Family Guy Red Bull Milking Cow Chris on Fire

8th episode of the sixth season of Family Guy

"McStroke"
Family Guy episode
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 8
Directed by Brian Iles
Written by Wellesley Wild
Production code 5ACX19
Original air date January thirteen, 2008 (2008-01-13)
Invitee appearances
  • Max Burkholder equally Little Kid
  • Denis Martel equally Italian clerk
  • Camille Guaty equally Gina
  • Lisa Wilhoit as Connie D'Amico
  • Ricardo Montalbán as Bull (Mr. Cow)
Episode chronology
Previous
"Peter's Daughter"
Side by side →
"Back to the Woods"
Family Guy (season 6)
List of episodes

"McStroke" is the 8th episode of season six of the blithe comedy serial Family Guy. Information technology originally aired on Fox in the United States on Jan 13, 2008. The episode follows Peter as he saves the life of the owner of a fast-nutrient restaurant and the owner gives him a lifetime supply of costless hamburgers. After eating 30 hamburgers in a row, Peter suffers a massive stroke and tries to accept revenge on the eatery.

The episode was written by Wellesley Wild and it was directed by Brian Iles. This is i of the episodes that did non take show creator Seth MacFarlane's piece of work in mail service-production because he was participating in the Writers Guild of America strike. The episode invitee starred Max Burkholder, Denis Martel and Ricardo Montalbán. Recurring voice actors Alex Breckenridge, Phil LaMarr, Ralph Garman, Mark Hentemann, Danny Smith, Alec Sulkin, Lisa Wilhoit and John Viener also made appearances. It received mixed reviews from critics.

Plot [edit]

Peter starts collecting Cleveland's mail (he calls it "blackness guy mail") while the latter is out of town. After looking through i of Cleveland's magazines devoted to mustaches, Peter decides to grow one. It quickly becomes his most prized possession, and he pretends that it gives him special abilities; for instance, convinced he tin can now speak Italian, he angers an Italian butcher with his mock Italian gibberish.

Peter and Brian walk past McBurgertown and it is on burn down. Firefighters notice Peter's mustache and give him a burn down hose. Peter is reluctant to gamble injury rescuing a man trapped in the edifice, just rationalizes "with great mustache comes cracking responsibility". He rescues the manager from the fire, merely is devastated that his mustache has been burned off. The manager afterward visits the Griffins to give thanks Peter with a lifetime supply of hamburgers. At the thou re-opening, Peter drowns his sense of loss with 30 hamburgers, causing a stroke that paralyzes the left half of his body. Unhappy about the pace of his recovery, Peter walks into a stem cell research center; he is cured of his stroke impairment in simply five minutes. Peter so tries to sue McBurgertown for causing his stroke. Brian points out that it was Peter'south own fault for overindulging. Peter loses the trial because the company has more lawyers, he offered the judge a inexpensive bribe, and because he has no evidence that McBurgertown was at mistake.

Nevertheless wanting revenge, Peter drags Brian to the corporate headquarters. Peter claims that he and Brian are wealthy Asian businessmen and asks for a tour. The company grants his request. Looking for show of wrongdoing that he tin can employ, Peter asks nigh a room labeled "restricted". The bout guide says that room is off-limits, so excuses himself for a 30-minute bathroom break. Peter breaks his word that he would not go in the room, and finds that it is a slaughterhouse. Peter and Brian befriend a bull that is genetically engineered and capable of human spoken communication, who eloquently describes the horrors the company has inflicted. Realizing that this is the evidence that Peter needs to accept downward McBurgertown, Brian offers a deal to set Mr. Cow costless in exchange for his assistance exposing McBurgertown. Realizing that Peter and Brian broke their promise, the tour guide sends two security men after them. Fleeing the building in a madcap hunt set to The Monkees' "Pleasant Valley Lord's day", Mr. Cow reveals McBurgertown's practices and the bad health effects of its food to the media. The visitor suffers a blow from which it might not recover, and Mr. Cow thanks Peter for helping out.

In the B story, Stewie and Brian wager that Stewie can disguise himself as a high schooler and become the most popular kid in less than a week. Using the name "Zac Sawyer", Stewie easily wins over Connie D'Amico and her clique, winning the bet. Connie and "Zac" drive to Anal Point to have sex, just Connie laughs at the size of his penis and drives off. The next twenty-four hour period at school, Stewie is ostracized by anybody for his "baby penis". Stewie concedes defeat and asks Connie for one terminal kiss. When Connie'southward eyes are closed, Stewie takes off his clothes and kisses her. He loudly accuses her as a pedophile and she is arrested immediately by police force.

Production [edit]

A man with black short hair and a black shirt, with tan skin, laughs into a microphone while leaning forward.

The episode was written by Wellesley Wild, who has been with the show since its quaternary season.[1] [2] It was directed by Brian Iles, who would direct the episode "Back to the Forest" later this flavour.[1] [3] Series regulars Peter Shin and James Purdun acted equally supervising directors for the episode.[1]

This is 1 of the episodes of Family Guy that was released afterwards the evidence'south creator, Seth MacFarlane, joined the Writers Order of America strike.[4] MacFarlane participated in the writing process and did record the voices of the characters that he normally plays for the episode, merely he did not approve or participate in any mail-production done to the episode.[iv]

In improver to the regular cast, actors Camille Guaty, Denis Martel, Ted McGinley and Ricardo Montalbán guest starred in the episode (Montalbán would i yr later guest star in the episode "Moon Over Isla Island" on MacFarlane'southward other show, American Dad).[ane] [5] Recurring voice actors Alex Breckenridge, Phil LaMarr, Ralph Garman, writer Mark Hentemann, writer Danny Smith, writer Alec Sulkin, Lisa Wilhoit and writer John Viener made pocket-sized appearances in the episode.[ane]

Cultural references [edit]

The episode featured various references to the popular culture. In a scene, we are shown the Monopoly man, from the lath game Monopoly, in a prison that is reminiscent of The Shawshank Redemption.[four] [6] Brian and Stewie are shown watching the television drama, One Tree Hill.[iv] [6] Singer and actor Will Smith is shown rapping positive and kid-friendly lyrics. When Peter has his mustache, he enters an Italian deli and assumes that he can speak Italian considering of his mustache.[4] Peter sings R.Due east.Yard.'s song "It's the Cease of the World as Nosotros Know It (And I Experience Fine)".[six] Peter'south paralysis is cured by stalk prison cell experiments.[4] Peter tries to find skillful comedy fabric for Robin Williams.

McBurgertown is a parody of worldwide fast-food company McDonald's and similar fast-nutrient multinational chains. The slaughterhouse is referred to as "Dacow" which is a reference to the concentration camp of Dachau.[4] Bob Dylan'south song "Hurricane" is played in the episode.[6] There is a musical chase sequence through multiple doors and a hallway, inspired by tardily 1960s Sabbatum morning cartoons like The Archies and Scooby-Doo, backed past the 1967 song "Pleasant Valley Sunday" by The Monkees.[4] [6] J. Wellington Wimpy (from the comic strip Popeye) makes a cameo appearance (as an in-gag to both his drooping facial features and affinity for hamburgers).

Disquisitional reception [edit]

The episode received mixed reviews. Ahsan Haque of IGN praised the episode, saying that it "turns out to be much more entertaining than one would expect" and grading it 8.8 out of 10.[6] Robert Pierson from the Television receiver Critic gave the episode a mixed review, he stated that "the jokes are pretty adept and although the stories are badly written they are not overly annoying", he ended his review by giving the episode a 46 out of 100.[7]

In dissimilarity, Brad Trechak of TV Squad wrote that at that place were "hints of really skilful ideas in the episode just those were superseded past some hack writing and poorly executed textile" and blamed the WGA strike for the episode's perceived poor quality.[4] Genevieve Koski of The A.Five. Club called the episode "very haphazard" and wrote that there were but "a couple of solid gags sprinkled throughout". She graded "McStroke" C-.[8]

The Parents Television Quango, a frequent critic of the evidence, condemned it as the "Worst TV Show of the Calendar week" for January 25, 2008, their fundamental bespeak of criticism concerned the subplot involving Stewie and Connie D'Amico.[ix]

Tom Eames of entertainment website Digital Spy placed the episode at number eleven on his listing of the all-time Family unit Guy episodes in society of "yukyukyuks" and noted that the show "somehow made strokes funny". He described the episode every bit "A farce of an episode, only in a good fashion."[10]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Family Guy: McStroke". Yahoo!. Retrieved October 4, 2012.
  2. ^ "Family Guy: Petarded". Yahoo!. Archived from the original on Jan 9, 2007. Retrieved October v, 2012.
  3. ^ "Family unit Guy: Back to the Woods". Yahoo!. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Trechak, Brad (Jan 14, 2008). "Family Guy: McStroke". Television set Squad. Archived from the original on Jan xix, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2010.
  5. ^ "Family Guy Episode: "McStroke"". Goggle box Guide . Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Haque, Ahsan (January fourteen, 2008). "Family Guy: "McStroke" Review". IGN . Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  7. ^ Pierson, Robin. "Episode 8 - McStroke". The Television Critic. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  8. ^ Koski, Genevieve (Jan 13, 2008). "McStroke" / "Tearjerker". The A.V. Club . Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  9. ^ Shuler, Adam (Jan 25, 2008). ""Family unit Guy" on Trick". Worst TV Show of the Week. Parents Television Council. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  10. ^ Eames, Tom (March xix, 2017). "The xvi best ever Family Guy episodes in order of yukyukyuks". Digital Spy . Retrieved March 19, 2017.

External links [edit]

  • "McStroke" at IMDb

madigantwoured.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McStroke

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