Meg Griffin

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Meg Griffin
Quahog, Rhode Island
NationalityAmerican
Age18[1]

Megan

animated television series Family Guy. Meg is the eldest child of Peter and Lois Griffin and older sister of Stewie and Chris, but is also the family's scapegoat
who receives the least of their attention and tolerates the brunt of their abuse. She is often bullied, belittled, ridiculed, and ignored.

Meg first appeared on television, along with the rest of the Griffin family, in the episode "Death Has a Shadow" on January 31, 1999. She was created and designed by Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, who was asked to pitch a pilot to the Fox Broadcasting Company, based on The Life of Larry and Larry & Steve, two shorts made by MacFarlane featuring a middle-aged man named Larry and an intellectual dog, Steve. Meg did not appear in these shorts and was only created after Fox picked up the show.

Originally voiced by

season 2
.

Personality

Meg is a self-conscious and insecure

Neil Goldman is attracted to her.[4]

Meg is usually the butt of Peter's jokes due to her unpopularity and "ugliness"; Peter resorts to outrageous stunts and names. Stewie and Brian tend to disdain her kindness, but they typically do it behind Meg's back. Lois constantly puts Meg down, while boosting her own ego. Lois is usually of little to no help to Meg when she is abused by others; though her attitude is more negligent or apathetic than the more overt and direct abuse given by Peter.

While Meg is usually a pushover, she can get angry when pushed too far, though such occasions are usually rare. This can be seen in the episode "Seahorse Seashell Party", where she strongly insults and defames Peter, Lois, and even Chris for their inconsiderate actions toward her. This causes Peter, Lois, and Chris to distance themselves in shame and sends Peter into depression; though she later apologizes upon realizing that the family needs a "lightning rod" to absorb the dysfunction. In the episode "Road to Rupert", Meg assaults a man for insulting her after a fender-bender.

Despite her persistent mistreatment, Meg has proven a variety of times throughout the series that she is more talented and has greater potential than most people bother to realize, such as

. However, she seldom earns any notable accolades for these abilities, mostly due to her family's lack of regard or interest in her or her inability to stick up against them.

Many of the show's storylines about Meg involve her trying to improve her life, find a boyfriend, being a Russian

".

Out of all the members of the family, her father Peter abuses her the most, however he is shown to actually care about Meg in various episodes, such as in "

Meg and Quagmire" when he goes out of his way to prevent friend and neighbor Glenn Quagmire from having sex with her, and in "This Little Piggy" where he tries to get Meg out of a foot fetishism
business objectifying her for men's sexual amusement. Peter occasionally cares about Meg but is not open about it to anyone.

Voice actors

On the season 1 DVD commentary for the

tenth season episode "Back to the Pilot" in which Brian and Stewie go back in time to the events of "Death Has a Shadow". However, Chabert does in fact return for the eleventh season episode "Yug Ylimaf
" as Stewie references the fact that time has reversed so much that Meg's voice has reverted back from that of Kunis' to Chabert's.

Social life

Meg is very unpopular in high school due to both her plain appearance and personality. She desperately tries to be part of the cool crowd, but is usually coldly rebuffed. Because of her eagerness for acceptance, she has been recruited "unknowingly" into a

Ruth
, are characterized as being highly unpopular and dateless, much like Meg.

Meg is so unpopular at school that one student fires a nail gun into his own abdomen twice (in

Jerome is the New Black
", Jerome, an old flame of Lois's and Peter's new friend, admits to having sex with Meg, to which Peter replies indifferently.

In the episode "

lesbian student named Sarah invites Meg to join in her Lesbian Alliance Club, with Meg not knowing at first what kind of club it was. Desperate to fit in, she pretends to be a lesbian and also pretends to be attracted to Sarah and even goes so far as to kiss her to prove it. At the end of the episode, Meg goes over to Sarah's house to admit she lied about being a lesbian (Sarah thought that Meg came over to have sex and even undresses when Meg is telling her that she lied), much to Glenn's (who was hiding in Sarah's closet) disappointment. She also used to have a crush on anchorman Tom Tucker, but it ended after she discovered his vanity and selfishness. In other episodes, she is portrayed as chronically incapable of finding a boyfriend. For her Junior Prom she accepts a pity date from Brian, the family dog and only after threatening suicide.[19]

Earlier in season 2, she dated Joe Swanson's son Kevin Swanson, but in "

Peter's Daughter", Meg falls in love with a medical student named Michael Milano after coming out of a short coma (caused by Peter when he asked her to "rescue" beer and make him a sandwich out of an already flooded kitchen) and they start to date. After he breaks up with Meg (because of Peter being overprotective of her after promising that if she came out of the coma, he would "treat her like a princess"), she announces that she is pregnant by Michael and the two get engaged. After finding out that she is not actually pregnant, Meg tells Michael the truth hoping that he will stay, however, Michael quickly leaves Meg at the altar. In the episode "Dial Meg for Murder", she is dating a convict, while in the episode "Go, Stewie, Go!
" she dates an attractive young man named Anthony, who is absolutely normal (much to the surprise of many of the other characters). They were so shocked that they had to do tests just to see if he was completely normal which annoyed Meg. It is presumed that she broke up with him after he and Lois had an affair. Meg also shows extremely possessive behavior when she encounters someone she believes she has a romantic connection with such as kidnapping Brian and detaining Bonnie Swanson at the airport by planting a gun in her purse.

Overall, Meg has shown romantic interest in and dated several men throughout the series. However, there have been several instances in which she has shown hints of being

lesbian: examples of this include "Brian Sings and Swings", "Stew-Roids", and "Dial Meg for Murder
".

In November 2016, when asked by

lesbian, taking inspiration from previous instances in which she exhibited signs of lesbian characteristics, like when she joins a lesbian alliance group at school in "Brian Sings and Swings" and is identified as a "transgender man" named "Ron" in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, the latter which takes place in the future. However, Sulkin also noted that the plotline has not yet been finalized and thus isn't officially set to be used in an episode.[20][21]

Family life

In the first three seasons of the show, Meg was portrayed with a more whiny and uptight personality who was often embarrassed by the family’s acts of bumbling and stupidity, though they cared for her and meant well. In the post-cancellation seasons, this began to change as the inadvertent embarrassment became deliberate bullying and disrespect. Additionally, the show started to flesh out the characters to the point where it appears that most of the population of Quahog who knows her, or even just meets her, picks on or disdains her for no reason other than her simply being "Meg".[22] This basically means that she is a victim of circumstance, as Meg is normally docile and well-behaved and never seems to do anything mean or inconsiderate. In an interview, Mila Kunis stated: "Meg gets picked on a lot. But it's funny. It's like the middle child. She is constantly in the state of being an awkward 16-year-old, when you're kind of going through puberty and what-not. She's just in perpetual mode of humiliation, and it's fun."[23]

While Meg is, in reality, the least obnoxious or self-involved of the family, she is also the least respected and most misunderstood, often shown by people avoiding her company, disparaging her in person, gathering in her bedroom to read her diary for laughs, etc.

Peter's Daughter") but despite this he also was going to say "I love you" in "Hell Comes to Quahog", and in "Road to Rupert
" he stated they were 'secret best friends' before throwing lemonade in her face, saying he would have to continue to treat her badly in public in order to maintain his reputation due to "peer pressure", thus giving hope that they may be on good terms. Occasionally, when Meg asks a question to Peter or just speaks when he is in the room, Peter responds by saying "Shut up, Meg", which is immediately followed by a line from another character.

When the family tries an anger management technique of writing letters and not sending them, Meg finds Peter's letter to her, which says, "Dear Meg, for the first four years of your life, I thought you were a house cat."

anthropomorphic monkey in her closet, and although she has proved it, her father coldly state that they were talking about Chris', not hers. Cleveland comments to Peter "Meg is my least favorite of your children."[29]

Apparently, a

Model Misbehavior", when Lois starts a modeling career, Peter states that he will pleasure himself
to Lois' pictures, followed by Chris and Meg both exclaiming "Me too!" to which Peter shouts "Oh God, Meg, that's sick! That's your mother!", ignoring the fact that Chris said the same thing first. Meg responded by saying "I was only trying to fit in!" Peter immediately kicked her out of the house. Later, during an unrelated conversation, when she tried to insight Peter on how Lois' behavior from modeling made a poor example for women, he said "Meg, who let you back in the house?"

Brian's attention initially softens the lack of respect from Peter and the rest of family; he admits that he cares for Meg when she goes out with Mayor Adam West. While initially seeming to have more common decency for Meg than most people, this appears to almost completely disappear after the tenth season, as Brian's increasingly shallow and self-centered character begins to take more pleasure and joy in being rotten to Meg and often refuses to give her the time of day, such as desperately trying to avoid having to comfort her,

foil to her daughter, being more rebellious, outgoing, and loose-spirited compared to her daughter's own uptight demeanor, easily-embarrassed personality, and lack of confidence. Before the more recent seasons of the series, Lois has also often shown sympathy for Meg and tried to boost her confidence in terms of teenage social matters. Occasionally however, such occasions resulted in the former getting carried away and stealing the show, for example, taking her to Spring Break at the beach, only for her former younger wild side to kick in and completely exclude Meg from the excitement. Lois would very often comfort Meg when she is down; however, she gives up one attempt after 45 minutes and gives her a Sylvia Plath novel and a bottle of Ambien, and with a "Whatever happens, happens", leaves Meg to her misery.[29]
One of the most cruel examples of the family's lack of humanity or gratitude for Meg comes in the episode "
You Can't Do That On Television, Peter". When Peter is mauled by a puma
, Meg uses medical training to save his life. However, no one thanks her afterward and when she tries to point it out, Peter just tells her to get him water.

The family's treatment of Meg finally reaches her limit in "Dial Meg for Murder" when Meg emerges from a short stint in a Young Offenders Institution as a hardened criminal, abusing her family and beating up anyone who makes fun of her. It is only after a conversation with Brian that she changes her ways. However, it comes to a head once again in "Seahorse Seashell Party", when Meg finally grows tired of her mistreatment and lashes out against Lois and Peter, informing them of their own flaws. Lois condescendingly tells Meg that she is simply taking her own problems out on everyone else invoking Meg to bring up her mother's delinquent past. Meg tells her that she is far from the perfect parent, harshly berates her for constantly and ruthlessly pointing out Meg's shortcomings. Lois tries to justify that she's a better person because of her past and she is open that she isn't the perfect parent, but Meg tells her that she's the farthest thing from and states how she has neglected to guide her through life and navigate her through the hardships and difficulties of being a young woman. Meg also informs Lois that when she turns 18, she may never want to see her again. This breaks Lois' heart and she finally admits that she's been a terrible mother to Meg. Finally, Meg turns on Peter who, unable to comprehend her insults, thinks that his daughter's argument is amusing, even when she points out Peter's destructive tendencies and that he would go to jail if someone could witness his negative treatment towards her. It dawns on Peter that he is being insulted when Meg calls him a "waste of a man." A disillusioned Peter asks Lois to tell Meg to "knock it off", but Lois refuses because he didn't stick up for her. Within moments, Peter turns his abusive criticisms and insults on Chris and Lois. Peter finally runs to his room crying, with Lois running after him, leaving behind Meg and Brian, who is now fully recovered from his trip, to discuss what just happened. Brian likes that Meg stood up for herself, but she sadly tells him that even though she meant every word, seeing Peter turn on everyone like wolves has made her think that it is ultimately her non-ideal role to serve as the Griffins' "lightning rod that absorbs all the dysfunction". He commends her on her maturity, and even goes on to say that Meg is the "strongest person" in the family. She soon apologizes to the others and says that she is actually the one at fault.

Since this episode, the abuse that Meg receives begins to fade away as a storyline. She also notices that Peter's pro wrestler sister Karen treats Peter exactly the way Peter treats her, and they bond over this with a plan to embarrass Karen at a wrestling show—which goes awry when Meg hits her with a metal folding chair instead of a breakaway one and injures Karen to the point where she ends up in a coma and (as it is implied) possibly will die from her injuries without a blood transfusion.

Notes

  1. ^ In the episode "A Fistful of Meg", it is revealed that Peter Griffin put the name "Megatron" on her birth certificate, though Lois Griffin had already chosen the name Megan, by which she is still commonly known.[2]

References

  1. ^ "'Family Guy': Girls Go Crazy At 'Teen Choice Awards,' Meg Turns 18". HUFFPOST. January 9, 2012. Archived from the original on May 29, 2023. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  2. ^ "A Fistful of Meg". Family Guy. Season 12. Episode 4. November 10, 2013. Fox.
  3. ^ "IMDB – Family Guy – Stew-Roids (2009) Movie Connections". IMDb. Archived from the original on February 1, 2016. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  4. ^ Aurthur, Kate (July 12, 2005). "Sharing the Ratings Spoils". The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  5. ^ "Lacey Chabert interview by GameSpy (October 6, 2006) – Sonic Retro". Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  6. ^ "Family Guy – Casting Mila Kunis". The Paley Center for Media. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
  7. ^ "An interview with Seth MacFarlane". IGN. July 21, 2003. Archived from the original on April 20, 2022. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  8. ^ Eggerton, John (June 6, 2005). "Fox Swears By Family Guy". Broadcasting & Cable. Archived from the original on September 27, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  9. ^ Planet Family Guy – Character guide – Meg Griffin Archived September 7, 2012, at archive.today
  10. ^ Mila Kunis talks about working on Family Guy « : EveryJoe – Sports and Entertainment News Archived October 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Movie Reviews, Articles, Trailers, and more at Metacritic". Archived from the original on October 4, 2009. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  12. ^ "Chitty Chitty Death Bang". Family Guy. Season 1. Episode 3. April 18, 1999. Fox.
  13. ^ "Brian Sings and Swings". Family Guy. Season 4. Episode 19. January 8, 2006. Fox.
  14. Fifteen Minutes of Shame
    ". Family Guy. Season 2. Episode 12. April 25, 2000. Fox.
  15. The Thin White Line". Family Guy
    . Season 3. Episode 1. November 7, 2001. Fox. Are you 18 yet?
  16. . Season 2. Episode 19. July 18, 2000. Fox.
  17. . Season 3. Episode 18. January 24, 2002. Fox.
  18. . Season 4. Episode 4. June 5, 2005. Fox.
  19. ^ "Barely Legal". Family Guy. Season 5. Episode 8. December 17, 2006. Fox. I'm so fat and gross!
  20. ^ Newman, Vicki (November 27, 2016). "Family Guy's Meg Griffin 'to come out as lesbian' ... but will she still go on to become transgender man Ron?". Daily Mirror. Archived from the original on April 20, 2017. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
  21. ^ Ennis, Dawn (November 28, 2016). "Is Meg Griffin of 'Family Guy' About to Come Out as a Lesbian?". LGBTQ Nation. Archived from the original on June 22, 2020. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
  22. ^ "IGN's Top 25 Family Guy Characters". IGN. May 27, 2009. Archived from the original on August 31, 2011. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  23. ^ De Leon, Kris (September 25, 2007). "Mila Kunis Talks About Working on Family Guy and Her Upcoming Movie". BuddyTV. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved September 3, 2009.
  24. Stuck Together, Torn Apart". Family Guy
    . Season 3. Episode 19. January 31, 2002. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  25. ^ "Petergeist". Family Guy. Season 4. Episode 26. May 7, 2006. Fox. Oh yeah right like I'm going back for Meg
  26. Lethal Weapons". Family Guy
    . Season 3. Episode 7. August 22, 2001. Fox.
  27. ^ "Peter's Two Dads". Family Guy. Season 5. Episode 10. February 11, 2007. Fox.
  28. ^ "Breaking Out Is Hard to Do". Family Guy. Season 4. Episode 9. July 17, 2005. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  29. ^ a b "Hell Comes to Quahog". Family Guy. Season 5. Episode 3. September 24, 2006. Fox.
  30. ^ "Big Man on Hippocampus". Family Guy. Season 8. Episode 10. January 3, 2010. Fox. "I wish you'd told him that before he lost his memory!" – Meg, after Lois tells Peter he cannot have sex with the children
  31. ^ "Partial Terms of Endearment". Family Guy. Season 8. Episode 21. June 20, 2010. Fox.
  32. ^ "Friends Without Benefits". Family Guy. Season 11. Episode 7. December 9, 2012. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  33. Underage Peter". Family Guy
    . Season 14. Episode 14. February 21, 2016. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  34. ^ "Yug Ylimaf". Family Guy. Season 11. Episode 4. November 11, 2012. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  35. ^ "No Country Club for Old Men". Family Guy. Season 11. Episode 22. May 19, 2013. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  36. Once Bitten". Family Guy
    . Season 13. Episode 15. April 19, 2015. Fox Broadcasting Company.

External links