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Stewie gay

‘Family Guy’ Addresses Stewie’s Sexuality, His Accent & More

SPOILER ALERT: This story contains details of Sunday’s episode ofFamily Guy on Fox.

It was an eye-opening episode of Fox’s Family Guy Sunday. The “Send in Stewie, Please” episode, which aired commercial-free, took viewers into Stewie Griffin’s therapy session, exploring his sexuality (which has been a running joke) directly for the first time and other things that revealed Stewie has been pretending to be someone he’s not.

Ian McKellan guest-starred as Stewie’s therapist Dr. Cecil Pritchfield, who was called in to counsel Stewie after the Griffin’s youngest, most evil member did something terrible to a pre-school classmate.

It was noticeable early on during the therapy session that there would still be questions about Stewie’s sexuality.

“Stewie’s understanding of his sexuality is this uncertain thing, and that needs to linger as it is. His uncertainty gives him a vulnerability, which is something we need to maintain for the series, scribe Gary Janetti told Deadline’s sister pub TVLine. Whether he is [gay] or not, tha

stewie gay

Stewie opens up about his sexuality and accent on ‘Family Guy’

In a capital known for its content hour culture, summer can be an even finer time to take benefit of post-work drink and eat deals. Interns are in town, summer Fridays are in full swing, and patios and rooftops are aplenty. Here are a few prime, non-comprehensive spots for an afternoon deal with besties, colleagues, and new connections. 

Alfreda. Dupont’s Alfreda, a tribute to the chef’s grandmother, bids relaxed pizza and traditional Italian eats. The content hour runs Monday-Friday 4-6 p.m., featuring $8 spritzes and BOGO pizzas. Rare do spritzes like the Italians, and Alfreda leans in on five kinds plus one N/A spritz; our go-to is the rose and mezcal with grapefruit or the locally made Don Ciccio limoncello spritz with basil.

Lyle’s. Especially leaning into the spritz side of summer is at Lyle’s, fully embracing the fizzy ephemera of the season with the Summer of Spritz. The Dupont Circle hotel restaurant imagines cocktails from France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Spritzes feature limoncello and vinho verde. For those that hit Lyle’s every week during the spritz special—and get a literal st

'Family Guy' Finally Addresses If Stewie Is Gay

Family Guy finally addresses Stewie’s sexuality and reveals his genuine voice…

Family Guy has hinted at and joked about Stewie’s sexuality for years now, though the subject has never been directly addressed. On Sunday late hours, however, all of that changed.

The episode titled “Send in Stewie, Please,” took place entirely in a therapy session after Stewie was sent to talk with Dr. Pritchfield (voiced by Ian McKellen) after pushing another boy at school down the stairs.

“I only pushed Tyler down the stairs because I like him and I’m afraid he won’t appreciate me back,” Stewie admitted to Dr. Pritchfield. “And not like him enjoy him. I’m not queer. This whole thing isn’t because I’m gay so calm down, I can already see you licking your chops. I’m sure you live for the ‘coming out’ sessions. If anything I’m less queer than I used to be. Not that anybody at this school would care. But do I think Grant Gustin and I would make the most adorable Instagram couple? Yes, yes we would.”

He added: “Grant Gustin plays The Flash on The

‘Family Guy’ Addresses Stewie’s Sexuality and Reveals His ‘Real’ Voice (VIDEO)

[Spoiler alert: This post contains spoilers from the March 18 Family Guy episode “Send in Stewie, Please”]

Since the beginning of its nearly 20 years (and counting) on the air, Fox’s animated hit Family Guy has played with the idea of toddler Stewie’s (voiced by series creator Seth MacFarlane) sexuality.

It has also given us hints as to just how in the nature the evil super-genius could have sprung from decidedly average parents like Peter and Lois Griffin, and how he could contain developed his Rex Harrison-esque British accent. (Even the notion of whether everyone can even understand Stewie has been in flux over the years.)

On Sunday’s commercial-free, Stewie-centered episode of Family Guy, called “Send in Stewie, Please” (the series’ 300th episode), both of these characteristics of the troublemaking toddler came to the forefront during a therapy session with institution psychologist Dr. Cecil Pritchfield (voiced by Sir Ian McKellen).

One question seems to have been answered (at least, for the purposes of that particul

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