The Fat Guy Strangler

"The Fat Guy Strangler"
Family Guy episode

Patrick attempts to strangle Peter.
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 17
Directed by Sarah Frost
Written by Chris Sheridan
Production code 4ACX20
Original air date November 27, 2005
Guest stars
Episode chronology
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"The Courtship of Stewie’s Father"
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"The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz"
Family Guy (season 4)
List of Family Guy episodes

"The Fat Guy Strangler" is the seventeenth episode of season four of Family Guy, which originally aired on November 27, 2005.[1] Lois discovers she has a long-lost brother, Patrick. She discovers he was put in a mental hospital after seeing his mother being seduced; so she consents to release him, but after a childhood flashback induced by Peter, he becomes traumatized and starts murdering overweight people.[2] The episode was written by Chris Sheridan and directed by Sarah Frost,[3] and guest-stars were Bob Barker, Dave Boat, Max Burkholder, Barclay DeVeau, Robert Downey, Jr., Margaret Easley, Kim Parks, Will Sasso, Anne-Michelle Seiler and Tara Strong.[3]

Contents

Plot

Peter has dinner out with Brian, Quagmire, Cleveland and Joe instead of going to his physical. When Lois finds out Peter was lying about going to the doctor, she brings him herself. There, he is told by the doctor that he is healthy but fat, which Peter takes badly. Later, after Peter breaks Lois's family picture, she discovers there is another child in the picture whom she believes to be her brother. When she telephones her father Carter, he tells her she doesn't have a brother and terminates the call. Intent on finding out the truth, Lois breaks into her parents' house and discovers her brother, Patrick, is secured in a mental hospital. He had apparently been committed there at a very young age after having a nervous breakdown brought about when he walked in on his mother having an affair with Jackie Gleason, an incident that may or may not have been an halluciation.

Meanwhile, Peter announces to the family that he is fat, and decides to create the "National Association for The Advancement of Fat People" (NAAFP). Peter hosts the first meeting of the association, but it is unsuccessful due to those attending munching junk food the entire way through.

Believing Patrick to be sane, Lois authorizes his release, and arranges for Patrick to stay with the family. Patrick soon announces he has a wife, Marion, albeit she is imaginary and nobody else other than him can see her. This leads Brian and Stewie to believe he is crazy. Lois attempts to overlook the evidence, and instead tries to persuade Peter not to encourage people to be fat. Peter unintentionally traumatizes Patrick later by dressing up like Ralph Kramden and repeatedly using one of Kramden's catchphrases "Pow, right in the kisser!" which brings back memories of Gleason telling him to get out. This triggers Patrick to start killing fat people.

Lois' father, Carter, calls her and tells her how dangerous Patrick is, but she assures him Patrick is safe, although she becomes worried after seeing on the news that a fat man has been murdered. Lois remains in denial as more murders are committed, even though Brian tries to convince her that Patrick is the killer.

Peter brings the fat men back to his home to protect them, but after learning from Brian that Patrick is the killer, a chase between the fat men and Patrick ensues. Brian, still at the house, shows Patrick's room to Lois. The room contains one dead fat man, one half-dead fat man, and pictures of Patrick murdering them. Lois continues to make crazy excuses, still wanting to believe her brother is a sane person, but ultimately she snaps out of her denial and realizes that Patrick is dangerous. Lois and Brian pursue Patrick and Peter into the woods, where Patrick is strangling Peter. Patrick quickly releases Peter after Lois threatens to stab Marion, his imaginary wife. Patrick apologizes, telling Lois that he never meant to hurt her, and the two agree he be sent back to the mental hospital, where Lois and the family plan to visit him once a month.

Cultural references

Patrick, was traumatized as a child by Jackie Gleason after seeing him seduce his mother, Barbara, in front of him.[4] Brian makes a reference to season-three Family Guy episode "To Love and Die in Dixie".[4] Lois is shown watching American game-show The Price Is Right, a reference to the actual show.[4] The cavemen who "invented singing" perform an a cappella version of Billy Joel's "The Longest Time".

Production

The origins of the episode and the character of Patrick began when Robert Downey, Jr. telephoned the show production staff and asked if he could produce or assist in an episode creation, as his son is a fan of the show, so the producers came up with the character of Patrick for Downey.[5] Show producer Seth MacFarlane believes Downey "did a great job," and brought a "very kind of half crazy, and maybe just eccentric personality to that character that really worked out great."[4] Bob Barker voiced himself presenting The Price Is Right;[4] but the actual sequence took years to make.[5] Barker has provided his voice for the show twice, although MacFarlane has never met him.[4] MacFarlane also notes, in the DVD commentary, that he likes this episode, because it is rare when the show produces an episode where a lot of it takes place in the home, and where it would be possible to do it in a live action series.[4] John Veiner voiced Bobby McFerrin falling down a flight of stairs.[5] The ball-in-a-cup scene is commented upon by MacFarlane, where he states that "the voice-overs work, the drawings work" and that Walter Murphy "did a great job of creating a piece of deliberately annoying music."[4] Several jokes had been pitched for Peter's words after killing an evil dragon, but all were dropped, as they weren't deemed funny enough by production staff.[5][6]

MacFarlane notes that he was surprised they were allowed to do the pickle gag, which consisted of Stewie placing a cucumber on the sofa where Patrick's imaginary wife is sitting, but inserting it into her imaginary vagina (to see if it would turn into a pickle),[4] but suggests that maybe broadcasting standards did not fully understand the scene.[5] The music song by the overweight people at a funeral for a murdered obese man was only shown on the DVD version and not televised, for timing purposes,[6] and for potential boredom to viewers.[4][6]. The musical composition was recorded at Fox studios on the Gary Numan stage,[4][6] and described by MacFarlane to be "beautifully, beautifully sung by our studio singers."[4] The chicken falling out of an obese man's mouth when outside James Woods was used in a promotional sequence for Fox.[6] George W. Bush is portrayed hiding in a tree house and being informed by Brian of Hurricane Katrina. Bush was offered the opportunity to voice himself, but declined.[5]

A deleted scene had been made which showed the family traveling on board an airplane showing Peter, rather than using the airplane toilet as "he is too fat to get out of his seat,"[4] urinates in his seat, but unknowingly urinates on Brian in the process, as he is in a dog cage below Peter's seat. If this scene had been used in the episode, it was intended for Brian, after throwing a rock aimed at Peter's head to say "that's for pissing on me!"[4][5] The gag produced for the episode showing Brian throwing a rock at Peter's head and shouting "that's for rolling up the damn window when I tried to jump into the The General Lee" is a reference to "To Love and Die in Dixie."[4]

Reception

In a review of the episode, TV Squad commented positively about the storyline, noting that "Unlike The Simpsons tonight, Family Guy actually did work their two storylines together. Their first big one, was about Peter's ever increasing weight problem. He skips out on going to his physical, so that he and Brian can go meet the guys at an all-you-can-eat steak restaurant."[7] In a review of Family Guy, Volume 4, Nancy Basile regards "The Fat Guy Strangler" as one of her favorite episodes, as well as "PTV."[8] Basile moves on to comment that "Being prejudiced against fat people just isn't talked about, but this episode sheds a harsh light on that problem. At times the episode tries to show people who are fat as being victims of unfair bias, but other times just out and out makes fun of them."[8]

References

  1. ^ "The Fat Guy Strangler". TV.com. http://www.tv.com/family-guy/the-fat-guy-strangler/episode/553990/summary.html. Retrieved 2008-02-17. 
  2. ^ "The Fat Guy Strangler". British Broadcasting Corporation. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0074g3m. Retrieved 2008-02-17. 
  3. ^ a b ""Family Guy:" Fat Guy Strangler". Internet Movie Database. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0576935/. Retrieved 2008-02-17. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o MacFarlane, Seth (2005). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "The Fat Guy Strangler" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Sheridan, Chris (2005). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "The Fat Guy Strangler" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  6. ^ a b c d e Sulkin, Alec (2005). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "The Fat Guy Strangler" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  7. ^ Budke, Ryan J (November 27, 2005). "Family Guy: Fat Guy Strangler". TV Squad. http://www.tvsquad.com/2005/11/27/family-guy-fat-guy-strangler/. Retrieved 2008-02-18. 
  8. ^ a b Basile, Nancy. "Family Guy Volume Four DVD". About.com. http://animatedtv.about.com/od/fgdvdreviews/gr/fgdvd4.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-18. 

External links

Preceded by
The Courtship of Stewie's Father
Family Guy (season 4) Succeeded by
The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz