Family Guy, S11E13
Meg saw Chris steal money from their mom and began blackmailing him to do her bidding. When Chris got sick of being treated like slave, he ran to Herbert's house to live. Stewie also got hooked into Anne Murray's music and turned Brian to her music as well.
I wasn't sure what would become of Chris being at Meg's beck and call. She didn't really do anything too shocking or twisted (save maybe wanting him to call girls and pretend to be their dead babies), but I knew that Chris couldn't possibly tolerate being her slave forever. I thought he might just come clean to his parents, but he surprised me by running away to Herbert's house.
I was scared what might happen to Chris under that pervert's roof for a few days, but after trying to jump into Chris' bed the first night, he didn't seem to make any other big moves. He might have been working up to that had Chris not driven him crazy with his slovenly ways. Chris got kicked out at the right time because in a cabin relatively alone with Herbert miles away, Chris probably would have been in some real danger there. The collection of tapes he had spying on kids was creepier than anything he really did to Chris, so I guess I was glad about that part.
Chris made a good point that he and Meg need to stick together, growing up in the house they do. Lois and Peter didn't even notice that Chris was missing for a few days. That's crazy. Even if Meg was covering for him, the fact that they didn't physically see him for a while didn't bother them at all. Great parents they are.
The funniest thing about this story, I guess, was when Chris had to put in Meg's contacts. It was freaky how her pupils rolled back into her head, but Chris' reaction to that was entertaining. He first compared her eyes to ping pong balls. Finally, he said that she looked like some blind jazz man--I really liked that comparison.
Another interesting moment was when Peter and Lois were at a restaurant. He made a call to someone named "Damone" and asked him to help him pay for their bill. It was a clip from Fast Times at Ridgemont High, but I have never seen that movie, so I didn't get the reference. The joke there might have worked for me had I seen it.
In Stewie's story, I liked that it commented on that fact that people listening to music can get very different impressions/meanings from the lyrics. I think they did a good job about speaking to the fact that arguing about differing opinions is pointless. There is no right or wrong. Stewie and Brian thought they would settle their argument by getting the "true" interpretion from Anne Murray, but she had sung "Snowbird" in her own interpretation and hadn't written the song at all. Somehow Stewie thought that made her a fraud and he felt like he had been deceived, which made him seem all the more ridiculous. Regardless of who wrote it, the way it made him feel was the right answer for himself.
It was concerning that Stewie tied up Anne Murray and pointed a gun at her. There was no resolution of that--they just ended it with him harassing her like that. We can just add that to Stewie's list of messed up things.
I think what I liked best about this story was when Brian first got into Anne Murray's music and imagined when he was a puppy. It was cute to see him frolicking with his siblings and nuzzling with his mother. Sometimes I forget how sensitive Brian is because he's often so insensitive and narcissistic.
I liked this episode because Meg and Chris were able to have a pretty sweet ending. Meg started off treating Chris horribly, but in the end she showed that she appreciated him, and they bonded. Stewie's story wasn't so sweet, but it at least it brought up an interesting topic. It really made me think about how there's just no wrong way to feel about music.
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