
Astonishing are the producers and writers of the show Family Guy for being able to come up with provoking and mindless jargon that, although crude and childish at times, allows the viewers to become more competent of how the world truly works. Seth MacFarlane, the creator of Emmy Award winning show, has gone beyond creating a show that is meant to entertain the average American with an IQ of 100 for 30 minutes. MacFarlane has designed a masterpiece that allows the more liberal viewers of higher intelectual cognition to quaff from the fountain of political satire the show is offers. In a sense, Family Guy is MacFarlane's own personal soap box on which he defaces the indignities of American politics and culture, while incorporating PG13 slap stick humor. A vast majority of Americans were frustrated and in utter dismay by the actions of the Bush administration, which MacFarlane found a great oportunity to indirectly voice his shared opinions on the show. In a few episodes, MacFarlane shows a couple clips of an animated G.W. Bush in all his glory by depicting him as a 5 year old child with a severe form of attention deficit hyperactive disorder. MacFarlane and his team have also thrown several left hooks at the Catholic Church through the aid of the anthropomorphic dog on the show. Brian was designed by MacFarlane to be a level-headed, witty, agnostic, and very liberal character who is an avid drinker while acknowledging it freely; all traits of which most Americans lack severly. As MacFarlane put it ever so gracefully, Brian is a "dog who has a wit as dry as the martinis he drinks." Media giants such as Fox News, Time Warner CEO Ted Turner, and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner have had their fare share of blows on Family Guy as well for their right-wing political opinions, erradic behavior, and speculated anti-sematic ideals respectively. Irronically, Entertainment Weekly, which has been chastized on the show as well, has voted Seth MacFarlane over all as "the smartest person on TV". Family Guy's overall design by MacFarlane to use eloquent vernacular, crude humor, and American culture satire while entertaining a broad range audience has made it a great success.



