Sometimes, when the
teams I root for are winning or losing by too much to keep the game
interesting, and when the “SVU” episode on cable is one I have already seen and
actually remember how it turns out, I sometimes find myself switching to a
block of (the animated comedy) “Family Guy” reruns on TBS – there are some
nights they show, like, six of them in a row.
I like “Family Guy”, not all the time, but occasionally. Unlike other comedies on the air, they do
jokes that actually make me laugh.
“Family Guy’s”
creator, Seth MacFarlane, who also penned this summer’s hit comedy movie “Ted”,
seems to have his finger directly on the pulse of the contemporary funnybone
(if that makes any sense whatsoever.) 0As
a former practitioner in the field, I find myself intrigued by the jokes
MacFarlane chooses to include, his enormous success suggesting they reflect,
“This is what’s funny today.”
I do not find the
following joke offensive, just curious, by which I mean I wonder if I would
have included a joke like this in the shows I was in charge of. I have forgotten how the joke was set up, as
I did not know I’d be writing about it till the day after I watched it, and by
then, I could no longer remember the details.
Please forgive the incomplete reporting. I mean well, but I’m old.
Anyway, the end of the
joke went like this: Peter Griffin, the
lead character on “Family Guy” bumps into a wooden barrel, at which point, an
animated likeness of actress Joyce DeWitt (the third most important lead character
from “Three’s Company”) rises up. Peter
Griffin notices her popping out of the barrel, and says,
“Joyce DeWitt! So that’s where you’ve been.”
I must admit I sort of
chuckled. I am no fan of “name” jokes,
but they seemed to have picked the right one.
I laughed at the selection, not the joke, which I found, well…
Why don’t I let Joyce DeWitt
speak for herself.
Peter Griffin delivers
his line, and the screen goes black, dissolving into a series of commercials. During the break, I imagine this conversation
taking place:
Animated Joyce DeWitt: Man!
Animated Peter Griffin: Excuse me?
AJD: Was that
supposed to be funny?
APG: You’re
talking.
AJD: It’s a
commercial. I can do whatever I want.
APG: We don’t
usually talk during commercials. Because
they don’t write us anything to say.
AJD: They
didn’t write me anything to say during the show
either. I just popped up, and you
slammed me.
APG: I didn’t slam you.
AJD: You did
too! You did an “obscurity” joke at my
expense.
APG: I didn’t do anything. I’m just a drawing
from Asia. I have no control over what I
say, or what I look like. If I did, I’d
have made myself handsomer.
AJD: Then who is responsible?
APG: The guy
who created the show. Seth MacFarlane.
AJD: Where is
he? I want to talk to him.
SFX: A CONTROL
BOOTH DOOR CLOSING. THEN FOOTSTEPS. THEN “FAMILY GUY’S” CREATOR AND SHOW RUNNER,
SETH MACFARLANE APPEARS.
SETH MACFARLANE:
What the hell is going on here?
ANIMATED PETER GRIFFIN: I believe she has a bone to pick with
you. And by the way, did you know I
could talk during commercials?
S.M: You
can’t.
APG: Then I
don’t understand.
S.M: Relax,
Peter. Somebody else is writing this.
APG: Really? Even
your part?
S.M: Yes. Do you think I normally converse with animated characters? I am too busy working my ass off and living
the high life, a phrase, by the way, I have never uttered in my life, which is
proof this is not coming from me. (TO ANIMATED JOYCE DEWITT) You were written
to be a “picture” joke. You pop out of
the barrel, we make fun on your career decline – Blackout! – and into
commercial. This is entirely unscripted.
ANIMATED JOYCE DEWITT: I understand that, and normally, as a player
currently working in the animated arena, I would perform my assigned bit, like
the professional I am. But I just
couldn’t live with myself if I held my tongue, was driven home in the animated
car you sent for me, and that was that.
S.M:
Fine. What’s the problem?
AJD: I just
wanted you to know I am deeply offended by your gratuitous insult. It was easy, cheap and personally
hurtful.
S.M: I can’t
believe this. The whole point of doing
an animated series is you don’t have to take crap from actors. South
Park. The Simpsons. It’s our favorite part of the process. Nobody talks back.
AJD: Imagine
I’m hanging out at home. I flip on the
TV to unwind, I switch to your show, and out of the blue, I am blindsided by a
joke telling millions of people that I’m a has-been loser failure.
S.M: Well you
are, aren’t you?
AJD: I am a
PERSON, Sir! I have a right to my
dignity. And by the way, if you check Wikipedia, you will realize that aside
from continuing my acting career well into the 2000’s, I co-hosted – along with
Oscar Winner Mr. Jeff Bridges – The World Food Day Gala at the Kennedy Center. You most definitely owe me an apology.
S.M: Yeah,
that’s not going to happen.
AJD: May I ask
why not?
S.M: Listen,
lady, I am very hot in comedy right now.
Why? Because I’m the “Casey
Jones” of the Zeitgeist Express. I know
what’s funny. And what’s funny, among other things, is pot
shots at nobodies who were former somebodies, and even then, nobody was
exactly sure why?
Do you know who fits that category to perfection? Joyce DeWitt!
We pitched a bunch of other
names in the room. But when I blurted “Joyce
DeWitt”, the place just fell apart. Not
because I’m the boss. “Joyce DeWitt” is on the money!
AJD: But it’s mean!
S.M: That’s
why it’s funny!
AJD: Not to
everyone!
S.M: Well, maybe
not to you and your loved one. What’s
that? Like, twelve people?
AJD: Who do
not deserve to see a family member’s reputation dragged through the mud on a
major cable station.
S.M: Look, I’m
sorry – by which I mean I’m not
sorry, it’s just the way I start a sentence where I don’t plan to apologize –
but I know my audience – hell, I am my audience. And trust me, “the line” has permanently been moved.
Polite comedy is dead. Today, it’s anything goes – gratuitous
insults, racial and religious slurs, insulting the handicapped, or the healthy
but ugly – cleverly executed, of course.
I mean, where have you been, anyway?
Oh, I forgot. Oblivion.
AJD: I cannot believe
the arrogance! Do you think people will
always find you funny?
S.M: I’m not
an idiot; I know comedy tastes keep evolving, becoming more and more edgy. But I’m
totally plugged into what’s funny now. That’s why I scored a reputed hundred million
dollar contract. I say “reputed” because
these aren’t my words and the writer hates to do research. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got work to
do. We’re pitching an “ugly” joke, and
we can’t decide between…I would do a “name” joke here, but the writer doesn’t
like them.
SETH MACFARLANE TURNS, AND RETURNS TO THE BOOTH.
ANIMATED JOYCE DEWITT: (TO
ANIMATED PETER GRIFFIN) You could have said something, you know.
ANIMATED PETER GRIFFIN: I prefer
to side with the boss. It pushes back
the time when I’m being drawn popping out of a barrel.
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