There's Something About Paulie

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Family Guy Episode
"There's Something About Paulie"

Peter meets Big Paulie.
Episode no.: 23
Prod. code: 1ACX10
Airdate: June 27, 2000
Writer(s): Ricky Blitt
Director: Monte Young
Guest star(s): Michael Chiklis, Haley Joel Osment

Family Guy Season Two
September 23, 1999 - August 1, 2000
List of Family Guy episodes

Episodes:

  1. Peter, Peter, Caviar Eater
  2. Holy Crap
  3. Da Boom
  4. Brian in Love
  5. Love Thy Trophy
  6. Death Is a Bitch
  7. The King Is Dead
  8. I Am Peter, Hear Me Roar
  9. If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'
  10. Running Mates
  11. A Picture Is Worth a 1,000 Bucks
  12. Fifteen Minutes of Shame
  13. Road to Rhode Island
  14. Let's Go to the Hop
  15. Dammit Janet!
  16. There's Something About Paulie
  17. He's Too Sexy for His Fat
  18. E. Peterbus Unum
  19. The Story on Page One
  20. Wasted Talent
  21. Fore Father

"There's Something About Paulie" is an episode from the second season of the FOX animated television series Family Guy. Guest starring Michael Chiklis as Big Fat Paulie. The name is a parody of the movie There's Something About Mary.

[edit] Plot summary

The Griffins need a new car. Lois decides to buy one out of the classified ads, but Peter refuses, having concluded that buying a car out of the classifieds is what led to an acquaintance of his contracting herpes ten years later.

Peter and Lois go to the local car dealership, where despite Lois's advice, a salesman convinces Peter to buy a car that has a drawing of an engine instead of an actual engine (the salesman claimed that the car was originally owned by James Bond). At Cleveland's Deli, a Mafia guy offers to help Peter obtain a brand-new car in exchange for a favor, entertaining Big Fat Paulie, the obnoxious nephew of the Don.

Lois disapproves of Paulie, and when Peter explains this to Paulie, Paulie puts a hit out on Lois. Peter immediately appeals to him to call it off and succeeds, but Paulie is murdered before being able to make the call. Peter and Lois are able to call off the hit by asking the Don for a favor on "the day of his daughters' wedding."

[edit] Notes

  • When Peter talks to Paulie he has a tie on, but when he talks to Lois a few seconds later he isn't wearing it and the tie comes out again.
  • When eveybody goes out to see the new car, the car strongly resembles a VW Beetle. In the next scene the car's appearance has completely changed.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The plot of this episode has similarities with the classic 1972 mafia film The Godfather, including the sequence in which various friends ask “the don” for favors on the day of his daughter’s wedding. “The don” in this episode is very similar in appearance and speech to Vito Corleone, Marlon Brando’s character in The Godfather.
  • The cut-away scene where Peter talks about using taxicabs, depicts a scene from the classic TV show Taxi. The characters mention “the foreign guy,” Chinese American martial arts actor Jackie Chan shows up instead of Andy Kaufman’s Latka Gravas, the immigrant on the show.
  • The used car salesman tells Peter that a car was owned by movie spy James Bond.
  • Peter explains that he tried on Lois’s clothes because his friends were staging a production of the play Gigi.
  • Peter says he “had to rent a mustang.” The ensuing cutaway shows Peter with the type of horse instead of a Ford Mustang.
  • The Griffin family twice watches the ABC sitcom Dharma and Greg.
  • A scene showing “the mob in the movies” parodies the infamous scene in 1990 film Goodfellas in which Joe Pesci harasses Ray Liotta for calling him “funny.” In this version, he asks “Am I George Carlin funny or Spin City funny or Rita Rudner funny?”
  • The online navigation system of Peter’s car mimics Russian-American comedian Yakov Smirnoff. Also, it speaks ungrammatical Spanish.
  • Peter uses a copy of the magazine Entertainment Weekly as toilet paper.
  • Peter confuses the mafia don with actor Dom DeLuise.
  • Peter asks the don to "Just wack me off right now" (kill him) if the don wants him to take Big Fat Paulie to a film starring Greg Kinnear.
  • When Peter is at the movie theater asking for Big Fat Paulie, he runs into comedian Louie Anderson.
  • After Paulie dumps a small milk carton down Peter's pants, Peter says “Guess I got milk!” a reference to the got milk? advertising campaign.
  • Peter and Paulie see a fictitious sequel to the 1998 Angela Bassett film How Stella Got Her Groove Back.
  • Imitating Goodfellas once again, Peter tries to clarify Paulie’s statement that Lois is a “crazy broad,” stating that “he didn’t mean you’re crazy like Elizabeth Taylor. He meant you were crazy like the glue
  • Stewie compares Paulie’s eating habits to those of actor Mickey Rourke, then curses the show Entertainment Tonight for teaching him that name. A cutaway then shows Entertainment Tonight, parodying the show’s constant showing of co-host Mary Hart’s legs.
  • A flashback shows Peter as one of the “cavity creeps” from Crest toothpaste’s 1980s television commercials.
  • James Woods High School stages a production of the play Death of a Salesman with Meg in the role of Linda Loman. A hitman tries to kill Lois at the play. Peter, still obtuse, says the “only victim tonight was the work of Arthur Miller,” the writer of Death of a Salesman.
  • A cutaway to the United Kingdom shows a “drive by argument” concerning a united European commonwealth.
  • A cutaway shows Peter on the game show The Dating Game.
  • At the Don’s daughter’s wedding, Peter sings country singer Glen Campbell’s song “Rhinestone Cowboy.”
  • Peter meets Friends' actor David Schwimmer in line to meet the don.
  • At the end of the episode, after the Parking Boy got killed Peter says "Nobody important got hurt" and you see his red shirt fall to the ground. This is an allusion to Star Trek redshirts.

[edit] References

  • S. Callaghan, "There's Something About Paulie." Family Guy: The Official Episode Guide Seasons 1-3. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. 103 - 107.
  • A. Delarte, "Nitpicking Family Guy: Season 2" in Bob's Poetry Magazine, 2.May 2005: 22 - 23 http://bobspoetry.com/Bobs02My.pdf


Preceded by:
"Dammit Janet!"
Family Guy Episodes Followed by:
"He's Too Sexy For His Fat"