What type of humor is family guy




















There are fairly consistent stereotypes of who likes which shows, based on age, race, gender, even religion. But these stereotypes may be getting outdated, as people change with time and old divisions between people are becoming blurred. This is illustrated by the huge number of kids who watch Family Guy or South Park. Should they be barred from the shows they understand and like merely because of their age? Should they be sheltered from having their minds formed by these shows with mature material?

Or should they be allowed to watch these shows if they can understand them already? Their minds seem to already be pretty formed if they get the humor included in shows such as Family Guy.

The way shows are rated seems to be based on age, not on maturity levels. Also, the chance that sense of humor is more of a generational thing than an age thing implies that future generations may find things such as Family Guy funnier than previous generations did, regardless of age. So if humor is more of a generational thing than an age thing, the label immature may no longer be relevant if everyone still laughs at certain shows regardless of age.

Should we ban ideas of maturity or at least alter them to accommodate the changing generational senses of humor? Family Guy and many other shows, particularly in the comedy genre, are indications of changes in the sense of humor, maturity, and even speed of growing up in contemporary generations.

Our thinking about ratings and maturity have not changed in a while, though. Perhaps it is time we caught up our thinking. If we did this, we could get TV executives to change their thinking as well, and thus alter the way shows are rated and what audiences are targeted with programming. Family Guy viewers seem to be rebels or rule breakers. They do not like authority, think rules and structure are unfair, and tend to be heavy users of sarcasm.

Family Guy was great back in the day, but the market is simply too saturated now with shows that are similar yet better, and as you say, they are marketing to the wrong demographic. Family Guy is just too slapstick for what people near their twenties want as far as an animated comedy series is concerned.

You make a good point. It was way more popular among my peer group and I even liked it more back in high school, even junior high. Family Guy is an excellent example of a show that has run its course. That being said, your views on the changing demographic is really interesting. I still remember walking through my neighborhood in high school and hearing little kids cuss each other out. My most favorite part about Fam Guy is that it is on Fox.

You know, that Tea Party loving, pretending to be on Gods side all knowing Conservative family values and all American Patriot bag of hypocrites who love most of all money. I suppose most people never reallly think much about that do they. Hmmm that is a good point. The show seems to be about a lot of conservative values and the blue collar lifestyle, if you look really deeply. Yes but the humor is more that of an obnoxious tween, hence why I said the show has a strange and split demographic.

Family Guy, in recent years, has expanded its world of storytelling and tackled serious topics that range from religion to domestic abuse. This is how the show maintains its comedy. Still, the newer episodes raise thought-provoking questions and ask the audience to think about what they are watching rather than sit mindlessly and laugh. Perhaps Family Guy is bridging the gap or simply creating a space for more dialogue to exist between generations.

Samira Excellent response to this article. That is a very astute observation. The show is inclusive with its satire; no group has proven to be exempt from these writers.

Somehow they have gotten into our heads heard our thoughts and put them in front of us to deal with. I do not equate a specific demographics to the viewing audience. I do know that the people I enjoy spending time with, which encompasses a wide range of demographics watch or watched and enjoy or enjoyed this show. Maybe it is not so popular now but when it was first released and then the onset of the re-release it was very popular. I do think they based Quagmire on the infamous Charlie Sheen.

They have a similar profile and lifestyle. Maybe so! I have noticed a bit deeper content in the newer episodes but also a little less, or more forced, comedy. It could also simply be that Seth MacFarlane is just growing up as a person. Maybe he has no deep-seated intentions to reach vast audiences or bridge the gap between generations.

Check out every example in the video at the top of this post. Most of these instances involve Family Guy tackling political topics that are hotly debated to this day or just ones that could be viewed as insensitive. The series has made jokes out of JFK's assassination, abortion, and school shootings, which are not topics that most would attempt to make light of. They didn't even wait very long to put Bill Cosby in their crosshairs to make jokes about the sexual assault cases against him, and have repeatedly made fun of Michael J.

Fox for having Parkinson's disease. While there are certainly going to be some who find these types of jokes distasteful, they are exactly the type of jokes that Family Guy has been making from the beginning.

The show has never shied away from a topic they think could be used to get a big laugh, and it is this dark sense of humor that many have come to know and love from Family Guy , making it the hit that it is. Adult Swim essentially saved the show after its second cancellation and Family Guy is what drove people to Adult Swim.

This joke makes fun of that relationship by cutting to an Adult Swim-esque bumper. One of the best running gags in Family Guy involves how intrusive ads for shows can be. On the bottom right corner, there is always a show being advertised in the most blatant and flash way. After Brian trips out on drugs, Stewie comes to his aid. This joke captures how ridiculously famous the smallest quips can get, not too dissimilar from how big the early quotes from Family Guy were at the height of its popularity between seasons The highlight comes from what happens during cutaways.

Every character just freezes and stares blankly at the screen. It then cuts to another flashback that shows what they do during cutaways, including smoking and checking their phone. His line was the aforementioned one. Look it up.



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