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What Family Guy Do They Throw the Horse

15th episode of the fifth flavor of Family unit Guy

"Boys Practise Weep"
Family Guy episode
Episode no. Season 5
Episode fifteen
Directed by Brian Iles
Written by Red Chevapravatdumrong
Production code 5ACX10
Original air date April 29, 2007 (2007-04-29)
Invitee appearances
  • Drew Barrymore as Jillian
  • Bill Engvall as Duke Dillon
  • Gilbert Gottfried every bit the equus caballus
  • Camilla Stull as beauty pageant contestant
Episode chronology
Previous
"No Meals on Wheels"
Next →
"No Chris Left Behind"
Family Guy (flavour 5)
List of episodes

"Boys Practise Cry" is the 15th episode of the 5th season of the American animated sitcom Family Guy. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United states of america on April 29, 2007. The episode follows the Griffin family after Lois gets a chore as an organist at the local church, and she insists that the balance of the family unit go to church with her. This eventually leads to Stewie drinking and throwing up the host during a sermon, which causes a mob to form around the Griffin household. In an endeavour to preclude the town from supposedly exorcising the devil out of Stewie, the family escape and seek refuge in Texas.

Information technology was written by series regular Ruby Chevapravatdumrong and directed by Brian Iles. The episode received generally mixed reviews from critics for its storyline and many cultural references. Co-ordinate to Nielsen ratings, it was viewed in 8.13 million homes in its original airing. The episode featured guest performances by Drew Barrymore, Pecker Engvall, Gilbert Gottfried and Camilla Stull, along with several recurring guest vox actors for the series. "Boys Do Cry" was released on DVD along with iv other episodes from the season on October 21, 2008.

Plot [edit]

Lois gets a task equally the new organist at the local church and forces her family to start attending mass on Sundays. After Stewie mistakes Communion wine for punch, he drinks too much and throws it upwards, leading the citizens of Quahog to believe Stewie is possessed by Satan. When the priest wants to exorcise him, aided by everyone in town, the Griffin family escapes to Lois' sis Carol's business firm in Texas. Upon arriving at the home, Peter fits in well with the cowboys, simply Brian is disgusted by the bigotry of the local residents. Stewie, disguised equally a girl to protect his identity, begins using the name "Stephanie Griffin" and, after being convinced by Lois, enters a "Footling Miss Texan" beauty pageant. Meanwhile, as part of an initiation into an after-schoolhouse lodge, Meg and Chris sneak into George Due west. Bush'southward Crawford ranch to steal a pair of his underwear.

Lois soon hears that the search for Stewie has ended after people got distracted by news of the Super Devil (an entity described as 6 inches taller than the Devil, driving a flying motorcycle and armed with a jar of marmalade), but since she was hoping to instill "new moral values" in her family she decides non to mention that they can go home. Meanwhile, later on branding a cow, things turn worse when Peter reveals that he is mentally retarded. The men with him, who explain that Texas "executes the retarded", tie him to an electric chair, in an endeavour to put him to death, but he is before long rescued by his trusty horse, revealed to be voiced past Gilbert Gottfried.

Later, Brian finds out from his girlfriend Jillian back in Quahog nigh the boondocks calling off the search, and rushes to the pageant tells Lois, who says she has known for weeks which horrifies Brian. Stewie manages to win, but when his wig falls off during the crowning ceremony, the audience labels him as a "queer-o-sexual" and tries to blitz the phase. The family unit is able to escape on the back of Gottfried, and return dwelling house to Quahog. The episode ends with Lois telling Peter that moral and family unit values don't come from where people live or who their friends are, merely from people themselves and that they should encompass their lives, while Peter says that people should be careful what they watch, and not go religious with information technology, while breaking the fourth wall.

Production [edit]

A woman looking up at the camera.

The episode was written by Cherry Chevapravatdumrong and was directed by Brian Iles, in his first episode for the series.[1] Series regulars Peter Shin and James Purdum served as supervising directors. Chevapravatdumrong was likewise 1 of the executive story editors working in the episode, the other ane being Patrick Meighan.[one]

"Boys Do Cry", along with the four other episodes from Family Guy 's 5th season, were released on a three-disc DVD set in the U.s.a. on October 21, 2008. The sets included brief audio commentaries by Seth MacFarlane and diverse coiffure and cast members, a collection of deleted scenes, a special mini-characteristic which discussed the procedure behind animating "100th Episode Special", and a mini-feature entitled Family Guy Live.[2]

The episode featured a guest operation past a leukemia patient, Camilla Stull, who had wanted to do a voice on the show. She provided two lines for one of the competing pageant contestants. Stull has since died from the disease, but is all the same "immortalized" in the episode. In addition to Stull and the regular bandage, actress Drew Barrymore and comedians Bill Engvall and Gilbert Gottfried guest starred in the episode.[1] Recurring voices include Lori Alan, Alex Breckenridge, writer Kirker Butler, voice histrion Chris Cox, actor Ralph Garman, writer Marker Hentemann, writer Danny Smith, writer Alec Sulkin, writer John Viener, and actor Adam West.[1]

Reception [edit]

In a slight decrease from the previous calendar week, the episode was viewed in 8.xiii million homes in its original airing, co-ordinate to Nielsen ratings, in the Us. The episode also acquired a 2.9 rating in the eighteen-49 demographic, tying with The Simpsons, in addition to significantly winning over American Dad!, in both rating and total viewership.[4]

In a review of the episode, Brett Love of TV Squad noted that the episode "had its moments, simply there were some pretty large breaks between them." Love also idea that Lois getting a chore as an organist was "a overnice way to go, because it does fit in well with what we already know nigh her."[five] Ahsan Haque of IGN said that the episode was "very dried and tired" with "very few funny moments," and that "Lois wanting a more than wholesome ethical lifestyle could take worked, merely the execution failed miserably." Overall, Haque noted that the episode was "a serious disappointment on many levels." The "lack of laughs, poor pacing, and lack of judgment really hurt," rating the episode equally a four out of x.[6]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Family Guy: Boys exercise Weep". Yahoo!. Retrieved October five, 2012. [ dead link ]
  2. ^ "Family Guy Volume Six DVD". Movieweb. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  3. ^ "Weekly Plan Rankings". ABC Medianet. Archived from the original on March 11, 2015. Retrieved October v, 2012.
  4. ^ Love, Brett. "Family unit Guy: Boys Exercise Cry". TV Squad. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
  5. ^ Haque, Ahsan. "Family Guy: "Boys Do Cry" Review". IGN. Retrieved October 5, 2012.

External links [edit]

  • "Boys Practise Weep" at IMDb

humphreythourbsixot48.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boys_Do_Cry