Sunday, October 18, 2009

Seth MacFarlane: Comedic Parody At Its Finest

Seth MacFarlane, best known for his creation, executive producer role, and writing work on Family Guy and American Dad, certainly has a signature style when it comes to the series he creates and plays leading roles in producing. Since his works consists entirely of animated series however, they are not classified by camera angles and lighting, but by the highly recognizable, overtly-parodist tone, his fond use of musical numbers, and the fact that no walk of life is safe from satire. MacFarlane has definitely created a name for himself in the world of animated television and beyond.

Seth MacFarlane was born and raised in Kent, Connecticut. Being raised in New England, MacFarlane integrates a distinctive East Coast humor to many of his later creations. Early in his childhood, he began showing an interest in animation, drawing well-known characters such as Fred Flintstone and Woody Woodpecker, even creating a comic strip character for his local newspaper. MacFarlane later attended the Rhode Island School of Design where he studied animation, got his Bachelor of Fine Arts, submitted his thesis film entitled “The Life of Larry” which his professor submitted to Hannah-Barbera where he was hired in turn. Early in his career he worked as a writer for Cartoon Network series such as Cow and Chicken, Johnny Bravo, and Dexter’s Laboratory. MacFarlane then went on to create his own series, Family Guy, which was cancelled due to low ratings and brought back due to high consumer demand. MacFarlane created a distinct image and hugely recognizable brand with Family Guy (and later American Dad and the Cleveland Show).

MacFarlane often integrates his love of music by including humorous musical numbers in his shows. Also a voice actor, MacFarlane does many of the voices in his series. I think it’s safe to say that Seth MacFarlane has created not only a distinctive set of animated series, but injected an insanely unique sense of culture into the world of television.

In Seth MacFarlane’s series, there are three very distinct thematic motifs that appear in nearly every episode. A thematic motif is a recurring theme, moral, or story across several episodes and even several series. The three that I found to be most prominent in MacFarlane’s work are the random installments of musical numbers into the storyline, the integration of cut-aways, and an ending “moral” that is almost always satirized.

The first motif, the use of musical numbers, is perhaps one of the most prominent, recognizable, and memorable things about MacFarlane’s shows. One blatant example is the opening themes. Family Guy, American Dad, and The Cleveland Show all have very distinct opening theme songs that give you a sense of the quirkiness that lies in the show ahead, all very satirical (Family Guy’s pays tribute to the 70s-80s sitcom cliché of the husband and wife sitting around a piano during the opening sequence, American Dad delivers an overly patriotic air in it’s opening sequence, a definite theme throughout the entire series, and the Cleveland Show’s opening theme rips off a 70s beat and neon lighting). Aside from opening themes, the show that uses the musical number the most often and definitely the most cleverly in my opinion, is Family Guy. Countless times has a musical number randomly popped up in an episode when you least expect it, often when it’s totally unnecessary (which makes it all the better). Songs ranging from Peter’s rendition of MC Hammer’s “Can’t Touch This” in an early season episode to the more recent Season 7 episode that boasts an overly cheerful song about legalizing marijuana called “A Bag O’ Weed.” MacFarlane seems to masterfully place these songs into the plot where you would least expect (or want) it, but for some odd reason you get sucked into loving the song because of the oddity of where it’s placed and it’s overly satirized subject matter. Perhaps the best part is how these musical numbers make it seem okay to laugh at things that society generally doesn’t find humorous..

Another thing that MacFarlane has made painfully tied to his creations is the use of cut-aways. A cut-away, as defined by dictionary.com is “a switch from one scene to another for showing simultaneous or related action, creating suspense, or abruptly introduces content, scenery, etc., away from the central action.” I find it near impossible to find one example that’s better than others in MacFarlane’s work simply because they pop up so frequently, usually tens of times in one episode. In each of his shows, characters are often reminded of events that had happened to them earlier in their lives by events that are currently going on, which is where the cut-away comes in. As soon as a character utters “That reminds of the time when…” you can be sure the screen is going to go to a shot of said event (though MacFarlane pokes fun at himself in this respect when in an episode of Family Guy Stewie recalls a past event and pauses waiting for the scene to cut away. When nothing happens he nervously says “Oh, no footage for that one..? Okay..”) These cut-aways, often with no relevance to the storyline, only enhance the often skittish and fast paced nature that MacFarlane portrays in his shows.

Last, but certainly not least, is the type of animation that MacFarlane chooses to integrate into his show. He has created a highly recognizable image with the animation he uses. Family Guy, American Dad, and the Cleveland Show all boast highly exaggerated human features. A very prominent example: both Peter (Family Guy) and Stan (American Dad) have overly-accentuated jaw-lines, much too accentuated to even air on the side of realistic. On a simpler note, with MacFarlane’s animations if you’re fat, you’re really fat; if you’re skinny, you’re deathly skinny; if you’re attractive, you’re overtly attractive; if you’re unattractive, you’re gruesomely unattractive; etc. As a consumer of MacFarlane’s product however, viewers of these shows have come to know and love the type of exaggerated animation that he chooses to use. This type of animation only accentuates the culturally satirical nature that MacFarlane portrays in his works.

I think it’s safe to say that Seth MacFarlane has created an image all his own when it comes to animated television, or television in general for that matter. More specifically, the use of musical numbers, cut-aways, and highly unique/recognizable animation styles have made his shows something all his own that society has come to know and love as “his”.

Works Cited:

IMDB. "Seth MacFarlane." The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Web. 17 Oct. 2009. .

"Seth MacFarlane -." Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Web. 16 Oct. 2009. .

MacFarlane, Seth, prod. "Family Guy." Family Guy: Seasons 1-7. FOX. Santa Monica, CA. Television.

MacFarlane, Seth, prod. "American Dad." American Dad: Seasons 1-5. FOX. Santa Monica, CA. Television.

MacFarlane, Seth, prod. “The Cleveland Show.” The Cleveland Show: Season 1. FOX. Santa Monica, CA. Television.

2 comments:

  1. When discussing MacFarlane’s unique and recognizable animation style you point out his tendency to over-emphasize. In his work if a person is overweight they are heavily overweight and when someone is smaller they are grotesquely skinny. With this being said, do you think that MacFarlane’s animations mirror other outlets of media today when it comes to image? Could he be using this idea to prove a point about media, or do you believe it is strictly for humor?

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  2. I too can attribute parts of my sense of humor to Seth MacFarlene's style of comedy. Nothing off limits, and nothing too random. This was a very informative post and it was great to get to learn how his shows were developed.

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