Cover of Seth MacFarlane I Griffin
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• Rating:

For fans of seth macfarlane, lovers of dark animated comedy, and viewers interested in sharp social satire.
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THE REVIEW

- The world is full of assholes -

An obese, dull, and incompetent worker with a slight mental delay, enemy of a giant talking chicken who gave him an expired coupon to buy a roast chicken and whom he has been fighting to the death since that day.

A seductive housewife, piano teacher, and wrestling expert.

An overweight, apathetic, inept, asocial, and gifted boy, terrified by a bad monkey living in his closet.

A typical unattractive adolescent girl, oppressed by various complexes besides her
peers and her family.

A brilliant diabolical child with the ambition to rule the world, homicidal instincts towards his mother, and an ambiguous sexual identity.

Finally, a talking dog, democratic and principled, cultured, refined, and alcoholic.

These are the Griffins.

The world is full of assholes, everyone knows that. The world is a huge round asshole, one of those that, when you get up from the toilet, you look at from top to bottom with pride and paternal love.

The United States of America is the biggest bullshit factory on earth.

The Griffins are the prototype workers of the American waste industry, they are the irreverent family, representative of the typical "American way of life" and protagonists of the demented and irreverent stories we all know.

The series is focused on character development, the humorous-demented vein, and the various flashbacks that explain the characters' behaviors ("like that time when").
These are the American social rejects, all humanly inhuman, vulgar, and often heavy.

All the "edgy" scenes for the average audience hide an absurd truth, inviting the viewer to grasp what man is in his most extreme expressions. A wild display of the human essence, the most aggressive, reckless, and incredibly stupid part, the demented part of man, the artistically crazy side of each of us.

The Griffins know how to fully exploit this side and have been living off it for 15 seasons, without ever declining, being predictable or clichéd, but above all always remaining the biggest pieces of shit.

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Summary by Bot

The review delves into the complex and flawed characters of Seth MacFarlane's The Griffins, highlighting their irreverent and vulgar nature. It portrays the show as a sharp satire of American life and societal flaws through wild humor and biting social commentary. Despite heavy scenes, the series remains unpredictable and artistically bold over 15 seasons.

Seth MacFarlane


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