Brian in Love

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Brian in Love
Family Guy episode

Brian cleaning after an accident.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 4
Written by Gary Janetti
Directed by Jack Dyer
Guest stars Tom Kenny, D.D. Howard, Sam Waterston
Production no. 2ACX01
Original airdate March 7, 2000
Season 2 episodes
Family Guy - Season 2
September 23, 1999August 1, 2000
  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

Season 1 Season 3
List of Family Guy episodes

Brian in Love is an episode from the second season of the FOX, animated series Family Guy. It is the 11th episode of Family Guy to be aired. It guest stars Sam Waterston as Dr. Kaplan.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Lois is upset that Stewie has wet the carpet in the living room. Stewie emphatically denies this, but Lois and Peter are convinced that it's a sign that Stewie is ready to potty train. However, it's actually Brian who's wetting the house, and he tries to clean up another accident that night.

After a failed attempt by Peter at getting Stewie to use the toilet, the family goes to the supermarket to buy groceries. In the checkout line, Brian has another accident, revealing that Stewie (much to his own delight) is innocent. This leads to Brian going to see Dr. Kaplan, a psychiatrist. The doctor decides Brian is having a mid-life crisis, so Brian goes traveling and exploring.

Brian feels better, but shortly after returning, Stewie gets revenge and frames Brian by peeing all over the living room. Brian (who believes he has done it himself, albeit claiming he never remembered doing it) is blamed and returns to Dr. Kaplan to find out why this is still happening. After revealing that his last accident happened after watching Lois and Peter have a water fight while washing the car, Dr. Kaplan tells Brian that he is in love with Lois.

Brian and Lois by themselves
Brian and Lois by themselves

Brian and Lois discuss the situation and decide to just remain friends. Peter, who is unaware that Brian's love is Lois, conjectures that Brian's beloved would "probably end up with some idiot."

[edit] Censorship

  • Edits made in syndication:
    • The scene in which Asian Reporter Tricia Takanawa is reporting from a motel room where she will have sex with a man she just met (Quagmire) and states that he's probably in the bathroom doing drugs is cut (the only part that wasn't cut from this scene was Quagmire's line ("I've never had a Spanish chick before. Ole!")[citation needed]
    • Stewie's line "I say, I say, Paco, get a mop. And, for God's sake, will someone get Patches the hell out of here before he decides to bend a fresh biscuit on the conveyor belt" was shortened into "I say, I say, Paco, get a mop".[citation needed]
    • When Stewie is about to kill Mr. Rogers, it goes straight to Stewie shooting him after he says "And now, Mr. Rogers", leaving out Stewie referring to him as Fred and saying that "Rogers" almost rhymes with "eliminate".[citation needed]
  • When this episode premiered, Peter's line to Brian as he's urinating in the store was "Geez, Brian, where do you think you are, K-Mart?". In all reruns and on the volume 1 DVD set, Peter's line was changed to "Geez, Brian, where do you think you are, Payless?"[citation needed]
    • The scene where Brian has an accident and the old lady slips and falls on it is cut. Originally, she begins to bleed, and the other characters just look at her without helping. That part is cut out and it goes to commercial break as soon as she falls.

[edit] Cultural references

Stewie disposing of Mr. Rogers
Stewie disposing of Mr. Rogers
  • One sequence parodies Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Stewie kills Mister Rogers, but first he lets him see the carnage in the Neighborhood of Make-Believe. Stewie is woken up, revealing that his domination of the neighborhood was just a dream, only to be in the middle of another dream where Mister Rogers is disguised as Lois.
  • A sequence parodies the closing titles of 1960's cartoon series The Jetsons in which George Jetson gets caught on his treadmill/dog-walk machine with their dog Astro.
  • Brian can be seen reading Into Thin Air, journalist Jon Krakauer's account of the 1996 Mount Everest disaster. Brian can also be seen reading Memoirs of a Geisha and The Perfect Storm.
  • A cutaway suggests that the mysterious 1932 kidnapping of aviator Charles Lindbergh's son was actually an attempt by Lindbergh to cover up the loss of the toddler during toilet training. Lindbergh also disposed of a witness, fellow aviator Amelia Earhart, who disappeared in 1937.
  • When Lois suggests that toilet training would be a good way for Peter and Stewie to bond, Peter responds with the catch phrase from the James Bond film series "Bond, James Bond".
  • When Peter is looking for books about toilet training the book seller shows him Everybody Poops, an actual book which would appear again in the episode PTV, followed by Nobody Poops But You. Peter then informs the books store owner he is Catholic, and he is handed a book titled You're a Naughty Child and That's Concentrated Evil Coming Out the Back of You.
  • When Brian pees in the supermarket, Peter asks "Where do you think you are, Brian? Payless?", referring to a discount shoe store (the original line referred to K-Mart instead of Payless, but it has since been changed on all broadcasts, including the Cartoon Network airing and the DVD release).
  • Brian tells Dr. Kaplan about a dream parodying the 1976 science fiction film Logan's Run, in which the "Sandmen" kill all people at age 30 as means of population control. In the dream, Brian tries to distract the Sandmen by pointing out Peanuts character Snoopy, who's "got to be in his fifties". Also, the overhead speakers in the film play the Air Supply song "All Out of Love".
  • After Peter says "Lots of crazy people have gone onto lead normal, successful lives", a picture of then-CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather appears on screen.
  • Brian runs over a man in the countryside and asks if he is horror author Stephen King. This refers to a car accident nine months before this episode aired, where King was hit by a car while walking down a road near his Maine home. However, Brian hit another horror author, Dean Koontz. Upon learning his identity, Brian runs him over a second time.
  • When Brian sees Tom Tucker’s son he makes the same “puzzled surprise” noise as Scooby Doo.
  • When Tricia Takanawa continues her in-depth report on sex, she is shown in a motel room with Quagmire. A picture above the bed is of a woman reclining on the beach and looking at the ocean, a reference to the Coen Brothers film Barton Fink
  • When Peter is at the Super Market he pulls out 2 candy bars, "Middlefinger", a play on Butterfinger and "Fat Cat", a play on Kit Kat.
  • Peter calls Dr. Kaplan "Sigmund Fraud", a reference to Sigmund Freud.
  • The scene in which Tricia Takanawa meets Quagmire is a parody of a scene from the 1974 movie The Groove Tube.
  • When Brian and Peter play golf at the end, Brian gets a hole in one and Peter says "You're like the Arnold Palmer of golf!" The joke, of course, being that Arnold Palmer is a golfer.

[edit] Notable Firsts

  • This is the first episode to note that Brian is in love with Lois, the second one being "The Perfect Castaway".
  • This is also the first episode that shows the name of the local bar, "The Drunken Clam."
  • This was the first episode produced for the second season, as well as the first episode made to have Mila Kunis portray Meg.

[edit] References

  • Callaghan, Steve. “Brian in Love.” Family Guy: The Official Episode Guide Seasons 1–3. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. 53–55.
  • Delarte, Alonso. “Nitpicking Family Guy: Season 2.” Bob’s Poetry Magazine May 2005: 10–11. http://bobspoetry.com/Bobs02My.pdf

[edit] External links

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