Da Boom

"Da Boom"
Family Guy episode
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 3
Directed by Bob Jaques
Written by Neil Goldman
Garrett Donovan
Production code 2ACX06
Original air date December 26, 1999
Guest appearance(s)

"Da Boom" is the third episode of the second season of the animated comedy series Family Guy and the tenth episode of the series. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on December 26, 1999. The episode features the Griffin family after a nuclear holocaust occurs, due to Y2K on New Year's Eve. The family then travels in search of food, and eventually decide to establish a town around a Twinkie factory. Peter then takes over the town, establishing himself as mayor, but eventually becomes power hungry, and is overthrown.

The episode was written by Neil Goldman and Garrett Donovan and directed by Bob Jaques. The episode featured guest performances by Patrick Duffy, Victoria Principal, Jack Perkins, Will Sasso, and Joey Slotnick along with several recurring voice actors for the series. This is the first episode that aired to feature Mila Kunis as the voice of Meg Griffin. The episode was rated TV-14-V for intense violence.

Plot

On December 31, 1999, Quahog prepares for New Year's Day, and the Griffins have been invited to Joe's millennium party. At a store, a man wearing a chicken suit asks Peter if he wants a coupon, but Peter refuses, recalling the time he got a bad coupon from Ernie the Giant Chicken and started a massive fistfight. The man then warns Peter that the world will end because of the Y2K problem, so Peter locks himself and the family in their basement in hazmat suits, despite Lois' objections. Just after midnight, the Y2K bug hits. This causes a worldwide nuclear attack, with vehicles crashing and missiles self-launching, completely destroying Spooner Street. The Griffins remain safe, though their house has been severely damaged. The next week, Meg cries about Kevin getting vaporized, and the Griffins discover that Quagmire and Cleveland have been stitched together and are now called "Clevemire" (or "Quagland"), and Tom Tucker and Diane Simmons have cooked and eaten Tricia Takanawa. Starving, Peter immediately eats all the dehydrated meals, without adding water. Peter recalls that the snack food Twinkies are the only food that can survive a nuclear holocaust, so the family prepares to travel to Natick, Massachusetts, in hopes that the Twinkie factory has survived.

While loading the car, Chris attempts to bring a tree (named "Woody") but Peter says no, Lois attempts to reason with him but he walks behind the house and shoots the plant. After Meg puts mousetraps for a mutated rat down to protect Joe (Who is somehow melted to his driveway), the family get underway in their heavily damaged car. Soon they are stopped by survivors, who were looking for food, but the Griffins don't have any food so they have to distract them. They continue their journey only to find that the car has run out of gas. The Griffins now have to walk to Natick just as they found a new home, where Randy Newman just sings about everyone he sees. Lois initially plans to stay there, but they leave because Newman starting annoying her with his literal song while trying to eat an apple. So they once again continue their journey after Lois knocks out Newman with her apple. They make it to Natick, but there is no factory. Stewie yells that they done of their life only to trip and get covered in nuclear waste. Upon the sun lights up and shows the factory is still standing and in perfect condition. Expecting to be able to live off of the snackfood while Stewie mutates his arms into tentacles, they establish the town of New Quahog around the factory. Peter proclaims himself mayor, and Joe and Clevemire join him to form a ruling council. One year later, New Quahog has become a fresh new community, complete with houses and wells. Peter has successfully reigned as mayor despite many mistakes, such as giving people jobs picked out of a hat rather than based on the person's skills. However, when Brian points out how New Quahog is a peaceful place with no violence, Peter says that they are completely defenseless and finds metal to make guns. Later Stewie's body completely transformes into an octopus, and when Lois tries put Stewie on with the pajamas with a trap door on the back, he sprays with ink but misses it. Then he tries to get on into the celling and soon fall off and Lois catch him then says that he getting heavy. Stewie suddenly lays hundreds of eggs. Peter shows and made guns that he uses the pipes from the city's water irrigation system to make guns and other weapons, outraging the citizens.

Despite Peter's insistence that he is fit to continue to be the leader of the new community, the townspeople run him out of New Quahog, and his family follows him. The citizens proceed to burn the guns Peter had made with the pipes in the middle of the town square, but as the final gun is thrown onto the pile, hundreds of newly spawned Octopus-Stewies eggs hatch and they begin to destroy the city, with the townspeople unable to protect themselves from the mutants. As the family walks away, oblivious to the town's destruction, they decide to continue to a Carvel factory in Framingham.

The episode ends with a live-action parody of Dallas, in which Pam Ewing (Victoria Principal) wakes up and tells her husband Bobby (Patrick Duffy) about a dream she had of a strange episode of Family Guy. Bobby comforts her, but pauses and then asks "What's Family Guy?", and the two turn and look with confusion into the camera.[1]

Production

A woman with black hair, smiling while wearing a black dress.
This is the first episode to include the voice of Mila Kunis as Meg.

"Da Boom" was the third episode of the second season of Family Guy, and the first for director Bob Jaques. It first aired on December 26, 1999.[2] The episode was written by writing team Neil Goldman and Garrett Donovan, who had written episodes for the show in the first season including "Mind Over Murder".[2][3]

This was the first episode to have Mila Kunis providing the voice of Meg.[4] Lacey Chabert, the original voice of Meg, left the series due to time constraints with her acting role in Party of Five, as well as schoolwork.[5] Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the character, in part due to her performance on That '70s Show.[6] Seth MacFarlane, the show's creator, called Kunis back after her first audition, instructing her to speak slower, and then told her to come back another time and enunciate more. Once she claimed that she had it under control, MacFarlane hired her.[6]

Ernie the Giant Chicken was introduced in this episode. He is an anthropomorphic chicken who serves as a rival to Peter. He has a long, unexpected fight with Peter, which interrupts the main storyline.[7] This has become a running gag, having reappeared in episodes such as "Blind Ambition", "Internal Affairs",[8] "No Chris Left Behind"[9] and "Meet the Quagmires".[10][11] He is voiced by regular show writer Danny Smith.[10]

In addition to the regular cast, actress Victoria Principal, comedian and actor Will Sasso, reporter, commentator, war correspondent, anchorman Jack Perkins, voice actor Joey Slotnick, and character actor Patrick Duffy guest starred in the episode. Recurring guest voice actress Lori Alan, writer Danny Smith, and actor Patrick Warburton also made minor appearances.[2]

Cultural references

The live-action sequence in the episode is a reference to the episode of the CBS soap opera Dallas that erased the death of Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy), which turns out to be a dream of Pamela Ewing (Victoria Principal).[2][12] Randy Newman appears singing everything he sees in a musical moment.[12] The plot includes references to the Y2K bug.[12] Peter takes away Trix from the Rabbit, which is a reference to commercials for Trix cereal. Chris tells E.T. to run when he thinks Peter is the government coming for him. When travelling to find food they are stopped and there's a reference to Family Feud.[12] Stewie's line, "Game over man! Game over!" is a nod to the science fiction film Aliens. Arriving at the Twinkie factory, Peter uses the same words to describe what he sees that Dr. Ellie Arroway used in Contact when witnessing a celestial event in a foreign galaxy.

Reception

The episode received positive reviews. Ahsan Haque of IGN rated the episode a 10/10, saying "Overall, this episode easily ranks as one of the best episodes in the series. Almost every joke succeeds, and the far-fetched alternate reality storyline thoroughly entertains. Despite the fact that all of the events in the episode are revealed to be a dream, it doesn't take away from the high degree of amusement provided."[12] Tom Eames of entertainment website Digital Spy placed the episode at number sixteen on his listing of the best Family Guy episodes in order of "yukyukyuks" and described it as "classic bonkers Family Guy".[13] He added that the episode was "potentially the first time fans realised this wasn't just a Simpsons ripoff."[13]

References

  1. Plot synopsis information for the episode "Da Boom" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 2003.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Family Guy: Da Boom". Film.com. RealNetworks, Inc. Archived from the original on August 11, 2009. Retrieved 2010-05-10.
  3. "Family Guy – Mind Over Murder Cast and crew". Yahoo!. Archived from the original on 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2010-07-28.
  4. "Family Guy Cast and Details". TV Guide. Retrieved August 24, 2009.
  5. "Sonic the Horndog". Gamespy. Retrieved 2009-10-03.
  6. 1 2 "Family Guy – Casting Mila Kunis". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved May 15, 2010.
  7. Callaghan, Steve (2005). "The Giant Chicken". Family Guy: The Official Episode Guide Seasons 1–3. Harper Paperbacks. New York: HarperCollins. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-06-083305-3.
  8. Wong, Kevin (June 13, 2005). "Family Guy". Popmatters.com. Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  9. Haque, Ahsan (2007-05-07). "Family Guy: "No Chris Left Behind" Review". IGN. Retrieved 2010-06-19.
  10. 1 2 "Danny Smith:Credits". TV Guide. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  11. Love, Brett (2007-05-21). "Family Guy: Meet The Quagmires". TV Squad. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Haque, Ashan (2008). "Family Guy Flashback: "Da Boom" Review". IGN. News Corp. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  13. 1 2 Eames, Tom (19 March 2017). "The 16 best ever Family Guy episodes in order of yukyukyuks". Digital Spy. Retrieved 19 March 2017.

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