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Bottle episode trope
Bottle episode trope







bottle episode trope
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  • " Bullocks to Stan": Hayley begins dating Stan's boss, Avery Bullock.
  • Meanwhile, Roger is going through his reproductive cycle and, in the process, accidentally impregnates Steve.
  • " Deacon Stan, Jesus Man": Stan, wanting to beat his rival, Chuck White, at something, volunteers to become a replacement deacon against him after the previous deacon dies.
  • bottle episode trope

    Meanwhile, Steve is abused by his scout troop members and Roger excretes a golden turd that brings out the evil in people. " Homeland Insecurity": Stan suspects the new neighbors, the Memaris, of being terrorists because of their Middle Eastern background." Roger Codger": Roger is feared dead after Stan yells at him and Roger slips into a coma.Meanwhile, a popular girl will only date Steve if someone goes out with her ugly best friend, Jewel - who finds a mate in a reluctant Roger. " Francine's Flashback": To avoid getting beaten up and appearing on COPS, Stan brainwashes Francine into forgetting that he forgot their wedding anniversary, but a mistake makes Francine think she's a wild teenager from 1985.Meanwhile, Steve claims Roger is his horribly disfigured burn-victim sister in order to gain sympathy from and ask out a girl to the school dance (and to get her bra on a dare). " Stan Knows Best": Hayley moves out of the house - and into her boyfriend's van - after having enough of Stan's harsh rules.and must learn to make her own money after Stan takes away her credit card and refuses to pay for her community college education.

    #Bottle episode trope series

    Meanwhile, Steve and his friends try to start their own Girls Gone Wild-type video series and Hayley uses an empty house next door as a homeless shelter.

    bottle episode trope

  • " Threat Levels": After surviving a virus scare, Francine realizes that her life is unfulfilled and she needs something to do, so Stan gets her a job as a real estate agent, and comes to regret it when Francine makes more money than he does.
  • Originally aired February 6, 2005, after Super Bowl XXXIX. Meanwhile, Roger (an extraterrestrial living with the Smiths after Stan rescued him from Area 51) gets angry when Stan's wife, Francine, cuts off his junk food supply and turns to helping Hayley (the community college-attending, socially liberal daughter of the family) finish her term papers in exchange for sweets.
  • " Pilot": CIA agent Stan Smith helps his geeky son, Steve Smith, get the attention of a cheerleader (guest voiced by Carmen Electra) by rigging the student council elections in his favor.
  • bottle episode trope

    Starting from the 2016 season, there are 22 episodes in each season.

    #Bottle episode trope download

    For Netflix, Hulu, and various digital download and streaming services, the FOX finale mini-season and the first season that aired on TBS are all one season.įor ease of reference, the production season will be in parentheses next to the broadcast season.

    #Bottle episode trope tv

    On TV and most online sources, it's a separate mini-season. There is also a point of contention on whether or not the final three episodes for FOX (from "Roger Passes the Bar" to "Blagsnarst: A Love Story") are considered a separate mini-season or the first part of a new season. However, the DVD version (which puts episodes in volumes, not seasons) has both parts of season one as one season. Note: For television broadcast, season one was split into two parts: part one goes from the pilot episode to "Deacon Stan, Jesus Man" while part two goes from "Bullocks to Stan" to "Tears of a Clooney". Since October 2014, the show now has new episodes (on Monday nights) and reruns on TBS while additional reruns (and encores of the TBS episodes) can be seen on Cartoon Network's line-up. The series started out on the FOX Network from 2005 to 2014. The following is a list of episode summaries for the Seth MacFarlane series, American Dad!, his second animated Dom Com centered on a conservative CIA agent named Stan Smith and his family: his hot, yet unstable wife, Francine his geeky, girl-chasing son, Steve his socially-liberal community college-dropout daughter, Hayley (and later, her stoner husband, Jeff Fischer) his house guest, a fey, hedonistic alien named Roger whom he rescued from Area 51, and Klaus, his lecherous, often ignored pet goldfish who used to be an East German skier.









    Bottle episode trope