Bozell on 'Family Guy' Creator's 'Hitler' Hate Mail

Photo of Tim Graham.

No one ever said the maker of "Family Guy" was a classy guy. Seth MacFarlane recently profaned Carnegie Hall, as TV Squad reported: "On a night when Seth MacFarlane's mother is willing to come onstage and in exchange for her son paying off one of her credit cards, she'll say, 'Suck my dick, Carnegie Hall,' you know anything is possible."

I only bring this up because MacFarlane's offered the same profane invitation to our sister organization the Parents Television Council, as well as equating them with Hitler. In his culture column this week, Brent Bozell ponders that, and MacFarlane's hateful leftist politics, including suggesting on his little cartoon that Christian conservatives hate "brown people." Give it a look:

Few people in the public eye can escape hate mail. Public scrutiny is one thing, but the sophomoric and so often crude letters designed to ruin the recipient’s day are increasingly the gambit of idiots. Maybe it goes all the way back to Michelangelo. “If you’re such a great artist, why are you painting graffiti on church ceilings?” But I doubt it.

It’s the kind of dialogue that has also become the signature of many in the entertainment world.  If Roger Ebert doesn’t like a movie, it’s a critique. It’s not hate mail. That’s not only because he’s paid to be critical, but the tone of his criticism is dedicated to evaluation, not insult. I suppose if you made that movie Ebert considered a stink-bomb, it might feel like hate mail. But serious critics like Ebert don’t say your mother rode a broomstick, or that you’re so fat it’s embarrassing.

Others in the Hollywood orbit do. It’s Hollywood’s version of hate mail.

Seth MacFarlane, a darling of Tinseltown, makes the Sunday evening Fox cartoons “Family Guy” and “American Dad.” Recently he was interviewed by the gay magazine The Advocate as part of a series of chats with celebrities and Hollywood types with a “Big Gay Following.”

They asked him about a “Family Guy” episode favoring “gay marriage” he made in 2006 titled “You May Now Kiss the Guy Who Receives.” A year later, when Fox replayed that episode in a four-program block promoting the teen-sex movie “Superbad,” the Parents Television Council made that foursome its Worst of the Week pick. When The Advocate recounted this fact to MacFarlane, he cried foul, in a remarkably foul way:

“Oh, yeah. That’s like getting hate mail from Hitler. They’re literally terrible human beings. I’ve read their newsletter, I’ve visited their website, and they’re just rotten to the core. For an organization that prides itself on Christian values – I mean, I’m an atheist, so what do I know? – they spend their entire day hating people.”

And then the man denouncing “hate mail from Hitler” invited the authors of the PTC report to perform a certain sexual act on him, using precisely the same language that one would find scrawled on the wall in a dirty bathroom stall in some dingy truck stop in the middle of nowhere.

The anything-goes lobby on the Internet loved this interview and that hate mail, singling out these remarks as “Highly entertaining” (the Defamer blog) “enjoyable” (New York magazine), and “choice” (After Elton, a blog sponsored by Viacom’s gay cable channel Logo).

A television show can be brilliant and clever and hilarious – and still inappropriate for young children. That’s doubly important for a cartoon, which children – and the show’s childish creators – quite naturally see as a medium made for them. Sometimes, “Family Guy” can be hilarious. Occasionally, it is even clever. It is also absolutely inappropriate for children. Yet when an organization like the Parents Television Council, which simply wants to restore a sense of decency to this increasingly squalid medium, says so – out comes the hate mail from Hollywood.

Consider recent plot lines like evil baby Stewie shooting his mother full of holes with a submachine gun. Or his father then shooting Stewie to death. How does a five-year-old boy or girl process those scenes? MacFarlane doesn’t seem to spend two seconds thinking about it, but people who worry about children’s media intake certainly do. Apparently one can worry about, but not voice that concern without receiving hate mail from Hollywood. So be it.

MacFarlane doesn’t just unleash his hate-mail style in interviews. He also unloads it on TV. Let’s revisit the “Family Guy” show on “gay marriage” that spurred MacFarlane’s outburst. Part of the plot has one of the show’s regular characters urged by a girl to join the Young Republicans, which in this episode goes by the acronym SARS, like the deadly respiratory virus. The girl describes their mission like this: “We perpetuate the ideal that Jesus chose America to destroy non-believers and brown people.”

That line is not hilarious satire. That is hate mail. It may be airing on national television instead of being scrawled on a pad and put in an envelope, but it’s still hate mail. It smears Christian conservatives not only as violent racists out to destroy “brown people,” but attributes to them the kill-the-infidel echoes of a homegrown Christian version of al-Qaeda.

Hollywood millionaire moguls like MacFarlane are notoriously awful at realizing that free speech is a two-way street. He expects to be adored wherever he goes, even if making vicious fun of everyone else is his daily bread. He may be a television success. But in the world of public debate, he’s not a player. He’s the guy scribbling graffiti in the bathroom stall.

MacFarlane had some other interesting quotes in the Advocate interview, such as describing how he's always considered the baby Stewie to be a gay character, despite the fact he's dramatically pre-pubescent:

Which character do gay fans respond to the most?
Generally they respond to Stewie, because he’s arguably the most complex character. He originally began as this diabolical villain, but then we delved into the idea of his confused sexuality. We all feel that Stewie is almost certainly gay, and he’s in the process of figuring it out for himself. We haven’t ever really locked into it because we get a lot of good jokes from both sides, but we treat him oftentimes as if we were writing a gay character.

He began the interview by declaring his red-hot fury at anyone who would make life difficult for gay people, including his outrage at two gay men being asked if they'd like one room or two at a hotel:

That was one of many conversations I had with them where I thought to myself, Why is it that Johnny Spaghetti Stain in f---ing Georgia can knock a woman up, legally be married to her, and then beat the s--t out of her, but these two intelligent, sophisticated writers who have been together for 20 years can’t get married? It’s infuriating and idiotic. I’m incredibly passionate about my support for the gay community and what they’re dealing with at this current point in time. I have arguments with people where I get red in the face, screaming at the top of my lungs.

Besides the typical liberal redneck-bashing in this quote, the most surprising part is that MacFarlane would have any idea what "intelligent, sophisticated writers" are. You couldn't tell from his day job.  

(H/T on the TV Squad concert review to Christopher Gildemeister)

—Tim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center


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He began the interview by

He began the interview by declaring his red-hot fury at anyone who would make life difficult for gay people, including his outrage at two gay men being asked if they'd like one room or two at a hotel:

Now if McFartlane's gay friends had been asked at reception if they'd like one room, two rooms, or the public rest room, then I could see that might drive him (I mean, them) to an uncontrollable wide-stance stall tapping rage.

Otherwise this future stroke victim nutcase wants to chill out and try to remember. .

he's the one with the TV show,

he's the one that gets to spout his views half-hour every week to a few million people.

But apparently that's not enough. You have to suck up to him all the time as well.

Still watch the show though -- it's hilarious.

Check out my exclusive edit of BBC News America's interview with Mrs Clinton: It's news to me!

he's the one with the TV


he's the one with the TV show,

he's the one that gets to spout his views half-hour every week to a few million people.


But apparently that's not enough. You have to suck up to him all the time as well.

Good points, Jack. They don't just want free speech. They want everyone tied down in their chairs and forced to listen to them. I am so tired of seeing these people day and night, all over the media, whining about how they are being "silenced." The irony is completely lost on them.

mb -- true. That's the

mb -- true. That's the irony indeed.

I've always found Family Guy funny... but now I know its creator is a boring crazy who calls you Hitler (Ooo, never heard that before, I'm really hurt) if you disagree with his extreme gay agenda.

Well, he needs some new material as that's old.

Check out my exclusive edit of BBC News America's interview with Mrs Clinton: It's news to me!

TV shows on broadcast

TV shows on broadcast networks live and die by one thing and one thing only - ratings. That's the only reason why "Family guy" is on - population seems to like it. If "700 club" had the audience of "Family guy" then the "700 Club" would be in that slot.

The girl describes their

The girl describes their mission like this: “We perpetuate the ideal
that Jesus chose America to destroy non-believers and brown people.”
(Insert laugh track)

Sadly, Tim, that is what comprises liberal "humor." They just spout the same venom they always do. But because this time it's in a "comedy" show, it's funny.

You're right..it's hate mail.  With a laugh track.

Family Guy is often funny...

...a guilty pleasure that my wife and I sometimes fall asleep to, without ascribing to the viewpoints proffered.

MacFarlane is obviously a troubled guy and time will no doubt reveal his problems to those around him, if not the public at large.  But creative people are often troubled, and we don't hold that against them.  Nor should we therefore print their every rabid utterance and treat their explosive verbal diarrhea as profound social commentary any more than we would that of the average Joe with the same emotional and/or mental issues when he spouts off.  The media that follow stars/starlets need to learn when to turn the microphone off and refrain from printing something.  Every bit of waste that oozes from any or all of a celebrity's orifices is not noteworthy...ya' know.

But one thing that seems to be a recurring theme on the left, and not only in the media, but also when discussing social and political ills with a couple of liberal friends and coworkers, is the relative cosmic justice of every ill in the world when another ill is pointed out.  While there may be a case for the injustice of MacFarlane's "Johnny Spaghetti Stain" reference (and by the way, if he thinks it's illustrative of the south only, he should visit an upstate New York grocery store on a Monday morning and watch the housewives wearing oversized dark glasses and scarves to hide the remnants of their husband's weekend "festivities"), it does not mean that we should therefore condone other bad social behavior or sanction gay marriage.

 If someone does a wrong thing, another wrong thing is not therefore legitimized because the first wrong thing was not righted.  Clumsy explanation, but an example is when a cop pulls you over for speeding and the first thing you want to say is, "Is this the worst crime you can find to address during your day?" but you don't, because you know that society cannot prioritize all it's ills on a list and only address #22 when #1 is completely crossed off.

We can't yet stop all the "Johhny Spaghetti Stains" from acting like animals, so therfore we should permit gay marriage?

We can't yet stop all corporate welfare, so therfore we should give welfare benefits to any illegal immigrant that manages to wander north?

Makes about as much sense.

I caught the "Johnny

I caught the "Johnny Spaghetti Stains" too...

Of course, he couldn't say "Johnny and Susie, who have been sweethearts since high school"....it wouldn't have the same "punch." You have to go with the most extreme example you can think of. Just like feminazis who, the minute someone mentions "parental notification for abortion" immediately go to the (supposedly common?) example of the drunken slob who rapes his 11-year-old stepdaughter...

Kinda like when anyone

Kinda like when anyone mentions gay marriage, certain factions of the right go straight to "Next it'll be OK to sleep with farm animals!!!"

→ Bal

You mean it's not OK?

♣ a seal

Just sayin' the slippery

Just sayin' the slippery slope is rarely a strong argument.

I'd list all the reason for

I'd list all the reason for saying that is wrong, but I'm just too lazy!

Let's just say, no one choses the slippery slope, the slippery slope choses them!

cool arrow

Your just Baaaaaaaad.;-)

"Suck it"

Pop Tech

My wife and I were Family

My wife and I were Family Guy fans before the show went off the air.  We were thrilled that it was coming back after getting cancelled.  But the show kind of sucks now.  It's gotten more political, less funny and usually pointless.  American Dad is often political, as well...but it's gotten a lot funnier over the recent months (almost inversely proportional to Family Guy).  Still, South Park, Simpsons and King of the Hill are far better.

By the way, from what I understand, McFarlane was scheduled to be on one of the hijacked flights on 9/11/2001.  He either missed it or had to cancel.

A Puzzlement

A few years ago, Dennis Prager, one of my favorite talk radio hosts, had MacFarlane on his show. It was basically a love-fest between Dennis and MacFarlane. Dennis said that he thought "Family Guy" was funny and was "politically incorrect" in that its targets were from both the left and right. Again, this was a few years ago. I myself have never seen the show (and probably never will). I wonder if the show has changed, and if so, if Dennis still feels the way he does.

It has changed. Before it

It has changed. Before it was literally one of those shows that everyone from all backgrounds could watch and laugh at it because it really wasn't political. Then once American Dad came around (a show that was obviously created to bash conservatives) Family Guy changed also and started leaning to the left.

The Simpsons was a great show once also and it was a show that anyone could enjoy, but then it got liberal and started to suck. The Simpsons at least went 14 years before it got completely wacked out. Family Guy only lasted 3 seasons before it got crazy.

Dunno what happened

There was an episode that defended stay-at-home moms and one that was actually kind of flattering to the Pope.  This was all long ago.  I wonder what happened.  It was very funny

I watched one recently (it was the gay marriage episode) and I really wanted it to be funny.  At the end I expected to hear "this message approved by GLOBL"  or whatever various and sundry homosexual organizations, take your pick.

I'm sad he went (at least openly) from funny liberal to fussy liberal. Fussy isn't funny.  I know this because I have young kids. 

When a liberal speaks, the truth is busy elsewhere.

Family Guys thrives on controversy yet they won't show Mohammed

There form of controversy is just to be vile and push the envelope of sex and Christian jokes. They love pedophile and bestiality jokes.

They can self censorship themselves with regrd to Islam jokes though.

This is why ill stick to

This is why ill stick to south park. They mat offend you, but they offend everyone else equally, and that is funny. For those of you who are not familiar, you need to see their episode on al gore.

 

"give me a break!" - John Stossel

The cartoon is

The cartoon is vulgar.

Nazis killed the innocent. NOW, NARAL, Democrats, MoveOn, etc, advocate the killing of innocent babies...so....Seth, YOU are the Nazi.

Family Guy is Funny Stuff!

Forget about "Family Guy" and start dealing with liberals where is really matters:  Capitol Hill and the Courts. 

By the way, I used to like this site, but you guys are getting way too anal retentive.  Lighten up!

South Park did a great

South Park did a great episode on Family Guy. They mocked it for what it is.  Rarely is the show clever and if so it is by accident. Within the community of animators, Family Guy is hated by a large majority. The quality of drawing is not much better than a Jr. High age and the writing isn't much better. So why is it so popular?

Because sophisticated thought, complex considerations, or truly thought provoking entertainment simply is not what the masses want. While they will take some of it, a bit of the time, most entertainment on the major networks is juvenile because that is what they actually want.

Conservative or liberal really doesn't matter when it comes to something like this. My belief is the a sizeable portion of the population, both liberal and conservative are simply mental dullards. They are simpletons. They are belly lovers and if it requires mental considerations beyond farting out a chuckle or waking from zombie trances of ridiculous plots, characters and awful acting, well forget it. They did their thinking at work (let's hope) or at school so it is time for a mental vacation.

While it is true we do need mental recreation, our culture is awash in most facets of life being lived with the expectation of entertainment and checking out of critical thought. So, this is why Family Guy succeeds where as in another time and place, where men and women had a bit less time for recreation and their lives were lived with more seriousness and attention to their thought life, today it isn't that way.
Shut up and blog! If you claim to be a conservative, please don't disgrace yourself and conservatism by thinking and arguing like a liberal.

The Worst Show on Cartoon Network

Though I like Cartoon Network, I don't like Family Guy at all. Since I think most American cartoons have gone down the drain, I like to watch a few good new cartoons, such as Chowder. I also like Dragon Ball Z and Naruto.I would rather watch those shows and Cartoon Network's superb channel Boomerang over Adult Swim and Family Guy.

"Kame-Hame-HAAAA!!!!!" - Son Goku, destroying the MSM.