.

“The cutaways predate YouTube and Hulu clips, and anticipate­d the shared content of my kids’ generation. When people watch 30- or 60- or 90-second bits that they like, that they think is funny, they’ll follow the trail to the whole show those bits came from. Family Guy is popular because hopefully it’s good, but the cutaways serve as a lifeline to the show in some ways.”

Another MacFarlane masterstro­ke continues unabated: The considerab­le naughtines­s of Family Guy. This means ongoing discussion­s with the network over content.

“Rich has a background in law,” said Sulkin, “so when we have issues that are brought up by Standards, he is particular­ly good at making arguments to get us around some of those issues.”

“I think what Alec is saying is: As a comedy writer, I’m a great lawyer,” Appel cracked.

“Rich just made several valiant phone calls trying to defend a bit in an upcoming show which is a play on the I Love Lucy chocolates-ona-conveyer-belt scene,” Sulkin said. “But instead of Lucy, it’s Peter. And instead of chocolates, it’s little Dixie cups filled with truckers’ urine for a drug test. Those are the kinds of things that we fight for.”

“It’s not exactly what my mother imagined when she paid for my law school,” Appel said, “but it’s something.”

He didn’t say who won this particular debate.

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 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Family Guy is back with a new season starting on Sunday night. Show runners Alec Sulkin and Rich Appel say the season premiere “will be a shameless grab to win a (best show) Emmy, while another episode will feature Stewie, above, in therapy for the...
SUPPLIED PHOTO Family Guy is back with a new season starting on Sunday night. Show runners Alec Sulkin and Rich Appel say the season premiere “will be a shameless grab to win a (best show) Emmy, while another episode will feature Stewie, above, in therapy for the...
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