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Baby Not on Board

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"Baby Not on Board"
Family Guy episode

Promotional Artwork for this episode.
Episode no. Season 7
Episode 4
Written by Mark Hentemann
Directed by Julius Wu
Guest stars H. Jon Benjamin as Carl
Production no. 6ACX07
Original airdate November 2, 2008[1]
Season 7 episodes
Family Guy season 7
September 28, 2008 – May 17, 2009
  1. Love Blactually
  2. I Dream of Jesus
  3. Road to Germany
  4. Baby Not on Board
  5. The Man with Two Brians
  6. Tales of a Third Grade Nothing
  7. Ocean's Three and a Half
  8. Family Gay
  9. The Juice Is Loose
  10. FOX-y Lady
  11. Not All Dogs Go to Heaven
  12. 420
  13. Stew-Roids
  14. We Love You, Conrad
  15. Three Kings
  16. Peter's Progress
List of Family Guy episodes

"Baby Not on Board" is an episode of Family Guy and originally aired on November 2, 2008.[1] it also aired in the United Kingdom channel BBC Three on May 3, 2009. The Griffin family gets a year of free gas, and decide to take a vacation to the Grand Canyon. They soon realize they left Stewie at home, and rush home to get him. The episode was written by Mark Hentemann and directed by Julius Wu. The episode was watched by 9.97 million viewers on its first airing.[2] The title is a play on the 'Baby On Board!' signs.

Contents

[edit] Plot

When Chris asks Peter for personal advice concerning Chris' testicles at the convenience store where Chris works, Peter threatens to sue the store for sexual harassment. Peter is given a coupon for unlimited gas for a year by the store owner to keep quiet. Lois suggests Peter use the card for a family vacation. The family decides to drive to the Grand Canyon. They leave early the next morning but inadvertently leave a sleeping Stewie behind at home. He wakes up to discover that he is home alone, and that he can do whatever he wants.

While stopping off at the ruins of the World Trade Center to pay respects, the rest of the family realizes that they left Stewie behind in Quahog. They call Cleveland and Quagmire to babysit him. As soon as they come in to the house, Stewie believes they are intruders and knocks them out with a noxious gas but, discovering their true identities, he chains them to the basement wall and force them to watch the 24-Hour DirecTV help channel. When Stewie eats up all the food in the house, he gets a job at McBurgertown, but is fired for eating food meant for the customers.

After not receiving any calls from Cleveland and Quagmire for the past eight hours, Lois insists they return home to get Stewie. While driving the car, Peter somehow enters the car next to them to watch a show, causing the Griffins' car to crash. The Griffins attempt to take a train home, but Peter squanders all the money they have with them for tickets on helium shower rings. Lois loses her temper and blames all their misfortunes on Peter's stupidity, but in a direct parallel to a scene from Planes, Trains and Automobiles is ashamed for hurting Peter's feelings when he calls her a cold-hearted cynic and says that everyone else likes him for who he is. Brian manages to get the Griffins a ride on the back of a pickup truck bound for Quahog.

In his solitude, Stewie realizes how much he depends on his family and is thrilled to see them return. When Peter questions where Cleveland and Quagmire are, the credits roll over Cleveland and Quagmire as they are still in the basement, reciting everything that is being said on TV, when Cleveland casually mentions he's getting a spin-off.

[edit] Cultural references

When Peter mentions about needing the sauna's treatment, the scene cuts to a non-sequitur that parodies the opening scene from Back to the Future, which Peter, as Marty, rushes for school. This also features sound biting of Christopher Lloyd as Doc and the corresponding song "The Power of Love" by Huey Lewis and the News which played in the film.[3]

Peter's masseuses are characters Molly Jensen and Sam Wheat from the film Ghost, who are reenacting the famous pottery-making love scene from the film with Peter's back fat while the corresponding song "Unchained Melody" by the Righteous Brothers plays.[4]

Meg suggests the family go to the island from Lost for their vacation, but Stewie doesn't want to listen to Matthew Fox's "heavy breathing". [5]

Brian tries to imitate Stewie's reaction to being left home alone, commenting that he "doesn't do a good Stewie." Seth MacFarlane provides the voice of both characters.

During the drive the family sings Bette Midler's song "The Rose".[3]

Both Peter's purchase of the shower curtains filled with helium and his monologue are references to John Candy's character Del in the film Planes, Trains and Automobiles.[6][7]

When Stewie is fired from McBurgertown for eating fish sandwiches, a picture of a McDonald's Big Mac is shown in the background.

When Stewie is reunited with the family, the suite from the film Home Alone, can be heard in the background.[3]

When Joe cleans his wheel-chair, he recites the first part of the Rifleman's Creed, substituting "rifle" for "wheelchair".

[edit] Reception

Alex Rocha of TV Guide said, "By the time the end rolled around on this week's episode, I was overall, satisfied. It was a definite step up from the previous Germany episode." He went on to say there were "memorable moments including crazy fight between Peter and Quagmire and also, one of my favorites, the Griffins singing Bette Midler's 'The Rose.'"[3] Ahsan Haque of IGN was much more critical of the episode. He said, "It seems as if the writers decided to forgo any effort to put together a decent plot and instead picked out whatever crap they could find from their barrel of manatee jokes and strung them together with absolutely no sense of pacing or theme." He continued by saying, "Overall, this was one of those lazy, haphazardly put-together episodes that has terrible timing, no real plot, overlong jokes that simply are not funny, uninspired musical numbers, and some terribly out of character moments. Despite the fact that there are a small handful of genuinely funny gags." He concluded by saying, "This is definitely one of the worst Family Guy episodes in years."[8]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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