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"Roads to Vegas"
Family Guy episode
Episode no.Season 11
Episode 21
Directed byGreg Colton
Written bySteve Callaghan
Production codeAACX20
Original air dateMay 19, 2013 (2013-05-19)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"Farmer Guy"
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"No Country Club for Old Men"
Family Guy season 11
List of episodes

"Roads to Vegas" is the twenty-first episode of the eleventh season, and the 209th overall episode, of Family Guy. It follows Brian and Stewie as they head off to Vegas using a teleporting machine, which malfunctions and creates clones of themselves. The episode, which is the seventh in the series of Road to... episodes, originally aired on Fox in the United States on May 19, 2013, airing before the episode "No Country Club for Old Men". Together, the two episodes were promoted as being the season finale.

First announced at the 2012 San Diego Comic-Con, the episode was written by Steve Callaghan and directed by Greg Colton. The episode generally received positive reviews from critics upon release. According to Nielsen ratings, it was viewed in 5.28 million homes in its original airing. The episode featured guest performances from Alexandra Breckenridge, Ralph Garman, Gary Janetti, Joe Lomonaco, Patrick Meighan, Emily Osment, Danny Smith, Alec Sulkin, and John Viener.

Plot

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At the Quahog Gay Pride Day festivities, in a raffle sponsored by Weenie and the Butt, Brian wins tickets to see Celine Dion in Las Vegas. As they prepare to travel, Stewie convinces Brian to use the new teleportation device he has been working on instead. A flash of light reveals a disappointed Stewie and Brian standing on the device's platform, and they head off to the airport, but they do not realize that the machine produced an identical Brian/Stewie pair who were immediately transported to Vegas. The original Brian and Stewie then travel by plane to Vegas. As the duplicate pair check into the Bellagio hotel, their luck makes itself present immediately with duplicate Brian winning a large jackpot at the slot machines near the entrance. The original Brian and Stewie arrive and find their room has been already taken. As the duplicate pair have the time of their lives with great food, great nightlife, and a freshly purchased Ferrari that they use to kill a bunch of people in front of an Ed Hardy store, the original pair find themselves in a third-rate hotel nowhere near the Vegas Strip. Trying their luck in the hotel's slot machine, they quickly lose all of the money they brought.

The original Brian is ready to go home but Stewie admits that he already gambled away their return tickets. Brian admits he cannot call for help after taking money from Lois. Using money they got from a loan shark, they bet on a basketball game and lose yet again. Preparing to leave, the duplicated pair sitting nearby accidentally takes the empty backpack from the unlucky pair. In contrast, the original Stewie unknowingly takes the duplicated pair's backpack, which is full of cash.

As the pairs go their separate ways, an enforcer for the loan shark catches up with the duplicate pair (mistaking the clones for the originals) to get the money back and discovers to his fury and their shock that they have no cash. The enforcer orders Brian to either accept his own death or sacrifice Stewie. Brian initially refuses to choose but when he panics, he tells the enforcer to shoot Stewie. A disgusted Stewie is murdered via a gunshot to the head, and the bookie threatens to kill Brian next unless he gets the money by the next day. Meanwhile, the original pair face their impossible situation of being unable to get the money or back or go home, and Brian agrees with Stewie's proposal that they commit suicide. They prepare to throw themselves off the top balcony of the hotel but Stewie chickens out at the last second, leaving Brian to fall to his death. A panic-stricken Stewie trips over his backpack and finds the money the other pair had won.

Returning home the next day, the duplicate Brian and original Stewie bump into each other at the bus terminal. Stewie realizes that the device had made clones of themselves. The two deceive each other about how their respective friend's deaths transpired, before the original Stewie pays for their bus fares home. The duplicate Stewie and original Brian greet each other coldly at the pearly gates of Heaven.

Production and development

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Steve Callaghan wrote the episode.

"Roads to Vegas" is the seventh episode of the series Road to.. hallmark which air through various seasons of the show. The episode was directed by Greg Colton, who previously directed the Road to ... episodes "Road to Germany", "Road to the Multiverse", and "Road to the North Pole".[1][2] It was written by Family Guy veteran Steve Callaghan. "Roads to Vegas" is Callaghan's first writing credit for a Road to ... episode.[3]

In July 2012, the Family Guy panel first announced the episode at San Diego Comic-Con by giving a brief plot outline.[4] The episode was revealed as the penultimate episode of the series eleventh season, airing before the premiere of "No Country Club for Old Men". Together, the two episodes were promoted as the season finale.[5][6][7] On a press release, the Fox Network then officially announced the episode and described it as:[8]

Stewie and Brian use Stewie's time machine to go to Las Vegas for a Bette Midler concert, but chaos ensues when the machine malfunctions and creates alt-versions of the pair: a "lucky" version and an "unlucky" one.

Production of the episode began months in advance according to the episode's writer Steve Callaghan. "We're working over a year ahead of time," Callaghan says in an interview with Hollywood.com. He added "We work so far ahead I can even tell you the finale... the finale is a cool episode called 'Roads to Vegas.' It's like a roadshow and Stewie and Brian teleport themselves to Las Vegas, but in the process [they] unknowingly create a duplicate of one another."[9] In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Callaghan recalled the scene in the episode where Brian and Stewie consider joint suicide the most difficult scene for him to write in 2012.[10]

In addition to the regular cast, "Roads to Vegas" featured guest performances from actress Alexandra Breckenridge, actor Ralph Garman, voice actor Joe Lomonaco, and actress and singer Emily Osment. Recurring voice actors and series writers Gary Janetti, Danny Smith, Alec Sulkin, and John Viener also made minor appearances throughout "Roads to Vegas".[3]

Reception

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During its original airing, the episode was viewed by a total of 5.28 million viewers according to Nielsen ratings. This made it the most viewed episode to premiere that night on Fox's Animation Domination, edging out two episodes of The Cleveland Show and two episodes of The Simpsons. The episode received a 2.6 rating in the 18–49 demographic.[11]

The episode generally received positive reviews. Kevin McFarland of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B+ and said that it "isn't typically as heavy on the usual stock jokes that weigh the show down, and the adventures of Brian and Stewie drive more interest than most other characters."[12] Carter Dotson of TV Fanatic gave the episode a 4.4 rating and called the episode and its sister episode, "No Country Club for Old Men", "a perfect representation of the wild extremes of this season." He added "it wasn't the funniest episode, but the way the parallel stories worked and intertwined was at least extremely interesting, lacking much of the lazy humor that at times plagued this season.[13] Mark Trammell of TV Equals said "All in all, an okay episode that benefited from the combination approach, but MacFarlane might want to retire both the time travel stuff and the "road picture"-approach after this one, as the well is clearly running dry ... To tell the truth, I didn't laugh as much as I wanted to".[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Family Guy – Road to the Multiverse – Cast and Crew". Yahoo!. Archived from the original on 2011-06-15. Retrieved June 26, 2011.
  2. ^ Colton, Greg; Wild, Wellesley; MacFarlane, Seth (2009-09-27). "Road to the Multiverse". Family Guy. Season 08. Episode 01. Fox.
  3. ^ a b Writers: Steve Callaghan, Director: Greg Colton (19 May 2013). "Roads to Vegas". Family Guy. Fox.
  4. ^ Nicholson, Max (14 July 2012). "Comic-Con: More Movie Parodies for Family Guy?". IGN. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  5. ^ Magrath, Jordan (19 May 2013). "Family Guy Season 11 Finale 2013 "Road to Vegas; No Country Club for Old Men"". TV Equals. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  6. ^ "Family Guy Finale Sneak Peeks: Peter Joins a Country Club and Brian and Stewie Head to Vegas". TV Overmind. 19 May 2013. Archived from the original on 16 June 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  7. ^ Hibberd, James (14 July 2012). "'Family Guy' scoop: Peter breaking bad next season". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  8. ^ Bryne, Craig (19 May 2013). "Family Guy: The One-Hour Season Finale Airs Tonight". Ksite TV. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  9. ^ Aguilera, Leanne (31 August 2012). "'FAMILY GUY' SCOOP: EXPECT HOOKERS, METH, AND JON HAMM". Hollywood.com. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  10. ^ Rose, Lacey. "Showrunners 2012: 'American Dad's Seth MacFarlane & Matt Weitzman, 'Family Guy's Mark Hentemann & Steve Callaghan, 'Cleveland Show's Rich Appel". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 28 April 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  11. ^ "Sunday Final Ratings: 'The Simpsons' & 'The Cleveland Show' Adjusted Up, 'The Billboard Music Awards, 'America's Funniest Home Videos' & '60 Minutes' Adjusted Down". Tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  12. ^ McFarland, Kevin (20 May 2013). ""Road To Vegas/No Country Club For Old Men"". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on May 20, 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  13. ^ Dotson, Carter (20 May 2013). "Family Guy Season Finale Review: Split Personality". TV Fanatic. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  14. ^ Trammell, Mark (20 May 2013). "Family Guy Season 11 Review 'Road to Vegas'". TV Equals. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  • The plot description was adapted from Roads to Vegas at Family Guy Wiki, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
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