History of Family Guy
The first and second seasons of Family Guy were made starting in 1999 after the Larry shorts caught the attention of the Fox Broadcasting Company. Its cancellation was announced, but then a shift in power at Fox and outcry from the fans led to a reversal of that decision and the making of a third season. After that, it was officially cancelled.
Reruns on Cartoon Network drove interest in the show up, and the DVD releases did quite well, selling over 2.2 million in a year and renewing network interest. Family Guy returned to production in 2004, completing three more seasons (for a total of six seasons) and a straight to DVD movie, Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story. The show has completed airing its seventh season and is in its ongoing eighth. The show is contracted to make new episodes until at least 2012.[1]
History on TV
Creation
In Family Guy Live in Montreal, Seth MacFarlane stated that he wanted an animated show to impress a girl. Seth MacFarlane wrote the first episode of what would become Family Guy for Cartoon Network's The Cartoon Cartoon Show. Steve, an anthropomorphic dog that would later become Brian is found as a stray by Larry, a fat, idiotic man who would later become Peter and is taken in. In the span of two episodes, many characters that resemble Family Guy characters (for example, a flirtatious pilot that becomes Glenn Quagmire) are referenced. Due to the target audience of Cartoon Network being children, the Larry shorts were significantly tame in content, relative to Family Guy. Family Guy as we know it today premiered in the United States on the Fox Broadcasting Company on January 31, 1999, after Super Bowl XXXIII.
This episode attracted 22 million viewers. The show premiered as a regular series in April and ran for six additional episodes until the season finale in mid-May. The first season had seven episodes which introduced the show's main characters. The second season began on September 23, 1999, and suffered competition from other shows. After only two episodes of the second season, Family Guy was taken off the network's permanent schedule and shown irregularly thereafter. The show returned in March 2000 to finish airing the second season which contained 21 episodes. The third season contained 21 episodes and began airing from July 11, 2001 to February 14, 2002.
During its second and third-season runs, Fox frequently moved the show around different days and time slots with little or no notice and consequently, the show's ratings suffered. When Family Guy was shown in the UK, and when the DVDs were subsequently released there (November 12, 2001), the seven episodes of the second season that were produced for season one were included with the first season, balancing them out with 14 episodes each. This resulted in latter DVD releases to be labelled incorrect to their original American season (e.g. the Family Guy: Season 6 DVD features Season 5 episodes).
There was a great deal of debate and rumor during the second and third seasons about whether Family Guy would be cancelled or renewed. Fox publicly announced that the show had been cancelled at the end of the second season. In an attempt to convince Fox to renew the show, dismayed fans created websites, signed petitions, and wrote letters; some even sent diapers and baby food to the network to "save" Stewie.
A shift in power at Fox resulted in the ordering of thirteen new episodes forming the basis of the third season. Keenly aware of the uncertainty of the show's future, the writers referenced the uncertainty in several episodes, specifically The Thin White Line, where Fox let them say the word "fuck" (at 15:55 into the episode) for the first time without being hidden by background noise like a bell. It was instead bleeped. Family Guy also had to deal with a very tough time slot competing with Survivor and Friends having aired on Thursday Nights at 8:00 PM ET, which was mentioned (along with 2nd cancellation) in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story.
During the third season, Fox announced that Family Guy was cancelled for good.
Revival efforts
The show's cancellation in the third season was decried by fans, who renewed efforts to convince Fox to resurrect the show. An online petition was launched, garnering over 10,000 signatures within a few weeks. The petition gained over 100,000 signatures total, but this along with mass e-mailing and letter writing to Fox executives and organized street protests failed to save Family Guy. Later efforts to get other networks, particularly UPN, to buy Family Guy also failed.
Return to television
In 2003, Family Guy gained its first syndicated run on Canada's Teletoon network, where it quickly gained massive popularity due to frequent airings. Several months later, reruns of the series finally found a permanent home at Cartoon Network's late-night Adult Swim block, where it continues to air. According to a Cartoon Network press release,
Family Guy ranks #1 in its time period on cable among Adults and Men 18–24, and occasionally beats both The Late Show with David Letterman and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in head-to-head competition among Men 18–34 and Men 18–24.
The series found further success on DVD, when it was finally released for the US market (NTSC, Region 1) on April 15, 2003. Divided into two volumes, Family Guy sold 2.2 million DVD units in the first year,[3] reportedly surpassing every other TV-based DVD released in 2003, including Sex and the City and Friends compilations. The significant Cartoon Network ratings combined with the unprecedented DVD sales, led to widespread rumors that Fox was in talks to revive the series.
On November 19, 2003, the E! Entertainment Television channel and its website (see below) reported that Fox was negotiating with Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane to revive the show with 35 new episodes. In a February 27, 2004 interview with IGN, Seth MacFarlane confirmed that Family Guy would resume production.[4] MacFarlane provided even more information in a BBC interview.[5]
On March 26, 2004, Fox Broadcasting Company officially announced that it had committed to producing at least 22 more episodes of Family Guy for broadcast in early 2005. Adult Swim retained a window to run these episodes, starting on May 1, 2005. Seth MacFarlane was quoted as saying,
I'm just incredibly excited that we're back in business on Family Guy. Now all those crazy kids who've been hounding me to bring the show back can stop bothering me and move onto more serious matters—like saving Coupling.
The fourth-season premiere of Family Guy aired on Sunday, May 1, 2005, 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Fox, and poked fun at the show's former troubles by showing a 2002 flashback with Peter listing all of the Fox shows that would have to fail (and did) before Family Guy would be able to return. An important reason for the show's current success is the Sunday night time slot along with other Fox animated programs. Reruns of the fourth season began play during Adult Swim on June 9, 2005.
A Family Guy direct-to-DVD movie titled Family Guy Presents Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, which combined three Family Guy episodes into one coherent story (with added scenes) was released on September 27, 2005.[6] The 88-minute film is unrated in the US (in the UK it's rated with a 15 certificate) and includes commentary, deleted material, and other bonus features. An edited version of the film was shown as the Season 4 finale on May 21, 2006. The film's plot concerns Stewie finding out what he is like in the future. Originally, the movie was going to be made before the TV episodes, but the film got pushed back when the ideas within the episodes took off. On the same day of the DVD movie's release, Variety reported that 20th Century Fox greenlit production of 22 additional all new episodes of Family Guy, which began airing on FOX on September 10, 2006.[7]
A Family Guy video game was produced under the 2K Games banner, and was developed by High Voltage Software. Playable characters include Peter, Brian and Stewie. The game was released on October 25, 2006 on the PlayStation Portable, Xbox and PlayStation 2.[8][9][10] The video game is rated M for Mature and is rated 15 in the UK.
Production on Season 6 (2007-2008) has started up in January after a two month hiatus. [11]
Copyright lawsuit
In December 2007, Art Metrano (of Police Academy fame) filed a lawsuit accusing the show of copyright infringement, and claiming damages in excess of two million US dollars. Metrano frequently appeared on The Tonight Show as a "magician" performing tricks (such as making his fingers "jump" from one hand to another) while constantly humming a theme song (named "Fine and Dandy", an early 1930s composition by Kay Swift). This bit was parodied in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story. [12]
On March 15, 2007, lawyers for entertainer Carol Burnett filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles claiming that Burnett's likeness and theme was willfully misappropriated in the episode "Peterotica". The opening of the episode has Peter, Quagmire, Joe Swanson and Cleveland entering an adult bookstore and remarking on its cleanliness. They learn that the reason is that Burnett has been hired as a part-time janitor. The scene then cuts to a cartoon of Burnett in the guise of her "Charwoman" character mopping near a pile of inflatable dolls, while an altered arrangement of her signature tune plays. The characters then discuss her habit of tugging her ear at the end of every episode, leading into another joke. The suit alleges that the jokes in the episode were in response to Burnett's production company denying Seth MacFarlane permission to use the tune in an episode. The suit was dismissed.[13][14][15]
Live performances
Seth McFarlane and some of the other writers and voice actors on the show have begun to perform in "Family Guy LIVE!", which have been enormously successful theater shows. The show usually begins with a read-through of a script from a classic episode from the series, with all of the original voice-actors performing their character's lines, and then moves onto a performance of some songs from the show's history. Towards the end, there is a Q & A session and a clip is shown from one of the new, unaired episodes. There have been performances in New York, Los Angeles, Montreal, and Chicago[16]. Even though an aired episode is usually only 22 minutes long, the script-reading of an episode of the same length can last as long as an hour with all of the pauses for laughter to subside and constant asides to the audience.
References
- ^ Goldman, Eric (May 5, 2008). "Big New Deal for Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane". IGN. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
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(help) - ^ Battaglio, Stephen (May 1–7, 2005). "The Second Life of Brian". TV Guide.
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: CS1 maint: date format (link) - ^ Netherby, Jennifer (March 29, 2004). "DVD keeps Family alive". Video Business.
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(help) - ^ Patrizio, Andy (2004-02-27). "The Family Guy To Return — Production begins for a 2005 return to TV". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
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(help) - ^ "Cult Television — Family Guy". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
- ^ Grossberg, Josh (2005-06-21). ""Family Guy" Flick Hits DVD". E! Online. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
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(help) - ^ Adalian, Josef (September 27, 2005). "Fox forges 'Family' tie: Goodman new 'Guy' at 20th Century". Variety.com. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
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(help) - ^ ""Family Guy" Video Game Announced". Yankidank.com. 2005-04-02. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
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(help) - ^ Adams, David (2006-03-06). "Family Guy Plays to Consoles This Fall". IGN.com. Retrieved 2006-07-12.
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(help) - ^ "Family Guy video game preview (part 1)". Planet Family Guy. 2006-10-10.
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(help) - ^ Family Guy - TV.com Tracking
- ^ Magician Claims "Family Guy" Stole His Act
- ^ Carol Burnett v. "Family Guy" - March 16, 2007
- ^ [1] [dead link ]
- ^ Carol Burnett Loses Family Guy Lawsuit
- ^ 'Family Guy' hits the road - Entertainment News, TV News, Media - Variety
Great show to watch