A Picture Is Worth a 1,000 Bucks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from A Picture is Worth A 1000 Bucks)
Jump to: navigation, search
"A Picture Is Worth a 1,000 Bucks"
Family Guy episode
FGPictureisWorth.jpg
Chris is manipulated by art dealer Antonio Monatti.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 11
Written by Craig Hoffman
Directed by Gavin Dell
Production no. 2ACX07
Original airdate April 18, 2000
Guest stars
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"Running Mates" "Fifteen Minutes of Shame"
Family Guy (season 2)
List of Family Guy episodes

"A Picture Is Worth a 1,000 Bucks" is an episode from the second season of the Fox animated series Family Guy. It is the 18th episode of Family Guy to be aired. It guest-starred Candice Bergen as Murphy Brown, Faith Ford as Corky Sherwood and Charles Kimbrough as Jim Dial. Mila Kunis permanently takes over the role of Meg from Lacey Chabert beginning with this episode.

The title is a parody of the saying "A picture is worth a thousand words".

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

For his birthday, a blindfolded Peter drives the family to Bob's Funland and Putt Putt Golf. The attraction's owner, Bob Funland, soon asks them to leave, after Peter makes repeated trouble for other customers. Peter grows unhappy over his lack of accomplishments; he remembers Bob Funland as a loser from high school, and even his own obnoxious cousin Kathy Griffin is famous. Chris gives Peter an astonishingly good painting as a present, but Peter simply uses it to cover a hole in the window of his car. An art dealer named Antonio Monatti buys the painting for $5,000 and urges Peter to bring Chris to Manhattan, where he could become a famous artist. Brian reveals he used to know Andy Warhol.

Under the guise of nurturing his son's natural talent, Peter puts Chris completely in Monatti's hands while the rest of the family tour the city, dazzled by the big-town sights. Monatti gives Chris a total makeover, dying his hair green, dressing him in fashionable clothes, renaming him "Christobel" and introducing him to a two-dimensional Kate Moss (implying that Moss is so thin, when she turns to the side, she disappears). Since Monatti alienates Peter (because he "is a pig"), he tells Chris that he must keep away from his father at all times. When Chris reluctantly complies, Peter disowns him and focuses on Meg's talent for bird calls.

Lois tricks Peter into attending the première of Chris' artwork by telling him that strippers would be distributing free tacos. After a grandiose unveiling, "Christobel's" masterpiece turns out to be a collection of portraits of Peter in a style reminiscent of that of Andy Warhol. Monatti and the "art crowd" immediately detest the new work and reject Chris as a poser. As the family prepare to return to Quahog, "heterosexual fashion designer" Calvin Klein spots Stewie and immediately casts him as "the face" for his new line of designer diapers. At the end of the episode, the billboard with Stewie wearing a diaper on it reads "Stewie Griffin says: I can go anywhere in my 'Calvins' ".

[edit] Reception

In his 2009 review, Ahsan Haque of IGN called the episode a "strong outing", with "some memorable cutaways, and a few interesting character moments". He also noted, that the part about Chris making portraits of his father was "unusually heartfelt for an episode of Family Guy".[1]

[edit] References

  • S. Callaghan, "A Picture Is Worth a 1,000 Bucks". Family Guy: The Official Episode Guide Seasons 1-3. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. 81-85.

[edit] External links


Preceded by
Running Mates
Family Guy episodes Followed by
Fifteen Minutes of Shame