The pilot episode of American Dad! originally aired on Fox in the United States on February 6, 2005, just after Super Bowl XXXIX. The episode was written by series co-creators Seth MacFarlane, Mike Barker and Matt Weitzman. The episode was leaked onto the internet before its supposed premiere on FOX. The episode features a guest appearance by Carmen Electra.
"Pilot" | |
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American Dad! episode | |
Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 1 |
Directed by | Ron Hughart |
Written by | Seth MacFarlane Mike Barker Matt Weitzman |
Production code | 1AJN01[1] |
Original air date | February 6, 2005 |
Guest appearance | |
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Seth MacFarlane, who is best known for creating Family Guy, stated that he and Weitzman came up with the series after the 2000 United States presidential election. Initially, the series was to replace Family Guy after its cancellation but it was revived after the pilot episode aired. Because of this, MacFarlane chose to focus on Family Guy and handed creative control over to Barker and Weitzman. After the pilot aired, the rest of the first season began on May 1, 2005, on Fox's Animation Domination lineup which had its debut on that date.
The pilot follows Stan Smith, who rigs a school election to make his son Steve popular; but Steve becomes corrupt with power. The pilot received mixed reviews from critics and fans, with many people calling American Dad! a rip off of Family Guy. Despite the mixed reviews, it was a ratings success. According to the Nielsen ratings, it was viewed by 15.10 million people in the United States, and acquired a 7.5 rating in the 18-49 demographic.
Plot
editSteve is upset about his lack of popularity. He notices that girls seem attracted to guys with dogs, so he asks his parents for one. Stan gets Steve a 19-year-old dog, because it was alive during the Reagan administration. One night, Roger makes a noise and Stan goes downstairs, thinking it is an intruder. Stan shoots the intruder, only to find out that he just accidentally killed Steve's dog.
They bury the dog, and Stan tries to make up for it by rigging the school election and discrediting his opponent by showing an altered photo of her in bed with the Jack in the Box Man (who Stan tells Steve, and Roger later discovers, is still in their basement) so that Steve wins and becomes the school president. Once elected, Steve uses his attribution as student body president to impress the head cheerleader, Lisa Silver, turn the lockers into edible chocolate ones, and changes the word "period" to Steve. He soon gets corrupted with power, but believes that he is succeeding, until Lisa dumps him when he first tries to kiss her. Steve goes crazy and holds the school hostage. Stan sneaks into the school and gets Steve to stop by revealing that he was unpopular in high school as well.
On another front, the audience is introduced to Roger, an alien who saved Stan's life in Area 51. As repayment, Roger lives with the Smiths, but his presence is not known by the CIA, Stan's employer, and the world. Since Stan fears that the CIA would erase his and Roger's memories if the alien were ever discovered, Roger is forced to live in confinement at the Smith's. Roger is also addicted to sugar, and Francine puts him on a forced diet when his weight causes him to break a chair and the dinner table. In order to get around Francine's strict control of junk food in the house, Roger strikes a deal with Hayley to do her homework in exchange for her smuggling sweets to him. It works at first, but on the night before the deadline for one of Hayley's papers on Henry Kissinger, Roger has too much sugar and passes out without doing the work. He and Hayley are able to come up with an excuse to make her teacher give her an extension on the paper's deadline (they dig up Steve's dead dog and Hayley tells the teacher that she just lost her dog). After this scare, however, Hayley decides to discontinue her agreement with Roger. Roger, noticing Steve's frustration in getting a girl, becomes his adviser for dating, in exchange for a "buttload" of Twinkies. Roger also reveals that every seven hours an ooze shoots out of his body, "like clockwork".
Background and production
editIn 1999, Family Guy, MacFarlane's first animated show, aired on Fox to ratings success. During this time, MacFarlane came up with the idea for American Dad! after the 2000 presidential election; stating "me and co-creator Matt Weitzman were so frustrated with the Bush administration that we would just spend days bitching and complaining, and we figured we should channel this into something creative and hopefully profitable."[2][3] Later, series co-creator Mike Barker stated, "About a year and a half ago, Seth called and asked if Matt and I would be interested in working on a show about a right-wing CIA agent and his liberal daughter. It was right up our alley, and everything just fell into place."[3][4] On September 14, 2003, Variety reported that Fox Broadcasting had ordered a pilot presentation of the then tentatively titled American Dad! and "If greenlit, American Dad! could launch as early as fall 2004." At the time, Fox was aiming to develop a new lineup of adult animated sitcoms.[5]
The original American Dad! pilot was a 6-minute version of the first 6 minutes in the series premiere. This precursory pilot was used by MacFarlane, Barker, and Weitzman to sell American Dad! to Fox and was never aired along with the rest of the series. Fox green-lit the show and announced that it would air after Super Bowl XXXIX on February 6, 2005.[6][7] While American Dad! was being pitched to Fox, the network canceled Family Guy in 2003, and Fox planned on marketing American Dad! as a replacement for Family Guy. However, in 2005, Family Guy was revived due to high re-run ratings and DVD sales. As a result, MacFarlane chose to focus on Family Guy and handed creative control of American Dad! to Barker and Weitzman.[2]
Cultural references
editSteve's Shazam! shirt is a reference to the TV show of the same name. The old Algebra teacher's name is Mr. Feeney; which is a reference to the show Boy Meets World, in which the teacher that seemed to always teach the kids was named Mr. Feeney. The school is named after Pearl Bailey, as Bailey was an actress and singer, who won a Tony Award for playing Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly!.
Reception
editThe pilot episode received mixed reviews from critics. In a review of American Dad! Volume 1 DVD, Michael Drucker of IGN stated that it's "occasionally weighed down with its topical humor. Characters are extremely polarized, especially Stan and Hayley, and the constant flow of jokes about their politics can become tiring."[8] The New York Times's Alessandra Stanley said the show "aspires to pick up where 'The Simpsons' and 'South Park' left off, but many of its jokes and cultural references seem off.[9] " Robert Bianco of USA Today said "If you like Family Guy, you'll probably like American Dad. The problem is, if you've seen Family Guy, you've already seen American Dad." In a negative review, Thomas Conner of the Chicago Sun-Times said "The jokes aren't funny, the story is silly (or, really, not silly enough) and the new writers follow the "Family Guy" model so closely they fail to explain any of the characters or even the premise of the show."[10] According to the Nielsen ratings, it was viewed by 15.10 million people in the United States, and required a 7.5 rating in the 18-49 demographic.[11]
References
edit- ^ Registration Number PAu002881649
- ^ a b Sean Doorly. "Seth MacFarlane Interview". Doorly.com. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ a b Borstein, Alex (2013-09-13). "Seth MacFarlane's TV History". IGN.com. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ "American Dad Touchdown | AWN | Animation World Network". AWN. 2005-02-06. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ Josef Adalian (2003-09-14). "Fox hankering for a homer with 'Dad'". Variety.com. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ Riggs, Thomas (August 2007). Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television - Thomas Riggs - Google Boeken. Cengage Gale. ISBN 9780787690502. Retrieved 2013-09-17.
- ^ TV.com. "American Dad! - Season 1, Episode 0: Unaired Pilot Presentation". TV.com. Retrieved 2013-09-17.
- ^ "American Dad! Volume 1; Seth MacFarlane's Family Guy follow-up offers plenty of patriotic pleasures, including four featurettes, 12 commentaries and 13 episodes". Ign.com. 2006-04-03. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ Stanley, Alessandra (February 4, 2005). "Dad Is a C.I.A. Operative, the Kids Have a Weird Pet". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
- ^ "American Dad! season 1". Metacritic. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- ^ "FOX Salutes 'American Dad' by Moving Up Its Timeslot Beginning Sunday, May 1, on Fox". The Futon Critic. February 9, 2005. Retrieved March 25, 2011.