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The critical reaction was fairly positive. Kate Moon of TV Fanatic did not think Peter's staircase subplot line was funny and also thought the show should have used Marlee Matlin for more than just a few lines in the beginning, but she did think the episode was funny, specifically praising Stewie's moments in the episode.
4th episode of the 7th season of Family Guy "Baby Not on Board" Family Guy episode Episode no. Season 7 Episode 4 Directed by Julius Wu Written by Mark Hentemann Production code 6ACX07 Original air date November 2, 2008 (2008-11-02) Guest appearances Jon Benjamin as Carl Joe Flaherty Jacob Pressman Episode chronology ← Previous "Road to Germany" Next → "The Man with Two Brians" Family Guy ...
The episode was met with a generally positive response from critics. Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club gave "Road to the North Pole" a positive review, stating that it is "a satisfying episode of Family Guy all around, filled with funny gags and nice moments." She especially praised the musical segments, and the portrayal of the North Pole ...
"Boys Do Cry" is the 15th episode of the fifth season of the American animated sitcom Family Guy. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April 29, 2007. The episode follows the Griffin family after Lois gets a job as an organist at the local church, and she insists that the rest of the family go to church with her.
In his review of the first volume DVD collection of Family Guy, Aaron Beierle of DVD Talk listed "The Son Also Draws" as one of the series' "most brilliant moments", praising the spiritual vision sequence and naming the conversation between Peter and Brian among the best moments of the series, calling the conversation "rolling-on-the-floor funny."
Brian writes a play, entitled A Passing Fancy, which is a hit in Quahog.Just as he lets his success go to his head, Stewie asks him to read a play he has written. Brian humors him and reads the play after a night of drinking and philosophical discussion with aspiring writers, but he realizes Stewie's play, entitled An American Marriage, is much better than his.
Critics have targeted Family Guy 's reliance on cutaway gags, panning the show for its characterization, excessive pop culture references and writing outside of these gags, and have unfavorably compared the show to contemporaries such as The Simpsons and Comedy Central's South Park; South Park itself has also parodied and criticized Family Guy ...
Family Guy managed to point out virtually all of those moments in this parody." [3] Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club found the episode to have "a lot of solid laughs", and admired the show for "throwing itself into these outsized movie parody things". [6]