"Petarded" is the sixth episode of the fourth season of Family Guy, which originally broadcast on June 19, 2005. It was written by Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild and directed by Seth Kearsley. The episode sees Peter taking the MacArthur Fellows Program to see if he is a genius, however he performs poorly and is declared mentally retarded. Attempting to take advantage of the situation, he accidentally hospitalizes Lois while attempting to steal from a restaurant and loses custody of Meg, Chris, and Stewie.
"Timer the Cheese Guy", a character from 1970s cheese commercials made an appearance in the episode. Series producers tried to get the actor who had voiced him in the original commercials to make a guest appearance in the episode. However, the actor was very old, and had no memory of providing the voice of the character. Various scenes in the episode were removed by broadcast censors. "Petarded" gained a Nielsen Rating of 4.4, making it the week's 42nd most-watched program. Critics and news sources responded mostly positive to the episode.
Contents |
Plot
The Griffins invite their neighbors over for a games night. While playing Trivial Pursuit, Lois uses questions from the preschool edition for Peter in order to let him win. When Peter wins, he brags everyone, believing himself to be smarter than the rest of the family. Irritated at Peter's arrogance, Brian challenges Peter to take the MacArthur Fellows Program test to prove he is a genius. The results of the test show that Peter is not a genius; in fact, he suffers from mental retardation. Peter sinks into depression after being publicly labeled as retarded, but he soon discovers he can get away with anything after Tom Tucker doesn't press charges after Peter runs him over.
As he tests the limits of what he can get away with, Peter accidentally drenches Lois with boiling oil while stealing a deep-fat fryer from a fast food restaurant. While she is recovering, Child Protection Services takes away Peter's custody of Meg, Chris, and Stewie due to their contention that Peter is mentally unfit to look after them. The three are placed in the care of Cleveland. In an attempt to get the kids back and make Cleveland look bad, Peter brings prostitutes into Cleveland's house, but his plan backfires. In a last attempt, he appeals to the court for custody of the children, but he is denied. After returning home and accepting that the Griffins may never be together again, Lois walks in, revealing she has completely recovered and reobtained custody of the children, returning life back to normal.
Production
"Petarded" was written by Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild and directed by Seth Kearsley.[1] Though Sulkin and Wild wrote the episode, the idea for "Petarded" came from series creator Seth MacFarlane.[2][3] The episode featured an appearance by "Timer the Cheese Guy", a character from 1970s "Time for Timer" cheese advertisements.[2][4] Series producers attempted to get the actor who provided his voice for the character to appear in "Petarded" but, as MacFarlane describes in the DVD commentary, "he was a little old [...] and he didn't remember doing it".[2][4]
In the original draft of the episode, Peter being asked easy questions during Trivial Pursuit was meant to be by chance, however, executive producer David A. Goodman proposed the storyline of easy questions being given to Peter by Lois.[5] Prior to the episode broadcast, several sequences were shown after Peter discovers he can get away with anything on the basis that he is mentally challenged including a "how loud can I yell" experiment, as well as tackling down an opponent going for a touchdown while attending a New England Patriots game, but they weren't deemed funny enough and scrapped.[2][5]
Various scenes in the episode were changed or removed because of broadcast censors. Originally, just after Peter hands Brian his test results from the MacArthur Genius Grant, Peter was to state "Would a retarded person have peed in their pants?", then for him to urinate in his trousers, however, because broadcasting standards prohibited this it was changed to "Well, would a mentally retarded guy have hired a bulldozer with a drunk driver to level half of his house in celebration of his fantastic test results?".[2][4] Brian stating to Peter "In your fucking face, Fuckwad" after Peter performs poorly on the test was censored from television broadcasting.[4] The Family Guy orchestra sung and recorded a song for a sequence which showed several Quahog citizens learning and talking about Peter being declared as retarded.[4] However, this was removed from the episode because broadcasting standards believed it used the word "retarded" too many times.[2] After Peter loses custody of the kids, Chris was originally to stay with Mort Goldman, Stewie with Cleveland and Meg with Quagmire. During this original sequence, Mort was to tell Chris that he has two anuses, causing Quagmire to force Meg to lock him in a safe room as he couldn't trust himself around Meg's friends, but the series was prohibited to broadcast it from an unknown authority, presumably broadcasting standards.[3][4][5]
In the episode's DVD commentary, MacFarlane addressed what viewers perceived to be a rather abrupt ending to the episode. As Peter has lost all hope in getting custody of his kids back, Lois walks through the front door, returning from the hospital, and has brought the kids home with her. MacFarlane stated, "Some of the fans actually noticed, commented on the fact that this was a very abrupt resolution, but, to that I would say, you're not watching CSI...wouldn't you rather we throw in more jokes and fill up the time and then, hustle to the finish line at the last minute?".[4]
Cultural references
The episode is based in the movie I Am Sam, which also revolves about a mentally challenged father trying retain custody of his child.[4] In "Petarded" Lois is seen having developed a tumor due to constantly repressing negative thoughts about having married a mentally retarded man.[4] The tumor sings an altered version of the 1985 Falco song "Rock Me Amadeus".[4] Peter is shown taking the MacArthur Fellows Program (also known as the "MacArthur Genius Grant") in his attempt to prove to Brian that he is a genius.[5] The "Time for Timer" character shown singing and dancing is a reference to advertisements shown on ABC in order to encourage people to eat more cheese.[2] A deleted scene showing Quahog residents singing about Peter being retarded was a reference to music from Bye Bye Birdie.[2][4] A reference is made to 1985 drama film Mask, which is a film about Rocky Dennis who suffered from a rare bone disorder.[4] An animated scene is shown in the episode parodying Jake and the Fatman.[3]
Reception
On June 19, 2005, the episode was first broadcasted on FOX. It gained a Nielsen Rating of 4.4, making it the 42nd most-watched show of the week of June 13 to June 19.[6]
"Petarded" met with positive responses from critics. In his review of Family Guy, volume 3, Francis Rizzo III of DVD Talk wrote "[...] I will say there are some very good episodes in this set, starting with "Petarded," which sees Peter declared mentally retarded. The ways he takes advantage of this status is classic "Family Guy" material, while the musical montage here, involving phone calls all over town, is actually quite funny. Plus, the appearance of the Naked, Greased-Up Deaf Guy gave hope that the creators still had that sense of the bizarre in them."[7] John Nigro of The Pitt News considered "Petarded" one of volume 3's best episodes along with "Breaking Out is Hard to Do" and "Perfect Castaway".[8] The Sydney Morning Herald critic Marc McEvoy commented "Petarded" to be "a real thigh-slapper."[9] Kim Voynar of TV Squad gave the episode a mixed review, saying "[...] it just seemed to wrap up a little too quickly for me, like they ran out of time and were like, "Oops, let's wrap this up now". Other than that quibble, though, it was a fairly funny episode."[10]
References
- ^ "Family Guy: Petarded: Cast & Crew". MSN. http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-cast-and-crew/family-guy-petarded/. Retrieved on October 26, 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Goodman, David. (2006). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Petarded". [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ^ a b c Wellesley, Wild. (2006). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Petarded". [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l MacFarlane, Seth. (2006). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Petarded". [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ^ a b c d Sheridan, Chris. (2006). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Petarded". [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ^ "The Primetime Race". Broadcasting & Cable. June 27, 2005.
- ^ Rizzo, Francis III (November 29, 2005). "Family Guy Volume 3". DVDTalk.com. http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/19078/family-guy-volume-3/. Retrieved on October 9, 2008.
- ^ Nigro, John (September 1, 2006). "Latest 'Family Guy' release as absurd as ever". The Pitt News. http://media.www.unews.com/media/storage/paper274/news/2006/01/09/Culture/Latest.family.Guy.Release.As.Absurd.As.Ever-1322231.shtml. Retrieved on July 5, 2009.
- ^ McEvoy, Marc (January 30, 2006). "TV previews - Thursday February 2". The Sydney Morning Herald (John Fairfax Publications Pty Limited): p. 16.
- ^ Voynar, Kim (June 20, 2005). "Family Guy: Petarded". TV Squad. http://www.tvsquad.com/2005/06/20/family-guy-petarded/. Retrieved on October 9, 2008.
External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Petarded |
- "Petarded" at the Internet Movie Database
- "Petarded" at TV.com
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)


