Difference between revisions of "Family Guy: "Guy Robot""
(Created page with ""Guy Robot." ''Family Guy'' 14.3 (11 October 2015). Fox-TV. See [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4848904/|IMDb entry] for details. IMDb storyline notes, "Stewie builds a robot fr...") |
|||
(8 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | "Guy Robot." ''Family Guy'' 14.3 (11 October 2015). Fox-TV. See [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4848904/ | + | '''"Guy Robot." ''Family Guy''''' 14.3 (11 October 2015). Fox-TV. See IMDb entry for videographic details [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4848904/]. |
− | IMDb storyline notes, "Stewie builds a robot friend after a fight with Brian and Lois makes Peter buy a new mattress," relevant here for the robot friend, rendered in cute, anime style. The robot is gendered prepubescent male, but a bit more mature than Stewie; significant for plot and what theme there is, the robot is heuristic and capable of learning, which it does: outstripping Stewie in intelligence and getting to the point where he can build two additional robots. The robotic threesome then bully Stewie until Stewie reconciles with Brian (the talking, semi-intellectual, Prius-driving family dog), and Brian very directly resolves the problem in the canine-decorous fashion of soaking them with a hose. | + | |
+ | IMDb storyline notes, "Stewie builds a robot friend after a fight with Brian and Lois makes Peter buy a new mattress," relevant here for the robot friend, rendered in cute, anime style. The robot is gendered prepubescent male, but a bit more mature than Stewie; significant for plot and what theme there is, the robot is heuristic and capable of learning, which it does: outstripping Stewie in intelligence and getting to the point where he can build two additional robots. The robotic threesome then bully Stewie until Stewie reconciles with Brian (the talking, semi-intellectual, Prius-driving family dog), and Brian very directly resolves the problem in the canine-decorous fashion of "killing" the robots by soaking them with a hose. Note comic/satiric take on motif of [[A BOY AND HIS DOG|a boy and his dog]], with friendship with the organic trumping relationship with the robotic, with the Stewie/Brian/robot plot vaguely paralleling Lois and Peter returning — briefly — to their old, sex-battered and sex-stained mattress after trying a nice, clean new one. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Note also the "critique of pure reason" with the idea here, suggested occasionally by thinkers from Erasmus's attack on Stoics[http://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1509erasmus-folly.asp] to Konrad Lorenz's attack on Kant that purely rational human beings would be (in contemporary terms) unempathic sociopaths.[http://tinyurl.com/hdt49z3|] Note specific reference in dialog to Asperger's syndrome, described by the mother of a son with A.S. as "a form of autism typified by by a distinctly high I.Q. and a notable lack of emotional intelligence."[http://tinyurl.com/5d3f8z] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | RDE Ap2016 | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[CATEGORY: Drama]] |
Latest revision as of 01:14, 25 April 2016
"Guy Robot." Family Guy 14.3 (11 October 2015). Fox-TV. See IMDb entry for videographic details [1].
IMDb storyline notes, "Stewie builds a robot friend after a fight with Brian and Lois makes Peter buy a new mattress," relevant here for the robot friend, rendered in cute, anime style. The robot is gendered prepubescent male, but a bit more mature than Stewie; significant for plot and what theme there is, the robot is heuristic and capable of learning, which it does: outstripping Stewie in intelligence and getting to the point where he can build two additional robots. The robotic threesome then bully Stewie until Stewie reconciles with Brian (the talking, semi-intellectual, Prius-driving family dog), and Brian very directly resolves the problem in the canine-decorous fashion of "killing" the robots by soaking them with a hose. Note comic/satiric take on motif of a boy and his dog, with friendship with the organic trumping relationship with the robotic, with the Stewie/Brian/robot plot vaguely paralleling Lois and Peter returning — briefly — to their old, sex-battered and sex-stained mattress after trying a nice, clean new one.
Note also the "critique of pure reason" with the idea here, suggested occasionally by thinkers from Erasmus's attack on Stoics[2] to Konrad Lorenz's attack on Kant that purely rational human beings would be (in contemporary terms) unempathic sociopaths.[3] Note specific reference in dialog to Asperger's syndrome, described by the mother of a son with A.S. as "a form of autism typified by by a distinctly high I.Q. and a notable lack of emotional intelligence."[4]
RDE Ap2016