Brian bonds with his new girlfriend's son; Peter, Quagmire, and Cleveland take a joyride in Joe's new classic Corvette.Brian bonds with his new girlfriend's son; Peter, Quagmire, and Cleveland take a joyride in Joe's new classic Corvette.Brian bonds with his new girlfriend's son; Peter, Quagmire, and Cleveland take a joyride in Joe's new classic Corvette.
Seth MacFarlane
- Peter Griffin
- (voice)
- …
Alex Borstein
- Lois Griffin
- (voice)
Seth Green
- Chris Griffin
- (voice)
Mila Kunis
- Meg Griffin
- (voice)
Mike Henry
- Cleveland Brown
- (voice)
Dusan Brown
- Bully
- (voice)
Issac Ryan Brown
- Bully
- (voice)
Laura Bell Bundy
- Holly
- (voice)
Andre Robinson
- Kyle
- (voice)
Jennifer Tilly
- Bonnie Swanson
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe dates of events mentioned on Joe's radio:
- November 22, 1963 - John F. Kennedy assassination as announced by CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite
- October 30, 1938 - "War of the Worlds" broadcast was a radio play about the alien invasion of Earth that most listeners accepted as on-scene news reporting. The play was written by Orson Welles and produced at the Mercury Theater. The play itself was based on the novel by science-fiction writer H.G. Wells of the same name.
- Quotes
Peter Griffin: [Joe, Peter, Cleveland and Joe are all sitting in the car parked in the driveway. Joe has told them to use their imaginations while he sits int the drivers seat] Joe Stop this car right now!
Glenn Guagmire: The car is Stopped!
[with a Duh! tone]
- ConnectionsReferences Sesame Street (1969)
Featured review
Solid Episode
It's not a 10/10 best episode ever like the other two reviews are saying, but still not bad nonetheless and I like the storyline with Brian and Kyle. Granted there's not many laugh out loud jokes and gags in there but still some nice storylines and such.
But something I don't get with this show is that how it's structured that every time it feels rushed and you're thinking that everything just came to a conclusion suddenly and feel like some things didn't resolve and it should've been longer. I don't know if it's because there are two plotlines in the episodes and they're not given enough time or what, but it's really weird.
It's like a total contrast to American Dad where you similarly have 20 minute episodes but they feel like a thorough and complete episode with a beginning, middle and ending and you feel like you watched a whole episode with a memorable story and scenes, while here it's like "eh yeah, that happened I guess" and you forget about it afterward. And funnily enough, even in the American Dad most if not all the episodes have multiple storylines but 9 out of 10 you still feel like they are given enough time and it doesn't feel rushed and thoughtless.
But something I don't get with this show is that how it's structured that every time it feels rushed and you're thinking that everything just came to a conclusion suddenly and feel like some things didn't resolve and it should've been longer. I don't know if it's because there are two plotlines in the episodes and they're not given enough time or what, but it's really weird.
It's like a total contrast to American Dad where you similarly have 20 minute episodes but they feel like a thorough and complete episode with a beginning, middle and ending and you feel like you watched a whole episode with a memorable story and scenes, while here it's like "eh yeah, that happened I guess" and you forget about it afterward. And funnily enough, even in the American Dad most if not all the episodes have multiple storylines but 9 out of 10 you still feel like they are given enough time and it doesn't feel rushed and thoughtless.
helpful•103
- MamadNobari97
- Feb 15, 2021
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