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Fuzzy Door Productions, Inc. (or credited as Fuzzy Door on-screen since 2019) is an American film and television production company founded by Seth MacFarlane on July 31, 1998.[2] The company's productions include the animated sitcoms Family Guy and American Dad!, the Family Guy spin-off The Cleveland Show, the live-action sitcom The Winner, the science documentary series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, and the sci-fi comedy drama series The Orville. Established as part of 20th Century Studios, the company signed a deal with NBCUniversal in 2020,[3] subsequently basing its headquarters at Universal City Studios in Universal City,[4] and naming Erica Huggins as its president that same year.[5][2]

Key Information

MacFarlane's animated series, Family Guy and American Dad!, have been produced at 20th Television Animation, while his live-action series, The Orville, is filmed at the studio's Universal City headquarters and in Westlake, California.[6]

The name of the company comes from the leopard-printed fake fur-covered door to the house MacFarlane lived in when he attended Rhode Island School of Design as an undergraduate in animation. The house itself also went by the nickname the Fuzzy Door during MacFarlane's residence and was the location of many "Fuzzy Door" parties. The company's logo was designed by Cory Brookes, a friend and housemate of MacFarlane's at the Fuzzy Door residence. The logo was updated in 2019, featuring a more abstract design of the door and no longer featuring the leopard fur-pattern design, instead it is colored in a plain white door with a blue background, or vice-versa colors. In 2020, the new logo was enhanced, featuring the door animating open and the text irising in as it does so, over a background that has a darker shade of blue.

Filmography

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Series

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Television series

[edit]
Title Genre Creator(s) Years active Original network(s) Co-production company(s) Notes
Family Guy Animated sitcom Seth MacFarlane 1998, 1999–2003; 2005-present Fox 20th Television (seasons 1–19) and 20th Television Animation (season 20–present)
American Dad! Seth MacFarlane
Mike Barker
Matt Weitzman
2005–present Fox (2005–2014; 2026–)
TBS (2014–2025)
Underdog Productions, 20th Television (seasons 1–18), and 20th Television Animation (season 19–present)
The Winner Period sitcom Ricky Blitt 2007 Fox Candy Bar Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
The Cleveland Show Animated sitcom Seth MacFarlane
Mike Henry
Richard Appel
2009–2013 Persons Unknown Productions, Happy Jack Productions, and 20th Century Fox Television Spin-off of Family Guy
Dads Sitcom Alec Sulkin
Wellesley Wild
2013–2014 20th Century Fox Television
Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey Science documentary Ann Druyan
Steven Soter
2014 Fox
National Geographic Channel
Cosmos Studios and Santa Fe Studios Follow-up to Cosmos: A Personal Voyage
Blunt Talk Sitcom Jonathan Ames 2015–2016 Starz Media Rights Capital and The Herring Wonder
Bordertown Animated sitcom Mark Hentemann 2016 Fox Hentemann Films and 20th Century Fox Television
The Orville Science fiction Seth MacFarlane 2017–2022 Fox (2017–2019)
Hulu (2022)
20th Television
The Long Road Home Drama Mikko Alanne 2017 National Geographic Channel Phoenix Pictures and Finngate Television Miniseries
Cosmos: Possible Worlds Documentary Ann Druyan 2020 Fox
National Geographic Channel
Cosmos Studios Third season of Cosmos after "A Personal Voyage" and "A Spacetime Odyssey"
The At-Home Variety Show Featuring Seth MacFarlane Variety Seth MacFarlane Peacock Universal Content Productions and Jax Media
The End is Nye Documentary Bill Nye
Seth MacFarlane
Brannon Braga
2022 Beetlecod Productions, Universal Television Alternative Studio, and Universal Content Productions
Ted Fantasy-comedy Seth MacFarlane 2024–present Universal Content Productions and MRC Television Prequel to the Ted films
Good Times: Black Again Animated sitcom Ranada Shepard
Carl Jones
2024 Netflix Coco Cubana Productions, Act III Productions, Unanimous Media, and Sony Pictures Television Studios Based on Good Times
The Shrouded College Adventure-horror Seth MacFarlane TBA Peacock Universal Content Productions Based on the graphic novel series
The Winds of War Period drama Seth MacFarlane
Seth Fisher
TBA Based on the novel of the same name
Ted: The Animated Series Animated sitcom Seth MacFarlane Peacock Universal Content Productions and MRC Television[7] Sequel to the Ted films
The 'Burbs Black comedy Celeste Hughey Imagine Entertainment and Universal Content Productions[8] Based on the film of the same name

Web series

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Title Creator(s) Years active Original network(s) Notes
Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy Seth MacFarlane 2008–2009 YouTube Co-production with Media Rights Capital and Main Street Pictures

Films

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Year Title Director(s) Distributor Notes
2005 Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story Pete Michels 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment Direct-to-video; co-production with 20th Century Fox
2012 Ted Seth MacFarlane Universal Pictures Co-production with Media Rights Capital, Bluegrass Films and Smart Entertainment
First film distributed by Universal Pictures
2014 A Million Ways to Die in the West Co-production with MRC and Bluegrass Films
2015 Ted 2
2020 Books of Blood Brannon Braga Hulu Television film; co-production with Touchstone Television
2025 The Naked Gun Akiva Schaffer Paramount Pictures
TBA Revenge of the Nerds TBA 20th Century Studios
Untitled Family Guy film Co-production with 20th Century Animation

Short films

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Title Director(s) Release date Initial release Notes
Inside the CIA Seth MacFarlane April 8, 2005 Fever Pitch Co-production with 20th Century Fox and Fox Television Animation

Discography

[edit]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Fuzzy Door Productions is an American film and television production company founded in 1998 by Seth MacFarlane, renowned for its contributions to animated sitcoms, science fiction series, and comedic films that blend humor with social commentary.[1][2] The company's name derives from the leopard-print fake fur that once covered MacFarlane's dormitory door at the Rhode Island School of Design, where he conceived early ideas for Family Guy.[3] Under MacFarlane's leadership as founder and Erica Huggins as president and chief creative officer, Fuzzy Door has developed a distinctive style of entertainment that engages global audiences through layered storytelling and cultural impact.[2] The company gained prominence with the launch of Family Guy in 1999, an animated series created by MacFarlane that became a cornerstone of adult animation on Fox, running for over 20 seasons and spawning spin-offs like The Cleveland Show.[4] Fuzzy Door expanded into live-action with projects such as The Orville (2017–present), a science fiction comedy-drama series on Hulu that MacFarlane stars in and executive produces, drawing comparisons to Star Trek for its exploration of ethical dilemmas amid adventurous narratives.[5] Other notable productions include the Ted franchise, featuring the foul-mouthed teddy bear voiced by MacFarlane, which transitioned from a 2012 blockbuster film directed by MacFarlane to a 2024 Peacock series, and the 2025 reboot of The Naked Gun.[6][7][8] Fuzzy Door has also ventured into documentary-style programming, co-producing the 2014 reboot Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson, which earned multiple Emmys for its educational blend of science and visuals, and its 2020 sequel Cosmos: Possible Worlds.[9] In addition to American Dad!, another long-running animated series that premiered in 2005 and now airs on Fox after concluding its TBS run in 2025, the company emphasizes innovative content that addresses contemporary issues through satire and wonder, partnering with major networks like Fox, Hulu, and Peacock.[6] With a focus on diverse talent and boundary-pushing narratives, Fuzzy Door remains a key player in Hollywood's entertainment landscape.[2]

History

Founding

Fuzzy Door Productions was founded on July 31, 1998, by Seth MacFarlane, who had recently established himself as an animator and writer at Hanna-Barbera Productions, contributing to series such as Johnny Bravo, Cow and Chicken, and Dexter's Laboratory.[[10]] [[3]] [[11]] MacFarlane, a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) with a focus on animation, created the company to channel his creative vision into independent production ventures, drawing directly from his hands-on experience in the industry.[[3]] The company's name originated from a distinctive feature of MacFarlane's student housing during his time at RISD: a door covered in leopard-printed fake fur, which he affectionately dubbed the "fuzzy door." This quirky element from his college days in the early 1990s symbolized the playful yet unconventional spirit MacFarlane sought to infuse into his work, serving as an enduring emblem for the production banner.[[3]] [[12]] [[13]] From its inception, Fuzzy Door Productions emphasized animated content, rooted in MacFarlane's early experiments with irreverent storytelling, including his 1995 thesis short film The Life of Larry, which featured crude humor and adult themes centered on a slovenly protagonist and his anthropomorphic dog companion.[[14]] These shorts, produced while at RISD, highlighted MacFarlane's shift away from children's animation—despite initial aspirations to join Disney—toward edgier, adult-oriented material inspired by shows like The Simpsons.[[15]] The company's early objectives centered on developing television animation that embraced satirical, boundary-pushing narratives, setting the stage for MacFarlane's signature style of humor.[[16]]

Expansion and key partnerships

Fuzzy Door Productions achieved its first major success with the launch of the animated sitcom Family Guy on January 31, 1999, in partnership with 20th Century Fox Television.[[2]] The series, created and executive produced by Seth MacFarlane, quickly became a flagship property for the company, establishing its reputation in adult animation and generating widespread cultural impact through its satirical humor.[[17]] Building on this foundation, Fuzzy Door expanded its animated portfolio with the premiere of American Dad! in 2005, co-produced with 20th Century Fox Television and Underdog Productions.[[18]] This move solidified animation as a core strength, followed by the 2009 launch of The Cleveland Show, a Family Guy spin-off also developed in collaboration with 20th Century Fox Television. These series not only increased the company's output but also demonstrated its ability to create interconnected franchises within the genre. The company ventured into live-action programming with the 2007 Fox sitcom The Winner, marking its initial foray beyond animation.[[19]] Further partnerships included the 2015 Starz series Blunt Talk, executive produced by MacFarlane and highlighting collaborations with premium cable networks.[[20]] In the 2010s, Fuzzy Door experienced significant operational growth, including the 2013 relocation of its headquarters to a newly purchased building in Beverly Hills to accommodate expanding teams for shows like Family Guy, American Dad!, and the live-action Dads.[[21]] The company hired key executives, such as appointing Erica Huggins as president in 2018, which bolstered its production capacity and strategic direction.[[22]] This period saw increased output, with the establishment of robust animation pipelines supporting multiple ongoing series. Fuzzy Door also entered feature films with the 2012 release of Ted, a Universal Pictures comedy directed by and starring MacFarlane's voice work, produced in association with Media Rights Capital and Bluegrass Films.[[23]] This success underscored the company's diversification into theatrical releases while leveraging its animation expertise for hybrid storytelling.

Recent developments

In January 2020, Fuzzy Door Productions signed a multi-year overall deal with NBCUniversal Content Studios valued at nearly $200 million, enabling the company to develop and produce television projects across NBCUniversal's platforms, including Peacock, while transitioning from its prior arrangement with 20th Century Fox Television.[[24]] [[25]] This agreement facilitated the relocation of Fuzzy Door's headquarters to Universal City, California, aligning operations more closely with NBCUniversal's infrastructure. As part of the company's expansion under the NBCUniversal deal, Erica Huggins, who had been appointed president of Fuzzy Door in 2018, continued to oversee content development and creative direction, guiding the production of new projects across television and film.[[22]] [[2]] In 2019, Fuzzy Door updated its logo to a simplified, abstract design featuring a white door on a blue background—dropping the previous leopard fur pattern—and shortened the name to "Fuzzy Door" for branding consistency.[[26]] The following year, in 2020, the logo received an animated enhancement for on-screen credits, showing the door opening to reveal light, which has been used in subsequent productions.[[13]] Building on earlier partnerships with Fox, such as those for Family Guy and The Orville, Fuzzy Door adapted existing intellectual properties to new streaming formats in the early 2020s; notably, The Orville shifted from Fox to Hulu for its third season, premiering on June 2, 2022, after the network's scheduling constraints delayed production following the 2019 renewal announcement.[[27]] [[28]] The company's streaming focus continued with the launch of the live-action prequel series Ted on Peacock on January 11, 2024, produced by Fuzzy Door, which became Peacock's most-watched original series debut at the time.[[29]] In May 2025, Peacock ordered an animated spin-off, Ted: The Animated Series, also from Fuzzy Door, featuring returning voice talent and set for future release.[[30]] [[31]] Fuzzy Door also ventured into feature films with the reboot of The Naked Gun, produced in association with Paramount Pictures and released on July 18, 2025, starring Liam Neeson as Frank Drebin Jr. and directed by Akiva Schaffer, marking a revival of the classic comedy franchise under the company's banner.[[32]] [[33]] In 2025, Fuzzy Door announced development of a television adaptation of the graphic novel series The Shrouded College for Peacock.[[34]]

Organization and leadership

Key personnel

Seth MacFarlane founded Fuzzy Door Productions in 1998 and serves as its founder, overseeing all creative decisions and steering the company's output in television and film.[2] As the creative force behind flagship projects, MacFarlane has shaped the studio's signature blend of animation and live-action comedy, drawing from his experience as a writer, director, and performer.[13] Erica Huggins has been President and Chief Creative Officer of Fuzzy Door since 2018, with her role expanding in 2020 following the company's overall deal with NBCUniversal, where she manages day-to-day operations and cultivates strategic partnerships across the media conglomerate's platforms.[22][35] Under her leadership, Fuzzy Door has broadened its development slate, emphasizing innovative content for streaming and broadcast.[36] Aimee Carlson joined Fuzzy Door as Senior Vice President in 2020 and was promoted to Executive Vice President, concentrating on business affairs, talent relations, and operational support for productions.[37][2] Drawing from her prior experience at Marvel Television, Carlson facilitates key negotiations and fosters creative collaborations essential to the company's growth.[38] Other key personnel include Rachel Hargreaves-Heald, who serves as Senior Vice President.[2]

Divisions and subsidiaries

Fuzzy Door Productions functions as a private entity that signed a multi-year overall deal with NBCUniversal in January 2020 (lasting until 2025), enabling the development and production of content across its television and film divisions with integrated pipelines for animation and live-action work.[35] This structure supported cross-media adaptations by streamlining the transfer of intellectual properties and creative assets between television series and feature films.[24] A primary division within the company is Fuzzy Door Tech, launched in 2019 as a dedicated unit for developing innovative tools in animation and visual effects.[39] This division focuses on augmented reality and real-time visualization technologies, such as the ViewScreen suite, which allows filmmakers to integrate virtual elements with live-action footage during production.[40] Fuzzy Door Tech's tools have been applied in various projects to enhance efficiency in multimedia workflows, including series like The Orville.[41] Fuzzy Door also maintains Underdog Productions as a subsidiary, which handles select live-action and hybrid projects through collaborative credits and production support. For instance, Underdog Productions appears in the end credits of the Ted films alongside Fuzzy Door, contributing to the blend of practical effects and CGI in these hybrid comedies.[42] This subsidiary complements the parent company's operations by specializing in targeted creative and technical contributions to feature-length adaptations.

Productions

Television series

Fuzzy Door Productions has produced a diverse array of television series since its inception, spanning animated comedies, live-action sitcoms and dramas, and documentary miniseries. The company's output emphasizes irreverent humor, science fiction, and educational content, often in collaboration with networks like Fox, Hulu, Starz, and National Geographic. Many of these series feature creator Seth MacFarlane in key creative roles, contributing to their distinctive voice and longevity.[43]

Animated Series

Fuzzy Door's animated output is dominated by long-running adult sitcoms known for satirical takes on American family life and culture. The flagship series, Family Guy, premiered on Fox in 1999 and has continued into its 23rd season as of 2025, transitioning to Hulu for streaming exclusivity in later years while maintaining broadcast runs.[4][24] This animated sitcom follows the Griffin family in the fictional town of Quahog, Rhode Island, and has become a cultural staple with over 400 episodes produced. Similarly, American Dad!, another Fox animated series co-produced by Fuzzy Door, debuted in 2005 and remains ongoing, airing on TBS following its initial Fox run through 2019; it centers on CIA agent Stan Smith and his eccentric family, amassing more than 400 episodes across 20 seasons.[44][24] Spin-offs and additional animated efforts include The Cleveland Show, a 2009 Fox premiere that ran for four seasons until 2013, focusing on the Family Guy character Cleveland Brown relocating to Virginia with his new family. Fuzzy Door also executive produced the short-lived Bordertown, an animated Fox series that debuted in 2016 and was canceled after one 13-episode season, exploring cultural clashes in a border town through the lens of an immigrant family and their neighbors.[45] Upcoming animated projects include Ted: The Animated Series, ordered by Peacock in May 2025 as a sequel to the live-action Ted series, featuring the titular bear in new comedic adventures.[31]

Live-Action Series

In live-action television, Fuzzy Door has ventured into sitcoms and genre series, often blending comedy with character-driven narratives. The Winner, a Fox sitcom executive produced by MacFarlane, premiered in March 2007 and concluded after six episodes in the same year due to low ratings, depicting a man's belated coming-of-age in his hometown.[46][47] Dads, another Fox collaboration, aired from 2013 to 2014 across one season of 19 episodes, starring Seth Green and Giovanni Ribisi as business partners navigating life with their fathers.[48] Blunt Talk, a Starz comedy-drama starring Patrick Stewart as a British news anchor in Los Angeles, ran for two seasons from 2015 to 2017, totaling 20 episodes and earning praise for its witty dialogue.[49] The company's most prominent live-action sci-fi series, The Orville, created by and starring MacFarlane as a starship captain, premiered on Fox in 2017, ran for two seasons until 2019, moved to Hulu for its third season in 2022, and has season 4 in pre-production as of November 2025, blending Star Trek-inspired adventure with comedic elements across 36 episodes to date.[5][24] A recent addition is the live-action comedy Ted, based on MacFarlane's film franchise, which premiered on Peacock in January 2024 and was renewed for a second season in May 2024 after strong viewership; the series follows the foul-mouthed teddy bear in 1990s high school antics with his human friend, spanning 10 episodes in its first season.[50] Upcoming live-action projects include Dungeon Crawler Carl, a Universal adaptation announced in August 2024, based on Matt Dinniman's novel series, executive produced by MacFarlane.[43]

Documentary and Miniseries

Fuzzy Door has also contributed to educational programming through high-profile documentary miniseries. Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson, premiered on Fox and National Geographic in 2014 as a 13-episode revival of Carl Sagan's original series, exploring cosmology and human discovery in association with Cosmos Studios.[51][52] Its sequel, Cosmos: Possible Worlds, aired on National Geographic in 2020 for five episodes, delving into possible futures and scientific possibilities under the same production partnership.[53]

Feature films

Fuzzy Door Productions has produced six feature films since its inception, often blending live-action with animation in a style reflective of founder Seth MacFarlane's comedic sensibilities. These projects span comedies, Western parodies, and horror anthologies, primarily distributed through major studios like Universal Pictures or streaming platforms such as Hulu. The company's film output emphasizes irreverent humor and character-driven narratives, with several entries achieving notable commercial success despite mixed critical responses.[7][54] The earliest feature from Fuzzy Door is Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story (2005), a direct-to-video animated film serving as a spin-off from the Family Guy television series. Directed by Peter Shin, Pete Michels, and Tim Johnson, it follows the infant genius Stewie Griffin on a quest to discover his biological father, incorporating the show's signature cutaway gags and celebrity cameos voiced by actors like Drew Barrymore and Patrick Stewart. Released by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, the 88-minute film received positive feedback from fans for its fidelity to the series' humor, earning an IMDb user rating of 7.5/10, though it lacked theatrical distribution and thus had no box office earnings. Its hybrid animation style, fully animated but tied to live-action TV origins, marked an early expansion of Fuzzy Door's IP beyond episodic formats.[55] Fuzzy Door's theatrical debut came with Ted (2012), a live-action/animated hybrid comedy directed by and starring Seth MacFarlane as the voice of a foul-mouthed teddy bear who comes to life. Co-produced with Media Rights Capital and Bluegrass Films, and distributed by Universal Pictures, the film follows adult John Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) navigating his friendship with the sentient Ted amid relationship strains. With a budget of $50–65 million, it grossed $549.4 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing original R-rated comedy at the time of release, surpassing The Hangover (2009). Critically, it holds a 69% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 220 reviews, praised for its raunchy humor and visual effects but critiqued for uneven pacing. The film's success highlighted Fuzzy Door's ability to translate animated comedy tropes into mainstream cinema.[56][57][58][59] In 2014, Fuzzy Door released A Million Ways to Die in the West, another Universal Pictures collaboration written and directed by MacFarlane. This Western comedy, co-produced with Media Rights Capital and Bluegrass Films, stars MacFarlane as a timid sheep farmer in 1880s Arizona who gains courage through a romance with a mysterious woman (Charlize Theron). Budgeted at $40 million, it earned $87 million globally, underperforming relative to expectations amid competition from family films like Maleficent. The 116-minute feature received mixed reviews, with a 33% Rotten Tomatoes score from 211 critics, noting its ambitious parody of the genre but faulting repetitive jokes and self-indulgent runtime. Its live-action format with minimal animation underscored Fuzzy Door's versatility in period settings.[60][61][62][63] The sequel Ted 2 (2015) continued the hybrid animation/live-action approach, again directed by MacFarlane and distributed by Universal Pictures in partnership with Media Rights Capital and Bluegrass Films. Centering on Ted's legal battle for civil rights as a "person" alongside John (Wahlberg) and new lawyer Samantha (Amanda Seyfried), the film explores themes of equality through absurd courtroom antics. Produced on a $68 million budget, it grossed $216.7 million worldwide, a solid but diminished return compared to the original. Critics gave it a 45% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 201 reviews, appreciating the returning cast's chemistry but criticizing formulaic plotting and dated humor. This entry solidified the Ted franchise's role in Fuzzy Door's portfolio.[64][64] Shifting genres, Books of Blood (2020) marked Fuzzy Door's venture into horror as a Hulu original anthology film directed by Brannon Braga. Co-produced with Touchstone Television, it adapts stories from Clive Barker's collection, intertwining tales of a troubled woman (Britt Robertson), a hitman (Rafi Gavron), and a scholar (Anna Friel) encountering supernatural "books of blood." The 107-minute streaming release bypassed theaters, so no box office data exists, but it garnered low critical acclaim with a 20% Rotten Tomatoes score from 30 reviews, faulted for shallow adaptations and lack of Barker's visceral edge despite strong gore effects. This project demonstrated Fuzzy Door's exploration of non-comedic formats.[65][66][67] Fuzzy Door's most recent feature, The Naked Gun (2025), is a reboot of the classic comedy franchise, produced in association with Domain Entertainment and distributed by Paramount Pictures. Directed by Akiva Schaffer, it stars Liam Neeson as bumbling detective Frank Drebin Jr., with Pamela Anderson and others in supporting roles, reviving the slapstick parody style. Executive produced by MacFarlane and Erica Huggins, the film premiered in theaters on August 1, 2025. It received an 88% Tomatometer score from critics and an 88% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. This PG-13 entry returns to pure live-action comedy, emphasizing physical gags over animation.[7][33][68]
FilmYearDirectorDistributorBudget (USD)Worldwide Gross (USD)Rotten Tomatoes Score
Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story2005Peter Shin, Pete Michels, Tim Johnson20th Century Fox Home EntertainmentN/A (Direct-to-video)N/AN/A
Ted2012Seth MacFarlaneUniversal Pictures50–65 million549.4 million69%
A Million Ways to Die in the West2014Seth MacFarlaneUniversal Pictures40 million87 million33%
Ted 22015Seth MacFarlaneUniversal Pictures68 million216.7 million45%
Books of Blood2020Brannon BragaHuluN/A (Streaming)N/A20%
The Naked Gun2025Akiva SchafferParamount Pictures50 million150 million (approx., as of Nov 2025)88%
Overall, Fuzzy Door's feature films have grossed over $1 billion collectively from theatrical releases, as of November 2025, with the Ted series driving the bulk of financial impact. While critically variable, they showcase the company's strength in genre-blending comedies that appeal to broad audiences through MacFarlane's voice work and satirical edge.

Short films and web series

Fuzzy Door Productions' involvement in short films and web series primarily stems from founder Seth MacFarlane's early experimental animations, which tested comedic styles and character dynamics that influenced later productions. Although predating the company's formal founding in 1998, MacFarlane's student short The Life of Larry (1994–1995) featured a bumbling middle-aged man and his anthropomorphic dog in satirical vignettes, serving as a prototype for the irreverent humor central to Fuzzy Door's output. This seven-minute thesis project from the Rhode Island School of Design was followed by Larry & Steve (1997), a seven-minute pilot produced for Cartoon Network's What a Cartoon! anthology, where Larry rescues a talking dog named Steve from a pet store, echoing the familial absurdity that would define Family Guy. These shorts functioned as conceptual pilots, refining MacFarlane's animation techniques and voice work before Fuzzy Door's establishment. In 2008, Fuzzy Door produced Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy, a web series comprising 50 short animated sketches released exclusively on YouTube.[69] Co-produced with Media Rights Capital and Main Street Pictures, the anthology parodied pop culture, historical events, and everyday absurdities through rapid-fire gags, often featuring guest voices and MacFarlane's signature cutaway humor. Each episode ran under two minutes, allowing for experimental content too risqué for broadcast television, and the series amassed millions of views while serving as a testing ground for ideas later adapted into full episodes of Family Guy and American Dad!.[13] Fuzzy Door also ventured into theatrical shorts with American Dad!: The New CIA (2005), a six-minute animated promotional film that screened before the comedy Fever Pitch. Directed by Rodney Clapp, the short follows CIA agent Stan Smith showcasing his agency's operations in a mock recruitment video, blending workplace satire with the series' espionage themes to build anticipation for American Dad!'s debut. Like other Fuzzy Door shorts, it emphasized concise, high-concept humor to prototype narrative elements for longer-form series.

References

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