American Dad, S07E18
Stan took Steve to lose his virginity in Mexico because he wanted Steve to grow out of playing with toys. They failed to find a suitable whorehouse to facilitate that and also got kidnapped by some drug cartel. They only managed to escape when Steve used his imagination through a toy made from parts he found in their cell. In a side story, Roger wanted to steal a bottle of Rain Duck from Greg and Terry to enjoy with the steak dinner Francine made. All of his attempts failed, so Francine had to get it herself, but Roger had planned all alone to get rid of Francine and have the meal to himself.
It's episodes like these that make me think that Steve and Junior from The Cleveland Show are so similar. They both are teenage boys who refuse to grow up and continue to play with toys. I would have preferred that Stan fight Steve and his "army" toys over and over again, rather than have had Stan listen to Klaus' plan. Taking a teenager out of the country to get laid seems a little extreme just because you don't like him playing with dolls. Steve seemed to love the idea, but I think if he and Stan had succeeded it would have somehow warped him. It would have at least taught Steve that it was okay to buy sex, and possibly he would have never bothered to seek companionship based on mutual affection. So in a sense, the fact that every whorehouse they went to was disgusting and horrifying was a great thing.
I just wish that they didn't have to portray Mexico in such a horrible light. I don't know which of the places they went to (that were shown) was worse, but I especially disliked when everyone was vomiting on the streets. I also don't understand why anyone besides Stan and Steve needed to puke at that particular moment. It seemed unnecessarily gross. Even if it was for a joke about horchata (I've never tried it, so that one goes over my head), I think it was excessive.
I had hope for them to enjoy nicer trip when Stan and Steve were taken in by a group of people in a car, until they all took out guns on them. But truth be told, it's always risky to take a ride from a stranger no matter what country you're in. It was just a little ironic because just before Stan and Steve knew they were in danger, the man said that most of Mexico is wonderful. At least that line suggests that the writers aren't completely trying to make Mexico seem unpleasant. I just wish things had turned out differently, but I guess their troubles were vital to Stan allowing Steve to continue playing with toys.
I was glad, too, that Steve had such a great imagination because I don't know what kind of food they were fed in their cell, but it didn't look like anything good. In Steve's mind they could be eating food that was recognizable and weren't surrounded by rats and roaches. I also didn't like looking at the toilet paper tube, roach-headed, rat skeleton-armed toy that Steve made. So glad that he could picture it as something less creepy and nasty. If I had to watch Steve the whole time shaking that monstrosity of a toy around throughout the end of the story, I'd have had to look away most of the time. Especially with its roach head (I can't stand those things).
Because of my repulsion of "Pedro," I couldn't blame Steve for throwing the thing out when they got away from their captors. I liked that the fantasy version of Pedro was outraged, though. Plus, he said that line that you hear at the end of the episodes: "Bye, have a beautiful time." That was kind of cute. It made me like the ending of the episode a lot more.
As far as the Roger story went, I can't believe that I didn't suspect that it was all going to be a setup by Roger. From the beginning, I wondered why Roger would bring a really nice wine (that he obviously loved) to a steak dinner that Francine claimed was going to be for her and Stan (did she have no idea that he went down to Mexico?). I guess I got distracted at his attempts to steal the last bottle from Greg and Terry that I started to ignore the why. He wasted all this time making a device with dominoes and other triggers throughout the house just to take out their electricity. What a rip (not in a way that made me laugh). After Roger was failing like a champion, I was glad to see Francine get the damn bottle in a quick minute. But I was pissed that Roger set her flying away on a giant wrecking ball. Not another story where he just screws over someone and gets to reap the profits at the end! Freaking Roger. I love him because he provides fantasy and creepy humor, but I hate how he is frequently exempt from consequences. He needs to pay more often!
This may be an episode I would come to like after watching again. It lacked a lot of the usual annoyance I find when the stories concentrate on one of Stan's plans (or Klaus', really). It would have been better if Roger was a little funnier, but at least he wasn't portraying himself as another obnoxious persona and was more or less playing himself this time. However, it would have been even better to see Roger get away with less in the future. The joke of Roger screwing people over for his own selfish needs is really starting to wear thin.
The Mexico part was spot on. Trust me.
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