The Kiss Seen Around the World

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The Kiss Seen Around the World
Family Guy episode

Meg and Neil share their moment.
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 8
Written by Mark Hentemann
Directed by Glen Hill
Guest stars Hugh Downs, Ralph Garman, Josh Peck and Abe Vigoda
Production no. 3ACX02
Original airdate August 29, 2001
Season 3 episodes
Family Guy - Season 3
July 11, 2001February 14, 2002
  1. The Thin White Line (1)
  2. Brian Does Hollywood (2)
  3. Mr. Griffin Goes to Washington
  4. One If by Clam, Two If by Sea
  5. And the Wiener Is...
  6. Death Lives
  7. Lethal Weapons
  8. The Kiss Seen Around the World
  9. Mr. Saturday Knight
  10. A Fish out of Water
  11. Emission Impossible
  12. To Love and Die in Dixie
  13. Screwed the Pooch
  14. Peter Griffin: Husband, Father...Brother?
  15. Ready, Willing, and Disabled
  16. A Very Special Family Guy Freakin' Christmas
  17. Brian Wallows and Peter's Swallows
  18. From Method to Madness
  19. Stuck Together, Torn Apart
  20. Road to Europe
  21. Family Guy Viewer Mail #1
  22. When You Wish Upon a Weinstein*

(*)-Episode didn't air until November 9, 2003.


Season 2 Season 4
List of Family Guy episodes

"The Kiss Seen Around the World" is an episode from the third season of the FOX animated series Family Guy. It is the 36th episode to be aired. It guest stars Hugh Downs as himself, Josh Peck as Charlie the bully (uncredited), Ralph Garman as Gene Rayburn and Abe Vigoda as himself.

The episode title is a parody of the famous description of the shot in Lexington, Massachusetts at the very start of the American Revolution, the "the shot heard around the world", and the assassination that sparked World War I. The episode name can also refer to the famous home run by Bobby Thomson in 1951.

[edit] Plot summary

Channel 5 announces they want two high school interns, and Meg, who has a crush on news anchor Tom Tucker, applies and is selected entirely due to her relative ugliness. The other intern turns out to be Neil Goldman, who himself has a crush on Meg, though Meg finds him repulsive. When the Mass Media Murderer threatens to kill Hugh Downs atop City Hall, Tom and Diane decide to send the interns to cover the event (rather than go themselves, thinking that the Murderer will kill anyone who arrives at the scene). The news copter is shot down. Fearing death and lamenting that she never got her first kiss, Meg kisses Neil, but Hugh Downs captures the Mass Media Murderer. That very night, Neil puts the kiss on the news.

The next day, Neil gives everyone at school a T-shirt showing the kiss, and that evening Meg has to suffer through a dinner with his parents.

In return, Meg goes on TV to declare she hates Neil Goldman, and that she only kissed him was because she thought she was going to die. She then conducts on-the-street interviews, asking if anyone would kiss Neil. No one would; even when Meg shows the picture of Neil, to his father Mort, he shields his eyes in disgust. She declares that she never liked him, and never will.

A despondent Neil threatens to jump off the City Hall roof. Meg's image of Tom Tucker is shattered when she realizes he doesn't want to save Neil, but just get a funny story for ratings. Neil falls, but Meg breaks his fall. She tells him that just because she doesn't like him, it doesn't mean she wants him to kill himself. However, Neil said he never wanted to kill himself. At that moment, a guy calls him a phony.

Meanwhile, Peter and Lois buy Stewie a tricycle, which Stewie absolutely loves. A bully steals Stewie's tricycle. He gets no help from the police and, when he attempts to bulk up to fight the bully, a gym just tries to hard-sell him a membership. In retaliation, Stewie captures the bully with a net launcher and ties him up in the basement to interrogate him. However, just as Stewie is about to start torturing the bully, Lois appears with the tricycle, which she found abandoned on the street.

[edit] Notes

  • This episode is the first episode of the third production cycle to air which utilizes a slightly more universal style of character design regarding facial expression, though it was the second one made in this style ("Emission Impossible" was the first). It also introduces Peter and Lois' slightly modified designs, in which they are no longer designed to have eyebrows.
  • The bully who picks on Stewie, Charlie, is reading a magazine called Bully Weekly with an article called "Wedgie Tips".
  • The Mass Media Murderer is also the robber in the convenience store in "To Love and Die in Dixie" who threatens Chris.
  • During a news broadcast, Tom Tucker mentions the loss of Betsy LeBeau to Fred Johnson in a school board race. LeBeau was mentioned as a candidate for school board in the past episode "Running Mates".
  • This episode reveals that Meg is allergic to peanuts.
  • The line "dismembered Baltic hooker" is "dismembered Spanish hooker" in the closed captions.
  • During one of Tucker's newscasts, the subtitles incorrectly refer to Betsy LeBeau as "Betsy LaFoe".
  • This is the first of two episodes to make a reference to Roman Polanski's alleged child rape. In the episode, 'The Tan Aquatic With Steve Zissou', when Stewie exaggerates Martin Landau's spitting problem, Landau talks about Polanski's talents in a cutaway, and says, "and pedophile or not, he was a perfectly professional person, and punctual".
  • Neil says that when they kissed, they ceased to become Meg and Neil, and became "Meil."

[edit] Censorship

  • In syndicated airings, the entire scene where Stewie tries to report his tricycle stolen to a cop who thinks that everyone is a baby is cut. Also cut was Tom Tucker yelling at Neil for putting Sweet'n Low instead of urine in his coffee.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The toy store where the Griffins shop is called “Toys R Overpriced,” a parody of Toys ‘R’ Us.
  • The man who calls Peter a “phony” and later levels the charge at Neil is referred to in the credits as “Holden Caulfield,” the protagonist of the classic 1951 novel The Catcher in the Rye, who often accused others of being “phonies.”
  • Neil’s class presentation is on the 1967 Star Trek episode “Arena.” Several of his statements are incorrect. It is episode #19 of the series rather than #18. Also, the stunt double for William Shatner in "Arena" was Dick Dial,[1] not "Fred Lubins".
  • Neil passes Meg a note reading “I Want You” and points at her while dressed as Uncle Sam. This is a reference to World War I and World War II military recruitment posters.
  • Tom Tucker tells the high school students “I pity the fool who does drugs,” a reference to the catch phrase of 1980s icon Mr. T.
  • The scene in which Meg fantasizes about Tom Tucker emerging from a swimming pool and removing his shirt with the Cars song “Moving in Stereo” playing in the background mirrors the famous nude scene of Phoebe Cates in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
  • While Brian catches Meg kissing the television, Tom Tucker can faintly be heard saying “More news from the White House today on why President Bush stuck his finger in an electric socket. The president responded, ‘Dick Cheney told me that’s where leprechauns hide their gold.’ ”
  • When Meg screams, “Oh my God, I’m missing the news!” Peter replies “We all miss the news, but Huey Lewis needs time to create and we all have to learn to be patient,” referring to the rock band Huey Lewis & The News. While this episode was in production, the band had not released an album in six years. However, they released Plan B four months before it aired.
  • Diane Simmons says, “In entertainment, Mary Tyler Moore is 64 years old today,” implying this scene in the episode took place December 29, 2000.
  • Tom Tucker’s “interview” with Dustin Hoffman consists of sliced-together clips from his films The Graduate, Rain Man, and Hook, in a reference to "Weird Al" Yankovic's interviews with celebrities on Al TV.
  • The scene where Peter and Brian travel back in time to 1492 parodies the segment “Peabody’s Improbable History” on the popular cartoon show The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show.
  • Peter videotapes a bag blowing in the wind and makes a speech about beauty and the serenity of life, like a character in the 1999 film American Beauty
  • Tom Tucker calls ABC World News Tonight anchor Peter Jennings to reschedule their golf game.
  • Neil asks a hologram named Al, “Why haven’t I leaped?,” a reference to the science fiction show Quantum Leap, in which a character travels through time and cannot leave a certain period until he sets events “right.”
  • When Stewie asks the bully how old he is and the bully replies, "seven", Stewie says, "My, you're practically a lady." This is a reference to The Sound of Music, when Maria is introduced to the children.

[edit] References

  • S. Callaghan, “Kiss Seen Around the World.” Family Guy: The Official Episode Guide Seasons 1–3. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. 152–155.
  • A. Delarte, “Nitpicking Family Guy: Season 3” in Bob’s Poetry Magazine, 2.August 2005: 42–43 http://bobspoetry.com/Bobs02Au.pdf
  1. ^ Dick Dial (Shatner's stunt double) at Memory Alpha

[edit] External links


Preceded by
Lethal Weapons
Family Guy Episodes Followed by
Mr. Saturday Knight