Peter Griffin

Peter Griffin
Family Guy character

Peter Griffin
Voiced by Seth MacFarlane
Character information
Full name Peter Löwenbräu Griffin
Relatives Mother: Thelma
Father:
Francis (adoptive; deceased)
Mickey McFinnigan (biological)
Wife: Lois

Children: Meg (daughter)
Chris (son)
Stewie (son)

Hair color Brown
Occupation Shipping clerk at Pawtucket Patriot Brewery
Show information
First appearance Death Has a Shadow

Peter Griffin is a fictional character and the protagonist of the animated television series Family Guy.[1] Peter is the patriarch of the Griffin household and the central character in the show. He is married to Lois, and is the father of Meg, Chris, Stewie, and Bertram. His voice, which has a thick Boston accent, is performed by the show's creator and lead writer, Seth MacFarlane.

The character is Archie Bunker without the knowledge of what he's doing. He has the mind of a child, basically, and a source of big laughs is when he doesn't realize he's doing something inappropriate.

—Producer Seth MacFarlane, interview in The Advocate[2]

Contents

Backstory

Lois' father Carter objected to Peter because of his lower social class — this resentment remains a theme in Carter and Peter's relationship, as shown in several episodes, like the e-mail Mr. Pewterschmidt sends to Peter, which punches him in the face.[3] After marrying, Peter and Lois settled in Quahog, where Peter got a job at the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory.

Jobs

Peter has primarily worked as a safety inspector at the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory, as a fisherman using his own boat, and in the shipping department of the Pawtucket Patriot brewery as an office worker and "that guy who fishes out the dead rats". Peter was temporarily promoted to the position of "Head of Toy Development" in the episode "Mr. Saturday Knight" before the company was demolished and replaced by a terminal illness research centre. In the following episode, "A Fish out of Water", after two weeks of unemployment, he won a boat at an auction and became a private fisherman. He held this position until the episode "Perfect Castaway" in which his ship was demolished in a hurricane. Two episodes later he got a job as a brewer at the Pawtucket Patriot Brewery, but became intoxicated against regulations within the first five minutes working there and was demoted to working as a clerk for the brewery's shipping department, which he currently practices.

Throughout the series, he regularly mentions that he has had many different odd jobs. He has also had a few periods of unemployment. He has also had a number of jobs that only lasted for one episode, such as becoming a jouster, or playing for the New England Patriots, before going back to his usual jobs.

Ernie the Giant Chicken

In a running gag, storylines are randomly interrupted by extremely long, unexpected fights between Peter and a giant chicken. These battles parody the action film genre, with explosions, high-speed chases, and immense devastation to the town of Quahog. The sequences always conclude with Peter the victor leaving the giant chicken for dead, only for a sudden movement to show that the chicken is still alive.

In the episode "Da Boom", the feud starts over a trivial incident where the chicken gives Peter an expired coupon at the grocery store.[4] The fight resumes in "Blind Ambition";[5] in "No Chris Left Behind",[6] the chicken is identified as "Ernie", and he is given a wife named Nicole, also a giant chicken. Ernie makes a brief, non-fighting appearance in the time travel themed episode "Meet the Quagmires", in which Peter unwittingly assaults the giant chicken at an 80s dance,[7] retroactively providing Ernie with a grudge against Peter. The chicken is planned to appear in the Star Wars parody episode "Something, Something, Something Dark Side," as the infamous bounty hunter Boba Fett, nemesis of Peter's Han Solo.[8] Ernie also appears in the video game as the final boss.[9]

Personality

Peter appears to be unintelligent and consistently depicted as crude and lowbrow. He enjoys activities such as going to up-market tailors and farting in Meg's cereal. His favorite pastime is watching TV. A running gag on the show is Peter's preference for Pauly Shore movies over classic films such as The Godfather and Citizen Kane. He is also a huge Kiss fan and followed them during the KissStock shows and even got a copy of Kiss Saves Santa for Christmas. Peter is also a huge fan of Barry Manilow, though this is a fact he has been known to deny in public (to a certain extent, anyway). Despite his love of these musicians, Peter's favorite song ever, told by Peter in the episode I Dream of Jesus, is Surfin' Bird by The Trashmen (and after aquiring the record from a 1950's themed restaurant, he annoys the whole family by playing it non-stop until Stewie and Brian steal it).Peter also mentions in an episode that he wears the male deodorant Speed Stick to his wife Lois quoting, "Smell my Speed Stick?" while he is rubbing her shoulders and trying to convince her to have sex with him in his office at the brewery.

An I.Q. test confirms that his low intellect places him in a category slightly above mentally retarded, but higher above Creationists.[10] His mental shortcomings have resulted in various accidents and deaths to other people; most notably to his surrogate father Francis Griffin, and on multiple occasions, his wife Lois Griffin. His attention span is also incredibly short; when he discovers his mental retardation in "Petarded", he closes his eyes while driving, wishing "it would all be over" (hitting Tom Tucker with his car instead).

Peter also has a habit for proving his masculinity, not wanting Lois to fall for another man. He is incredibly jealous of other attractions Lois has in her life, an attitude that tends to get out of hand in most cases; in "Stuck Together, Torn Apart", he goes so far as to punch his reflection in the mirror after Lois comments on his reflection being handsome.[11] In "Brian Sings and Swings", he tells Lois, "Remember what I always tell you, if I come home in the middle of the day and catch you having sex with someone, I'll kill you both" (though when he catches her in bed with Bill Clinton in "Bill and Peter's Bogus Journey", he takes no hostile actions whatsoever). However, he seems not to mind the fact that she, of course, slept with other men before they met, just so long as she doesn't do so again; he is particularly proud of the fact that she once slept with Gene Simmons of Kiss when he discovers this in "Road to Europe", but forbids any sexual actions between the two now as seen in "Don't Make Me Over".

Peter seems to find it frustrating when he is "wrong" while Lois is "right" about issues all the time, and apparently takes these issues competitively, just waiting for the day she slips up. This day finally comes in the episode "PTV" after settling a conflict with Lois about censorship on television that she appeared sure to win. In an ironic twist that forces Lois to concede defeat, Peter celebrates by opening a secret compartment within the ceiling containing balloons, streamers, confetti, and a banner reading "PETER'S RIGHT!"; Peter then claims that he set up the stall 15 years ago, suggesting that this was a pretty major issue for him for quite some time (there was also a clown in the stall, but he had since died after being in there for so long). Curiously, in the non-canon episode "Da Boom", after Lois admits he was right about the end of the world and she was wrong, Peter makes no reference to the compartment, though he had been bragging about his "victory" for two weeks straight.

Among the members of his family, he tends to treat his daughter, Meg with the least amount of respect; in "Peter's Daughter", for example, he reminisces to various pranks he played on her, including tripping her, flicking her nose with his finger, and even shooting her at one point. He is known to embarrass her at times and with things that mean the most to Meg; the entire family once huddled together to read her diary and continues after Meg catches them. However, later episodes of the series show Peter developing greater respect and unity between himself and his daughter (such as in "Hell Comes to Quahog", "Road to Rupert" and the aforementioned "Peter's Daughter"), though these moments tend not to last for very long.

Health

Despite being obese, a heavy drinker, and accident-prone, Peter appears to be in good health. Periodically, in typical cartoon fashion, Peter is shown recovering quickly from serious injuries,[12] with McStroke being a notable exception, where he suffered the side effects of a stroke for two months, and only recovered due to Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. In some episodes, he displays enormous strength, such as when singlehandedly challenging a professional football team in "Patriot Games". In the episode "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz" it is revealed that Peter played high school football as a full back as well.

He underwent a vasectomy in the episode "Sibling Rivalry." Because of this, he temporarily loses his sex drive, but regains it when Lois channels her frustrations into eating to the point where she becomes almost as fat as Peter himself.

Occasionally Peter soils himself, prominently featured in "Death Lives" and "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein".

Episodes like "Mr. Saturday Knight", "Model Misbehavior", "Deep Throats", and "Peter's Two Dads" show that Peter has used various drugs such as LSD, ecstasy, marijuana, steroids, cocaine, and crack cocaine, but has managed to avoid incarceration and long-term effects from the use of these drugs.

In the episode "McStroke", Peter suffered a stroke that paralyzed the left side of his body after eating thirty hamburgers at once. For the next two months he walked with a limp as his arm and leg hung lifelessly from his body, and his eye and part of his mouth slid down his face, giving him a speech impediment. This damage was reversed completely after a five minute session at a stem cell research facility (to which he exclaims "Why are we not funding this!?").

Ancestry

Whereas Lois's Old Money lineage is well-defined, Peter's ancestry is obscured by several ancestors used only for one-time jokes. Only a few of Peter's ancestors are confirmed by repeated references in different episodes.

One of them is a black ancestor Peter discovered in the episode "Peter Griffin: Husband, Father...Brother?." A pre-Civil War era African American named Nate Griffin was a slave owned by Lois' ancestors (this is the first of several episodes which have Peter related to Lois’ family in various ways). Nate Griffin is shown again in the "Untitled Griffin Family History", where it was revealed that he had had children with one of Lois' ancestors; this implies that Peter and Lois are distant relatives. (In the same episode, Peter lists other ancestors who have not appeared again since). However, other episodes contradict Peter being related to Nate Griffin at all, as his biological father is subsequently revealed to NOT be a member of the Griffin family.

In the episode "Peter's Two Dads", Peter discovers that his real father is not the late Francis Griffin, the stern Roman Catholic Irish American patriarch of the first five seasons, but an Irishman named Mickey McFinnigan, a town drunk who resembles his son in every aspect, save red hair and an aged face.[13]

Another episode, "Padre de Familia", Peter discovers that he was actually born in Mexico, due to his mother finding out that she was pregnant with him and had gone there to get an abortion, but was born and she decided to keep him. However, when returning back to the states she was afraid of being judged, so she never filled out the paper work to make him a citizen, thus making him an illegal immigrant.

Peter's middle name "Löwenbräu" is actually the name of a brand of German beer, which directly translates to "Lion's Brew." This would seem appropriate, since the creature of his surname's namesake is part-lion and Peter's favorite beverage happens to be beer. However, the phonetics of such a name appear to be the writers' highbrow use of the term "Lowbrow", in association with Peter's comedy style.

Video game

In the Family Guy video game, Peter restarts his PTV television station and broadcasts a Mr. Belvedere marathon, which he watches for three days. His satellite eventually falls on him and he develops severe head trauma. When Peter awakes in the hospital, he believes Mr. Belvedere has kidnapped his family and goes on a rampage to find them. Once Peter discovers his family is safe, he goes to the Drunken Clam to get drunk. This is where Peter discovers Ernie, the giant chicken, who is the final boss battle in the game. After another epic battle that takes them throughout the city, Peter defeats Ernie and escapes as the building he is in explodes, landing safely on top of Meg. He believes Ernie to be dead once again, not noticing that he was actually blown to safety on top of another building (where it is revealed Mayor West is making shadow puppets of Belvedere in a searchlight) and fully recovers, vowing revenge again.[14]

Appearances in other media

Peter had several appearances outside Family Guy, often in the form of direct parody. The Simpsons has had several depictions of Peter Griffin, usually premised on Family Guy being a ripoff of The Simpsons.[15][16] Robot Chicken (produced by Family Guy cast member Seth Green) has depicted Peter (voiced by MacFarlane) in several cameos, and the Griffin family was also parodied in the "Cartoon Wars" episode of South Park, implying that Peter's flashbacks are Family Guy's sole source of humor. Peter has also appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman and in advertisements for Subway Restaurants. As a child, Peter appeared in the film Children in the Crossfire. He could be seen playing football at the start.

References

  1. The middle name Löwenbräu is given in the episode "Peter, Peter, Caviar Eater". This may also be a pun on the term lowbrow, implying low culture.
  2. Voss, Brandon (2008-02-26). "BGF: Seth MacFarlane". Advocate.com. PlanetOut. Retrieved on 2008-02-15.
  3. "Screwed the Pooch". Dave Collard and Ken Goin (writers). Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2001-11-29. No. 13, season 3.
  4. "Da Boom". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 1999-12-26. No. 3, season 2.
  5. "Blind Ambition". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2005-05-15. No. 3, season 4.
  6. "No Chris Left Behind". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2005-05-08. No. 16, season 5.
  7. "Meet the Quagmires". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2007-05-20. No. 18, season 5.
  8. "Something, Something, Something Dark Side". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  9. High Voltage Software. Family Guy Video Game!. (2K Games). Level/area: 22 (in English). (October 16, 2006)
  10. "Petarded". Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild (writers). Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2005-06-19. No. 6, season 4.
  11. "Stuck Together, Torn Apart". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2002-01-31. No. 19, season 3.
  12. "Whistle While Your Wife Works". Family Guy. Fox. 2006-11-12. No. 5, season 5. Peter loses all the fingers on his right hand while handling M-80 firecrackers. In spite of the injury, he has no visible scarring on his hand.
  13. "Peter's Two Dads". Family Guy. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2007-11-02. No. 10, season 5.
  14. High Voltage Software. Family Guy Video Game!. (2K Games and Fox Interactive). Xbox, Playstation 2 and PlayStation Portable. (2006-10-16)
  15. "Treehouse of Horror XIII". The Simpsons. Fox. 2002-11-03. No. 1, season 14. In the first segment, "Send in the Clones", Peter appears as one of Homer's clones.
  16. "The Italian Bob". The Simpsons. Fox. 2005-12-11. No. 8, season 17. In an Italian book of criminals, Peter is depicted under the alias "Plagarisimo."

External links