List of Family Guy characters
Family Guy is an American animated comedy series created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company. Characters are only listed once, normally under the first applicable subsection in the list; very minor characters are listed with a more regular character with whom they are associated.
Appearances
Character | Voice actor/actress | Appearances | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season 1 | Season 2 | Season 3 | Season 4 | Season 5 | Season 6 | Season 7 | Season 8 | Season 9 | Season 10 | Season 11 | Season 12 | Season 13 | Season 14 | Season 15 | Season 16 | Season 17 | Season 18 | |||
Main characters | ||||||||||||||||||||
Peter Griffin | Seth MacFarlane | Main | ||||||||||||||||||
Lois Griffin | Alex Borstein | Main | ||||||||||||||||||
Chris Griffin | Seth Green | Main | ||||||||||||||||||
Meg Griffin | Rachel MacFarlane
(Season 1) Lacey Chabert (Season 1) Mila Kunis (Seasons 2-present) |
Main | ||||||||||||||||||
Cleveland Brown | Mike Henry | Recurring | Main | Recurring | Main | |||||||||||||||
Joe Swanson | Patrick Warburton | Guest | Main | |||||||||||||||||
Recurring characters | ||||||||||||||||||||
Tom Tucker | Seth MacFarlane | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Diane Simmons | Lori Alan | Recurring | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||||||
Jonathan Weed | Carlos Alazraqui | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||||||
Loretta Brown | Alex Borstein | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Bonnie Swanson | Jennifer Tilly | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||||||
Rupert | David Boat | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||||||
Kevin Swanson | Scott Grimes | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||
Bruce | Mike Henry | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||||||
Jake Tucker | Seth MacFarlane | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||||||||
Judge Dignified Q. Blackman | Phil LaMarr | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||
God | Seth MacFarlane | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||
Jesus | Seth MacFarlane & Alec Sulkin | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||||
Carter Pewterschmidt | Seth MacFarlane | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Babs Pewterschmidt | Alex Borstein | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||
Mayor Adam West | Adam West | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Tricia Takanawa | Alex Borstein | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Cleveland Brown, Jr. | Mike Henry & Kevin Michael Richardson | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||
Death | Adam Carolla | Recurring | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||||||
Elmer Hartman | Seth MacFarlane | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Evil Monkey | Danny Smith | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Horace | John G. Brennan | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||||||||||
Jim Caplan | Danny Smith | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Neil Goldman | Seth Green | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||
Ernie The Giant Chicken | Danny Smith | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||
Connie D'Amico | Lisa Wilhoit | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||
Jasper | Seth MacFarlane | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Principal John Shepherd | Gary Cole | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||
Francis Griffin | Charles Durning | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||||
Thelma Griffin | Phyllis Diller | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||
John Herbert | Mike Henry | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Mort Goldman | John Brennan | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
Muriel Goldman | Nicole Sullivan | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||||
Seamus Levine aka Davis Wilson | Seth MacFarlane | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||||
Ollie Williams | Phil LaMarr | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||
Carol West | Julie Hagerty | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Greased-Up Deaf Guy | Mike Henry | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Angela | Carrie Fisher | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Opening Sequence Only | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||
Esther | Christina Milian | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||
Opie | Mark Hentemann | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | |||||||||||
Patty | Emily Osment | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||
Ruth Cochamer | Natasha Melnick | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||||||||
James William Bottomtooth III | Chris Sheridan | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||||||||||
Jesse | Mike Henry | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||
Al Harrington | Danny Smith | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||
James Woods | James Woods | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | |||||||||||||
Joanna | Alex Borstein | Guest | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Carl | H. John Benjamin | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||
Jillian Russell-Wilcox | Drew Barrymore | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | Opening Sequence Only | Guest | Opening Sequence Only | Guest | |||||||||||
Fouad | Mike Henry | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||
RJ | Mike Henry | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||||
Consuela | Mike Henry | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||
Tomik & Bellgarde | John Viener & Alec Sulkin | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Guest | ||||||||||||||
Susie Swanson | Patrick Stewart | Recurring | Recurring | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Donna Tubbs-Brown | Sanaa Lathan | Guest | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Ida Davis | Seth MacFarlane | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||
Jerome | Kevin Michael Richardson | Guest | Guest | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Rallo Tubbs | Mike Henry | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||
Joyce Kinney | Christine Lakin | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Opening Sequence Only | ||||||||||||
Stella | Marlee Matlin | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||
Vinny | Tony Sirico | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||||||
Roberta Tubbs | Reagan Gomez-Preston | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||||||||
Miss Tammy | Rachael MacFarlane | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||||||||||
Bert & Sheila | Bryan Cranston & Niecy Nash | Recurring | ||||||||||||||||||
The Griffin family
Peter Griffin
Justin Peter Löwenbräu Griffin Sr. (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the patriarch of the Griffin household, a 45-year-old Irish-American blue-collar worker. For most of the series, Peter is shown as an obese, unintelligent, lazy, outspoken, childish, and eccentric alcoholic. He has several jobs, which have included working at the Happy Go Lucky Toy Factory, a fisherman, and currently as a shipping clerk at the Pawtucket Patriot Ale Brewery. It is discovered that his legal first name is Justin, in the season 13 episode "Quagmire's Mom".
Lois Griffin
Lois Patrice Griffin (née Pewterschmidt) (voiced by Alex Borstein) is the matriarch of the Griffin household, Peter's wife, and the mother of Meg, Chris, and Stewie. She is a 43-year-old German-American, and has a Jewish mother who is a Holocaust survivor. She is a housewife who cares deeply for her kids and her husband, while also working as a piano instructor.
Meg Griffin
Megan Harvey Oswald "Meg" Griffin (voiced by Lacey Chabert in season 1, Mila Kunis since season 2) is the Griffins' 17-year-old (18 as of "Quagmire and Meg") daughter and eldest child. She is a self-conscious, insecure, and sensitive teenager who is more often than not ridiculed and ignored by the people around her. Meg just wants to be another face in the crowd by fitting in with her peers and being accepted, but she often finds herself to be a victim of circumstance. She has had several love interests over the course of the series, including Brian Griffin, Mayor Adam West, Tom Tucker, Glenn Quagmire, Neil Goldman, and Joe Swanson.
Chris Griffin
Christopher Cross "Chris" Griffin (voiced by Seth Green) is the Griffins' 14-year-old son and middle child. He is a friendly, laid-back, and funny teenager who is a younger version of Peter physically, but intellectually, he often shows more potential, as demonstrated from moments of coherence and articulation within his speech. Chris, can however, be scatterbrained and is easily confused, something Peter frequently takes for granted.
Stewie Griffin
Stewart Gilligan "Stewie" Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the Griffins' infant child, but often behaves in adult ways such as speaking in an upper-class British dialect. He is a child genius who at first frequently aspired to murder his mother Lois and take over the world, but has since mellowed considerably. He turned one year old in "Chitty Chitty Death Bang", and since then has not aged.
Brian Griffin
Brian Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the family's six-year-old anthropomorphic talking white Labrador Retriever and the best friend of both Stewie and Peter. He and Stewie are often at the center of the show's most critically acclaimed episodes, most notably the "Road to..." episodes, in which he and Stewie go on road-trips together. Brian is portrayed as an intellectual—a Brown University attendee—who often serves as the family's voice of reason, pointing out how ridiculous Peter's ideas are. He is not-so-secretly in love with Lois and is an unsuccessful, unemployed writer.
Brian was not revealed to be an atheist until season 7. In earlier seasons, he was shown to be very much a believer of God especially in "If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'" in season 2. How this change occurred in Brian is unknown.
In "Life of Brian", Brian is hit by a car and dies from his injuries, with the family by his side. The family then decides to adopt a new streetwise dog with a New Jersey/Italian American way of speaking named Vinny. However, in "Christmas Guy" (two episodes later), Stewie still misses Brian, but finds a way to go back in time and successfully saves him, also meaning that the family never adopted Vinny, though Stewie and Vinny did say their goodbyes.[1]
Extended family
The characters listed below are the extended family of the Griffin family that come from either Peter's side of the family, Lois's side of the family, and the occasional members of Brian's family:
- Francis Griffin (voiced by Charles Durning) – Peter's grumpy and stubborn adoptive father, Lois's adoptive father-in-law, and the adoptive paternal grandfather of Meg, Chris, and Stewie. He was once married to Peter's biological mother Thelma Griffin. An obsessively devout Roman Catholic, he hates Lois because she is not a Catholic, and often calls her a "Protestant whore", disapproves of his son's family's lifestyle, and frequently attempts to force his religious views on them. To a lesser extent he disapproves of Lois due to her heritage, and is angry with Peter for not marrying an "Irish rose". When Peter and Lois got married, Francis taped the sign "To a Protestant Whore" underneath the "Just Married" sign on the limousine. Despite all of this, he truly did love and care for Peter, and showed on multiple occasions to care for his grandchildren. Francis used to have a job at a metal fabrication plant; after his short retirement, he became a bodyguard for the Pope. In the episode "Peter's Two Dads", Francis dies on Meg's 17th birthday when Peter gets drunk and tries to ride a unicycle down the stairs, but ends up falling off the stairs and landing on top of Francis. He infrequently appears to Peter as a ghost to criticize him and give him advice.
- Mickey McFinnigan (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Peter's biological father, and the biological paternal grandfather of Meg, Chris, and Stewie, and father-in-law of Lois. He is an Irish drunk. He reprises a major role in "Peter's Two Dads", when Peter visits him in Ireland. Mickey mocks Peter at first and bullies him, but Peter challenges him to a drinking contest and wins. Finally, Mickey accepts Peter into his family and spoils him ever after by buying Guinness and more.
- Thelma Griffin (voiced by Florence Stanley in the first appearance, Phyllis Diller in later appearances, Alex Borstein as a young woman in "Don't Be a Dickens at Christmas") – Ex-wife to Francis, mother of Peter, and paternal grandmother of Meg, Chris, and Stewie. She is the mother-in-law of Lois. She first appears in "Holy Crap". She has gray hair and noticeable wrinkles below her eyes, and wears purple earrings and a purple bead necklace. She also wears glasses like her son and husband and is a heavy smoker. Unlike Francis, she is generally friendly and personable, and gets along well with Lois. Before Francis' death, she divorced him because she had "needs he didn't fill" and dated Tom Tucker for a while in "Mother Tucker". She often appears with news inconvenient or troubling to Peter and his family. Her brief partnership with Peter's biological father, Irishman Mickey McFinnegan, is only established in the episode "Peter's Two Dads". In the episode "Grumpy Old Man", it is revealed that Thelma was sent to a retirement home. In the Season 12 episode "Mom's the Word", it is revealed that Thelma died from a stroke. Thelma's death was written into the series because of Phyllis Diller's death in August 2012.
- Karen "Heavy Flo" Griffin (voiced by Kate McKinnon) – Peter's elder sister, who first appears in "Peter's Sister". She is the paternal aunt of Meg, Chris and Stewie and sister-in-law of Lois. Karen is a professional wrestler and is shown as the reason Peter bullies Meg where he was picked on by Karen. During her fight with Peter in the ring, Karen was knocked out by Meg using a real folding chair instead of a fake folding chair which puts her in a coma. At the end of the episode, Peter gets a phone call from the doctor where he is told that Karen is not in fact fine and needs an immediate blood transfusion. Peter states to the doctor that he doesn't want to check to see if he is the same blood type as Karen and decides to leave Karen to her own devices leading the family members to look at him with concern, but not say or do anything as the episode ends.
- Carter Pewterschmidt (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Lois's father, Babs's husband, and the maternal grandfather of Meg, Chris, and Stewie, and father-in-law of Peter. He is a 72-year-old billionaire industrialist, shipping mogul, and owner of several major companies. He is based on Harve Presnell character Wade Gustafson in Fargo. His company in the episode "Business Guy" is named Pewterschmidt Industries, and he is also a member of a fancy yacht club, where he mingles with other superwealthy people. He is a hard worker, and has been shown to have become temporarily senile as a result of forced retirement in "Grumpy Old Man". Carter is a domineering, devious and manipulative individual who despises his son-in-law, Peter, whom he often insults, badmouths and seeks to humiliate. On rare occasions, he and Peter work together, normally with a common goal. He is married to Barbara, with whom he had three children – Lois, Carol, and Patrick. In "No Chris Left Behind" and "Fresh Heir", he is shown to have a strong relationship with Chris. It is revealed in "Welcome Back, Carter" that he was an Allied officer. He is shown to be a womanizer with a fetish for Asian women, having had affairs in "Welcome Back, Carter" and "Carter and Tricia", and hiring an Asian prostitute in "Stewie Kills Lois". Babs left Carter once, but, with persuasion from Peter, he entered the dating scene, but he eventually convinced Babs to take him back. In "Screwed the Pooch", it is implied that Carter had an affair with an African-American woman, resulting in a biracial son as mentioned by Lois. In Laugh It Up, Fuzzball: The Family Guy Trilogy, Carter plays both Owen Lars and Emperor Palpatine. In the episode "The Old Man and the Big 'C'", it is revealed that Carter's parents were not around much and he was primarily raised by a maid named Mamie. It is shown that Carter really cares about Mamie, as he worriedly defends her health when Lois asks what he would do if Mamie were to hypothetically get cancer, indicating Carter would be devastated if she were to fall ill.
- Babs Pewterschmidt (voiced by Alex Borstein) – Carter's wife, the mother of Lois, Carol, and Patrick, and the maternal grandmother of Meg, Chris and Stewie, and mother-in-law to Peter. It is noted on a few occasions Barbara only married Carter for his wealth and family heritage. She is demeaning but more polite to Peter than her husband is, and is 69 years old. In appearance, she is basically an older version of Lois. In the episode "The Fat Guy Strangler", it is revealed that she had an affair with Jackie Gleason which traumatized Patrick. In "Family Goy", it is revealed she is Jewish, and a survivor of the Holocaust. She only changed her religion so she and Carter could gain access to country clubs. It is also revealed in that episode that her maiden name was Hebrewbergmoneygrabber, which was changed to Hebrewberg to escape Nazi persecution. In the episode "Running Mates", she is described as passive aggressive. Barbara Pewterschmidt is also the ex-wife of billionaire Ted Turner. She left Carter in "Welcome Back Carter" after learning he had an affair. However, she does eventually forgive him after deeming herself too old to remarry. In "Don't Be a Dickens at Christmas", most of Pewterschimdt family are fluent in German, but Lois is not, and Stewie understands it, but cannot speak it. In "Absolutely Babulous," it is revealed that Barbara was born in Weekapaug, Rhode Island.
- Carol Pewterschmidt-West (voiced by Carol Kane in the first appearance, Julie Hagerty in later appearances) – Lois' 29-year-old younger sister, the maternal aunt of Meg, Chris and Stewie, and sister-in-law of Peter. She has been married and divorced nine times where her previous last names have included Johnson, Carrington, Stone, O'Craggedy, Consago, Steinhols, Washington, Proudfoot and Thong. In "Emission Impossible", Peter and Lois had to stay with her when she ended up pregnant. The baby, a boy, is born in the episode yet never seen again. In "Brothers & Sisters", Carol moved in with Peter and Lois after her latest divorce where she ended up meeting Mayor Adam West. Her previous husbands include Evan Johnson (who bonded with Peter over the Boston Red Sox baseball team), Randall Carrington (who is always bringing people very unusual and inconvenient gifts), and Doggie Daddy (it was mentioned that Augie caused a strain in their relationship). She marries Adam West since the "Thanksgiving" episode until his death.
- Patrick Pewterschmidt (voiced by Robert Downey Jr. in the first appearance, Oliver Vaquer in the second appearance) – The elder brother of Lois and Carol and the maternal uncle of Meg, Chris, and Stewie, and Peter's brother-in-law. He has been kept hidden by her mother and father. He first appeared in the episode "The Fat Guy Strangler". When a picture of Lois's family was broken, she noticed a folded-in part of the picture included a brother she did not know she had. She then broke into her parents' house and found out where he lived. Then she and the family drove to the address which was found to be a mental institution. When there seemed to be nothing wrong with him they decided to check him out and take him in. Later it is discovered that he has an imaginary wife named Marian and, more importantly, that he had a hatred of overweight people due to a bad experience from his childhood (witnessing comedian Jackie Gleason having a sexual encounter with his mother). At the same time, there is a rash of killings in the neighborhood of fat men, and Patrick is strongly suggested to be this "Fat Guy Strangler". After denying it, Lois finally decides she must take him back, after he tries to strangle Peter to death. Patrick appeared in the season 10 episode "Killer Queen", in which he helped Peter and Joe after he is released from the mental institution by Charles Yamamoto as part of his revenge plot on Chris which involved framing Patrick. After Charles dies from having the cover of the Queen album News of the World shown to him by Stewie, Patrick identifies Charles as the one who let him out of the mental institution. Patrick manages to slip away after that with Peter having to injure Joe to make it look like a struggle.
- Jasper (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Brian's stereotypical flamboyantly homosexual 3-year-old cousin. Brian stays with him in Hollywood in "Brian Does Hollywood". Jasper marries a Filipino named Ricardo, in "You May Now Kiss the... Uh... Guy Who Receives". Jasper also makes a short appearance in "E. Peterbus Unum" during a flashback of Peter getting something the family does not need (in this case, a new dog—one that looks like a flamboyantly gay version of Brian). He also appeared in "Brian's Play", when he was seen chatting to Brian through a webcam. His most recent appearance (along with Ricardo) was at Brian's funeral in "Life of Brian".
- Bertram (voiced by Wallace Shawn) – The infant son of a gym teacher and her partner through artificial insemination. Bertram's biological father is Peter Griffin. Bertram appears in "Emission Impossible", "Sibling Rivalry" and "The Big Bang Theory". In "Emission Impossible", Bertram is a sperm inside Peter's testicles. He enters combat with Stewie Griffin in order to prevent his destruction, as Stewie wishes to remain the baby of the family. The two became frenemies, and Stewie spares Bertram. In "Sibling Rivalry", it is revealed that a mishap prior to Peter receiving a vasectomy caused Bertram to be part of a sperm donation used to impregnate a female gym teacher's partner. After he is born, he begins playing at the same park as Stewie, and the two fight over who will rule the playground. Stewie eventually disarms Bertram, who admits defeat and runs away. Bertram appears again in "The Big Bang Theory", in which he tries to erase Stewie from existence by killing Leonardo da Vinci, one of Stewie's ancestors. Although he kills da Vinci, he is killed in turn by Stewie who manages to maintain the timeline and save the universe. Bertram appears as the main antagonist in Family Guy Video Game!. An alternate reality version of Bertram is the main antagonist in the video game Family Guy: Back to the Multiverse.
- Dylan Flannigan (voiced by Seth Green) – Brian's human son. He first appears in "The Former Life of Brian". His mother Tracy was devastated when Brian left her. After Brian apologizes to Dylan for not being there for him, Brian turns his son's life around, making him into a charming, polite young man. Dylan then decides to leave the Griffin house and change his mother like Brian changed him. In "Brian's a Bad Father", Dylan returns as the star of a Disney Channel show.
- Biscuit – Brian's deceased mother who appears in a flashback of "Road to Rhode Island". She was stuffed by her owners after her death. Brian would go on to give her a proper burial. Biscuit is also seen during a flashback in "Chris Cross".
- Coco – Brian's deceased father who has never appeared on screen, but has been mentioned several times by Brian. According to Chris in "Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Jr. High", Coco was hit by a milk truck. Coco has been stated by Brian to have been racist towards African-Americans, as seen in "Don't Make Me Over" and "Chick Cancer".
Spooner Street neighbors
- John Herbert (voiced by Mike Henry) – A 97-year-old pederast often referred to solely by his last name, who resides just down the street from the Griffin family and distributes Popsicle ice pops to small children in his basement. He has a particular interest in Chris; in the episode "Play It Again, Brian", Chris finally realizes this and asks Herbert, "Are you a pedophile?", to no onscreen answer. Also, in "Spies Reminiscent of Us", Stewie refers to a "pedophile who lives down the street" about which nobody is taking any action "because he's so funny", clearly talking about Herbert. He has a dog named Jesse, who is also very old and is unable to use his hind legs. He has a high-pitched, very soft effeminate voice and pronounces sibilant consonants with a high-pitched whistle. Herbert is often seen wearing a light blue robe and slippers, walks with a walker and frequently makes inappropriate, sexually tinged comments to teenage boys (in "Road to the North Pole", Herbert wants a little drummer boy for Christmas, while staring at a poster of Nick Jonas). It is revealed later on that he is the eldest member of the Skull and Bones secret society. He was also a corporal in the United States Army and a POW during World War II. Herbert plays Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Star Wars episodes. In "And Then There Were Fewer", he drove an ice cream truck which in past episodes he has used to lure little boys. In "Internal Affairs", Herbert's ice cream truck is hijacked and destroyed during one of Peter and the Giant Chicken's fighting rampages. In an interview, Henry stated that he based Herbert's voice on an old man he used to meet at a grocery store.[2] Before the character was used for the show, Mike would use the Herbert voice to motivate stalled writers at meetings. He also appeared in The Cleveland Show episode "It's the Great Pancake, Cleveland Brown" as Cleveland Jr.'s first house when he was trick or treating. In "Valentine's Day in Quahog", it is revealed that Herbert's first name is John and that he has a grandniece named Sandy.
Quagmire family
- Glenn Quagmire (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – The Griffins' sex-addicted, 61-year-old next-door neighbor and one of Peter's best friends. He is an airline pilot for Spirit Airlines (as revealed at the end of "Passenger Fatty-Seven") and a former member of the US Navy, but is best known for his extreme sexuality and always saying "Giggity" or "Alright". He is attracted to nearly every woman (especially Lois Griffin). His sister is Brenda Quagmire. In one episode, he is revealed to have been Jack the Ripper in a past life. He has a soft side for cats and despises Brian from "Jerome is the New Black" and onward. His dad is Dan Quagmire/Ida Davis, who is a male-to-female transgender woman. He is shown on a number of occasions to be unnecessarily competitive, most notably while playing friendly games of baseball, bowling, and golf.
- Crystal Quagmire (voiced by Alex Borstein in "Fore, Father", Allison Janney in "Quagmire's Mom") – The mother of Glenn and Brenda Quagmire and the wife of Dan. Her first appearance was in "Fore Father" where she is seen in a flashback breastfeeding Glenn. When facing prison time for statutory rape in "Quagmire's Mom", Quagmire places the blame for his behavior on living with his sexually promiscuous mom during his trial where her actions are seen during a flashback sequence. She arrives at his trial where a lot of the generic men attending the trial recognize her as noted by Mayor Adam West. Crystal admits her faults, but claims to have found religion and asks that he be released to her custody. The judge presiding over the trial rejects her request and sentences Quagmire to twenty years in prison. She tries to get him to find solace in God as well, but he rejects her words. Stewie even asked Crystal if she is aware of what Dan has been through. Just before he enters the prison, the judge arrives and announces that he has commuted Quagmire's sentence, thanks to his mother's "talents" and that new DNA evidence has turned up. He is surprised that despite her new religious life, she would do such a thing, but she admits that she would do anything to help him.
- Ida Davis (formerly Daniel "Dan" Quagmire)[3] (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – The 81-year-old father of Glenn and Brenda Quagmire and the husband of Crystal Quagmire. Dan was a war hero in the Vietnam War. He was thought to be a homosexual by Peter. When Glenn asked his father if this was true, Dan claimed that he was a woman trapped in a man's body and came to Quahog for a sex change operation. Following the operation, she takes the name Ida Davis.[3] In "Quagmire's Mom", Stewie asks Crystal if she knows what her husband has gone through.
- Brenda Quagmire (voiced by Alex Borstein in "Jerome Is the New Black", Kaitlin Olson in "Screams of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q") – The sister of Glenn Quagmire and the daughter of Dan and Crystal, who used to be in an abusive relationship.
- Gary Quagmire - A brother of Quagmire that was mentioned in "Jerome Is the New Black" and "Screams of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q". In "Jerome Is the New Black", he is stated to be deaf.
- Anna Lee (voiced by Mae Whitman) - Quagmire's infant daughter that was revealed in "Quagmire's Baby". She was the result of a one-night stand and was left on his doorstep. He later puts her up for adoption after realizing he cannot take care of her and keep up with his sex life. He starts to miss her and tries to steal her back from her adoptive family, but realizes how much better off she is with them.
- Courtney Quagmire[4] (voiced by Mandy Moore) – The biological daughter of Glenn Quagmire as revealed in the episode "No Giggity, No Doubt."
Brown/Tubbs family
- Cleveland Brown (voiced by Mike Henry from 1999–2020, Arif Zahir beginning in 2021[5]) – Peter's mild-mannered friend who formerly owned and ran a deli. He is a heavyset, mustached, 41-year-old African-American male who is very polite to everyone and has a unique laugh. He is the father of Cleveland Jr. A running gag in the series is the front of his house being damaged, usually as a result of one of Peter's shenanigans, while Cleveland is in the upstairs bathtub. The tub always falls into the front yard with Cleveland exclaiming, "No, no, no, no, no, no!!!" Following his departure from Quahog, the character became the star of his own spin-off series The Cleveland Show during which he lived in Stoolbend, Virginia. In "He's Bla-ack!", Cleveland brings his family along when he moves back to Quahog ever since The Cleveland Show had stopped production.[6] In "Take a Letter", Cleveland obtains a job as a postal worker at Quahog's branch of the United States Postal Service. Cleveland appears as R2-D2 in the Star Wars episodes.
- Loretta Brown (voiced by Alex Borstein) – Cleveland's late ex-wife, and the mother of Cleveland Brown Jr. She had a liking for cricket and the television program Friends. Performing Loretta's gravely voice was very demanding on Alex Borstein, and early in the show Loretta had very few lines, the bulk of which were "Mm-hmm!" She treats Cleveland harshly, and cheats on him with, among others, Glenn Quagmire, leading the Browns to divorce. In the episode "Love, Blactually", it is revealed that Loretta has regretted her actions and wants Cleveland back, but he refuses her advances. Cleveland informs her he needs to move on, and advises her to do the same. She obtains Cleveland's house in the divorce and puts it up for sale, yet is still apparently living there some months later. In The Cleveland Show episode "Gone with the Wind", Loretta dies at the age of 39 in an accident when Peter drops a Brontosaurus skeleton (which Brian had dug up from the Griffin family's yard) on her house and she goes through the same bathtub gag that Cleveland went through which she does not survive. Quagmire ended up driving her body down to Stoolbend for her funeral. It is also revealed in this episode that, according to Peter Griffin, she had also cheated on Cleveland with Mayor Adam West, Ollie Williams, Frank Sinatra Jr., and the Greased-Up Deaf Guy.
- Cleveland Brown Jr. (voiced by Mike Henry in earlier appearances, Kevin Michael Richardson in "The Cleveland Show" and later appearances) – The 13-year-old son of Cleveland and Loretta Brown. In his appearances on Family Guy, he is slim, hyperactive and has an apparent knack for golf. However, starting with the first episode of The Cleveland Show, he is somewhat older and both obese and somewhat lethargic; the reason for this sudden weight gain is never explained until the Season 4 episode "A Rodent Like This", in which Cleveland Jr. is really an agent that appears to have killed the slimmer Cleveland Jr. from Family Guy and taken his place as Cleveland's son. Also, it is revealed that he has lost his faith in God because of the affair his mother had with Quagmire that led to his parents' divorce. When Cleveland became engaged to Donna, Cleveland Brown Jr. became the stepbrother of Roberta and Rallo. As of "He's Bla-ack!", Junior has moved back to Quahog along with Cleveland and the rest of the family and has become an infrequently-appearing member of the Family Guy cast, retaining his appearance from The Cleveland Show.
- Donna Tubbs-Brown (voiced by Sanaa Lathan) – Cleveland's second and current wife and one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show. She is 40 years old and has two biological children from a previous marriage with Robert named Roberta and Rallo. As a result of her marriage to Cleveland, she has adopted his son Cleveland Brown Jr. as her stepson. In "He's Bla-ack!", Donna moved to Quahog with Cleveland when The Cleveland Show folded, and now replaces the former role of the now-deceased Loretta as part of the major cast of Family Guy.
- Roberta Tubbs (voiced by Reagan Gomez-Preston) - Donna's daughter and stepdaughter to Cleveland. She was one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show. As of "He's Bla-ack!", she is now occasionally referred to and less frequently seen on Family Guy. She's also the only member of the Tubbs family that has yet to speak in Family Guy (Family Guy: The Quest for Stuff doesn't count as a speaking role).
- Rallo Tubbs (voiced by Mike Henry) - Donna's son, stepson to Cleveland and stepbrother to Cleveland Jr. He was one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show and, as of "He's Bla-ack!", he is now an infrequently-appearing cast member of Family Guy.
Swanson family
- Joseph "Joe" Swanson (voiced by Patrick Warburton) – The Griffins' neighbor and Peter's friend. He is a paraplegic 46-year-old police officer who suffers from impotence and incontinence. Joe still proves to be an extremely skilled police officer, as he is constantly seen pursuing criminals or rescuing victims with the aid of his wheelchair and even goes so far as to abandon his wheelchair to complete his work. In "A Hero Sits Next Door", Joe mentioned that he was crippled stopping the Grinch from stealing Christmas from an orphanage. He is usually shown as being very tactful, but he also has severe anger issues (In "Road to Rupert", for example, he overreacts when Peter makes it difficult for him to revoke his driving license.) He is married to Bonnie Swanson, who was once pregnant for many years. They have a son named Kevin who staged his own death in Iraq.[7] He also has an infant daughter, Susie. In "Joe's Revenge", it is revealed that Joe's story about being crippled during a fight with the Grinch was a cover-up. Joe Swanson was actually crippled by Bobby "The Shirt" Briggs, who he kills later in that episode. A recurring joke for Joe is that his legs are often depicted as being flexible to the point of not seeming to have any bones in them at all. Though Joe was initially presented as wildly popular and successful in almost everything he did, he is later portrayed as a bit of an "odd man out" among his friends, never quite up to their level of creativity or wit.
- Bonnie Swanson (voiced by Jennifer Tilly) – Joe's calm and soft-spoken wife who is the mother of Kevin and Susie Swanson. She is pregnant from her first appearance in "A Hero Sits Next Door" in season one until "Ocean's Three and a Half" in season seven. Her prolonged pregnancy is pointed out by Peter in the season four episode "Blind Ambition". Joe temporarily leaves her in "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air", when he regains the ability to walk. He returns to her when she tries shooting him to paralyze him. After missing several times, he shoots himself. In "Ocean's Three and a Half", she finally gives birth to a daughter named Susie at the age of 45. In "The Hand That Rocks The Wheelchair", Bonnie is arrested after Meg plants a gun in her purse due to Meg's infatuation with Joe, which she acquires when Bonnie asks her to look after Joe while she is out of town. She is later released from police custody. In "Foreign Affairs", Bonnie goes to Paris with Lois in the hopes of having an affair after feeling neglected by Joe. She nearly leaves Joe for a French man, also in a wheelchair, named François. After intervention from Lois, Joe comes to Paris and apologizes for neglecting her before proving his love by walking (although it is actually Quagmire walking while tied to Joe's back). Bonnie reunites with Joe and they return to Quahog. In the season ten episode "Internal Affairs", it is shown that Bonnie was once a stripper at The Fuzzy Clam where she first met Joe. In "A House Full of Peters", Bonnie uses a non-nasally voice (provided by Portia di Rossi) to pull a prank call on Joe causing Lois and Donna to wonder if this is Bonnie's real voice or not.
- Kevin Swanson (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in early appearances, Scott Grimes in later appearances) – Joe and Bonnie's 18-year-old son, and elder brother to Susie Swanson. He was mainly seen in the first three seasons, only making a few occasional appearances after that with no speaking parts. He seems to have been Meg's first crush as well. In the episode "Stew-Roids", Joe said that Kevin died in the Iraq War. In "Thanksgiving", Kevin returns and tells them a story that he was in a coma following a bomb that had been placed inside a turkey during Thanksgiving years before and faked his own death in order to leave the war and return home. However even upon the episode of his return to the series, Kevin's appearances remain occasional and somewhat less frequent than his baby sister Susie, even though he continues to live under his parents' roof. In "Tom Tucker: The Man and His Dream", it was mentioned that Bonnie stopped Kevin's suicide attempt. In "Joe's Revenge", it is revealed that Kevin shares a room with Susie as they get to know each other. In "Turkey Guys", it is revealed that Kevin is dating a little person.
- Susie Swanson – Joe and Bonnie's daughter who was born in the episode "Ocean's Three and a Half". Upon first meeting her, Stewie develops a crush on the newborn Susie and is seen practicing guitar to write a song about her and later shows Brian a music video he made of the song "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" by Bryan Adams. In the episode "Stew-Roids", it is shown that Susie is strong enough to beat up Stewie. In "Joe's Revenge", it is revealed that Susie and Kevin share a room as they get to know each other. Although Susie has not yet spoken, the voice of her inner monologues are provided by Patrick Stewart.
- Bud Swanson (voiced by Ed O'Neill) – Joe's father, and Kevin and Susie's grandfather, whose first and only appearance so far was in "Papa Has a Rollin' Son". Joe was initially estranged from Bud because of Bud's intolerance towards handicapped people and his fear that it would happen to him, Joe, or anyone else he loved (though he was unaware of Joe's paraplegic state when they reconnected). After putting up with Peter passing off as him, Joe tells his father to confront his fears and the two reconcile with Bud having accepted Joe's paraplegic state.
Goldman family
- Mort Goldman (voiced by John Brennan) – A 53-year-old Jewish pharmacist of Polish-Jewish descent, and one of Peter's friends. He runs Goldman's Pharmacy and was married to Muriel Goldman, with whom he had one son, Neil. Mort's family are stereotypes of American Jews. Mort frequently discusses his various maladies and childhood bullying in casual conversations. Although he first appeared one season after his son Neil, Mort became a major supporting character, especially during the period when Cleveland Brown was absent doing The Cleveland Show – when Cleveland returns to Family Guy, he interrupts the opening title song sequence to take Mort's place in the line-up of male characters on the left side of the stairs. Mort bowled a perfect game in the episode "Blind Ambition". Mort plays a Jawa in the "Blue Harvest" episode, and Lando Calrissian in the "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side" and "It's a Trap!" episodes. In "The Simpsons Guy", Mort attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where he is placed next to Krusty the Clown due to both of them being Jewish.
- Neil Goldman (voiced by Seth Green) – Mort's stereotypical nerdy 17-year-old son who is Chris's best friend at James Woods Regional High School. He is the editor of the school's newspaper, is a member of the A/V Club, and works at his father's pharmacy where he is employee of the month, according to Family Guy Online. He is more confident than his father, so much so that he does not seem to realize that he is highly considered an annoyance amongst his peers. He also has crush on Meg, but she, too, finds him annoying. At one point in the series, however, Neil and Meg become interns at the local news station, Channel 5, and they share a kiss. Neil speaks with a lateral lisp, but in "The Story on Page One", when he removes his retainer he speaks with a deep, smooth bass voice (provided by Seth MacFarlane).
- Muriel Goldman (voiced by Nicole Sullivan) – Mort's wife and Neil's mother, whose physical appearance is very similar to her husband's. She met Mort via a video dating service, and they had their first kiss at age of fourteen while both of them were suffering from a cold. Later in her life, one of recreations of herself and Mort was watching old films along with the album Hotel California to find if any of them synchronized. She was murdered in the Season 9 premiere "And Then There Were Fewer" where she was stabbed in the back by Diane Simmons after discovering her to be the murderer of James Woods. It is also revealed in that episode that she provided James Woods with multiple prescriptions for Oxycontin. In "Follow the Money," there is a park bench dedicated to her as Neil throws money on it telling her to buy something nice in Hell.
Quahog Channel 5 News
- Thomas "Tom" Tucker (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Tucker is the arrogant, baritone, 35-year-old male news anchor at Channel 5. He was also an actor before moving to Quahog; he was in Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers. Tom tends to insult everybody around him, particularly former co-anchor Diane Simmons. He disliked her and frequently traded insults with her on-air. His family includes his first wife, Stacy; his second wife, Sarah; and a son from his first marriage named Jake, whose face is upside down. He is shown to be protective of his son and dislikes people's use of the term "freak". MacFarlane stated that Tucker's voice is the easiest to do for him, and he was "sort of modeled after the cigarette spokesmen from the 1940s commercials".[8] Tom hardly speaks in completely normal sentences, instead using his news anchor voice in regular conversation (e.g. "Back to you, [character]"). In "The Kiss Seen Around the World", Meg Griffin developed a crush on him until he showed his true colors by saying he does not care if Neil Goldman died, then yelled at Tom by saying he only cared about his ratings. In the episode "Mother Tucker", Tom has a brief relationship with Peter Griffin's mother, Thelma Griffin, where he became a father figure to a childish Peter. In the episode "And Then There Were Fewer", Simmons killed Muriel Goldman and Derek Wilcox, James Woods, as well as Woods' then girlfriend leaving evidence to frame Tucker. In "Excellence in Broadcasting", Tucker was released from prison and mentions on the news that Diane was the killer and is now dead. He introduces Joyce Kinney as Diane's successor. In "Tom Tucker: The Man and His Dream", Peter learns about Tucker's life as George P. Wilbur and had done minor TV appearances after that. Peter plans to get Tom back on the track in Hollywood. He started off by getting Tom a minor part in an episode of NCIS where Tom played a mechanic that Leroy Jethro Gibbs questions. In "The Simpsons Guy", Tom Tucker attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where he was sitting next to Kent Brockman. In "Trump Guy," Tom is shown to have a twin brother named Tim Tucker who works on a news program in Washington, D.C.
- Diane Simmons (voiced by Lori Alan) – The station's 40-year-old former news co-anchor and talk show hostess. In "The King Is Dead", it was revealed that her birth name was Diane Seidelman. She and fellow anchor Tom Tucker often traded insults on the air. Her largest role on the show was when Peter hired her to play Anna in his version of The King and I; she quit after he kept changing everything. In "Patriot Games", it was revealed that she was the widow of an unnamed man who committed suicide after Tom Tucker asked, "Diane, didn't your first husband blow his brains out?" In the season 9 premiere "And Then There Were Fewer", it was mentioned that she used to date James Woods until he broke up with her around the same time when Tom Tucker tried to replace her. Diane reveals that she worked with Tom for 15 years. This caused her to plan revenge on both men with James Woods ending up murdered and leaving evidence that Tom Tucker murdered Muriel Goldman, Derek Wilcox, James Woods' girlfriend Priscilla and Quagmire's then-girlfriend Stephanie. Lois put the pieces together, only to come face to face with Diane, who took Lois to the edge of a cliff, where she intended to kill her. However, Diane is shot and killed with a sniper rifle fired by Stewie. After saving Lois' life he then states that "If anyone's gonna take that bitch down, it's gonna be me." In "Excellence in Broadcasting", her murderous actions and demise were mentioned by Tom; Diane was replaced by Joyce Kinney.[9] Lori Alan has appeared in Seth MacFarlane's animated short Larry & Steve, a precursor to Family Guy. When Family Guy was created, Lori Alan auditioned for the role of Lois, but eventually was cast as Diane.[10] Lori Alan stated that she based Diane's voice on her own mother (who was also a voice actress).[10]
- Joyce Kinney (voiced by Christine Lakin) – The station's latest news co-anchor who was introduced in the episode "Excellence in Broadcasting" as a successor to the late Diane Simmons. In the season 9 episode "And I'm Joyce Kinney", it is revealed that she was overweight in high school and harbors a grudge against Lois, who attended high school with her (making her around 43 years old, since Lois is 43), for a humiliating prank committed by Lois and the cheerleading squad. When Lois confides in her over drinks that she was in a porn film, Joyce announces it on the news the next day causing most of Quahog to loathe Lois. Also, it is revealed that in order to have a name that would work on television she changed her last name from Chevapravatdumrong (the last name of the series' co-producer) to Kinney. When Lois showed the "Quest for Fur" porn film in church, Joyce was present and not pleased that the congregation forgave Lois.
- Tricia Takanawa (voiced by Alex Borstein) – Typically referred to as "Asian reporter Tricia Takanawa" by her colleagues, she speaks in a nasal monotone cadence that Borstein has described as "all presentation and no substance", and is 37 years old. She is confirmed as being Japanese in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story. In "Livin' on a Prayer", Tricia has a distrusting African-American boyfriend named Tyrone who gets suspicious of her when she has to work at night. In "The Simpsons Guy", Tricia Takanawa attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. When Peter brings her word that Carter plans to use toxic materials in the beer cans of the Pawtucket Brewery in "Carter and Tricia", she has an affair with him and becomes a mother figure to Peter in order to record the truth. When the guys later try to exact revenge, they find that her actions are partially a result of her upbringing by her mother, Irene Takanawa, who was first introduced in "12 and a Half Angry Men".
- Oliver "Ollie" Williams (voiced by Phil LaMarr) – The 45-year-old Channel 5 Blaccu-Weather Forecast reporter. Ollie Williams is a fast-talking African-American man who rarely speaks for more than about 1–3 seconds. His news reports are always rapidly spoken and loud. The only time he was so calm was in "420", having smoked marijuana and it was later revealed his hyperkinetic style was also influenced by alcoholism in the episode "Friends of Peter G.".[11] Ollie has only spoken for longer than a few seconds on two occasions, one in an episode where Ollie and Tom were talking about him stuck in a rainstorm with his umbrella blown away, and in "Lois Kills Stewie" where he recaps the previous episode, "Stewie Kills Lois".
Peter's co-workers
The following characters have worked with Peter at different jobs:
- Mr. Jonathan Weed (voiced by Butch Hartman in the pilot pitch, Carlos Alazraqui in the TV series) – The owner of the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory, where Peter originally worked under his supervision. He speaks with a strong Spanish accent and is described as an "effeminate weirdo" by his employees. He disapproves of nearly all of Peter's actions, mainly because most of them are detrimental to the company, and fires or comes close to firing Peter on multiple occasions. In "Mr. Saturday Knight", he is invited to the Griffins' house for dinner. He promotes Peter to head of toy development and minutes later chokes to death on a dinner roll after it was Heimlich maneuvered out of Brian's throat and into Mr. Weed's throat; the half-eaten dinner roll was actually taken into police custody. His video will describes how the factory will be replaced by a children's hospital starting "now", at which point the demolition machinery promptly starts tearing through the factory, endangering everyone present. His great-grandfather's surname was "Bermudagrass" but was changed to Weed at Ellis Island. In the episode "Lois Kills Stewie", Stewie tells Lois, before attempting to shoot her, "Say hello to Cleveland for me, Oh, and Mr. Weed".[12]
- Santos and Pasqual (voiced by Denis Martell and Mark Peredes) – A pair of Portuguese immigrants who do not speak English. All of their dialogue is subtitled and not understood by the other characters. In "From Method to Madness", they lament leaving Portugal for various low-paying jobs in Quahog such as caterers, fishermen, janitors, and babysitters. Peter treats them poorly. In return, they urinate in his refreshments when the opportunity arises as seen in "The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire". In this episode, Pasqual saves Joe's life after he nearly drowns by using CPR. This prompts Lois to demand that Peter take CPR classes in order to learn what to do should the situation happen again.
- Angela (voiced by Carrie Fisher) – Peter and Opie's supervisor who is in charge of the Shipping Department at the Pawtucket Brewery. She likes Opie far better than Peter, and treats Peter very coldly, repeatedly rewarding Opie as employee of the month. However, Angela fires Opie in "The Blind Side". Peter tried to befriend her based on her love of animals, but ended up horrifying her by staging a bloody cockfight in her house. In "Peter-assment", Angela sexually assaults Peter after he comes to work without wearing his glasses (which were broken at the time). After Peter refused to have sex with her and cheat on Lois, she tried to gas herself in her car. After Peter rescued her, it was revealed that she has not dated anyone in ten years. Feeling sorry for her, Peter disguised himself as a stereotypical 1920s New York billionaire and had sex with her. Angela knew it was really Peter, but what she did not know was that Peter, as a means of remaining faithful to Lois, hid Mort Goldman (who did it for $2) in his pants so it was Mort who actually had sex with her, not Peter. In "The Simpsons Guy", Angela attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. Following Carrie Fisher's unexpected death on December 27, 2016, Seth MacFarlane revealed that Angela would appear on at least two more episodes that Fisher had already done voiceover work on in Season 15, but would not comment on the character's future except by saying that "Family Guy will miss [Fisher] immensely."[13] Her final appearance was during the sixteenth-season episode "Don't Be A Dickens At Christmas" aired on December 10, 2017. The episode "Pawtucket Pete" states that Angela had died after going swimming less than 20 hours after she had eaten, getting a stomach cramp, and drowning. (Peter mentions to the audience, "That's a real thing kids - listen to your mothers.")
- Bert and Shiela (voiced by Bryan Cranston and Niecy Nash) - An interracial husband and wife who become the new managers of the Pawtucket Brewery in "Pawtucket Pete" following the death of Angela. They were hired to replace Angela because Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder's "Ebony and Ivory" was the favorite song of one of the Pawtucket Brewery's shareholders.
- Opie (voiced by Mark Hentemann) – A seemingly mentally-challenged and gibberish-speaking co-worker of Peter at the Pawtucket Brewery and ward of the state. He has won "Employee of the Month" at least twenty times and has been promoted ahead of Peter. He appears to have mental retardation and never really does anything about it. He sometimes tells Peter to stick his finger in his mouth, only to bite it. He wears two different shoes on each foot. He once went for a haircut that went horribly awry. No-one other than Angela seems to understand what he is saying. However, Peter has been shown to understand him in some instances such as when he gets fired. In "Whistle While Your Wife Works", Opie was forced to watch Peter and Lois have sex in his office at the brewery. In "Blue Harvest", he played a Tusken Raider. In "New Kidney in Town", Peter sends him a shoutout on The Price is Right. In "It's A Trap!", he plays a small amphibious alien that swallows the door droid, voiced by Consuela, from Jabba the Hutt, played by Joe Swanson's, palace. In "The Blind Side", Opie is fired from his position for doing something unnecessary that only Peter understood and is replaced by a deaf woman named Stella. He makes a cameo crowd appearance when Peter proposes reinstating the city government in "Tea Peter". Opie can also be seen as Stewie rides through town under Brian's car in "Family Guy Viewer Mail 2". In "The Simpsons Guy", Opie attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. In "Underage Peter," it is revealed that Opie is not disabled, but rather he spoke gibberish due to being constantly under the influence of alcohol.
- Fouad (voiced by Mike Henry) – One of Peter Griffin's co-workers at the Pawtucket Brewery. He is a recent immigrant to the United States, apparently of Arab ethnicity. In all his appearances, he has demonstrated that he is extremely earnest in his attempts to learn a Western sense of humor and understand its subtleties, such as the nature of a sarcastic or ironic comment. He laughs in a loud manner at sarcastic or ironic statements before explaining why the joke was funny (for example, "Ahh! Is funny because..."). Peter does not seem to have a strong relationship with Fouad, likely due to his comparatively short time employed at the Pawtucket Brewery, however Peter gets along much better with Fouad than he does with Opie or Angela. Fouad first appears in "Chick Cancer", being introduced by Peter as that foreign guy at work who helped him understand sarcasm. In "Blue Harvest", Fouad plays Lieutenant Shann Childsen on the Death Star prison deck, who laughs when Chewbacca (played by Brian) asks for a cell by the pool, stating that it is funny because prisons do not have luxury areas such as swimming pools. In "Padre de Familia", Peter suspects that Fouad may be an illegal immigrant and is angered because of it. Fouad's voice is also heard off-camera in a DVD exclusive scene in "Three Kings". In "The Shawshank Redemption" segment, Captain Byron Hadley (played by Seamus) yells for lights out calling the inmates "ladies" and Fouad replies that it is funny because they are men.
- Stella (voiced by Marlee Matlin) – An attractive deaf worker at the Pawtucket Brewery. She debuted in "The Blind Side" as Opie's successor.
Members of Adam West High School
The following characters make up the school body of Adam West High School (previously named James Woods Regional High School):
- Principal John Shepherd (voiced by Gary Cole) – The principal of Adam West High School. He was revealed to be Jewish in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein". In "The Simpsons Guy", Principal Shepherd attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where he was placed next to Principal Skinner. In "The Peter Principal", Principal Shepherd had a bitter divorce and suffers a breakdown causing the board of education to put him on an indefinite paid leave. As Vice-Principal Brenda McGuire was found dead in her car, the board of education asks for someone to come forward to be the interim principal until a permanent replacement for Principal Shepherd can be found. When Lois anonymously tipped off the board of education about how Peter was helping Meg and her friends on their revenge on the mean students, the board of education intervenes causing them to fire him and reinstate Principal Shepherd after he recovered from his divorce following his sex trip to Thailand. In "Crimes and Meg's Demeanor", Principal Shepherd is revealed to have the first name with John and lives in an apartment building across from the building that is managed by Lou Spinazola. After a confrontation with Stewie and Brian over what appeared to have been him killing his ex-wife Fiona which ended with Brian falling out of the window, Principal Shepherd admitted to the police and the medic about him living off food taken from the school to make ends meet when the police find the bag that supposedly leaked blood.
- Mr. Berler (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Mr. Berler is one of Meg's teachers at James Woods Regional High School. In "The Kiss Seen Around the World", he disagrees with Neil Goldman's selection of James T. Kirk as the better Star Trek captain supporting Captain Jean-Luc Picard as the superior officer. In "The Simpsons Guy", Mr. Berler made a cameo at the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale.
- Connie D'Amico (voiced by Fairuza Balk in "Let's Go to the Hop," Lisa Wilhoit in all subsequent appearances) – The head cheerleader and most popular girl at James Woods Regional High School. Connie is a beautiful yet narcissistic and mean-spirited girl 17-year-old who tends to look down on those who are either socially inept or unpopular and encourages the other popular students who she is friends with to bully them, with Meg being an object of favoritism to this abuse. She is most often seen with her closest friends: Gina, Scott, and Doug. While a bully to most students lacking popularity and confidence, Connie does have a softer side; in "Stew-Roids" – Connie begs Meg for help after she realizes what it is like to be shunned and ridiculed by her classmates. In the same episode, she fell in love with (and dated) Chris when she realized how nice and kind he can be. In "Let's Go to the Hop", she dances with Peter when he went undercover as "Lando Griffin" at the Winter Snowball dance.
- Gina (voiced by Alex Borstein in earlier appearances, Camille Guaty in later appearances, Nina Dobrev in "Trading Places") – A popular student and cheerleader at James Woods Regional High School who is Connie D'Amico's best friend.
- Esther (voiced by Tamera Mowry in "Barely Legal" and "Peter's Daughter," Christina Milian in later episodes) – An African-American girl who is one of Meg's friends.
- Patty (voiced by Alexandra Breckenridge in "Barely Legal," Barclay DeVeau in "Halloween on Spooner Street," Martha MacIsaac in later episodes) – A redheaded girl who is one of Meg's friends. She has two mothers, implying that her biological mother is a lesbian. Brian briefly had a crush on her after realizing she has a more attractive body than she seems.[14]
- Ruth Cochamer (voiced by Natasha Melnick in earlier appearances, Emily Osment in later appearances) – One of Meg's friends. Her tongue is supposedly cut off during her and Meg's trip to Paris when they are kidnapped in "Leggo My Meg-O". In later episodes however, she converses normally. She has at least once hinted to have a crush on Lois, but tried to keep it under wraps.
Other recurring characters
- Mayor Adam West (voiced by Adam West) – The 71-year-old Mayor of Quahog who is named after the actor who provides his voice. He is a highly odd and delusional politician. He has been shown to be good-natured but generally irresponsible. He also has a love affair with Meg in "Deep Throats". Mayor West played Grand Moff Tarkin in "Blue Harvest". As of "Brothers & Sisters", he marries Lois' sister Carol thus making him Peter and Lois's brother-in-law and the uncle-by-marriage of Meg, Chris and Stewie. In "The Simpsons Guy", Mayor Adam West attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Beer where he was sitting next to Mayor Joe Quimby. In "Adam West High", Mayor Adam West has passed away as Brian persuades Principal Shepherd to rename his high school after him. The episode "Wild Wild West" marked the debut of Mayor West's cousin of the sane name.
- Wild Wild West (voiced by Sam Elliott) - Mayor Adam West's rural cousin. In his debut, Peter requests he be the new mayor of Quahog following the death of his cousin; although he initially refuses, he graciously accepts the job at the end of the episode. He offhandedly mentions killing a man twice in his debut.
- Bruce Straight (voiced by Mike Henry) – A 39-year-old mustached man who speaks effeminately in a calm, drawn-out voice with a slight lisp, as well as occasionally smacking his lips before a sentence. Though he was not given a name until the episode "No Chris Left Behind", he has appeared in several episodes without being named on-screen; however, he is referred to in commentary tracks prior to that episode as "the Performance Artist". He even comments on it the first time his name is spoken in the series. He has several catchphrases, the most notable being "Oh, no!". He first appeared as the clerk of an "exotic entertainment" shop in the Season 1 episode "Chitty Chitty Death Bang", and was then seen sitting astride an obese donkey at the Renaissance fair when Peter fought the Black Knight. He has since been seen with a variety of jobs including a deacon, a therapist, a medium, a lawyer, a masseur and a barman. More recently, he was seen working at the bowling alley selling rental shoes as seen in "The Splendid Source", refereeing the boxing match where Lois fought Deirdre Jackson in "Baby, You Knock Me Out", and working at Quahog Laser Tag in "Forget-Me-Not". He has also been seen training to be a police officer, teaching a CPR course, chairing the Quahog Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and entertaining children at the Quahog Library. He is a member of the school board committee of James Woods Regional High School. Although Bruce himself is generally limited to occasional appearances, his voice is lent to a number of anthropomorphic creatures including a large bee, the shark in a parody of Jaws, a Xenomorph from a parody of Aliens, a Tetris block, and a giant mutant rat. In "Blue Harvest", he played the role of Greedo. He makes an appearance as Admiral Piett on the Imperial Star Destroyer in the episode "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side". Bruce is openly gay, although he initially does not want to admit it to his parents, Phil and Candy Straight, who insisted on him meeting a woman. His partner/fiancé is his roommate Jeffrey (in "Road to the North Pole", Bruce states in the song "All I Want for Christmas" that his Christmas wish is a wedding ring from Jeffrey). In the episode "BFFs" of The Cleveland Show, Peter says that Bruce was his therapist and referred to him as "that gay guy who has, like, a thousand jobs". Another character voiced by Mike Henry who was heavily implied to be Jeffrey appeared in both the Family Guy episodes "Friends of Peter G." and "Finders Keepers", and The Cleveland Show episode "Die Semi-Hard" before being confirmed to be Jeffrey in "Underage Peter." He also appeared in a deleted scene of the episode "Stewie is Enceinte", adopting Stewie's human-dog hybrid puppies at an animals shelter with Bruce. Bruce is also noted for his tendency to give unsolicited advice about mundane subjects, often during critical events. This occurs most notably during his training as a 911 operator. When a victim calls to report a man in her home, he provides tips for being a good host to unexpected guests. In "The Simpsons Guy", Bruce attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where he was sitting next to Waylon Smithers. In "Meg's Wedding," Bruce briefly had a romantic relationship with Meg. However, they ended it on the wedding day and Bruce finally got engaged to Jeffrey in a parking lot since the priest wouldn't allow them to marry in the church.
- Carl (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin) – The 24-year-old manager of the local gas station and convenience store called the Quahog Mini Mart. He speaks in a calm, monotone voice and shows almost no emotion regarding anything happening around him. Carl is a cinephile, having an obsession with films and attractive actresses. In "Road to the North Pole", he wants a Blu-ray of The Wiz for Christmas. He goes out of his way to discuss exciting movies. He becomes friends with Chris, when Chris worked for him in "Movin' Out (Brian's Song)". Their friendship is based on their mutual interest in movies. He does not get along well with Meg, although he did once hire her to work in the store. In "Friends of Peter G.", it is revealed that the reason that he knows so much about movies is because he is an alcoholic and he spent so much time in his house and watched every film he could get his hands on. In the Star Wars episodes, Carl plays Master Yoda.
- Consuela (voiced by Mike Henry) – A 68-year-old maid who in one cut-away gag is shown as the head of the Maids' Union. She is Hispanic and speaks broken English. She usually says "No, no, no...", whenever asked to do anything. She first appears in "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air" demanding Lemon Pledge in a court case. She is seen answering the door as Superman's maid at the Fortress of Solitude in "Stewie Kills Lois" telling Joe and the police officers that Superman is not home. She appears in a cutaway in "Ocean's Three and a Half" on the game show Are You Smarter Than a Hispanic Maid?. In "Dog Gone", she goes to work for the Griffin family, but proves to be so annoying that they drug her with chloroform and leave her with Joe. She has a nephew named Mikey, who sells light-up yo-yos, and a son named Rodrigo, who is in prison. Another of her nephews was molested by James Woods before he committed suicide, as revealed in "And Then There Were Fewer" when she was working as Woods' maid. In "Stewie Goes for a Drive", Stewie runs away from home and ends up in a bad neighborhood. Consuela finds and takes him to her home and puts him in her bathtub, which is also being used to make soup for a Quinceañera celebration being held at her house. Brian tracks Stewie to Consuela's house but she refuses to let him go, claiming that Stewie is her son "Ernesto". Consuela also appears as Darth Vader's maid in "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", and as the controller of the security system at the palace of Jabba the Hutt in "It's a Trap!". She also appears as Donna's housekeeper in The Cleveland Show season 3 episode "Die Semi-Hard". In "Valentine's Day in Quahog", it is revealed that Consuela has a husband who is still living in Mexico, and to see him annually on Valentine's Day, she crosses the border illegally into Mexico. In "The Simpsons Guy", Consuela attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where she was sitting next to Bumblebee Man due to their both being Hispanic. In "Dearly Deported," it is revealed that Consuela has an attractive niece named Isabella who has children of her own.
- Death (voiced by Norm Macdonald in the first appearance, Adam Carolla in later appearances) – The Grim Reaper figure in the form of a skeleton in a black robe who seldom removes his hood. Underneath his hood is a human skull with spiders and snakes crawling in and out of the eye sockets, mouth, and ear cavities as seen in "Death Lives". He is present in "Mr. Saturday Knight" when Mr. Weed dies after choking during dinner at the Griffins'. In "I Take Thee Quagmire", it is revealed that anyone who touches his bones dies instantly (though in "Death Is a Bitch" it seems that this is contradicted, but while Stewie rubs his ankle to heal it faster, Death being out of commission, no one at all is able to die). In "Wasted Talent", Death comes to a college campus where a party had taken place and everybody is dead with beer bottles around the room. After doing his deed, he drinks some beer bottles to try to find a silver scroll (for Pawtucket Pat's contest). He ends up getting drunk and crashes his car. In "Friends of Peter G.", Death shows Peter what his life would be like if he continues to drink as much as he does, and if he does not drink at all. Peter learns to control his drinking from this. Death later ends up in a car crash in "Grumpy Old Man", leading him to be taken away by "Super Death" (a larger version of himself) who tells him he was going to be reincarnated as a Chinese child. He disappears only to reappear seconds later as he was reincarnated a Chinese baby girl. In "3 Acts of God", Death takes Peter, Quagmire, Cleveland, and Joe to speak to God.
- Dr. Elmer Hartman (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – An incompetent 36-year-old doctor who works at Quahog's hospital. Dr. Hartman is generally shown to be an unskilled doctor and his skills fluctuate from episode to episode. In one episode, he mentions his Yale Medical School degree, but then implies it is a product of his calligraphy skills. Occasionally, he seems to know exactly what he is doing and performs great medical feats, such as plastic surgery to restore Peter's face, to other episodes where he does not even understand common medical terminology, or needs a chart to find body parts and lets Meg take care of patients while he is gone, as in "You Can't Do That on Television, Peter". He temporarily loses his medical license in "Stewie Loves Lois" when Peter accuses him of rape (it turns out that Hartman had in fact merely performed a normal prostate exam, though Peter did not understand the procedure). He manages to regain his license after treating Peter's urination problem. In "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air", Peter brought up the fact that Hartman sounds very similar to Carter Pewterschmidt when he speaks. As a response, Hartman tells Peter that Carter is one of his patients and that there are only so many voices in the world; some are bound to be similar and that he never noticed because they do not talk all that much despite the fact that Carter is in fact a patient of his. This was brought up to turn the scenario that MacFarlane voices both Hartman and Carter into a comical situation. His name comes from MacFarlane's close friend and fellow animator Elmer "Butch" Hartman. In "New Kidney in Town", Hartman gives Peter one of his kidneys because the Griffin family are his last paying customers. Also in the episode, Hartman reveals that while attempting to clone a chicken, he inadvertently created the Giant Chicken where Peter says he is going to want to discuss with Dr. Hartman later. In "Secondhand Spoke", it is revealed that Hartman has a gay son. In "Ratings Guy", it is revealed that Hartman is the worst doctor at Quahog's hospital. In "The Simpsons Guy", Dr. Hartman was among the Quahog citizens to attend the trial between Pawtucket Patriot Ale and Duff Beer in Springfield. He was shown to have been seated next to Dr. Nick Riviera (who was also an incompetent doctor). In "Once Bitten", Dr. Hartman enlisted his dad to get him and Seamus into a movie theater. In "Papa Has a Rollin' Son", it is revealed that Hartman has dyslexia.
- Frank Sinatra Jr. (voiced by himself) – A singer, songwriter and conductor who meets Brian Griffin in "Brian Sings and Swings" following his near-death experience. Frank gives him some words of wisdom before taking the stage at the Quahog Cabana Club. Brian and Frank start to sing together, and eventually Stewie Griffin joins them, forming the "New Rat Pack". In "Tales of a Third Grade Nothing," Frank and Brian purchase the Quahog Cabana Club. When business fails to improve, the two look to Stewie to bring in more customers. Stewie turns the club into a trendy Hollywood style night club called pLace that ultimately fails when Andy Dick shows up to party. The episode "Bookie of the Year" was posthumously Frank Sinatra Jr.'s final role where he was shown helping Brian and Stewie with a restaurant plan. The episode is dedicated to him.
- God (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – The father of Jesus Christ and the creator of life. He is a central part of the basic tenets in the religion of Christianity. Although the basic concept of God exists in other monotheistic and polytheistic religions, it is the Christian God that serves as the basis for the character in Family Guy. His appearance in the show is the stereotypical appearance of an Abrahamic god in the Western world; a bald-headed Caucasian man with long white hair, a huge white beard and a white robe. Contrary to the widespread belief of a benevolent and pure God, the "God" character in Family Guy has often been shown to have several human flaws, especially being shown as being socially irresponsible and sexually perverted. In the episode "Fifteen Minutes of Shame", he aims a sniper rifle with red dot sight at Meg from the clouds after she says, "Oh God, kill me now", but is interrupted by a phone call before he can complete the task. In the episode "Blind Ambition", God flirts with a woman at the Drunken Clam, and lights her a cigarette with lightning before accidentally vaporizing her and setting the bar on fire, to which he exclaims, "Jesus Christ!" Jesus then arrives, and hastily leaves the area with God in a Cadillac Escalade before they can be caught up in the blaze. In "Untitled Griffin Family History", God asks his roommate Chuggs for a lighter, using it to light a fart. On his second attempt, the lit fart sets in motion the Big Bang that creates the universe. In "The Courtship of Stewie's Father", Joseph quarrels with a teenage Jesus, before Jesus storms out of the room shouting, "You're not my real father!". He then goes on to give God a phone call asking if he can go back to live with him in Heaven, but is rejected. God then turns to a young woman named Janet lying in his bed, hoping to have sex with her. Janet hands him a condom to his disappointment, and asks her to reconsider, saying it is his birthday, but Janet refuses. In "Partial Terms of Endearment", Peter thanks God thinking he is set to participate in a threesome with Lois and her friend Naomi, to which God replies "Don't mention it, Peter". A jingle is then heard singing, "God! He knows what turns you on!" after which God says, "Have fun!" In "Into Fat Air", God and Jesus discuss on how to name a country in the Himalayas. God says that the mountains look like nipples, to which Jesus replies by saying that he cannot just call a country "Nipples". In response, God suggests the name "Nepal" to Jesus' approval. In other episodes, God's serious side has also been shown on occasion such as in "If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'" where he curses Peter with six of the 10 plagues after he lied to the people of Quahog about being a healer and is then worshipped as a god.
- Horace (voiced by John Brennan) – The proprietor and bartender of The Drunken Clam for 30 years. Has been shown to have been working there for at least as long as Peter and his friends have been regulars. Horace has also been shot a handful of times, but has recovered from each incident. In "One If by Clam, Two If by Sea", Horace sold The Drunken Clam following a storm and moved to Florida. He later repurchased it after moving back to Quahog. In "Blind Ambition", Horace's life is saved by Peter (who was blind at the time) when The Drunken Clam was on fire. In "Save the Clam", Horace is accidentally killed when a baseball hit by Jerome hits him during a baseball game between The Drunken Clam and Mort's Pharmacy. His death causes the bank to close The Drunken Clam which was enough for Peter, Joe and Quagmire to protest this until Jerome buys The Drunken Clam to keep Horace's legacy alive.
- Jake Tucker (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Tom Tucker's deformed son and Chris' former classmate. Jake's many appearances show him with an "upside-down face"; a mouth near the top of his head and eyes near the bottom. In "It Takes a Village Idiot, and I Married One", he gets a normal face, via toxic waste. Although typically depicted as a demanding and obnoxious brat, Jake craves his father's attention, which he rarely gets. It is also revealed in "Peter Griffin: Husband, Father...Brother?" that he "doesn't have a bottom". Though Tom often neglects him, he often shows that he cares when Brian accused Jake of giving Chris alcohol. However, when Chris gets his own back on Jake by planting drugs in his locker an enraged Tom declares him a "bad boy" and loses faith in him. In "Mother Tucker", Jake is noticeably neglected by Tom when Tom pays more attention to Peter. But Peter then realizes that Tom should pay more attention to Jake.
- James Woods (voiced by himself) – A 52-year-old actor whose fictional persona becomes a criminal sociopath. In "Peter's Got Woods", he is invited by Peter to help deal with the local high school being named for Woods, i.e. James Woods Regional High School. While Brian's attentions are turned to his girlfriend, Peter becomes friends with Woods. This friendship ends when Woods becomes jealous of Brian. Peter and Brian lure Woods into a crate, forgetting to make holes for air, and ship him off to be studied by "top men". Woods returns in "Back to the Woods", stealing Peter's wallet and assuming his identity. Peter retaliates by assuming Woods' identity and ruining his credibility on the Late Show with David Letterman. When Woods shows up to fight Peter, he is again lured into a crate to be studied by "top men". In "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", Woods makes an appearance as General Maximilian Veers. In "Brian Griffin's House of Payne", the CBS producers hire Woods to star in Brian Griffin's television show, Woods making multiple changes to Brian's original script that prompt Brian to back out of the project. James Woods reappears in "And Then There Were Fewer" in which he becomes a born-again Christian due to his new relationship with young news intern Priscilla. Woods turns his life over to Jesus wishing to make amends for his sins. Woods is later killed as part of an elaborate murder plot orchestrated by Diane Simmons. In "Tom Tucker: The Man and His Dream", it is revealed that the paramedics who loaded Woods' body into the ambulance recognized him and had his body rushed to a special Hollywood hospital where a teenage girl's life force was drained into Woods which successfully resurrected him. He is still a born-again Christian when he encounters Peter Griffin and Tom Tucker in Hollywood. In "The Simpsons Guy", James Woods was present in Springfield at the trial between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. During this time, he interacted with his Simpsons counterpart from "Homer and Apu". The episode "Inside Family Guy" had James Woods hosting the behind-the-scenes theme of the episode.
- Jeffrey (voiced by Mike Henry) - Jeffrey is Bruce's boyfriend and is rarely shown. He is finally seen in "Meg's Wedding" where he and Bruce finally got married.
- Jerome (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) – A 42-year-old African-American man, who first appeared in "Jerome is the New Black" in which he won the audition as a temporary replacement for Cleveland. It is revealed he was involved with Lois Griffin in their younger days before she met Peter, which made Peter jealous enough to burn down Jerome's house. So Lois invited him to come live with them. Peter believed that Jerome was trying to steal Lois from him and became jealous. He kicked Jerome out of his house, but later apologized to him and they remained friends. Jerome also tells Peter that he had some nasty ass sex with Meg when he was staying with the Griffins although Peter told him that he does not care about that. He returns in "Save the Clam" playing for Mort Goldman's softball team against Peter and his team from The Drunken Clam. He accidentally kills Horace by swinging the ball towards his face. Jerome appears at the funeral where he apologizes for accidentally killing Horace. When it came to the demolition of The Drunken Clam which Peter, Quagmire, and Joe were protesting, Jerome appears and uses his sports earnings from lacrosse (which also happens to be his brother's name) to buy The Drunken Clam in order to keep Horace's legacy alive. In "Baby Got Black", it is revealed that Jerome has a daughter named Pam and at first disapproved of her relationship with Chris. In "Follow the Money", Jerome reveals that he lost both his childhood sweetheart and their daughter shortly after their wedding. In "Pawtucket Pete," it is revealed that Jerome's voice is unaffected by helium as seen when Peter fired a harpoon gun at Brian Griffin's parade balloon.
- Jesus Christ (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in early episodes, David Goodman in "Stu and Stewie's Excellent Adventure", Seth Green in "The Courtship of Stewie's Father", Alec Sulkin in later episodes) – The central figure of Christianity. Throughout the duration of the series, there has been a running gag that Jesus drives a Cadillac Escalade. This is first seen in the episode "Blind Ambition", in which he uses it to pick up God from the Drunken Clam after He accidentally set the bar on fire. In "North by North Quahog", he is seen in the car in a trailer for the action film The Passion of the Christ 2: Crucify This starring Jim Caviezel as Jesus and Chris Tucker, and directed by Mel Gibson. Jesus Christ's most prominent appearance on the show came in the episode "I Dream of Jesus", where he worked in disguise at a vinyl record store called "Dead Format Records" before being recognized by Peter. After a public display of his powers, including walking on water, he becomes a huge celebrity in Quahog. While having dinner with the Griffins, Jesus proves to Brian that he actually is Jesus Christ by turning their dinners into ice cream sundaes, before immensely enlarging Lois' breasts at Peter's request, to the absolute shock of Brian. As the episode progresses, Jesus lets fame get to his head more and more while becoming more distant from Peter and his family, and ultimately gets himself incarcerated for drug abuse. When Peter visits him in prison, Jesus apologizes for his actions and decides that he probably was not mature enough to return to the world. He then gives Peter another record of "Surfin' Bird" as a gift after the first one he had was destroyed by Brian and Stewie. In "Chitty Chitty Death Bang", he turned water into funk. In the episode "Holy Crap", Francis repeatedly gives Jesus the employee of the week award, and is himself later seen in a golf course going for a fourth birdie. Upon missing his putt, he uses his power to move the ball into the hole. In the episode "And the Wiener is...", Jesus and Moses use guns to defeat the Romans in a film by the National Gun Association. In the episode "Deep Throats", Lois asks "What if Jesus had given up?", after which Jesus is seen in a shabby-looking house sitting lazily in a chair, with several children running around him, and calls out to their mother asking why their ironing board is still out. In "Stu and Stewie's Excellent Adventure", the adult Stewie tells his infant self of a time when he went back in time on vacation to see Jesus, saying that his abilities may have been exaggerated a bit. A cutaway shows adult Stewie and other members of the public watching Jesus perform Art Metrano's "tricks" while humming the song "Fine and Dandy". In "Boys Do Cry", Stewie imagines what it would be like meeting Jesus, and in a cutaway is then seen entering a room in Jesus' house to find him naked washing himself in a tub. Despite noticing Stewie, he carries on. In "Jerome is the New Black", he has an African-American counterpart in "Black Jesus" who is portrayed as a cool laid back character and is seen wearing sunglasses. In "Go, Stewie, Go", he is seen in a dodgeball game on the side of the jocks pelting numerous balls at the nerds. In "Life of Brian", Stewie is seen at the last supper suggesting the idea of rebellion to Judas Iscariot, pointing out that Jesus ordered five margaritas while all Judas had was the salad. In other episodes, Jesus has also been portrayed as a voice of reason, such as in "Family Goy", where he tells Peter about his Jewish identity after Peter and Lois quarreled over whether their family should be Christian or Jewish. However, in response to Peter's question asking which religion his family should follow, Jesus says "6 of 1, they're all complete crap". In "3 Acts of God", it is shown that Jesus is dating Carrie Underwood. In "The 2000-Year-Old Virgin," Jesus has broken up with Carrie Underwood.
- Jillian Russell-Wilcox (voiced by Drew Barrymore) – Brian's cute, bulimic, and dimwitted 23-year-old ex-girlfriend who is portrayed as a stereotypical blonde. She is quite ignorant; for example, she does not understand that Adolf Hitler was defeated decades ago. She has a close friendship with Peter, who treats her more like a daughter than he does Meg, due to their similar levels of intelligence. The remainder of the Griffin family look on her as a figure of mockery and symbol of Brian's shallowness, although she has affection for them, involving them all in her wedding. She first appeared in "Whistle While Your Wife Works". She is the only girlfriend that Brian has dated for more than one episode, and was a recurring character in Season 5. He stays with her purely for sex, though after they split, he felt strong feelings of love for her. In "Prick Up Your Ears", when Brian talks about Jillian's bulimia, he goes on to compare her to Karen from The Carpenters, who succumbed to anorexia in 1983, claiming she "overdid it" but he thinks "Jillian's found a good balance". She breaks up with Brian in "Movin' Out" when it is revealed that Brian did not want a committed relationship with her, and she briefly dated Mayor West. She got married in the episode "We Love You, Conrad". In "And Then There Were Fewer", her husband Derek Wilcox was murdered by Diane Simmons, making Jillian a widow. She is shown dating again in "Tiegs for Two", where Quagmire attempts to date her to make Brian jealous, but she and Cheryl Tiegs leave together when they realize how immature both men are acting. In "Valentine's Day in Quahog", Jillian is among the ex-girlfriends of Brian that Stewie assembles.
- Jim Kaplan (voiced by Danny Smith) – A con man who tricks Peter into spending money on various useless things on many occasions. He was first introduced as Doug but has been referred to as Jim in later episodes. First appearing in "There's Something About Paulie", he sells a car to Peter that does not have an engine under the hood but rather a picture of one by claiming that the car belonged to James Bond. He later sells Peter volcano insurance in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein" where Peter paid him with Lois' rainy day money (which she planned to use after Stewie broke Meg's glasses). With help from the accountant Max Weinstein, Peter reclaimed the money. Jim later sells Peter a TiVo in "Bango Was His Name Oh!". In "A Fish out of Water", he gives Peter a loan for Peter's new fishing boat and Peter offers up his house as collateral which later gets taken over by the bank and sold to a fashionable, artsy, neo-hippie-ish new couple named Jim and Abby. In "Hell Comes to Quahog", he sells Peter a tank for Meg at a car dealership for her first car and finally convinces him by saying "Did I mention it's a tank?"
- Judge Dignified Q. Blackman (voiced by Phil LaMarr) – The African-American judge who presides over trials involving any of this show's characters. His full name was revealed by the bailiff in "Veteran Guy" when Peter, Cleveland, and Joe were on trial for violating the Stolen Valor Act of 2013.
- Lou Spinazola - The building manager of the seedy apartment building that Brian Griffin resides in from "The D in Apartment 23" to "Crimes and Meg's Demeanor." Lou's one rule in his apartment building is to never kiss the mail carrier. In "Married... with Cancer," Lou allows Brian and his terminal cancer-recovered wife Jess Schlotz to move in while having developed a sitcom catchphrase.
- Paddy Tanniger – A short red-haired angry man who has been seen as a caddy manager and a Hummer salesman. He generally ends his statements with "Big whoop, wanna fight about it?" He was eventually killed when he was run over by a tank piloted by Brian and Stewie in "Hell Comes to Quahog". It is mentioned on the DVD commentary for "The Perfect Castaway" that the character was disliked by nearly all the writing staff, which led to his death.
- Rupert (voiced by David Boat in "Stewie Loves Lois," "Stewie Kills Lois, "Lois Kills Stewie," and "Road to the North Pole") – A stuffed teddy bear that belongs to one-year-old Stewie Griffin. Though inanimate, Rupert has become his personal confidant and best friend. Stewie confides all his secrets and machinations in Rupert, and often gets upset when Rupert does not respond. Rupert has been known to double as a pistol when needed "Peter, Peter, Caviar Eater". Rupert has been damaged several times. The first time in a flashback in "Stu & Stewie's Excellent Adventure", Stewie argued with Brian about the economy and Brian decided to eat one of Rupert's legs. Stewie got the leg back after a while. The second time involved encountering an unfamiliar Rottweiler dog in "Stewie Loves Lois". Rupert was torn to shreds but was later sewn back together by Lois. In "A Very Special Family Guy Freakin' Christmas", Stewie tears Rupert in two, after waking up from a Santa Claus-themed nightmare. In "Killer Queen", Stewie shoots Rupert in the head with a gun rather than risk letting him die a worse death when he sees the cover of a Queen album. In "The Man with Two Brians", he is humped by New Brian for two hours. Stewie is then shown dragging a body into the garbage, later revealed to be New Brian. At the end of the episode Stewie is shown crying in the shower and washing Rupert in despair, constantly reassuring him that it was not his fault. In "Chick Cancer", when Stewie married Olivia Fuller, he had Rupert officiate the ceremony. "8 Simple Rules for Buying My Teenage Daughter" had the creation of Stewpert, a being where Stewie and Rupert were fused together after Stewie activated his teleportation device before he realized Rupert was inside, in reference to Brundlefly of The Fly. Stewie had several times referred to him as gay. Stewie accused Rupert of choosing to watch the boys in "Road to Rhode Island" as opposed to watching their bags as Stewie has told him to, much to Stewie's chagrin. In the episode "Road to Rupert". Brian accidentally sells Rupert causing both Brian and Stewie (after Brian confesses to selling Rupert by accident) to head off to the Swiss Alps to retrieve him from the family that he was sold to, eventually challenging the father of the family to a ski race to either get him back or give the family Brian as the stakes, Stewie does not respect the rules and throws hot tea in the other young boy' eyes blinding him long enough to grab Rupert, but Stewie later says that he was through with Rupert and was too old for him, saying "...after all, Brian, I'm nearly one." Stewie has also imagined Rupert as a muscular, human male a few times, including in "Road to the North Pole", where he builds a buff Rupert snowman in the opening credit sequence. However, Rupert retains his Teddy Bear head. In a DVD exclusive scene in "Excellence in Broadcasting", Stewie explores the experience of masturbating and in his fantasy buff Rupert makes out with an equally buff Brian while Stewie is tied to the bed. In the episode "Lois Comes Out of Her Shell", Rupert's head is ripped off by Stewie's evil pet turtle Sheldon who Stewie enters a fight with in return. In "Total Recall", the factory that made Rupert demands all bears are sent back due to them becoming a choking hazard. Lois in shock sends him back and Brian and Stewie go on a life-threatening quest to get him back, only just saving Rupert (and Stewie) from instant death on a furnace. As they return home, Stewie celebrates with Rupert only for Rupert's eye to come off and Stewie to swallow it supposedly killing him with Chris who witnessed the scene casually shouting "Mom, Stewie's dead". In the episode "Quagmire's Quagmire", Stewie must decide whether to "play" with Rupert anymore after Lois finds his newborn plush toy, a blue, scruffy looking, bow-tied teddy bear named Oscar who was apparently given to him by Babs Pewterschmidt (his maternal grandmother) when Stewie was born. This fact is stated by Meg who is in the attic, organizing items from boxes along with Lois. Stewie treats Rupert like a nagging wife juxtaposed to Oscar's imaginary role as the still loved ex-girlfriend. In "Stewie, Chris & Brian's Excellent Adventure", Rupert tells the other stuffed animals that he is straight after Stewie and Brian leave with Chris in the time machine. In "Dog Bites Bear", Brian accidentally destroys Rupert while drunk. He later replaces him with an identical looking bear that Stewie believes to be Rupert having returned from the dead. In the season 19 episode “The Talented Mr. Stewie” Stewie “breaks up” with Rupert after having found out he belonged to Chris before Stewie was born. Stewie then returns Rupert to Chris and in trying to fill the void starts playing with different stuffed animals, but to no avail. Eventually Stewie is driven by jealousy to kill Chris and Rupert. After realizing Chris planned on returning Rupert, Stewie saves a drowning Chris and reconciles with Rupert.
- Seamus Levine[15] (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Seamus is a tough fisherman with two peg-legs as well as two peg arms. He wears a black eye-patch over his right eye. He makes his first appearance in the episode "A Fish Out of Water". While spending time with Peter and the gang in a steam room, it is revealed his whole body from the neck down is wood. He tends to warn Peter of danger. Seamus had his own talk show in "Perfect Castaway". In his premiere episode, he jokes that his father was a tree, but in the episode "And Then There Were Fewer" he blames his condition on James Woods. Seamus initially claims that Woods carved him from wood and did not wish hard enough for him to be a real boy, but he later revealed that they both got high on acid one day and Woods ate off Seamus' arms and legs, thinking that he was a steak. In "Ocean's Three and a Half", when Seamus is seen naked, his body is entirely wooden while his head is human, bringing into question how he can sustain life. He played Byron Hadley in the series' portrayal of The Shawshank Redemption which was seen the second of the "Three kings". In a DVD exclusive scene, Seamus tries out for Fox News Channel in "FOX-y Lady". He gets a ship in a bottle for Christmas in "Road to the North Pole". In "Tiegs for Two", he attends Quagmire's class on how to pick up women. In "Cool Hand Peter", Seamus attempts to join in Peter, Joe, Cleveland, and Quagmire's road trip only to be rejected by Peter. In "The Simpsons Guy", Seamus attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale where he was sitting next to Captain Horatio McCallister. In "Christmas Is Coming" his son Woody was introduced; he also has two peg-legs and two peg arms.
- Vinny (voiced by Tony Sirico) – A 4-year-old talking Italian greyhound whose first appearance in the franchise occurs in "Life of Brian". After Brian is killed in a tragic car accident, the Griffin family decides to find another dog at the pet store to ease their grief. They meet Vinny, a pussyhound (he is 1/16th cat) of Italian descent.[16] Each member of the family is taken by the dog, save for Stewie, and he is adopted into their family. Stewie, still mourning over the death of Brian, rebuffs the hound and makes several attempts to get him out of the family. However, once Stewie learns that Vinny had also undergone a period of mourning when his owner died in a freak yoga accident, he comes to accept Vinny as a part of the family. His personality is that of a streetwise, "wise guy" Italian American. In "Christmas Guy", Vinny found out that Carter Pewterschmidt canceled an event at Quahog Mall upon asking around and reported this to the Griffin family. Vinny helps Stewie distract his past self so he can steal the return pad from his backpack and travel back in time to save Brian. Before Stewie goes back in time, he says his goodbyes to Vinny. Just before Stewie travels back in time, Vinny walks off shouting "Georgette, I'm coming home!" to which Stewie questions himself on who "Georgette" is. At the end of "The Boys in the Band," Vinny was seen performing with Olivia Fuller.
Gag characters
- Al Harrington (voiced by Danny Smith) – The owner, president, and CEO of "Al Harrington's Wacky Waving Inflatable Arm-Flailing Tubeman Emporium and Warehouse". In an advertisement, he speaks at an incredibly fast rate and could be described as "in-your-face", but just in that friendly-annoying way, as described by Peter. In "The Simpsons Guy", Al Harrington made a cameo at the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale.
- Barbershop Quartet (voiced by Jon Joyce, Bob Joyce, Rick Logan, and Randy Crenshaw) – A group of four men that sing close harmony songs in specific episodes.
- Big Bird (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) - Parody of a fictional character from the children's television program Sesame Street, Big Bird, or sometimes referred to as "Bird" appears in multiple episodes such as "I Never Met The Dead Man", "A Picture's Worth a Thousand Bucks", "Model Misbehavior", "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air", "The Peter Principal", and also "Brian's Play" were he is portrayed as a meth addict working as the resources director of The Muppets.
- Buzz Killington (voiced by Danny Smith) – A man who dresses and acts as if he is a 19th-century British man of means. His name is based on the term "buzzkill". He is a stereotype of a socially popular person in the late 19th century, but by today's standard would be regarded as a "buzzkill". He is typically introduced into otherwise fun situations, such as a wild party, but his contributions (showing etchings, telling stories) bring the party (and fun) to a grinding halt, resulting in al least one character rubbing between their eyes in annoyance with a pained sigh.
- Conway Twitty – Usually seen in archival footage of his performances, which are used when one of the characters needs a distraction. The first such appearance was in the episode "Peter's Daughter" where Meg's wedding had just been called off and Peter said that the guests were expecting a show—cut to a clip of Twitty singing his best-known song, "Hello Darlin'". Twitty has also been featured in "Bill and Peter's Bogus Journey" and "The Juice is Loose" (which featured a 3-minute clip of him singing "I See the Want To in Your Eyes"). In "It's a Trap!", he's referred to as Darth Twitty and a Darth Vader helmet is digitally placed over his hair. In "Lois Comes Out of Her Shell", Peter beats up Justin Bieber just before a concert, so the scene cuts to "Conway Bieber" digitally sporting the young singer's floppy hair. In "3 Acts of God", God tells Peter that Twitty wanted him to tell Peter to quit using him in cutaway gags.[17]
- Cookie Monster (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Cookie Monster is, like Big Bird, a fictional character from Sesame Street who has made various appearances on this show.
- Evil Monkey (voiced by Danny Smith) – A 31-year-old monkey living in Chris's closet, who scares Chris whenever he jumps out of the closet by pointing at him with an evil grimace and a strange tremble (which the monkey claims is due to a copper deficiency). For much of the series, the family believes the Evil Monkey is a figment of Chris's imagination. In "Hannah Banana", Chris blames him for a bad test grade, saying that he scared him while he was trying to study. Peter and Lois are stunned when Chris catches him and shows him to them. The Evil Monkey explains that he moved into Chris's closet after his wife had an affair and divorced him, and pointing at Chris was his way of trying to make conversation. Chris is unconvinced, but when Monkey helps him write a book report, they become friends. Eventually, Monkey moves out of Chris's closet and, saying "I'll go where I'm needed", moves into Jake Tucker's closet. The monkey's trademark grimace and pointing was the idea of writer Mike Barker.[18] In The Cleveland Show episode "BFFs", Peter Griffin brought the Evil Monkey with him to rescue Cleveland and his friends from hillbilly rapists.
- Ernie the Giant Chicken (voiced by Danny Smith) – An anthropomorphic, human-sized, 32-year-old chicken that often fights violently and suddenly with Peter Griffin, usually interrupting some unrelated event. The fight scenes are often long and melodramatic, involving the destruction of large sections of Quahog and sometimes killing bystanders. Peter always wins, but it is then shown that the Giant Chicken is still alive. This rivalry begins in "Da Boom" when the Giant Chicken gives Peter an expired coupon, which angers Peter (however, in "Meet the Quagmires", Peter's meddling in his past allows him to accidentally punch the Giant Chicken while dancing at the Country Club, giving a new origin to the rivalry). In "Blind Ambition", the Giant Chicken turns up while the Spooner Street residents are discussing Quagmire peeping in the ladies' room watching Lois, and Peter interrupts his defense of Quagmire to rejoin the fight. In "No Chris Left Behind", their fight comes to a halt when Peter and the Giant Chicken forget what they have been fighting about, and Peter is cordially invited to dinner with the Chicken and his wife Nicole. Although the character's official name in scripts and production documents is simply "the Giant Chicken", the Chicken is referred to as "Ernie" in this dinner scene. When the bill comes, both Peter and Ernie try to pay. This starts out politely but quickly escalates to a fight that resumes their feud. In "Big Man on Hippocampus", the Chicken ends up attacking an amnesiac Peter when he insults his lawn. The blow to the head causes Peter to remember who he is, and he states that he does not remember making peace with the Chicken, who resumes smashing various objects on his head. Ernie is shown as Boba Fett in the Star Wars episodes "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side" and "It's a Trap!". In "New Kidney in Town", Dr. Hartman tells the Griffins about a failed cloning attempt that resulted in a violent man-sized chicken. Peter responds that they should talk. He also appears in "Trading Places", when Chris makes a chicken noise and says it was fake. The Chicken's fight with Peter continues in "Internal Affairs", where Peter accidentally backs into the front of the Chicken's car; during this brawl, the Chicken is close to killing Peter at an oil rig, but gets burned alive by the falling debris and plunges into the ocean, taking on the appearance of a roasted chicken—but he reveals he is still alive by opening his eyes. In "Yug Ylimaf", Brian and Stewie witness a backwards fight between Peter and the Chicken that "ends" by Peter opening his car door in front of the Chicken's moving bicycle. He is the main antagonist in Family Guy Video Game! disguised as Mr. Belvedere. Ernie is not directly referenced in the episode "Life of Brian", but in the veterinary surgery waiting room when Peter asks a decapitated chicken if he should be running around, the chicken says "Don't talk to me. You have a bad reputation in the chicken community". In the crossover episode with The Simpsons, titled "The Simpsons Guy", Comic Book Guy references the aforementioned "chicken fights", by claiming the epic fight between Peter and Homer Simpson was the "worst chicken fight ever". In "Follow the Money", Lois has become friends with Ernie much to the dismay of Peter and Nicole. In that same episode, Lois and Nicole get into a similar fight at a coffee shop, with Ernie trying to convince them to stop. Instead of having excessive violence and causing massive destruction and deaths, they just slap and tackle/wrestle each other, breaking a tip jar and dislocating minor character RJ's right arm in the process. For the "Viewer Mail 2" Segment "Chap of the Manor", which shows a British version of the series, Ernie is replaced by a Giant English Pheasant, who accidentally hit's Peter's Counterpart Neville with his chair. The two get into a similar fight, except it's 3 seconds of slapping and they exchange pleasantries when it's over.
- Fred Flintstone (voiced by Jeff Bergman) – Fred Flintstone is a caveman from The Flintstones who has made various appearances on the show. In "Patriot Games" where he warns viewers to 'vote no on Indian gaming laws'. He also bet with Stewie on the Mike Tyson vs. Carol Channing fight on Celebrity Boxing. In "Believe it or Not, Joe's Walking on Air" when at Peter Griffin's men's club, he confesses to Barney that he was walking by his house when he saw Betty undressing. Fred says that Betty saw him, but kept undressing leading to an "erocktion." Fred also appeared in "Peter's Daughter" as they see a marriage counselor/divorce lawyer named Mr. Stoneberg over the rough parts of their marriage. In "Quagmire's Baby", Fred Flintstone was seen in Wildest Police Chases being pursued by police officers which ended at a movie theater where the police officers apprehend Fred Flintstone when he tried to climb the fence. In "The Simpsons Guy", Fred Flintstone is the judge who presided over the trial involving Pawtucket Patriot Beer and Duff Beer in Springfield. While he finds in favor of Duff Beer, Fred Flintstone states that they pale in comparison to his favorite beer Bud Rock.
- The Greased-up Deaf Guy (voiced by Mike Henry) – A naked man covered in grease who first appears in "The Thin White Line". His speech is indicative of someone with prelingual deafness. He is always shown running; even when stopped, he will continue to run in place, flailing his arms. In "North by North Quahog", he mentions that he used to be a lawyer. In "Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Jr. High", he is seen speaking in court during the show's Law and Order-parody intro. He was named Jay after an audience member by the same name in Family Guy Live queried his name in a Q&A session. He appears in the direct-to-DVD movie Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story. He also appears in Family Guy Online. The reason for his condition was revealed in "Yug Ylimaf" where an accident with Stewie's time machine caused Brian and Stewie to witness him on his way to work hurrying past a grease truck that explodes, burning off his suit, and covering him in grease.
- James William Bottomtooth III (voiced by Chris Sheridan) – A character who suffers from a severe underbite (Habsburg jaw), which has given him a comically oversized lower jaw and has made his speech impossible to understand due to his extreme Locust Valley lockjaw accent. He has a taste for brandy, which he pours into his lower jaw. He is part of the staff of The New Yorker in "Brian Goes Back to College". In "You May Now Kiss the...Uh...Guy Who Receives", he refuses to sign Brian's petition against Mayor Adam West's gay marriage ban because he is a devout Christian. He has a son named James William Bottomtooth IV who attends Morningwood Academy and bears a strong resemblance to his father (particularly the large lower jaw and speech). Like his classmates, he holds a strong antipathy for Chris, as seen in "No Chris Left Behind", until he finds out that Chris is the grandson of Carter Pewterschmidt, who also attended Morningwood. He is part of the mob that rushes the Griffin home in "The Juice Is Loose" to deal with O.J. Simpson. In "420", he catches a bag of marijuana in his jaw. In "Tiegs for Two", he attends Quagmire's class on how to pick up women.
- Kool-Aid Guy (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – The mascot for the popular drink Kool-Aid is parodied in several episodes. In "Death Has a Shadow" and "Stewie Kills Lois", when each family member exclaims "Oh no!" to the Judge's sentencing of Peter, the Kool-Aid Guy breaks through the courtroom wall yelling "OH YEAH!", then backs away awkwardly. In "Peterotica", he has an epiphany while sitting in his living room when a car crashes through his wall, which put him on the receiving end of the breaking wall for the first time. In "Prick Up Your Ears", after Stewie panics about the existence of the Tooth Fairy, Brian and Chris fail to calm Stewie, then Glenn Quagmire makes an attempt, then the Kool-Aid Guy is seen in a pair of boxing gloves at the back of a line of other characters. In "The Hand That Rocks the Wheelchair", Evil Stewie lures him out by pretending to impersonate other people saying "Oh no!"; when he bursts through the wall, Evil Stewie shatters him with a baseball bat, and drinks up the spilled Kool-Aid. Thanks to Stewie's and Brian's interference, the Kool-Aid Guy misses his cue when they travel back to the events in "Death Has a Shadow" in "Back to the Pilot", when he shatters trying to back out of the courthouse. He is still able to yell at Stewie and Brian where he blamed them for messing things up. In "Valentine's Day in Quahog", the Kool-Aid Guy is with his parents when they meet his date in the form of an anthropomorphic Yoo-hoo bottle (much to his father's dismay). In "The Simpsons Guy", the Kool-Aid Guy attempts to break through the wall during a trial between Pawtucket Patriot Beer and Duff Beer in Springfield. However, he calls Peter to apologize that he "went to the wrong Springfield" as he broke through the wall of the courthouse there. This references the fact that the state in which The Simpsons version of Springfield is located has never been revealed.
- Phineas and Barnaby – Two strongmen that usually pursue two goals: working out at the Quahog Gym and riding high-wheel 'Penny Farthing' bicycles of the 1860s–1890s.
- Tomik and Bellgarde (voiced by John Viener and Alec Sulkin) – Two foreign guys who have "been living in the United States almost long enough to sound American". They first appear in "The Former Life of Brian" sitting in a coffee shop discussing how much fun they had at a "discotheque" and reflecting that they had drunk "so many liters of beer". In "Extra Large Medium", they wonder how to celebrate Gerbitz Day, a holiday in their native country. In "Road to the North Pole", they participated in the musical number "All I Really Want For Christmas" where they revealed they do not know what Christmas is and that their home country has a similar holiday called "Kishkev Fufleer". They are alcoholics attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings Peter attends in "Friends of Peter G." They do not share any stories, but participate in the performance of "Mr. Booze".
- Vern and Johnny (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) – Two Vaudeville characters who appear in cutaways and are dressed in traditional turn-of-the-century outfits. Vern will often perform a line or two of a song and then, either because he is finished or because his act is not going well, he asks Johnny to "play me off", at which point Johnny enthusiastically plays "Galloping Gertie" on the piano. They debut in the episode "Holy Crap" and perform in the talent show in "Deep Throats". They appear in two small boats connected by a rope by Carter Pewterschmidt's racing yacht in "Model Misbehavior". In "Saving Private Brian", they are both shot to death by Stewie, who says "They're dead, all right? We're not gonna be seeing them again". This is later proven wrong in "Back to the Woods" when Vern is shown to be performing in the surface world as a ghost and Johnny is shown playing piano in Hell; he is then revealed by Vern to be there because he's attracted to young boys.
Deaths
Five actors who voiced semi-regular Family Guy characters have died:
- Phyllis Diller (d. 2012), who played Peter's mother, Thelma[19]
- Charles Durning (d. 2012), who voiced his father, Francis, and who died after his character had already been killed off in the series;[20]
- Carrie Fisher (d. 2016), who played Angela, Peter's boss at the brewery;[21]
- Frank Sinatra Jr. (d. 2016), who appeared in three episodes as himself;[22]
- Adam West (d. 2017), who voiced Mayor Adam West.[23]
References
- "WATCH: Brian Griffin Returns to Family Guy". Mediaite. December 15, 2013. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
- Kraus, Leah; Venkateswaren, Nandini (September 11, 2008). "Mike Henry of "Family Guy" talks voices, gags and instinct". Campus Times. Retrieved January 8, 2010.
- Meg and Quagmire
- No Giggity, No Doubt
- Swift, Andy (September 25, 2020). "Family Guy Reveals New Actor Voicing Cleveland Brown in Season 19". TVLine. Retrieved September 25, 2020.
- Walker, Jodi (October 24, 2013). "'Family Guy': Details on Cleveland's return". Insidetv.ew.com. Archived from the original on October 26, 2013. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
- "FOX November Sweeps – Press Release | Spoilers". SpoilerTV.com. October 17, 2011. Retrieved December 10, 2013.
- "Interview with Seth MacFarlane". IGN. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
- "Twitter/SethMacFarlane: Yes, tonight's episode is". Twitter. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved December 10, 2013.
- "Exclusive: Interview with Lori Alan, the voice of Diane Simmons". everyjoe.com. January 11, 2010. Archived from the original on April 6, 2012. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- "Friends of Peter G.". Family Guy. Season 9. Episode 10. February 13, 2011. 12:13 minutes in. Fox.
This poor gentleman used to speak in long, eloquent sentences. But after years of drinking he can only speak in short, choppy utterances.
- Steve Callaghan (writer) (September 5, 2001). "Mr. Saturday Knight". Family Guy. Season 3. Episode 9. Fox Broadcasting Company.
- http://ew.com/tv/2016/12/28/carrie-fisher-family-guy/
- "Scammed Yankees". Family Guy. Season 14. Episode 12. January 17, 2016. Fox.
- Valentine's Day in Quahog
- Cannon, William (November 25, 2013). "Brian Griffin Dies: 4 Things To Know About 'Family Guy' Newcomer Vinny". Latin Times. Retrieved November 25, 2013.
- "Family Guy Episode Guide 2014 Season 12 – 3 Acts of God, Episode 13". TVGuide.com. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
- "Seth MacFarlane Interview". TVShowsOnDVD.com. April 21, 2003. Archived from the original on August 24, 2007. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
- Diller's last episode was in season 6, episode 6, "Padre de Familia"
- Francis Griffin died in season 5, episode 10, "Peter's Two Dads", but then came back as a vision of Peter's in season 8, episode 2, "Family Goy"
- Fisher's last appearance was in season 15, episode 17, "Peter's Lost Youth"
- Sinatra's last appearance was in season 15, episode 2, "Bookie of the Year"
- West's last appearance was in the season 17, episode 5, "Three Directors", which aired on November 5, 2017