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List of characters in the Family Guy franchise
List of characters in the Family Guy franchise
from Wikipedia

Family Guy is an American animated comedy multimedia franchise originally conceived and created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company, primarily based on the animated series Family Guy (1999–present), its spin-off series The Cleveland Show (2009–2013), and the film Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story (2005), based on his 1995–1997 thesis films The Life of Larry and Larry & Steve.

Set in the fictional towns of Quahog, Rhode Island, and Stoolbend, Virginia, the show exhibits much of its humor in the form of metafictional cutaway gags often lampooning American culture. The following is an abridged list of characters consisting of the starring families (Griffin; Brown/Tubbs) and supporting characters from all three. Characters are only listed once, normally under the first applicable subsection in the list; very minor characters are listed with a more regular character with whom they are associated.

Appearances

[edit]
Character Voice actor Family Guy
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Main characters
M Main R Recurring G Guest
Peter Griffin Seth MacFarlane M
Stewie Griffin M
Brian Griffin M
Lois Griffin Alex Borstein M
Chris Griffin Seth Green M
Meg Griffin Lacey Chabert M Does not appear
Mila Kunis Does not appear M
Cleveland Brown Mike Henry R M R M Does not appear
Arif Zahir Does not appear M
Glenn Quagmire Seth MacFarlane R M
Joe Swanson Patrick Warburton G R M
Recurring characters
R Recurring G Guest
Tom Tucker Seth MacFarlane R
Diane Simmons Lori Alan R G Does not appear G Does not appear
Jonathan Weed Carlos Alazraqui R Does not appear G Does not appear
Loretta Brown Alex Borstein G R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Bonnie Swanson Jennifer Tilly G R
Rupert David Boat G R
Kevin Swanson Scott Grimes G R G Does not appear R G Does not appear R Does not appear G
Bruce Mike Henry G R
Jake Tucker Seth MacFarlane G R G R Does not appear G Does not appear
Judge Dignified Q. Blackman Phil LaMarr G R G R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
God Seth MacFarlane G R Does not appear G R Does not appear G R Does not appear R Does not appear G R Does not appear G Does not appear
Jesus G R Does not appear R G Does not appear G R G Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G R
Carter Pewterschmidt Does not appear R
Babs Pewterschmidt Alex Borstein Does not appear R G R G R G R G R Does not appear R
Mayor Adam West Adam West Does not appear R G Does not appear
Tricia Takanawa Alex Borstein Does not appear R G R G Does not appear
Death Adam Carolla[a] Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear
Elmer Hartman Seth MacFarlane Does not appear R
Evil Monkey Danny Smith Does not appear R G R Does not appear G Does not appear
Horace John G. Brennan Does not appear R Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear
Jim Kaplan Danny Smith Does not appear R G R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Neil Goldman Seth Green Does not appear R Does not appear G R G R G Does not appear R
Cleveland Brown, Jr. Kevin Michael Richardson Does not appear R G G Does not appear G Does not appear G R G R G R
Ernie The Giant Chicken Danny Smith Does not appear G Does not appear G R Does not appear G R G R Does not appear G R G R G Does not appear G
Connie D'Amico Lisa Wilhoit Does not appear G R G R G R G Does not appear G Does not appear R
Jasper Seth MacFarlane Does not appear G R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Principal John Shepherd Gary Cole Does not appear G R Does not appear R Does not appear G R G R
Francis Griffin Charles Durning Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Thelma Griffin Phyllis Diller Does not appear G R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
John Herbert Mike Henry Does not appear R G Does not appear R
Mort Goldman John Brennan Does not appear R
Muriel Goldman Nicole Sullivan Does not appear R G R G Does not appear G Does not appear
Seamus Levine Seth MacFarlane Does not appear G R G R G R
Ollie Williams Phil LaMarr Does not appear G R G R G Does not appear G R G R G Does not appear
Carol West Julie Hagerty Does not appear G Does not appear G R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Greased-Up Deaf Guy Mike Henry Does not appear G R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Angela Carrie Fisher Does not appear R G R Does not appear R G Does not appear
Esther Christina Milian Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G R G Does not appear G Does not appear
Patty Martha MacIsaac Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G R G Does not appear
Ruth Cochamer Emily Osment Does not appear R G Does not appear G R G Does not appear
Opie Mark Hentemann Does not appear R G R G R Does not appear G R Does not appear R G Does not appear R
James William Bottomtooth III Chris Sheridan Does not appear R Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear
Jesse Mike Henry Does not appear G R Does not appear G R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Al Harrington Danny Smith Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear R Does not appear
James Woods James Woods Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Elle Hitler Alex Borstein Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear R G R
Carl H. Jon Benjamin Does not appear G R G R G R G Does not appear R
Jillian Russell-Wilcox Drew Barrymore Does not appear R G R Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Fouad Mike Henry Does not appear G R G Does not appear G Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear
R.J. Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear
Consuela Does not appear R G R G R G R Does not appear R
Tomik & Bellgarde John Viener Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear
Alec Sulkin
Susie Swanson Patrick Stewart Does not appear R Does not appear R Does not appear R Does not appear R Does not appear
Ida Davis Seth MacFarlane Does not appear G Does not appear G R G R G R G R G Does not appear
Jerome Kevin Michael Richardson Does not appear G Does not appear G R
Donna Tubbs-Brown Sanaa Lathan Does not appear G Does not appear G Does not appear R
Rallo Tubbs Mike Henry Does not appear G Does not appear R G R G R Does not appear R G R G
Joyce Kinney Christine Lakin Does not appear R G R G R G R Does not appear G Does not appear G
Stella Marlee Matlin Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear G R Does not appear G Does not appear
Vinny Tony Sirico Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear
Roberta Tubbs Reagan Gomez-Preston Does not appear G R G R Does not appear G R
Miss Tammy Rachael MacFarlane Does not appear R Does not appear G Does not appear R G Does not appear
Bert & Sheila Bryan Cranston Does not appear R G Does not appear
Niecy Nash
Doug Chris Parnell Does not appear G R Does not appear
Wild West Sam Elliott Does not appear R
Preston Lloyd Peter Macon Does not appear R

The Griffin Family

[edit]

Peter Griffin

[edit]

Peter Löwenbräu Griffin Sr. (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the patriarch of the Griffin household, a 45-year-old Irish-American blue-collar worker and the "family guy" of the show's title. For most of the series, Peter is shown as an obese, unintelligent, lazy, outspoken, childish, and eccentric alcoholic.

Lois Griffin

[edit]

Lois Patrice Griffin (née Pewterschmidt) (voiced by Alex Borstein) is the matriarch of the Griffin household, Peter's wife, and the mother of Meg, Chris, and Stewie. She is 43 years old, and is of German and Jewish descent.

Meg Griffin

[edit]

Megan Harvey Oswald "Meg" Griffin (voiced by Lacey Chabert in seasons 1 & 2, Mila Kunis from season 2 onwards) is the Griffins' 18-year-old daughter. She is a self-conscious, insecure, and sensitive teenager who is more often than not ridiculed and ignored by the people around her.

Chris Griffin

[edit]

Christopher Cross "Chris" Griffin (voiced by Seth Green) is the Griffins' 16-year-old son. He is a friendly, laid-back and slow-witted teenage boy who is a younger version of Peter physically, but intellectually, he often shows more potential, as demonstrated from moments of coherence and articulation within his speech.

Stewie Griffin

[edit]

Stewart Gilligan "Stewie" Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the Griffins' 1-year-old child, but often behaves in adult ways such as speaking in an exaggerated upper-class English accent.

Brian Griffin

[edit]

Brian Edward Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the family's 10-year-old (70 in dog years) anthropomorphic talking white Labrador Retriever and the best friend of both Stewie and his father, Peter.

Extended Griffin family members

[edit]

The characters listed below are the extended family of the Griffin family that come from either Peter's side of the family, Lois's side of the family, and the occasional members of Brian's family:

  • Francis Griffin (voiced by Charles Durning) is Peter's grouchy, stubborn and abusive 82-year-old Irish surrogate father, Lois's surrogate father-in-law and the surrogate paternal grandfather of Meg, Chris and Stewie. He was married to Peter's biological mother Thelma Griffin. An obsessively devout Irish American Catholic, he hates Lois because she is not a Catholic, and often calls her a "Protestant whore", disapproves of his stepson's family's lifestyle, and frequently attempts to force his religious views on them. In "Peter's Two Dads", Francis attends Meg's 17th birthday party, and is crushed by a drunk Peter while attempting a unicycle trick to entertain the party guests as "Pee-Pants the Inebriated Hobo Clown". The injuries prove fatal, and as Francis is dying in the hospital, his last words to Peter before his death are, "Peter… you're a fat, stinking drunk." Shortly after, while Peter partakes in a hypnotherapy session, he realizes Francis was not his biological father when he recalls a childhood memory of him being explicitly told so by Francis. He appears once more as a vision of Peter's in "Family Goy".
  • Mickey McFinnigan (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is Peter's biological father, Lois' father-in-law and the biological paternal grandfather of Meg, Chris and Stewie. He lives in Ireland and is regarded as the town drunk (a highly respected position) in his neighborhood. Peter travels to meet him after he learns that Francis, who had just died, was not his biological father. He looks just like Peter, albeit he also wears a green vest and has a red beard, and has a talking sheep named O'Brian, with similar mannerisms to Brian. Despite that, he refuses to believe Peter is his son, so Peter then challenges him to a drinking contest and wins, which convinces him he is Peter's father.
  • Thelma Griffin (voiced by Florence Stanley in the first appearance, Phyllis Diller in later appearances, Alex Borstein as a young woman in "Don't Be a Dickens at Christmas") is the wife of Francis, mother of Peter, mother-in-law of Lois and paternal grandmother of Meg, Chris and Stewie. She is an 85-year-old Irish American Catholic. "Mom's the Word" reveals that Thelma has died of a stroke.
  • Aunt Helen (voiced by Ellen Albertini Dow) is Peter Griffin and Karen Griffin's aunt and Thelma Griffin's sister, the aunt-in-law of Lois Griffin and paternal great-aunt of Meg Griffin, Chris Griffin and Stewie Griffin. The Griffin family call her up in "Jesus, Mary, and Joseph".
  • Chip Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is Peter's vestigial twin brother, who appears in "Vestigial Peter". After he is surgically separated from the side of Peter's neck, Chip lives in the Griffin household for a short while before leaving, eventually landing a role on The Middle.
  • Karen "Heavy Flo" Griffin (voiced by Kate McKinnon) is Peter's abusive older sister, who only appears in "Peter's Sister". She is the paternal aunt of Meg, Chris and Stewie and the sister-in-law of Lois. She is a professional wrestler and a catalyst for Peter’s behavior toward Meg. She ends up in a coma after Meg knocks her out in a match with a real chair instead of a fake one and it is implied that she dies when Peter refuses to check if he is the same blood type for a blood transfusion.
  • Carter Pewterschmidt (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is Lois, Carol and Patrick's father, Babs's husband, Peter's father-in-law and the maternal grandfather of Meg, Chris and Stewie. He is a cruel, selfish, petty, and prejudiced WASP old money billionaire industrialist, shipping mogul, and owner of several major companies. Though he generally despises Peter and disapproves of his marriage to Lois, he has occasionally teamed up with him to achieve some common purpose.
  • Barbara "Babs" Pewterschmidt (née Hebrewberg) (voiced by Alex Borstein) is Carter's wife, the mother of Lois, Carol and Patrick, the maternal grandmother of Meg, Chris and Stewie and the mother-in-law of Peter. She is a Jewish American Holocaust survivor who concealed her identity to marry Carter.
  • Carol Pewterschmidt-West (voiced by Carol Kane in the first appearance, Julie Hagerty in later appearances) is Lois and Patrick's sister, Peter's sister-in-law and the maternal aunt of Meg, Chris and Stewie. She has been married and divorced nine times. Due to all of her marriages and divorces, her full formal name is Carol Pewterschmidt-Johnson-Carrington-Stone-O'Craggity-Canseco-Shteinholtz-Washington-Proudfoot-Fong-West.
  • Patrick Pewterschmidt (voiced by Robert Downey Jr. in the first appearance, Oliver Vaquer in the second appearance) is the 46-year-old older brother of Lois and Carol, the maternal uncle of Meg, Chris and Stewie and Peter's brother-in-law. His mother and father kept him secret from Lois as he was committed to a mental institution as a result of trauma from witnessing his mother having an affair with Jackie Gleason. After Peter unintentionally causes him to snap, he begins murdering fat men by strangling them and becomes known as "The Fat Guy Strangler". In the episode "Killer Queen", Patrick helps the Griffins track down an assailant who is trying to strangle Chris to death.
  • Jasper (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is Brian's stereotypical flamboyantly homosexual 4-year-old cousin. Brian stays with him in Hollywood in "Brian Does Hollywood". Jasper's partner is a Filipino man named Ricardo, whom he marries in "You May Now Kiss the... Uh... Guy Who Receives".
  • Bertram (voiced by Wallace Shawn) is the infant son of a gym teacher and her partner through artificial insemination. Bertram's biological father is Peter Griffin, and he holds a grudge against his half-brother Stewie. Bertram appears in "Emission Impossible", "Sibling Rivalry" and "The Big Bang Theory", the latter of which sees him traveling back in time to attempt to kill Stewie's ancestor, Leonardo da Vinci; although he succeeds, Stewie kills him and saves his own existence, as well as the entire universe (as Stewie became responsible for the Big Bang in the events of the episode).
  • "Boston Stewie" is the result of an egg donation Lois made in 1997. He had been abandoned by his birth mother. Stewie tracked him down in Boston and tried to bring him into the family, without success. Boston Stewie ends up being adopted by Mark Wahlberg's sisters. His real name is never given.
  • Dylan Flannigan (voiced by Seth Green) is Brian's human son. He first appears in "The Former Life of Brian". His mother Tracy was devastated when Brian left her. After Brian apologizes to Dylan for not being there for him, Brian turns his son's life around, making him into a charming, polite young man. Dylan then decides to leave the Griffin house and change his mother like Brian changed him. In "Brian's a Bad Father", Dylan returns as the star of a Disney Channel show.
  • Biscuit is Brian's deceased mother, who appears in a flashback of "Road to Rhode Island". She was stuffed by her owners after her death. Brian went on to give her a proper burial. Biscuit is also in a flashback in "Chris Cross".
  • Coco is Brian's deceased father who has never appeared on screen, but has been mentioned several times by Brian. According to Brian, Coco was racist towards African-Americans, and died after being run over by a milk truck.

Throughout the series, mainly during the first seasons, Peter mentions various ancestors of the Griffin family who are shown in cutaway gags.

The Brown/Tubbs family

[edit]
Brown/Tubbs families; from left to right: Cleveland Brown, Cleveland Jr., Donna Tubbs-Brown, Rallo and Roberta Tubbs.

Cleveland Brown

[edit]

Cleveland Orenthal Brown Sr. (voiced by Mike Henry from 1999 to 2021, Arif Zahir from 2021 on)[1] is a portly 42-year-old African-American man who is very polite to everyone and has a unique laugh. He was one of Peter Griffin's best friends in Family Guy and also owned and ran a deli. In the "Pilot" of The Cleveland Show, he moves to the town of Stoolbend, Virginia to show his son where he grew up, unintentionally meeting up with his old friend Donna, whom he was in love with despite her being unaware. Eventually re-sparking his relationship with her, they get married and he and his son move in with her and her two children. Cleveland is usually depicted as exceedingly gentle and patient, and it is only on rare occasions that he has been known to lose his temper and resort to violence. However, Cleveland gets visibly annoyed with racist behavior. He often acts as the voice of caution when other characters hatch harebrained schemes. Cleveland's speech is slow and almost elongated in Family Guy, but in The Cleveland Show his voice has a wide variety. Various flashbacks give conflicting histories of his speech patterns. He is a more sexual, obnoxious, unintelligent, selfish, and violent character in his new form than he was originally. After the show was not renewed for a fifth season, Cleveland moved back to Quahog (and Family Guy) in the twelfth season, now working as a mailman.

Loretta Brown

[edit]

Loretta Marie Callender Brown (voiced by Alex Borstein) is Cleveland's late ex-wife and the mother of Cleveland Brown Jr. in Family Guy. In early episodes, Loretta had few lines, the bulk of which were "Mm-hmm!". She treated Cleveland harshly, and eventually cheated on him with Glenn Quagmire, leading them to divorce. She had a liking for cricket and the television program Friends. In The Cleveland Show episode "Gone With the Wind", she dies in a freak accident back in Quahog when in her 40s because Peter accidentally swings a Brontosaurus skeleton found by Brian from a mobile crane into her house, destroying it and causing her to fall from the second floor in her bathtub (in a similar manner to Cleveland in a running gag on Family Guy), only for her neck to snap. She was buried in Stoolbend, and left her fortune to Cleveland Jr. in her will.

Donna Tubbs-Brown

[edit]

Donna Lou Retten Tubbs-Brown (voiced by Sanaa Lathan), is the second and current wife of Cleveland Brown and the stepmother of Cleveland Brown Jr.. She is 42 years old and works as the principal's secretary at Stoolbend High School. She has two biological children from her previous marriage with Robert Unknown (his last name is literally "Unknown", which is a joke later in the series), Roberta and Rallo, and she has kept her maiden name (in "Pilot", Cleveland says, "Back in high school, I would have given anything to spend the night at Donna Tubbs' house."). While one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show, as of "He's Bla-ack!", she has now taken on the former role of the late Loretta as a recurring character of Family Guy.

Cleveland Brown Jr.

[edit]
Cleveland Brown Jr.
Family Guy / The Cleveland Show character
First appearance"Love Thy Trophy" (2000; Family Guy)
"Pilot" (2009; The Cleveland Show)
Created byMike Baker
Matt Weitzman
Seth MacFarlane
Designed bySeth MacFarlane
Voiced byMike Henry (2000–2008; 2013)
Kevin Michael Richardson (2009–present)
In-universe information
Full nameCleveland Raj Rerun Dwayne Brown Jr.[2]
AliasAgent 14
NicknamesJunior, Chubster Dumbdumb
Family
SpouseCecilia Brown (née Moreno) (m. 2012)
HomeQuahog, Rhode Island
NationalityAmerican
Age14

Cleveland Orenthal Brown Jr. (also referred to as Cleveland Raj Rerun Dwayne Brown),[2] better known simply as Junior (voiced by Mike Henry in early appearances in Family Guy, Kevin Michael Richardson in The Cleveland Show and later appearances in Family Guy), is the obese 14-year-old biological son of Cleveland Brown and his late ex-wife Loretta. He debuted in the second-season episode "Love Thy Trophy" on the animated TV show Family Guy. During his time in Family Guy before The Cleveland Show he was skinny, hyperactive, and athletic. He was presumably taken into Loretta's custody after she and Cleveland divorced in "The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire" and has since become severely obese. He suffers from mild seizure-like episodes, which he calls "brainstorms", and takes medication to control them. The episode "The Hurricane!" reveals that he "doesn't believe in God", although he claims he is not an atheist either, which he calls "another religion". Junior is one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show and returns to the Family Guy cast as of "He's Bla-ack!" as a recurring minor character.

At 14 years old, Junior is the only child of Cleveland, the stepson of Donna Tubbs, and the stepbrother of Roberta and Rallo Tubbs. Upon his parents' divorce, Loretta gave custody of Cleveland Jr. to Cleveland and forced him to move. Cleveland and Junior left for California. However, en route, they decided to live in Stoolbend, Virginia, instead, where Cleveland married Donna Tubbs, and Rallo and Roberta became his stepsiblings. Junior's most prominent character traits are his laziness, obesity, and low social intelligence (although there are occasional references to him being academically bright).

Role in The Cleveland Show

[edit]

Cleveland Jr. is a frequent target of weight-related jokes from a variety of characters in the series, in particular his stepbrother Rallo. When Rallo met Cleveland Jr. and his father, he often called them "fat". In the second episode, Cleveland Jr. served as a door in the bathroom so that he could earn his classmates' respect, which angered Cleveland. He exhibits a nervous and overly sensitive nature.

While Junior is not as active as he was in Family Guy, he has other hobbies and interests; he enjoys science and playing the tuba in the Stoolbend High School band, and is the leader of a troop of Freedom Scouts, Stoolbend's version of the Boy Scouts.

Cleveland Brown Jr. is married to Cecilia, as shown in "Y Tu Junior También", to prevent her deportation.

Character

[edit]
Creation
[edit]

Cleveland Jr. debuted in the season 2 Family Guy episode "Love Thy Trophy", but only made minor appearances thereafter. He was presumably taken into Loretta's custody after she cheated on Cleveland in "The Cleveland–Loretta Quagmire" and had since undergone a major character reinvention upon becoming a leading character in The Cleveland Show. After Cleveland and Loretta's divorce is finalized in the pilot episode of The Cleveland Show, a now-overweight Junior is placed in Cleveland's custody, and they move out of Quahog, Rhode Island to Stoolbend, Virginia where Cleveland rekindles a relationship with, and subsequently marries, his high school sweetheart, Donna Tubbs.

Design
[edit]

In Family Guy, Cleveland Jr. was a hyperactive child of average size, but in The Cleveland Show, he had aged, gained weight, appeared potentially smarter, and wore glasses. In Family Guy, he wore a pink/light purple T-shirt, blue jeans and white sneakers, but in The Cleveland Show, he wears a red T-shirt, blue shorts, sneakers and glasses. He is also notably shorter, as Family Guy shows him to be of average height for his age, while in The Cleveland Show, he appears to be no more than 5 ft. at the age of 14.

Cleveland Jr. was a minor character who had a short time with Peter Griffin in the episode, "Fore Father", where he showed a talent for playing golf. After that episode, he made short appearances later in the show, with his last on Family Guy, until 2010 at his father's supposed funeral, along with Loretta.

Voice
[edit]

Junior's voice is provided by Kevin Michael Richardson, who voiced other characters on The Cleveland Show, including Lester Krinklesac, Julius, and P-Hound. Prior to The Cleveland Show, Junior's voice was initially provided by Mike Henry in early Family Guy episodes.

Richardson stated that he describes voicing Cleveland Jr. as "a character he did on ER named Patrick, who was mentally impaired and wore a football helmet."[3] Before the show aired in 2009, the show's panel appeared at the 2009 Comic Con International, and held a discussion about the show. When describing Junior's change in physical appearance and age, Mike Henry said "Cleveland Jr. really didn't have much to him and so he didn't appear for a while and so we sort of aged him up and made room for Rallo to be the younger one for a while."[4] The show's creators later gave an explanation of Junior's altered look in "A Rodent Like This".

Roberta Tubbs

[edit]

Roberta Coretta Tubbs (sometimes Roberta Benigni Tubbs; voiced by Nia Long in earlier episodes, Reagan Gomez-Preston in later episodes) is the 15-year-old biological daughter of Donna and her ex-husband, Robert, Rallo's sister, Cleveland's stepdaughter and Cleveland Jr.'s stepsister. She looks up to Tyra Banks, hoping to one day become her co-hostess. A relatively popular girl in school, Roberta is often seen socializing with her friends, both in person, and using phones/social networking websites. She has been dating a less-than-respectable boy named Gabriel "Federline Jones" Friedman. Donna does not approve of Federline, though Cleveland has since managed to bully him into submission. As with many popular students, Roberta often acts as a bully and a self-centered character, even towards her own family members. She is revealed to be a genius in The Cleveland Show season 3 episode "B.M.O.C.", when she went on a college tour to Cleveland's alma mater, State.

Neither Roberta nor her brother Rallo are initially pleased with the arrival of Cleveland and Cleveland Brown Jr., though both appear to accept their mother marrying Cleveland without much issue. Roberta and Cleveland seem to fall into a rather stereotypical stepfather/stepdaughter relationship, with Roberta being embarrassed by her stepfather's behavior when he attends social functions at her school. Eventually she accepts Cleveland as her father. While one of the main characters of The Cleveland Show, as of "He's Bla-ack!", she is now occasionally referred to and less frequently seen on Family Guy. She's the only member of the Tubbs family that has yet to speak in Family Guy.[5]

Rallo Tubbs

[edit]

Montclair "Rallo" Tubbs (voiced by Mike Henry) is the 5-year-old biological son of Donna and her husband, Robert, Roberta's brother, Cleveland's stepson and Cleveland Jr.'s stepbrother. Despite his age, and the fact that his father has been mostly absent most of his life, Rallo acts much like Robert, at times very articulate, yet hormonally charged. He seems to get along fairly well with his mother, Donna, and has a normal love/hate relationship with Roberta, who at times seems to neglect him, yet at other times speaks to him as an intellectual equal.

In The Cleveland Show season 3 episode "American Prankster", Cleveland asks Donna why his name is Rallo. Donna replies that it was from "that guy from Sanford and Son" (referring to Rollo Lawson). One of the main characters of The Cleveland Show, as of "He's Bla-ack!", he is now an infrequently appearing cast member of Family Guy.

Extended Brown family members

[edit]
  • Evelyn "Cookie" Brown (voiced by Frances Callier) is Cleveland's mother, Donna's mother-in-law, Roberta and Rallo's step-grandmother and Cleveland Brown Jr.'s paternal grandmother. Her first appearance was in the episode "A Brown Thanksgiving". She deeply cares about her son and is prone to babying him, but also often stands by her husband. She is hypercritical of her new daughter-in-law Donna, having never forgiven her for spurning Cleveland in favor of Robert in high school, although Cleveland is oblivious to their rough relationship. In "Baby Stewie", Cookie is stated to have died of a heart attack, though this is revealed to be false in "Karenheit 451" by her presence as being alive and well.
  • LeVar "Freight Train" Brown (voiced by Craig Robinson) is Cleveland's 63-year-old father, Cookie's husband, Donna's father-in-law, Roberta and Rallo's step-grandfather and Cleveland Brown Jr.'s paternal grandfather, whose first appearance is in the episode "A Brown Thanksgiving". He tends to take his wife for granted and is often verbally and physically abusive to Cleveland; the latter is revealed to be because of the latter's ineptitude at a family game show when he was a kid, costing the Browns a victory.
  • Broderick Brown is Cleveland's brother and Cleveland Brown Jr.'s uncle who is a doctor who first appears in the Family Guy episode "He's Too Sexy for His Fat". In The Cleveland Show he appears in the episode "Our Gang", which reveals that he left his career as a plastic surgeon in Quahog to enlist in the navy, and he rescues Cleveland and Cleveland Jr. from a drug gang by trading Afghani heroin to the gang for their freedom.
  • Robert (voiced by Corey Holcomb) is Donna's 42-year-old ex-husband and the biological father of Roberta and Rallo. At the start of the show, he had grown negligent of the statuses of his children, not even knowing their names or ages, which convinced Donna to accept Cleveland as her true love.
  • Kevin "Auntie Momma" Tubbs (voiced by Kym Whitley as a female, Kevin Michael Richardson as a male) is Donna's caring, lovable, eccentric aunt who is in her 60s. She is a large, fat woman whose appearance and mannerisms are a parody of Tyler Perry's character Madea. Auntie Momma was originally Donna's Uncle Kevin and when Donna was younger, her parents were never around. So Uncle Kevin creates the character of Auntie Momma in order to provide Donna with a strong female influence in her life.
  • Dorothy "Dee Dee" Tubbs (voiced by Phylicia Rashād) is Donna Tubbs' long-lost mother, Cleveland's mother-in-law, Cleveland Brown Jr.'s step-grandmother and Roberta and Rallo's grandmother. In the season three episode "Mama Drama", they are reunited, and she becomes a recurring character for the remainder of the series. In the last episode of season 4, Dee Dee begins a relationship with Robert (her daughter's ex-husband), and they adopt a 5-year-old Chinese boy named Quang Quang. The season 14 episode "Candy, Quahog, Marshmallow!" reveals Dee Dee committed suicide.
  • Quang Quang (later Hong-Kong-Phooey) is the 5-year-old adopted Chinese boy of Dee Dee and Robert. This makes him Donna's adopted brother, Cleveland's adopted brother-in-law, Cleveland Brown Jr.'s adopted step-uncle, and both the adopted brother and uncle of Roberta and Rallo, whom Donna refers to as their "bruncle". Near the end of the episode, Quang Quang was christened with the new name Hong-Kong-Phooey by Reverend Jenkins.

Neighbors and their relatives

[edit]

Spooner Street

[edit]
  • Doug (voiced by Chris Parnell) is a smug, condescending and insufferable toddler who lives in the Griffins' neighborhood and attends day care with Stewie, with whom he shares a rivalry. He was first introduced in "Island Adventure", and in most of his appearances, he usually shows up for the sole purpose of insulting Stewie. In "LASIK Instinct", Doug is hit by Lois' car due to her waning vision, and the men of the Griffin household are tasked with looking after him in his father's absence. Doug eventually reveals that he was faking the list of demands, as his parents are neglectful to both him and each other, and he just wanted to have fun. Stewie agrees to be friends with him privately, so long as they agree to remain rivals in public. During a heart-to-heart in "80's Guy", Doug reveals that he mainly antagonizes Stewie because he's intimidated by his brilliance and envious of his hair. He later dies offscreen in a commuter plane crash in "The Candidate" according to Stewie.
  • John Herbert (voiced by Mike Henry) is an elderly pederast who is often referred to solely by his last name. He resides down the street from the Griffin family and distributes Popsicle ice pops to small children in his basement. He has a particular interest in Chris; in the episode "Play It Again, Brian", Chris finally realizes this and asks Herbert, "Are you a pedophile?", to no onscreen answer. Also, in "Spies Reminiscent of Us", Stewie refers to a "pedophile who lives down the street" about which nobody is taking any action "because he's so funny", clearly talking about Herbert. He has a dog named Jesse, who is also very old and is unable to use his hind legs. He has a high-pitched, very soft effeminate voice and pronounces sibilant consonants with a high-pitched whistle. Herbert is often wearing a light blue robe and slippers, walks with a walker and frequently makes inappropriate, sexually tinged comments to teenage boys (in "Road to the North Pole", Herbert wants a little drummer boy for Christmas, while staring at a poster of Nick Jonas). It is revealed later that he is the eldest member of the Skull and Bones secret society. He was a corporal in the United States Army and a POW during World War II. Herbert plays Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Star Wars episodes. In "And Then There Were Fewer", he drove an ice cream truck which in past episodes he has used to lure little boys. In "Internal Affairs", Herbert's ice cream truck is hijacked and destroyed during one of Peter and the Giant Chicken's fighting rampages. In an interview, Henry stated that he based Herbert's voice on an old man he used to meet at a grocery store.[6] Before the character was used for the show, Mike would use the Herbert voice to motivate stalled writers at meetings.[citation needed] He also appeared in The Cleveland Show episode "It's the Great Pancake, Cleveland Brown" as Cleveland Jr.'s first house when he was trick or treating. "Valentine's Day in Quahog" reveals that Herbert's first name is John and that he has a grandniece named Sandy.

Quagmire family

[edit]
  • Glenn Quagmire (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the Griffins' sex-addicted, next-door neighbor and one of Peter's best friends. He is an airline pilot for Spirit Airlines (as revealed at the end of "Passenger Fatty-Seven") and a former member of the US Navy, but is best known for his extreme sexuality and saying "giggity" and "all right" or yelling "oh!" after innuendos.
  • Crystal Quagmire (voiced by Alex Borstein in "Fore, Father", Allison Janney in "Quagmire's Mom") is the mother of Glenn, Gary and Brenda Quagmire, the grandmother of Anna Lee and Courtney, and the ex-wife of Dan. Her first appearance was in "Fore Father", where she is in a flashback breastfeeding Glenn. Crystal was once very promiscuous and neglectful of her son, but it is revealed that prior to the events of the episode "Quagmire's Mom", she has become a born-again Christian.
  • Ida Davis (voiced by Seth MacFarlane), born Daniel Quagmire,[7] is the transgender parent of Glenn, Gary and Brenda Quagmire, the grandparent of Anna Lee and Courtney, and the ex-spouse of Crystal Quagmire, first appearing in the episode "Quagmire's Dad", where she undergoes a sex-change operation. Like her son, Ida is a military veteran and was a war hero in the Vietnam War. She has an on-again off-again relationship with Brian.
  • Brenda Quagmire (voiced by Alex Borstein in "Jerome Is the New Black", Kaitlin Olson in "Screams of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q") is the sister of Glenn and Gary Quagmire, the aunt of Anna Lee and Courtney, and the daughter of Dan and Crystal, who used to be in an abusive relationship with a man named Jeff Fecalman, whom Quagmire murders in retribution.
  • Gary Quagmire is the brother of Quagmire and Brenda, the uncle of Anna Lee and Courtney, and the son of Dan and Crystal that was mentioned in "Jerome Is the New Black" and "Screams of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q". In "Jerome Is the New Black", he is stated to be deaf.
  • Anna Lee (voiced by Mae Whitman) is Quagmire's infant daughter that was revealed in "Quagmire's Baby". She was the result of a one-night stand and was left on his doorstep.
  • Courtney Quagmire[8] (voiced by Mandy Moore) is the biological daughter of Glenn Quagmire as revealed in the episode "No Giggity, No Doubt". She is one of Quagmire's several daughters like Anna Lee.

Swanson family

[edit]
  • Joseph "Joe" Swanson (voiced by Patrick Warburton) is the Griffins' neighbor and Peter's friend. He is a 46-year-old paraplegic police officer who has impotence and incontinence. Joe still proves to be an extremely skilled police officer, as he is constantly pursuing criminals or rescuing victims with the aid of his wheelchair and even goes so far as to abandon his wheelchair to complete his work.
  • Bonnie Swanson (voiced by Jennifer Tilly) is Joe's calm and soft-spoken 46-year-old wife who is the mother of Kevin and Susie Swanson, and the daughter-in-law of Bud Swanson. She is pregnant from her first appearance in "A Hero Sits Next Door" in season one until "Ocean's Three and a Half" in season seven, in which she gives birth to her and Joe's daughter Susie.
  • Kevin Swanson (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in early appearances, Scott Grimes in later appearances) is Joe and Bonnie's 25-year-old son. He was mainly in the first three seasons, only making occasional appearances after that with no speaking parts. He enlisted in the US Army and served in the Iraq War but after witnessing American treatment of Iraqi civilians he chooses to desert, faking his death after a cellphone bomb attached to a turkey kills his platoon on Thanksgiving. He returns to his parents in episode "Thanksgiving". He has depression, behavioral disorders and PTSD.
  • Susie Swanson (inner monologue provided by Patrick Stewart) is Joe and Bonnie's 1-year-old daughter who was born in the episode "Ocean's Three and a Half".
  • Bud Swanson (voiced by Ed O'Neill) is Joe's father, Bonnie's father-in-law, and Kevin and Susie's grandfather, whose only appearance so far was in "Papa Has a Rollin' Son". Peter and friends set up Bud to visit his son in Quahog for Father's Day, only to learn from Joe that his father frequently makes fun of handicapped people and he doesn't know his own son is now a paraplegic, so Peter and Joe pretend to be each other in front of Bud in hopes that he won't find out the truth.

Goldman family

[edit]
  • Mortimer "Mort" Goldman (voiced by Johnny Brennan) is a pharmacist who is of Polish-Jewish descent, and one of Peter's friends. He runs Goldman's Pharmacy and was married to Muriel Goldman, with whom he had one son, Neil. Mort's family are stereotypes of American Jews. He gets remarried to a woman named Rachel in season 19.
  • Neil Goldman (voiced by Seth Green) is Mort and Muriel's stereotypically nerdy son, who is Chris' best friend at Adam West Regional High School, despite differing ages. He is also a classmate of Meg's and has a borderline-obsessive crush on her, although he seems to have gotten over this crush as of "Once Bitten". He is the editor of the school's newspaper, is a member of the A/V Club, and works at his father's pharmacy, where he is employee of the month.
  • Muriel Goldman (voiced by Nicole Sullivan) is Mort's 42-year-old wife and Neil's mother, whose physical appearance is very similar to her husband's. She met Mort via a video dating service, and they had their first kiss at age fourteen while both were suffering from a cold. Muriel died in "And Then There Were Fewer" where she is stabbed by Diane Simmons upon becoming a witness to her plot to kill James Woods and frame Tom Tucker.
  • Rachel Goldman (voiced by Courtenay Taylor) is Mort's second wife and Neil's stepmother. She makes her appearance in the episode "The Marrying Kind", where she and Mort have their wedding in New Orleans.

Grace Street

[edit]
The principal supporting characters of The Cleveland Show (2009–2013). Left to right: Ernie Krinklesac, Tim the Bear, Cleveland Jr., Arianna the Bear, Terry Kimple, Rallo Tubbs, Donna Tubbs-Brown, Cleveland Brown, Roberta Tubbs, Federline Jones, Lester Krinklesac, and Holt Richter.

In The Cleveland Show, a number of characters live on the same street as the Brown family. All attended the wedding of Cleveland and Donna Brown.

Bear family

[edit]
  • Tim (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in seasons 1–3, Jess Harnell in seasons 3–4) is one of Cleveland and Donna's neighbors in Stoolbend who happens to be an anthropomorphic brown bear. He is 39 years old[2] (as revealed in the season 3 episode "Skip Day") and lives with his wife, Arianna, and his son, Raymond. He becomes Cleveland's drinking buddy at The Broken Stool, where he also converses with Holt and Lester.
  • Arianna (voiced by Arianna Huffington) is the wife of Tim and one of Cleveland and Donna's neighbors in Stoolbend. Arianna has a son named Raymond. Like her son and husband, Arianna is a brown bear.
  • Raymond (voiced by Nat Faxon) is the teenage son of Tim and Arianna and neighbors with Cleveland and Donna in Stoolbend. He appears briefly in the pilot at Cleveland and Donna's wedding.

Krinklesac family

[edit]
  • Lester Krinklesac (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) is one of Cleveland and Donna's neighbors in Stoolbend, Lester is a hillbilly with a large beer gut. He becomes Cleveland's drinking buddy at The Broken Stool, conversing with Tim and Holt.
  • Kendra Krinklesac (voiced by Aseem Batra) is the wife of Lester and the mother of Ernie. While having been slender in her early life, Kendra is now morbidly obese and uses a mobility scooter to get around.
  • Ernie Krinklesac (voiced by Glenn Howerton) is the 17-year-old son of Lester and Kendra, and Cleveland Jr.'s best friend. Ernie first appeared in the episode "Pilot" at Cleveland and Donna's wedding.
  • (Unnamed Sister) is Lester's unnamed sister, who is a stripper.
  • Princess is Krinklesac family's pet opossum.

Richter family

[edit]
  • Holt Richter (voiced by Jason Sudeikis) is a short frat-boy wannabe.
  • Mrs. Richter (voiced by Stacy Ferguson) is the unnamed and unseen mother of Holt, who lives with him and still treats him like a child.
  • General Richter (voiced by Will Arnett) is the strict father of Holt, who works in the military.

Choni's family

[edit]
  • Choni (voiced by Rosie Perez) is the aunt of Cecilia, the aunt-in-law of Cleveland Brown Jr., and the mother of Marco. She is the owner of a Mexican restaurant called Choni's Cantina.
  • Cecilia Moreno-Brown (voiced by Elia Saldana) is the 16-year-old niece of Choni and wife of Cleveland Jr. who works at her aunt's restaurant but wants to go to college to become a nurse.
  • Marco is Choni's young son, Cleveland Brown Jr.'s cousin-in-law and Cecilia's cousin. He is only shown in the episode "There Goes El Neighborhood" when Choni asks Cleveland to babysit him while she went out.
  • Sofía Vergara (voiced by herself) is depicted as the fictional aunt of Cecilia. In The Cleveland Show, Sofía Vergara appears in the Mexican segment of "Wide World of Cleveland Show".

Co-workers

[edit]

The following characters have worked with Peter and Cleveland at different jobs:

Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory

[edit]
  • Mr. Jonathan Weed (voiced by Butch Hartman in the pilot pitch, Carlos Alazraqui in the TV series) is the owner of the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory, where Peter originally worked under his supervision. He spoke with a strong Spanish accent and was described as an "effeminate weirdo" by his employees. He disapproved of nearly all of Peter's actions, mainly because most of them were detrimental to the company, and fired or came close to firing Peter on multiple occasions. In "Mr. Saturday Knight", he is invited to the Griffins' house for dinner. He promotes Peter to head of toy development and minutes later chokes to death on a dinner roll after it was Heimlich maneuvered out of Brian's throat and into Mr. Weed's throat; the half-eaten dinner roll was taken into police custody. His video will describes how the factory will be replaced by a children's hospital starting "now", at which point the demolition machinery promptly starts tearing through the factory, endangering everyone present. His great-grandfather's surname was "Bermudagrass" but was changed to Weed at Ellis Island. In the episode "Lois Kills Stewie", Stewie tells Lois, before attempting to shoot her, "Say hello to Cleveland for me, Oh, and Mr. Weed".[9]

Peter's ship

[edit]
  • Santos and Pasquale (voiced by Denis Martell and Mark Peredes) are a pair of Portuguese immigrants who do not speak English. All of their dialogue is subtitled and not understood by the other characters. In "From Method to Madness", they lament leaving Portugal for various low-paying jobs in Quahog such as caterers, fishermen, janitors, and babysitters. Peter treats them poorly while they worked for him as fishermen aboard his ship. In return, they urinate in his refreshments when the opportunity arises, as in "The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire". In this episode, Pasquale saves Joe's life after he nearly drowns by using CPR. This prompts Lois to demand that Peter take CPR classes in order to learn what to do should the situation happen again.

Pawtucket Brewery

[edit]
  • Pawtucket Pat (voiced by Michael McKean) is the original Willy Wonka-like owner and mascot of the Pawtucket Patriot Brewery. So far, he has only appeared in the season 2 episode "Wasted Talent" and was mentioned in the season 4 episode "Jungle Love" when Peter started working at his brewery stating that Pat sold his brewery. A public statue of his ancestor – also called Pawtucket Pat – in the eponymous episode "Pawtucket Pat" becomes the center of controversy when it is revealed that he stole the recipe for Pawtucket Patriot Ale from the Narragansett tribe. After a publicized debate on whether the statue should be torn down, a group of Narragansett descendants intervene and their leader gives his say, stating that the pressing issue is not the injustices that Native Americans have faced in the past, but how society can help Native Americans today. Following this, the statue is relocated to the Quahog Museum.
  • Angela (voiced by Carrie Fisher) was the former overseer of the Pawtucket Brewery's shipping department, and the supervisor of Peter, Opie, and later Stella. She likes Opie far better than Peter, and treats Peter very coldly, repeatedly rewarding Opie as employee of the month. However, Angela fires Opie in "The Blind Side". Peter tried to befriend her based on her love of animals, but ended up horrifying her by staging a bloody cockfight in her house. In "Peter-assment", Angela sexually assaults Peter after he comes to work without wearing his glasses (which were broken at the time). After Peter refused to have sex with her and cheat on Lois, she tried to gas herself in her car. After Peter rescued her, it was revealed that she has not dated anyone in ten years. Feeling sorry for her, Peter disguised himself as a stereotypical 1920s New York billionaire and had sex with her. Angela knew it was really Peter, but what she did not know was that Peter, as a means of remaining faithful to Lois, hid Mort Goldman (who did it for $2) in his pants so it was Mort who actually had sex with her, not Peter. In "The Simpsons Guy", Angela attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. Following Carrie Fisher's unexpected death on December 27, 2016, Seth MacFarlane revealed that Angela would appear on at least two more episodes that Fisher had already done voiceover work on in season 15, but would not comment on the character's future except by saying that "Family Guy will miss [Fisher] immensely."[10] Her final appearance was during the sixteenth-season episode "Don't Be A Dickens At Christmas", aired on December 10, 2017. The episode "Pawtucket Pete" states that Angela had died after going swimming less than 20 minutes after she had eaten, presumably by way of getting a stomach cramp and drowning, as claimed in Peter's eulogy for her. Peter mentions to the audience, "That's a real thing, kids – listen to your mothers."
  • Opie (voiced by Mark Hentemann) is a seemingly mentally disabled and gibberish-speaking co-worker of Peter at the Pawtucket Brewery and ward of the state. He has won "Employee of the Month" at least twenty times and has been promoted ahead of Peter. He appears to have mental retardation and never really does anything about it. He sometimes tells Peter to stick his finger in his mouth, only to bite it. He wears two different shoes on each foot. He once went for a haircut that went horribly awry. No one other than Angela seems to understand what he is saying. However, Peter has understood him in some instances, such as when he gets fired. In "Whistle While Your Wife Works", Opie was forced to watch Peter and Lois have sex in his office at the brewery. In "Blue Harvest", he played a Tusken Raider. In "New Kidney in Town", Peter sends him a shout-out on The Price is Right. In "It's a Trap!", he plays a small amphibious alien that swallows the door droid, voiced by Consuela, from Jabba the Hutt's (Joe Swanson) palace. In "The Blind Side", Opie is fired from his position for masturbating on the job (Peter comments that "the underside of [his] desk looks like Carlsbad Caverns") and is replaced by a deaf woman named Stella. However, he has since been rehired as he has been seen employed at the brewery in later episodes such as "The Birthday Bootlegger". He makes a cameo crowd appearance when Peter proposes reinstating the city government in "Tea Peter". Opie can also be seen as Stewie rides through town under Brian's car in "Family Guy Viewer Mail 2". In "The Simpsons Guy", Opie attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. "Underage Peter" reveals that Opie is not disabled, but rather spoke gibberish due to being constantly under the influence of alcohol.
  • Fouad (voiced by Mike Henry) is one of Peter Griffin's co-workers at the Pawtucket Brewery. He is a recent immigrant to the United States, apparently of Arab ethnicity. In all his appearances, he has demonstrated that he is extremely earnest in his attempts to learn a Western sense of humor and understand its subtleties, such as the nature of a sarcastic or ironic comment. He laughs in a loud manner at sarcastic or ironic statements before explaining why the joke was funny (for example, "Ahh! Is funny because..."). Peter does not seem to have a strong relationship with Fouad, likely due to his comparatively short time employed at the Pawtucket Brewery, but Peter gets along much better with Fouad than he does with Opie or Angela. Fouad first appears in "Chick Cancer", being introduced by Peter as that foreign guy at work who helped him understand sarcasm. In "Blue Harvest", Fouad plays Lieutenant Shann Childsen on the Death Star prison deck, who laughs when Chewbacca (played by Brian) asks for a cell by the pool, stating that it is funny because prisons do not have luxury areas such as swimming pools. In "Padre de Familia", Peter suspects that Fouad may be an illegal immigrant and is angered because of it. Fouad's voice is heard off-camera in a DVD-exclusive scene in "Three Kings". In "The Shawshank Redemption" segment, Captain Byron Hadley (played by Seamus) yells for lights out, calling the inmates "ladies", and Fouad remarks that it is funny because they are men.
  • Stella (voiced by Marlee Matlin) is an attractive deaf worker at the Pawtucket Brewery. She debuted in "The Blind Side" as Opie's successor.
  • Bert and Sheila (voiced by Bryan Cranston and Niecy Nash) are an interracial married couple who become the new managers of the Pawtucket Brewery Shipping Department in "Pawtucket Pete" following the death of Angela. They were hired to replace Angela because Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder's "Ebony and Ivory" was the favorite song of one of the Pawtucket Brewery's shareholders. The characters were dropped before season 20 for unknown reasons and they were succeeded by Preston Lloyd.
  • Preston Lloyd (voiced by Peter Macon) is the no-nonsense overall manager of the Pawtucket Brewery who succeeds Bert and Sheila in season 20. Despite managing a brewery, he finds alcohol repulsive and does not drink. He speaks in a deep, monotone voice.

Waterman Cable

[edit]
  • Lloyd Waterman (voiced by Bruce McGill) is the head of Waterman Cable, who hires Cleveland to be a salesman. His workers are Terry and Tim the Bear.
  • Terry Kimple (voiced by Jason Sudeikis) is Cleveland's 42-year-old best friend from high school, who once took the fall for him when the two were busted for smoking marijuana.
  • Arch (voiced by Mike Henry) is an employee of Waterman Cable. He seems to be very serious, being quite a stickler when it comes to office etiquette.
  • Aaron (voiced by Alec Sulkin) is one of Cleveland's co-workers. He once helped Cleveland win a Civil War reenactment of "The Battle of Stoolbend" against B. Emerson Plunkett V.
  • Florence (voiced by Mike Henry) is Lloyd Waterman's assistant who seems to be more favored than the other employees.
  • Jane (voiced by Stacy Ferguson) is a worker at Waterman Cable.
  • Tori (voiced by Rutina Wesley) is a worker who first appears in "Frapp Attack". She becomes friends with everyone in the office, especially Cleveland (much to Donna's dismay).

Students and teachers

[edit]

Adam West High School

[edit]

The following characters make up the school body of Adam West High School (previously named James Woods Regional High School):

  • Principal John Shepherd (voiced by Gary Cole) is the principal of Adam West High School. He was revealed to be Jewish in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein". In "The Simpsons Guy", Principal Shepherd attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale, where he was placed next to Principal Skinner. In "The Peter Principal", Principal Shepherd had a bitter divorce and breakdown causing the board of education to put him on an indefinite paid leave. As Vice-Principal Brenda McGuire was found dead in her car, the board of education asks for someone to come forward to be the interim principal until a permanent replacement for Principal Shepherd can be found. When Lois anonymously tipped off the board of education about how Peter was helping Meg and her friends on their revenge on the mean students, the board of education intervenes causing them to fire him and reinstate Principal Shepherd after he recovered from his divorce following his sex trip to Thailand. "Crimes and Meg's Demeanor" reveals Principal Shepherd's first name to be John, and he lives in an apartment building across from the building that is managed by Lou Spinazola. After a confrontation with Stewie and Brian over what appeared to have been him killing his ex-wife Fiona, which ended with Brian falling out of the window, Principal Shepherd admitted to the police and the medic about him living off food taken from the school to make ends meet when the police find the bag that supposedly leaked blood.
  • Mr. Berler (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is one of Meg's teachers at Adam West High School. In "The Kiss Seen Around the World", he disagrees with Neil Goldman's selection of James T. Kirk as the better Star Trek captain, supporting Captain Jean-Luc Picard as the superior officer. In "The Simpsons Guy", Mr. Berler made a cameo at the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale.
  • Connie D'Amico (voiced by Fairuza Balk in "Let's Go to the Hop" and Lisa Wilhoit in all subsequent appearances) is the head cheerleader and most popular girl at Adam West High School. Connie is a beautiful and popular yet narcissistic and mean-spirited girl who tends to look down on those who are either socially inept or unpopular and encourages the other popular students who she is friends with to bully them, with Meg being a favorite target of this abuse. She is most often seen with her closest friends: Gina, Scott, and Doug. While a bully to most students lacking popularity and confidence, Connie does have a softer side; in "Stew-Roids", Connie begs Meg for help after she realizes what it is like to be shunned and ridiculed by her classmates. In the same episode, she fell in love with (and dated) Chris when she realized how nice and kind he can be. In "Let's Go to the Hop", she dances with Peter when he went undercover as "Lando Griffin" at the Winter Snowball dance. In "Connie's Celica", her harassment of Lois as the school's new music teacher earns her expulsion. In revenge, she attempts to fake her death in a car accident by putting Peppa Pig in a blonde wig in the driver's seat and frame Lois for murdering her by dismantling the brakes. She later appears in season 23's "Live, Laugh, Love" as part of a school trip to Washington DC, implying that her expulsion was reversed.
  • Gina (voiced by Alex Borstein in earlier appearances, Camille Guaty in later appearances, and Nina Dobrev in "Trading Places") is a popular student and cheerleader at Adam West High School who is Connie D'Amico's best friend.
  • Beth (voiced by Lisa Wilhoit) is a blonde girl who is one of Meg's friends in the early seasons.
  • Esther (voiced by Tamera Mowry in "Barely Legal" and "Peter's Daughter", Christina Milian in later episodes) is an African-American girl who is one of Meg's friends.
  • Patty (voiced by Alexandra Breckenridge in "Barely Legal", Barclay DeVeau in "Halloween on Spooner Street", Martha MacIsaac in later episodes) is a redheaded girl who is one of Meg's friends. She has two mothers, implying that her biological mother is a lesbian. Brian briefly had a crush on her after realizing she has a more attractive body than she seems.[11]
  • Ruth Cochamer (voiced by Natasha Melnick in earlier appearances, Emily Osment in later appearances) is one of Meg's friends. Her tongue is supposedly cut off during her and Meg's trip to Paris when they are kidnapped in "Leggo My Meg-O".

Stoolbend High School

[edit]
  • Principal Wally Farquhar (voiced by Will Forte) is the 42-year-old Principal of Stoolbend High and a former high-school classmate of Cleveland's. He hates both Cleveland and Terry because they bullied him in high school.
  • Gabriel Friedman (voiced by Jamie Kennedy), more commonly known as Federline Jones, is Roberta's Jewish classmate and boyfriend. He is a reference to rapper Kevin Federline/"K-Fed".
  • Oliver Wilkerson (voiced by Mike Henry) is a popular deaf jock and school bully at Stoolbend High School. He is the captain of the school football team and often teases and torments Cleveland Jr. He leads the popular kids at his school and his closest friends are apparently Derek, Laine, and Reggie, although they are often seen without him.
  • Derek (voiced by Julius Sharpe) is one of Oliver's friends at Stoolbend High School. He is also possibly his right-hand man and like Oliver, he wears a letterman's jacket and is on the school softball team and possibly the football team as well. When he attempts to join the others in making fun of other students (notably Cleveland Jr.), he goes much too far by often making incredibly inappropriate comments (such as describing things as "gay"), much to Laine's anger.
  • Laine (voiced by Alec Sulkin) is one of Oliver's friends at Stoolbend High School. He is apparently the most intelligent of Oliver's main group of friends.
  • Reggie (voiced by Clarence Livingston) is one of Oliver's friends at Stoolbend High School. He is most likely the most humorous of Oliver's gang. His catchphrase is "Whoa!" and he reveals early in the series to have testicular cancer.
  • Kenny West (voiced by Kanye West) is the slick rapper of Stoolbend High. He first appears in "Brotherly Love". Cleveland Jr. and Kenny get in a rap battle to impress a girl. Then he re-appeared in the first episode in season 2 where Cleveland Brown helped to jump start Kenny's musical career. He has a daughter named Candace who is the same age as Rallo.

Harper Elementary School

[edit]
  • Mrs. Hadassah Lowenstein (voiced by Alex Borstein) is Rallo's kindergarten teacher at Harper Elementary School. In the pilot episode, she expelled Rallo from school for pulling down her pants, but Cleveland convinced her to give him another chance. She is a stereotypical Jew; when Cleveland asks if he can call her Hadassah, she says "Ochay", referring to the stereotypical "ch' sound heard in Hebrew and Yiddish.
  • Julius Nemeth (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) is one of Rallo's best friends, along with Walt, who attends Harper Elementary School. He writes a blog titled "Out & About with Julius".
  • Walt Fuller (voiced by Al Thompson) is one of Rallo's best friends, along with Julius, who attends Harper Elementary School.
  • Theodore Parker Jr. III (voiced by T-Pain) is one of Rallo's friends at Harper Elementary School. He is good friends with Bernard.
  • Bernard Bernard (voiced by will.i.am) is one of Rallo's friends at Harper Elementary School. He is good friends with Theodore.
  • Hot Wheels (voiced by Mike Henry) is one of the kids at Harper Elementary School. He wears roller blades. Despite being in kindergarten, he already shows signs of being part of an "alternative lifestyle". He resembles former American Idol contestant Adam Lambert.

Other recurring characters

[edit]

Quahog Channel 5 News

[edit]
  • Tom Tucker (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the arrogant, baritone male news anchor at Channel 5. He was an actor before moving to Quahog.
  • Diane Simmons (voiced by Lori Alan) is the station's 40-year-old former news co-anchor and talk show hostess. In "And Then There Were Fewer", Diane orchestrates a plot to murder James Woods and frame Tom Tucker for the crime; in the process, she murders Quagmire's date Stephanie, Woods' girlfriend Priscilla, Muriel Goldman, and Derek Wilcox. When Lois finds her out, she takes her hostage and attempts to kill her on a cliffside, but she is shot with a sniper rifle by Stewie, who wishes to kill Lois himself, and falls to her death.
  • Joyce Kinney (voiced by Christine Lakin) is the station's latest news co-anchor, who was introduced in the episode "Excellence in Broadcasting" as a successor to the late Diane Simmons. She is 45 years old[episode needed] and went to the same high school as Lois, who pulled a prank on her in front of the entire school, and as revenge, years later, she broadcast a news story about Lois having starred in a pornographic film in an attempt to get the entire city of Quahog to shun her and her family. This lasted until Lois showed the film in the church, which impressed everyone but Joyce. Her birth name was Joyce Chevapravatdumrong; she uses the surname Kinney in professional work.
  • Tricia Takanawa (voiced by Alex Borstein), typically referred to as "Asian reporter Tricia Takanawa" by her colleagues, speaks in a nasal monotone cadence that Borstein has described as "all presentation and no substance". She is confirmed as being Japanese in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story.
  • Ollie Williams (voiced by Phil LaMarr) is Channel 5's Blaccu-Weather Forecast meteorologist. Ollie Williams is a fast-talking African-American man who rarely speaks for more than about 3 seconds. His news reports are always rapidly spoken and loud. His hyperkinetic style was a result of alcoholism.[12] Ollie has only spoken for longer than a few seconds on two occasions, one in an episode where Ollie and Tom were talking about him stuck in a rainstorm with his umbrella blown away, and in "Lois Kills Stewie" where he recaps the previous episode, "Stewie Kills Lois".

West family

[edit]
  • Mayor Adam West (voiced by Adam West) is the Mayor of Quahog, named after the actor who provides his voice. He is a highly odd and delusional politician. He is good-natured but generally irresponsible. He has a love affair with Meg in "Deep Throats". Mayor West played Grand Moff Tarkin in "Blue Harvest". As of "Brothers & Sisters", he marries Lois' sister Carol, making him Peter and Lois' brother-in-law and the uncle by marriage of Meg, Chris and Stewie. In "The Simpsons Guy", Mayor Adam West attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale, where he was sitting next to Mayor Joe Quimby. In "Adam West High", Mayor Adam West has died, as Brian persuades Principal Shepherd to rename his high school after West. The episode "Wild Wild West" marked the debut of Mayor West's cousin Wild West.
  • Wild West (voiced by Sam Elliott) is Mayor Adam West's rural cousin who is in his 60s like his cousin. In his titular debut episode, Peter requests he run for mayor of Quahog following the death of Adam and he chooses to run, defeating his competitor, the librarian Elle Hitler (who claims she is of "no relation"). He offhandedly mentions killing a man twice in his debut and owns a farm where he raises livestock including sentient mustaches.
  • Old West (voiced by Gerald McRaney) is Mayor Wild West's father and Mayor Adam West's uncle. He is an outlaw who abandoned his family to keep his own son from becoming one himself. Every year on Father's Day Mayor Wild West ambushes his father for abandoning him and his mother. They eventually make up. He appears in episode 12 of season 21.
  • Allen (voiced by Tony Hale) is Mayor Wild West's stepfather, who steps in to fill the void in Mayor Wild West's life after being abandoned by Old West. Episode 12 of season 21 reveals that he doesn't believe in vaccines.

Quahog residents

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  • Bruce Straight (voiced by Mike Henry) is a 52-year-old mustached man who speaks effeminately in a calm, drawn-out voice with a slight lisp, as well as occasionally smacking his lips before a sentence. Though he was not given a name until the episode "No Chris Left Behind", he has appeared in several episodes without being named on-screen; however, he is referred to in commentary tracks prior to that episode as "the Performance Artist". He even comments on it the first time his name is spoken in the series. He has several catchphrases, the most notable being "Oh, no!" He first appeared as the clerk of an "exotic entertainment" shop in the season 1 episode "Chitty Chitty Death Bang", and was then sitting astride an obese donkey at the Renaissance fair when Peter fought the Black Knight. He has since had a variety of jobs including a deacon, a therapist, a medium, a lawyer, a masseur and a barman. More recently, he was working at the bowling alley renting shoes in "The Splendid Source", refereeing the boxing match where Lois fought Deirdre Jackson in "Baby, You Knock Me Out", and working at Quahog Laser Tag in "Forget-Me-Not". He has also trained to be a police officer, taught a CPR course, chaired the Quahog Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and entertained children at the Quahog Library. He is a member of the school board committee of Adam West Regional High School. Although Bruce himself generally makes limited appearances, his voice is lent to a number of anthropomorphic creatures including a large bee, the shark in a parody of Jaws, a Xenomorph from a parody of Aliens, a Tetris block, and a giant mutant rat. In "Blue Harvest", he played the role of Greedo. He makes an appearance as Admiral Piett on the Imperial Star Destroyer in the episode "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side". Bruce is openly gay, although he initially does not want to admit it to his parents, Phil and Candy Straight, who insisted on him meeting a woman. His partner/fiancé is his roommate Jeffrey (in "Road to the North Pole", Bruce states in the song "All I Want for Christmas" that his Christmas wish is a wedding ring from Jeffrey). In the episode "BFFs" of The Cleveland Show, Peter says that Bruce was his therapist and referred to him as "that gay guy who has, like, a thousand jobs". Another character voiced by Mike Henry who was heavily implied to be Jeffrey appeared in both the Family Guy episodes "Friends of Peter G." and "Finders Keepers", and The Cleveland Show episode "Die Semi-Hard" before being confirmed to be Jeffrey in "Underage Peter". He also appeared in a deleted scene of the episode "Stewie is Enceinte", adopting Stewie's human-dog hybrid puppies at an animal shelter with Bruce. Bruce tends to give unsolicited advice about mundane subjects, often during critical events. This occurs most notably during his training as a 911 operator. When a victim calls to report a man in her home, he provides tips for being a good host to unexpected guests. In "The Simpsons Guy", Bruce attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale, where he was sitting next to Waylon Smithers. In "Meg's Wedding", Bruce briefly had a romantic relationship with Meg. However, they ended it on the wedding day and Bruce finally got engaged to Jeffrey, and they marry in the parking lot outside of the church, since the priest wouldn't allow them to marry in the church. Bruce is widowed in "The Fat Lotus" when Jeffrey is killed by a shark.
  • Carl (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin) is the manager of the local gas station and convenience store called the Quahog Mini Mart. He speaks in a calm, monotone voice and shows almost no emotion regarding anything happening around him. Carl is a cinephile, having an obsession with films and attractive actresses. In "Road to the North Pole", he wants a Blu-ray of The Wiz for Christmas. He goes out of his way to discuss exciting movies. He becomes friends with Chris, when Chris worked for him in "Movin' Out (Brian's Song)". Their friendship is based on their mutual interest in movies. He does not get along well with Meg, although he did once hire her to work in the store. "Friends of Peter G." reveals that he knows so much about movies because he is an alcoholic and he spent so much time in his house and watched every film he could get his hands on. In the Star Wars episodes, Carl plays Master Yoda.
  • Consuela (voiced by Mike Henry) is a Hispanic maid who, in one cut-away gag, is shown as the head of the Maids' Union. She speaks broken English and usually says "No, no, no...", whenever asked to do anything. She first appears in "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air" demanding Lemon Pledge in a court case. She answers the door as Superman's maid at the Fortress of Solitude in "Stewie Kills Lois", telling Joe and the police officers that Superman is not home. She appears in a cutaway in "Ocean's Three and a Half" on the game show Are You Smarter Than a Hispanic Maid?. In "Dog Gone", she goes to work for the Griffin family, but proves to be so annoying that they drug her with chloroform and leave her with Joe. She has a nephew named Mikey, who sells light-up yo-yos, and a son named Rodrigo, who is in prison. Another of her nephews was molested by James Woods before he committed suicide, as revealed in "And Then There Were Fewer" when she was working as Woods' maid. In "Stewie Goes for a Drive", Stewie runs away from home and ends up in a bad neighborhood. Consuela finds and takes him to her home and puts him in her bathtub, which is also being used to make soup for a quinceañera celebration being held at her house. Brian tracks Stewie to Consuela's house but she refuses to let him go, claiming that Stewie is her son "Ernesto". Consuela appears as Darth Vader's maid in "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", and as the controller of the security system at the palace of Jabba the Hutt in "It's a Trap!". She also appears as Donna's housekeeper in The Cleveland Show season 3 episode "Die Semi-Hard". "Valentine's Day in Quahog" reveals that Consuela has a husband who is still living in Mexico, and to see him annually on Valentine's Day, she crosses the border illegally into Mexico. In "The Simpsons Guy", Consuela attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale, where she was sitting next to Bumblebee Man due to their both being Hispanic. "Dearly Deported" reveals that Consuela has an attractive niece named Isabella who has two sons of her own.
  • Death (voiced by Norm Macdonald in the first appearance, Adam Carolla in later appearances) is the Grim Reaper figure in the form of a skeleton in a black robe who seldom removes his hood. Underneath his hood is a human skull with spiders and snakes crawling in and out of the eye sockets, mouth, and ear cavities as seen in "Death Lives". He is in "Mr. Saturday Knight" when Mr. Weed dies after choking during dinner at the Griffins'. "I Take Thee Quagmire" reveals that anyone who touches his bones dies instantly (though "Death Is a Bitch" seems to contradict this, but while Stewie rubs his ankle to heal it faster, Death being out of commission, no one at all is able to die). In "Wasted Talent", Death comes to a college campus where a party had taken place and everybody is dead with beer bottles around the room. After doing his deed, he drinks some beer bottles to try to find a silver scroll (for Pawtucket Pat's contest). He ends up getting drunk and crashes his car. In "Friends of Peter G.", Death shows Peter what his life would be like if he continues to drink as much as he does, and if he does not drink at all. Peter learns to control his drinking from this. Death later ends up in a car crash in "Grumpy Old Man", leading him to be taken away by "Super Death" (a larger version of himself), who tells him he was going to be reincarnated as a Chinese child. He disappears only to reappear seconds later, as he was reincarnated a Chinese baby girl. In "3 Acts of God", Death takes Peter, Quagmire, Cleveland, and Joe to speak to God.
  • Elle Hitler (voiced by Alex Borstein) is Quahog's local librarian, originally named Joanna in her earlier appearances. She first makes two minor appearances in "Petergeist" and "Movin' Out (Brian's Song)", before making her first major appearance many seasons later in the episode "Wild Wild West" where this episode had her renamed Elle Hitler. She claims to be of no relation to infamous dictator Adolf Hitler. When the townspeople greet her with "Hi, Elle Hitler", it is a homophone of "Heil Hitler".
  • Dr. Elmer Hartman (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the Griffins' incompetent doctor who works at Quahog's hospital. Dr. Hartman is generally an unskilled doctor, though his skills fluctuate from episode to episode. In one episode, he mentions his Yale Medical School degree, but then implies it is a product of his calligraphy skills. Occasionally, he seems to know exactly what he is doing and performs great medical feats, such as plastic surgery to restore Peter's face; in other episodes, he does not even understand common medical terminology, or needs a chart to find body parts and lets Meg take care of patients while he is gone, as in "You Can't Do That on Television, Peter". He temporarily loses his medical license in "Stewie Loves Lois" when Peter accuses him of rape (it turns out that Hartman had merely performed a normal prostate exam, though Peter did not understand the procedure). He regains his license after treating Peter's urination problem. In "Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air", Peter brought up the fact that Hartman sounds very similar to Carter Pewterschmidt when he speaks. Hartman responds that Carter is one of his patients and that there are only so many voices in the world; some are bound to be similar and that he never noticed because they do not talk all that much despite the fact that Carter is a patient of his. This was brought up to turn the fact that MacFarlane voices both Hartman and Carter into a comical situation. His name comes from MacFarlane's close friend and fellow animator Elmer "Butch" Hartman. In "New Kidney in Town", Hartman gives Peter one of his kidneys because the Griffin family are his last paying customers. Also in the episode, Hartman reveals that while attempting to clone a chicken, he inadvertently created the Giant Chicken, which Peter says he will want to discuss with Dr. Hartman later. "Secondhand Spoke" reveals that Hartman has a gay son. "Ratings Guy" reveals that Hartman is the worst doctor at Quahog's hospital. In "The Simpsons Guy", Dr. Hartman was among the Quahog citizens to attend the trial between Pawtucket Patriot Ale and Duff Beer in Springfield. He was seated next to Dr. Nick Riviera (who was also an incompetent doctor). In "Once Bitten", Dr. Hartman enlisted his dad to get him and Seamus into a movie theater. "Papa Has a Rollin' Son" reveals that Hartman has dyslexia. Hartman is the general doctor for the Griffin family, and they usually go to him for emergencies and surgeries.
  • Frank Sinatra Jr. (voiced by himself) is a singer, songwriter and conductor who meets Brian Griffin in "Brian Sings and Swings" following his near-death experience. Frank gives him some words of wisdom before taking the stage at the Quahog Cabana Club. Brian and Frank start to sing together, and eventually Stewie Griffin joins them, forming the "New Rat Pack". In "Tales of a Third Grade Nothing", Frank and Brian purchase the Quahog Cabana Club. When business fails to improve, the two look to Stewie to bring in more customers. Stewie turns the club into a trendy Hollywood-style night club called pLace that ultimately fails when Andy Dick shows up to party. The episode "Bookie of the Year" was posthumously Frank Sinatra Jr.'s final role, where he helps Brian and Stewie with a restaurant plan. The episode is dedicated to him.
  • God (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the father of Jesus Christ and the creator of life. He is a central part of the basic tenets in the religion of Christianity. Although the basic concept of God exists in other monotheistic and polytheistic religions, it is the Christian God that serves as the basis for the character in Family Guy. His appearance in the show is the stereotypical appearance of an Abrahamic god in the Western world: a bald Caucasian man with long white hair, a huge white beard and a white robe. Contrary to the widespread belief of a benevolent and pure God, the God character in Family Guy often displays several human flaws, especially being socially irresponsible and sexually perverted. In the episode "Fifteen Minutes of Shame", he aims a sniper rifle with red dot sight at Meg from the clouds after she says, "Oh God, kill me now", but is interrupted by a phone call. In the episode "Blind Ambition", God flirts with a woman at the Drunken Clam, and lights her a cigarette with lightning before accidentally vaporizing her and setting the bar on fire, to which he exclaims, "Jesus Christ!" Jesus then arrives, and hastily leaves the area with God in a Cadillac Escalade before they can be caught up in the blaze. In "Untitled Griffin Family History", God asks his roommate Chuggs for a lighter, using it to light a fart. On his second attempt, the lit fart sets in motion the Big Bang that creates the universe. In "The Courtship of Stewie's Father", Joseph quarrels with a teenage Jesus, before Jesus storms out of the room shouting, "You're not my real father!". He then goes on to give God a phone call asking if he can go back to live with him in Heaven, but is rejected. God then turns to a young woman named Janet lying in his bed, hoping to have sex with her. Janet hands him a condom to his disappointment, and asks her to reconsider, saying it is his birthday, but Janet refuses. In "Partial Terms of Endearment", Peter thanks God thinking he is set to participate in a threesome with Lois and her friend Naomi, to which God replies "Don't mention it, Peter". A jingle is then heard singing, "God! He knows what turns you on!", after which God says, "Have fun!" In "Into Fat Air", God and Jesus discuss how to name a country in the Himalayas. God says that the mountains look like nipples, to which Jesus replies that he cannot call a country "Nipples". In response, God suggests the name Nepal, to Jesus' approval. In "Faith No More", Brian and Stewie try to go back in time to the Biblical times to prevent Christianity where Brian has Jesus persuade God to let him to do stand-up comedy. When Stewie uses the time machine to prevent Judaism, God visits the Griffin family house disguised as a delivery man where he beats them up for his actions. When Brian is reluctant to undo his and Stewie's actions, God angrily descends upon them as the final scene shows an injured Brian and Stewie singing hymns at church. Other episodes show God's serious side on occasion, such as in "If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'", where he curses Peter with six of the 10 plagues after he lied to the people of Quahog about being a healer and is then worshipped as a god.
  • Horace (voiced by Johnny Brennan) is the proprietor and bartender of The Drunken Clam for 30 years. He has been working there for at least as long as Peter and his friends have been regulars. Horace has been shot a handful of times, but has recovered from each incident. In "One If by Clam, Two If by Sea", Horace sold The Drunken Clam following a storm and moved to Florida. He later repurchased it after moving back to Quahog. In "Blind Ambition", Horace's life is saved by Peter (who was blind at the time) when The Drunken Clam was on fire. In "Save the Clam", Horace is accidentally killed when a baseball hit by Jerome hits him during a baseball game between The Drunken Clam and Mort's Pharmacy. His death causes the bank to close The Drunken Clam, which causes Peter, Joe and Quagmire to protest this until Jerome buys The Drunken Clam to keep Horace's legacy alive.
  • Jake Tucker (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is Tom Tucker's deformed son and Chris' former classmate. Jake's many appearances show him with an "upside-down face": a mouth near the top of his head and eyes near the bottom. In "It Takes a Village Idiot, and I Married One", he gets a normal face, via toxic waste. Although typically depicted as a demanding and obnoxious brat, Jake craves his father's attention, which he rarely gets. "Peter Griffin: Husband, Father...Brother?" reveals that he "doesn't have a bottom". Though Tom often neglects him, he often shows that he cares, such as when Brian accused Jake of giving Chris alcohol. However, when Chris gets back at Jake by planting drugs in his locker, an enraged Tom declares him a "bad boy" and loses faith in him. In "Mother Tucker", Jake is noticeably neglected by Tom when Tom pays more attention to Peter. But Peter then realizes that Tom should pay more attention to Jake.
  • James Woods (voiced by himself) is a 58-year-old actor whose fictional persona becomes a criminal sociopath. In "Peter's Got Woods", he is invited by Peter to help deal with the local high school being named for Woods, i.e. James Woods Regional High School. While Brian's attentions are turned to his girlfriend, Peter becomes friends with Woods. This friendship ends when Woods becomes jealous of Brian. Peter and Brian manage to trap Woods inside a crate (using Reese's Pieces as bait), and ship him off to be studied by "top men". Woods returns in "Back to the Woods", stealing Peter's wallet and assuming his identity. Peter retaliates by assuming Woods' identity and ruining his reputation on the Late Show with David Letterman by announcing a comedy film about the September 11th attacks, resulting in massive backlash from the public. When Woods shows up to fight Peter, he is again thwarted when Peter and Brian trap him inside a crate exactly as they had done before. In "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", Woods makes an appearance as General Maximilian Veers. In "Brian Griffin's House of Payne", the CBS producers hire Woods to star in Brian Griffin's television show, Woods making multiple changes to Brian's original script that prompt Brian to back out of the project. James Woods reappears in "And Then There Were Fewer", in which he becomes a born-again Christian due to his new relationship with a young news intern named Priscilla. Woods turns his life over to Jesus wishing to make amends for his sins. Woods is later killed as part of an elaborate murder plot orchestrated by Diane Simmons. "Tom Tucker: The Man and His Dream" reveals that the paramedics who loaded Woods' body into the ambulance recognized him and had his body rushed to a special Hollywood hospital where a teenage girl's life force was drained into Woods, which resurrected him. He is still a born-again Christian when he encounters Peter Griffin and Tom Tucker in Hollywood. In "The Simpsons Guy", James Woods was in Springfield at the trial between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale. During this time, he interacted with his Simpsons counterpart from "Homer and Apu". The episode "Inside Family Guy" had James Woods hosting the behind-the-scenes theme of the episode.
  • Jeffrey (voiced by Mike Henry) is Bruce's boyfriend and was initially an offscreen character before making his first official appearance in "Underage Peter". In "Meg's Wedding", he and Bruce finally get married. However, he's killed by a shark in "The Fat Lotus".
  • Jerome (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) is a 42-year-old African-American man, who first appeared in "Jerome is the New Black", in which he won the audition as a temporary replacement for Cleveland. It is revealed he was involved with Lois Griffin in their younger days before she met Peter, which made Peter jealous enough to burn down Jerome's house, so Lois invited him to come live with them. Peter believed that Jerome was trying to steal Lois from him and became jealous. He kicked Jerome out of his house, but later apologized to him and they remained friends. Jerome also tells Peter that he had some "nasty-ass sex" with Meg when he was staying with the Griffins, but Peter told him that he does not care about that. He returns in "Save the Clam", playing for Mort Goldman's softball team against Peter and his team from The Drunken Clam. He accidentally kills Horace by swinging the ball towards his face. Jerome appears at the funeral, where he apologizes for accidentally killing Horace. When it came to the demolition of The Drunken Clam which Peter, Quagmire, and Joe were protesting, Jerome appears and uses his sports earnings from lacrosse (which also happens to be his brother's name) to buy The Drunken Clam in order to keep Horace's legacy alive. "Baby Got Black" reveals that Jerome has a daughter named Pam and at first disapproved of her relationship with Chris. In "Follow the Money", Jerome reveals that he lost both his childhood sweetheart and their daughter shortly after their wedding. "Pawtucket Pete" reveals that Jerome's voice is unaffected by helium, as seen when Peter fired a harpoon gun at Brian Griffin's parade balloon.
  • Jesus Christ (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in early episodes, David Goodman in "Stu and Stewie's Excellent Adventure", Seth Green in "The Courtship of Stewie's Father", Alec Sulkin in later episodes) is the central figure of Christianity. Throughout the series, a running gag has been that Jesus drives a Cadillac Escalade. This is first seen in the episode "Blind Ambition", in which he uses it to pick up God from the Drunken Clam after He accidentally set the bar on fire. In "North by North Quahog", he is in the car in a trailer for the action film The Passion of the Christ 2: Crucify This starring Jim Caviezel as Jesus and Chris Tucker, and directed by Mel Gibson. Jesus Christ's most prominent appearance on the show came in the episode "I Dream of Jesus", where he worked in disguise at a vinyl record store called "Dead Format Records" before being recognized by Peter. After a public display of his powers, including walking on water, he becomes a huge celebrity in Quahog. While having dinner with the Griffins, Jesus proves to Brian that he actually is Jesus Christ by turning their dinners into ice cream sundaes, before immensely enlarging Lois' breasts at Peter's request, to the absolute shock of Brian. As the episode progresses, Jesus lets fame get to his head more and more while becoming more distant from Peter and his family, and ultimately gets himself incarcerated for drug abuse. When Peter visits him in prison, Jesus apologizes for his actions and decides that he probably was not mature enough to return to the world. He then gives Peter another record of "Surfin' Bird" as a gift after the first one he had was destroyed by Brian and Stewie. In "Chitty Chitty Death Bang", he turned water into funk. In the episode "Holy Crap", Francis repeatedly gives Jesus the employee of the week award, and is himself later seen in a golf course going for a fourth birdie. Upon missing his putt, he uses his power to move the ball into the hole. In the episode "And the Wiener is...", Jesus and Moses use guns to defeat the Romans in a film by the National Gun Association. In the episode "Deep Throats", Lois asks "What if Jesus had given up?", after which Jesus is seen in a shabby-looking house sitting lazily in a chair, with several children running around him, and calls out to their mother asking why their ironing board is still out. In "Stu and Stewie's Excellent Adventure", the adult Stewie tells his infant self of a time when he went back in time on vacation to see Jesus, saying that his abilities may have been exaggerated a bit. A cutaway shows adult Stewie and other members of the public watching Jesus perform Art Metrano's "tricks" while humming the song "Fine and Dandy". In "Boys Do Cry", Stewie imagines what it would be like meeting Jesus, and in a cutaway enters a room in Jesus' house to find him naked washing himself in a tub. Despite noticing Stewie, he carries on. In "Jerome is the New Black", he has an African-American counterpart in "Black Jesus", who is portrayed as a cool laid-back character wearing sunglasses. In "Go, Stewie, Go", he is in a dodgeball game on the side of the jocks pelting numerous balls at the nerds. In "Life of Brian", Stewie is at the Last Supper suggesting the idea of rebellion to Judas Iscariot, pointing out that Jesus ordered five margaritas while all Judas had was the salad. In other episodes, Jesus has been portrayed as a voice of reason, such as in "Family Goy", where he tells Peter about his Jewish identity after Peter and Lois quarreled over whether their family should be Christian or Jewish. However, in response to Peter's question asking which religion his family should follow, Jesus says "6 of 1, they're all complete crap". In "3 Acts of God", Jesus is dating Carrie Underwood. In "The 2000-Year-Old Virgin", Jesus has broken up with Carrie Underwood.
  • Jillian Russell-Wilcox (voiced by Drew Barrymore) is Brian's cute, bulimic, and dimwitted girlfriend who is portrayed as a stereotypical blonde, and is in her 20s. She is quite ignorant; for example, she does not understand that Adolf Hitler died decades ago. She has a close friendship with Peter, who treats her more like a daughter than he does Meg, due to their similar levels of intelligence. The remainder of the Griffin family look on her as a figure of mockery and symbol of Brian's shallowness, although she has affection for them, involving them all in her wedding. She first appeared in "Whistle While Your Wife Works". She is the only girlfriend that Brian has dated for more than one episode, and was a recurring character in season 5. He stays with her purely for sex, though after they split, he felt strong feelings of love for her. In "Prick Up Your Ears", when Brian talks about Jillian's bulimia, he goes on to compare her to Karen from The Carpenters, who succumbed to anorexia in 1983, claiming she "overdid it" but he thinks "Jillian's found a good balance". She breaks up with Brian in "Movin' Out" when it is revealed that Brian did not want a committed relationship with her, and she briefly dated Mayor Adam West. She got married in the episode "We Love You, Conrad". In "And Then There Were Fewer", her husband Derek Wilcox was murdered by Diane Simmons, making Jillian a widow. She is dating again in "Tiegs for Two", where Quagmire attempts to date her to make Brian jealous, but she and Cheryl Tiegs leave together when they realize how immature both men are acting. In "Valentine's Day in Quahog", Jillian is among the ex-girlfriends of Brian that Stewie assembles.
  • Jim Kaplan (voiced by Danny Smith) is a con man who tricks Peter into spending money on various useless things on many occasions. He was first introduced as Doug but has been referred to as Jim in later episodes. First appearing in "There's Something About Paulie", he sells a car to Peter that does not have an engine under the hood but rather a picture of one by claiming that the car belonged to James Bond. He later sells Peter volcano insurance in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein", for which Peter paid with Lois' rainy-day money (which she planned to use after Stewie broke Meg's glasses). With help from the accountant Max Weinstein, Peter reclaimed the money. Jim later sells Peter a TiVo in "Bango Was His Name Oh!" In "A Fish out of Water", he gives Peter a loan for Peter's new fishing boat and Peter offers up his house as collateral, which later gets taken over by the bank and sold to a fashionable, artsy, neo-hippie-ish new couple named Jim and Abby. In "Hell Comes to Quahog", he sells Peter a tank for Meg at a car dealership for her first car and finally convinces him by saying "Did I mention it's a tank?"
  • Judge Dignified Q. Blackman (voiced by Phil LaMarr) is the African-American judge who presides over trials involving any of this show's characters. His full name was revealed by the bailiff in "Veteran Guy" when Peter, Cleveland, and Joe were on trial for violating the Stolen Valor Act of 2013.
  • Lou Spinazola (voiced by Ralph Garman) is the building manager of the seedy apartment building that Brian Griffin resides in from "The D in Apartment 23" to "Crimes and Meg's Demeanor". Lou's one rule in his apartment building is to never kiss the mail carrier. In "Married... with Cancer", Lou allows Brian and his terminal cancer-recovered wife Jess Schlotz to move in while having developed a sitcom catchphrase.
  • Olivia Fuller (voiced by Rachael MacFarlane) is a child actress and local Quahog celebrity. She debuts in "From Method to Madness" when Stewie attends the same theatre school as her, and while they do perform together at first, they eventually become rivals. She moves away prior to the episode "Chick Cancer" but returns to Quahog as her career wanes. Stewie goes to the Quahog Mall, where she is scheduled to appear, intent on humiliating her, but instead ends up falling in love with her. With advice from Brian, Stewie attempts to woo her until she gives in to his efforts, and the two of them get "married". Unfortunately, their past rivalry and Stewie's jealousy of Olivia's success hinders their relationship, leading to Olivia "cheating" on Stewie with her old friend Victor. In retaliation, Stewie burns down their cardboard house with Olivia and Victor inside. She returns alive and well in "The Boys in the Band"; after once again running into Stewie, who is now performing with Brian as a children's music duo named Red Shirt, Blue Shirt, Olivia tricks them into breaking up, and takes Stewie's place as Red Shirt. However, Brian quits performing with Olivia during a concert, after seeing Stewie in the front row of the audience crying while they play one of Stewie's original songs. Unfazed, she replaces Brian with another dog, who turns out to be Vinny.
  • Paddy Tanniger (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is a short red-haired angry man who has been a caddy manager and a Hummer salesman. He generally ends his statements with "Big whoop, wanna fight about it?" He was eventually killed when he was run over by a tank piloted by Brian and Stewie in "Hell Comes to Quahog". The DVD commentary for "The Perfect Castaway" mentions that nearly all the writing staff disliked the character, which led to his death.
  • Rupert (voiced by David Boat in "Stewie Loves Lois", "Stewie Kills Lois, "Lois Kills Stewie", and "Road to the North Pole", Derek Jacobi in "Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Cheater") is a stuffed teddy bear that belongs to one-year-old Stewie Griffin. Though inanimate, Rupert has become his personal confidant and best friend. Stewie confides all his secrets and machinations in Rupert, and often gets upset when Rupert does not respond. Rupert has been known to double as a pistol when needed ("Peter, Peter, Caviar Eater"). Rupert has been damaged several times. The first time, in a flashback in "Stu & Stewie's Excellent Adventure", Stewie argued with Brian about the economy and Brian ate one of Rupert's legs. Stewie got the leg back after a while. The second time involved encountering an unfamiliar Rottweiler dog in "Stewie Loves Lois". Rupert was torn to shreds but was later sewn back together by Lois. In "A Very Special Family Guy Freakin' Christmas", Stewie tears Rupert in two, after waking up from a Santa Claus–themed nightmare. In "Killer Queen", Stewie shoots Rupert in the head with a gun rather than risk letting him die a worse death when he sees the cover of a Queen album. In "The Man with Two Brians", he is humped by New Brian for two hours. Stewie then drags a body into the garbage, later revealed to be New Brian. At the end of the episode Stewie is crying in the shower and washing Rupert in despair, constantly reassuring him that it was not his fault. In "Chick Cancer", when Stewie married Olivia Fuller, he had Rupert officiate the ceremony. "8 Simple Rules for Buying My Teenage Daughter" had the creation of Stewpert, a being where Stewie and Rupert were fused together after Stewie activated his teleportation device before he realized Rupert was inside, in reference to Brundlefly of The Fly. Stewie had several times referred to him as gay. Stewie accused Rupert of choosing to watch the boys in "Road to Rhode Island" as opposed to watching their bags as Stewie has told him to, much to Stewie's chagrin. In the episode "Road to Rupert", Brian accidentally sells Rupert, causing both Brian and Stewie (after Brian confesses to selling Rupert by accident) to head to the Swiss Alps to retrieve him from the family that he was sold to, eventually challenging the father of the family to a ski race to either get him back or give the family Brian as the stakes. Stewie does not respect the rules and throws hot tea in the other young boy's eyes, blinding him long enough to grab Rupert, but Stewie later says that he was through with Rupert and was too old for him, saying "...after all, Brian, I'm nearly one." Stewie has also imagined Rupert as a muscular, human male a few times, including in "Road to the North Pole", where he builds a buff Rupert snowman in the opening credit sequence. However, Rupert retains his Teddy Bear head. In a DVD-exclusive scene in "Excellence in Broadcasting", Stewie explores the experience of fantasizing and in his fantasy buff Rupert makes out with an equally buff Brian while Stewie is tied to the bed. In the episode "Lois Comes Out of Her Shell", Rupert's head is ripped off by Stewie's evil pet turtle Sheldon, who Stewie fights with in return. In "Total Recall", the factory that made Rupert demands all bears be returned to them, as they were a choking hazard. Lois sends him back, and Brian and Stewie go on a life-threatening quest to get him back, only just saving Rupert (and Stewie) from death in a furnace. As they return home, Stewie celebrates with Rupert, only for Rupert's eye to come off and Stewie to swallow it, supposedly killing him, with Chris, who witnessed the scene, casually shouting, "Mom, Stewie's dead". In the episode "Quagmire's Quagmire", Stewie must decide whether to "play" with Rupert anymore after Lois finds his newborn plush toy, a blue, scruffy-looking, bow-tied teddy bear named Oscar who was apparently given to him by Babs Pewterschmidt (his maternal grandmother) when Stewie was born. This fact is stated by Meg, who is in the attic, organizing items from boxes along with Lois. Stewie treats Rupert like a nagging wife juxtaposed to Oscar's imaginary role as the still-loved ex-girlfriend. In "The Simpsons Guy", Stewie is holding Rupert in court, while sitting next to Mr. Burns, holding his own teddy bear, Bobo. In "Stewie, Chris & Brian's Excellent Adventure", Rupert tells the other stuffed animals that he is straight after Stewie and Brian leave with Chris in the time machine. In "Dog Bites Bear", Brian accidentally destroys Rupert while drunk. He later replaces him with an identical-looking bear that Stewie believes to be Rupert having returned from the dead. In the season 19 episode "The Talented Mr. Stewie" Stewie "breaks up" with Rupert after having found out he belonged to Chris before Stewie was born. Stewie then returns Rupert to Chris and in trying to fill the void starts playing with different stuffed animals, but to no avail. Eventually Stewie is driven by jealousy to kill Chris and Rupert. After realizing Chris planned on returning Rupert, Stewie saves a drowning Chris and reconciles with Rupert.
  • Seamus Levine[13] (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is a tough fisherman who is in his 60s and has two peg-legs as well as two peg arms. He wears a black eye patch over his right eye. He first appears in the episode "A Fish Out of Water". While spending time with Peter and the gang in a steam room, it is revealed his whole body from the neck down is wood. He tends to warn Peter of danger. Seamus had his own talk show in "Perfect Castaway". In his premiere episode, he jokes that his father was a tree, but in the episode "And Then There Were Fewer" he blames his condition on James Woods. Seamus initially claims that Woods carved him from wood and did not wish hard enough for him to be a real boy, but he later revealed that they both got high on acid one day and Woods ate off Seamus' arms and legs, thinking that he was a steak. In "Ocean's Three and a Half", when Seamus is seen naked, his body is entirely wooden while his head is human. He played Byron Hadley in the series' portrayal of The Shawshank Redemption, the second of the "Three Kings". In a DVD-exclusive scene, Seamus tries out for Fox News Channel in "FOX-y Lady". He gets a ship in a bottle for Christmas in "Road to the North Pole". In "Tiegs for Two", he attends Quagmire's class on how to pick up women. In "Cool Hand Peter", Seamus attempts to join in Peter, Joe, Cleveland, and Quagmire's road trip only to be rejected by Peter. In "The Simpsons Guy", Seamus attended the trial in Springfield between Duff Beer and Pawtucket Patriot Ale, where he was sitting next to Captain Horatio McCallister. In "Christmas Is Coming" his son Woody was introduced; he also has two peg-legs and two peg arms.
  • Miss Tammy (voiced by Rachael MacFarlane) is Stewie's teacher at Quahog Preschool.
  • Vinny Fuller (voiced by Tony Sirico) is a 5-year-old talking Italian greyhound whose first appearance in the franchise occurs in "Life of Brian". After Brian is killed in a tragic car accident, the Griffin family decides to find another dog at the pet store to ease their grief. They meet Vinny, a pussyhound (he is 1/16th cat) of Italian descent.[14] Each member of the family (save Stewie) is taken with Vinny, and he is adopted into their family. Stewie, still mourning the death of Brian, rebuffs the hound and makes several attempts to get him out of the family. However, once Stewie learns that Vinny had also undergone a period of mourning when his owner died in a freak yoga accident, he comes to accept the hound as part of the family. His personality is that of a streetwise, "wise guy" Italian American. In "Christmas Guy", Vinny, upon asking around, finds out that Carter Pewterschmidt canceled an event at Quahog Mall, and reports this to the Griffin family. Vinny helps Stewie distract his past self so he can steal the return pad from his backpack and travel back in time to save Brian. Before Stewie goes back in time, he says his goodbyes to Vinny. Just before Stewie travels back in time, Vinny walks off shouting "Georgette, I'm coming home!", at which Stewie questions who "Georgette" is. At the end of "The Boys in the Band", after Brian quits performing with Olivia Fuller as Red Shirt, Blue Shirt, she replaces him with another dog, who, according to Brian, is "probably a dog neither [Stewie] or [he] has ever met"; it is then revealed that Vinny was chosen.

Stoolbend residents

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  • Coach Charles McFall (voiced by Mike Henry) worked as a baseball coach during Cleveland's high school days at Stoolbend High School. When Cleveland wanted to start up the Waterman Yards again, Cleveland found Coach McFall working as a janitor at the Broken Stool while missing his left cheek due to his chewing of tobacco over the years.
  • Gus (voiced by David Lynch) is the 117-year-old bartender at the Broken Stool, before which he studied drama at Northwestern University. Gus seems to be on good terms with Cleveland and his friends, giving them their drinks for free.
  • Larry is Cleveland Jr.'s stuffed toy leopard.
  • Meadowlark Lemon was the Tubbs' former family dog. In the second episode of season one, Cleveland accidentally kills him by running over him with his car several times. His body was later eaten by Lester and his family.
  • Murray (voiced by Carl Reiner) is a Jewish senior citizen who Rallo meets at the retirement home around Christmas time. He teaches Rallo about the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah. In the episode "Sex and the Biddy" he has a girlfriend named Hazel, but does not know until after he marries her that she is a gold digger. Near the end of the episode, Murray and Rallo get revenge on Hazel by filling her apartment with cats to make her seem that she lost her mind and being forced to go to a mental institution.
  • Angus (voiced by Alec Sulkin) is a radio show host and occasional sports commentator and one of Cleveland's high school friends.
    • Gordy (voiced by John Viener) is a radio announcer who is the co-host and best friend of Angus and one of Cleveland's high school friends.
  • Dr. Fist (voiced by Seth MacFarlane in seasons 1–2, Tom Kenny in season 3, Bryan Cranston in season 4) is a doctor that works at Stoolbend's hospital. Due to Seth MacFarlane working on the film Ted, Tom Kenny had to cover for Seth by voicing Dr. Fist starting with "Skip Day".
  • Donny (voiced by Danny Smith) is formerly a leisure-suit-wearing patron of the Broken Stool and a former acquaintance of Cleveland's. Donny was first in "How Cleveland Got His Groove Back", when Cleveland temporarily sought a new circle of friends. He later tried to murder Cleveland and kept Cleveland Jr. and Donna hostage to lure Cleveland into a trap.
  • Dwayne Meighan (voiced by Mike Henry) is the local television newscaster of Stoolbend.
  • Fern Stapleton (voiced by Kristen Wiig in the first appearance, Beth Littleford in later appearances) is the mother of Lacey Stapleton and Kyle Stapleton.
  • Mike (voiced by Brandon Richardson) is the band member leader who help Cleveland Brown and Kenny West find his street cred.
  • Mayor Larry Box (voiced by John Slattery) is the Mayor of Stoolbend, who is casually profane.
  • Mr. Flippers (voiced by Mike Henry) is a magical flying walrus that would save the characters during the "Scene Missing" parts.
  • Reverend Jenkins (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) is a reverend who works at the Stoolbend Community Church. He first appeared in "Gone with the Wind", where he presided over Loretta Brown's funeral.
  • Rock Hudson is an upbeat bichon frisé who was originally owned by Lloyd Waterman. When Rallo and Cleveland Jr. try to return him for a $5000 reward, Waterman reveals that he hates the dog and gives the boys the reward money to get rid of him.
  • Professor Sarah Friedman (voiced by Bebe Neuwirth) is the mother of Gabriel and works as a university professor alongside her husband Saul.
  • Professor Saul Friedman (voiced by Jason Alexander) is the father of Gabriel and works as a university professor alongside his wife Sarah. He allows his son to promote his CD at his house. Saul was present at LeVar and Cookie's wedding.
  • Yvette (voiced by Rutina Wesley) is Donna Tubbs' best friend. She first appears in the episode "Ladies' Night". She made a second appearance in the episode "Brotherly Love".

Gag characters

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  • Al Harrington (voiced by Danny Smith) is the owner, president, and CEO of "Al Harrington's Wacky Waving Inflatable Arm-Flailing Tubeman Emporium and Warehouse".
  • Barbershop Quartet (voiced by Jon Joyce, Bob Joyce, Rick Logan, and Randy Crenshaw) are a group of four men that sing close harmony songs in specific episodes.
  • Buzz Killington (voiced by Danny Smith) is a man who dresses and acts as if he is a 19th-century British man of means. True to his name, he tends to be a buzzkill during social gatherings and other events.
  • Conway Twitty is usually seen in archival footage of his performances, which are used when one of the characters needs a distraction.
  • Evil Monkey (voiced by Danny Smith) is a monkey living in Chris' closet. The monkey's trademark grimace and pointing was the idea of writer Mike Barker.[15]
  • Ernie the Giant Chicken (voiced by Danny Smith) is an anthropomorphic, human-sized chicken that often fights violently with Peter Griffin, usually interrupting some unrelated event. Their rivalry began after Ernie gave Peter an expired coupon, as shown in a flashback in the episode "Da Boom". He was killed off by Meg in Season 23's "The Chicken or the Meg", as confirmed by showrunner Alec Sulkin.[16]
  • Fjurg van der Ploeg (voiced by John Viener) is a Swedish man who owns a bakery, who makes his first official appearance in "Love, Blactually" (although he appears in a deleted scene of the earlier episode "McStroke", as seen on DVD). He speaks in a strong Swedish accent, pronouncing words in humorous ways, such as pronouncing "pie" as "pee", or "dough" as "doo". He is the world champion of a fictional sport known as schpupel; a cutaway shows that Peter once lost to him in a schpupel match.
  • The Greased-up Deaf Guy (voiced by Mike Henry) is a naked deaf man covered in grease who speaks in a shrill voice, first appearing in "The Thin White Line". His greased body and deafness were a result of being caught in an oil tank truck explosion.
  • Holden Caulfield (voiced by Mark Hentemann and named by the crew after the protagonist of the J.D. Salinger novel The Catcher in the Rye) is a man who obsessively calls out anyone he deems a "phony". He debuts in "The Kiss Seen Around the World", shaming Peter in public for pretending to play a keyboard while using its autoplay feature, going so far as to spray-paint graffiti on Peter's car and standing outside the Griffin house, yelling out to passersby that "a phony lives here!". In the Star Wars episodes, he plays Admiral Ozzel.
  • James William Bottomtooth III (voiced by Chris Sheridan) is a character with a severe underbite (Habsburg jaw), which has given him a comically oversized lower jaw and has made his speech impossible to understand due to his extreme Locust Valley lockjaw accent. "You May Now Kiss the... Uh... Guy Who Receives" reveals that he is a religious Christian and opposes same-sex marriage.
  • Kool-Aid Man (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is the mascot for the popular drink Kool-Aid, parodied in several episodes. A running gag sees him breaking through a wall and shouting his catchphrase "Oh, yeah!" after other characters' repeated cries of "Oh, no!"; it gets to the point where Judge Dignified Q. Blackman requests nobody yell "Oh, no!" in the courtroom to keep the Kool-Aid Man from showing up. "Valentine's Day in Quahog" reveals that he has a girlfriend, a sentient bottle of Yoo-hoo who is depicted as a stereotypical African-American woman, much to the shock of his disapproving father.
  • Phineas and Barnaby (voiced by Seth MacFarlane and Wally Wingert) are two strongmen that usually pursue two goals: working out at the Quahog Gym and riding high-wheel Penny Farthing bicycles of the 1860s–1890s.
  • RJ (voiced by Mike Henry) is a man with an overexaggerated, grating Wisconsin accent. His running gag is how he frequently wants to "bone his girlfriend" but due to some circumstance it never happens, as in his first appearance, where he claims to have seen Bigfoot just before he and his girlfriend could begin to have sex.
  • Tomik and Bellgarde (voiced by John Viener and Alec Sulkin) are two foreign guys who have "been living in the United States almost long enough to sound American".
  • Vern (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) and Johnny are two vaudeville characters who appear in cutaways and are dressed in traditional turn-of-the-century pinstripe outfits. Vern does all the talking (and singing) while Johnny is silent and provides accompanying piano music to Vern's acts. According to Seth MacFarlane, viewers quickly got tired of the characters, so they were killed off in "Saving Private Brian": Stewie shoots and kills them both, then turns to the audience and says "Okay, they're dead, all right? We're not gonna be seeing them again." However, they reappear as ghosts in "Back to the Woods", although Johnny is in Hell as Vern states that he was a pedophile.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The list of characters in the Family Guy franchise encompasses the core —consisting of the bumbling brewery worker Peter, his homemaker wife , their bullied teenage daughter , dim-witted adolescent son , diabolical infant prodigy Stewie, and anthropomorphic talking dog —along with prominent supporting figures such as the promiscuous airline pilot and wheelchair-bound police officer Joe Swanson, drawn from the adult animated sitcom Family Guy and its direct spin-off The Cleveland Show. Created by and airing on since 1999, the series is set in the fictional coastal city of Quahog, , where these human and non-human inhabitants engage in episodic misadventures marked by non-sequitur cutaway gags, celebrity impressions, and unfiltered targeting social norms, celebrities, and historical events. The franchise's ensemble, expanded in The Cleveland Show to include and his new family in , totals hundreds of recurring and one-off roles voiced primarily by MacFarlane and a stable of actors, reflecting the shows' emphasis on rapid-fire, boundary-pushing comedy that has sustained long-term popularity despite periodic backlash over its crass depictions of race, disability, and violence.

Franchise Context

Media Appearances

The Family Guy franchise characters primarily appear in the eponymous animated television series, which debuted on on January 31, 1999, and has continued production through multiple renewals, including a revival after cancellation following its third season in 2002. As of season 23, airing from October 2024 to July 2025 with 18 episodes plus two specials, the series has exceeded 430 episodes, maintaining central roles for core characters across its run on broadcast and streaming platforms. A key extension occurred with the spin-off , which aired on from November 2009 to May 2013 across four seasons and 88 episodes, relocating and introducing his new family while incorporating crossovers featuring staples like in episodes such as the pilot and "". These interactions underscored franchise interconnectivity without full integration. Limited specials, including Star Wars parodies like "" (2009) and holiday-themed originals on since 2023, have extended character visibility beyond standard episodes. Characters also feature in video games, such as Family Guy Video Game! (2006) for , , and , and Family Guy: Back to the Multiverse (2012) for multiple consoles, allowing playable interactions in -spanning adventures. series, published by entities like Devil's Due from 2005 onward, depicted anthology stories with recurring cast members. Extensive merchandise, including action figures, apparel, and collectibles, has sustained character presence in consumer products since the early . The franchise lacks theatrical films but integrates seamlessly into streaming on , with all episodes available for on-demand viewing.

Character Archetypes and Satirical Roles

The Family Guy franchise utilizes exaggerated character archetypes as conduits for , emphasizing causal drivers of human folly such as , , and hierarchical pretensions within family and society. These archetypes—exemplified by the inept embodying unchecked idiocy, the self-important intellectual masking mediocrity, and the hyper-rational exposing hypocrisies—facilitate undiluted critiques of behavioral incentives, stripping away socially imposed veneers of propriety to reveal underlying absurdities in dynamics like parental and interpersonal rivalries. This structure prioritizes irreverent humor over narrative coherence, deploying cutaway gags and non-sequiturs to underscore how real-world norms often incentivize evasion of unflattering truths, from domestic incompetence to cultural self-congratulation. Satirical roles extend to broader societal targets, lampooning and media-driven moral panics by attributing them to archetypal flaws like herd or virtue-signaling, thereby challenging viewers to confront causal disconnects between professed ideals and observable actions. Creator has described this as intentional boundary-pushing, where politically incorrect elements serve to deflate pretensions rather than endorse malice, drawing parallels to prior satirical precedents that used offense to provoke reflection on human incentives. Proponents view such gags as truth-revealing mechanisms that bypass filters obscuring behavioral realities, while detractors cite insensitivity as undermining coherence, though empirical persistence of the format suggests audience tolerance for raw causal realism over sanitized alternatives. The franchise's approach evolved from early seasons' integration of edgy within plot-driven episodes to later emphases on standalone gags amid heightened network oversight, reflecting causal pressures from broadcast standards yet retaining core irreverence. Initial cancellations in 2000 and 2002 stemmed partly from controversial content clashing with low linear viewership, but revival in 2005 via robust DVD sales and syndication demand—fueled by cult appeal of the unfiltered style—demonstrated how backlash amplified reach, with post-revival episodes drawing millions more through ancillary markets. This trajectory underscores a : while external constraints tempered certain excesses, the archetypes' enduring utility in dissecting incentives preserved the show's capacity for causal critique, unburdened by deference to prevailing sensitivities.

The Griffin Family

Peter Griffin

Peter Griffin serves as the chaotic patriarch of the Griffin family in the Family Guy, characterized as a morbidly obese, intellectually limited brewery employee prone to impulsive and self-destructive actions. Voiced by creator , who employs a distinctive accent inspired by real-life figures, Griffin works at the Pawtucket Patriot Brewery, where his incompetence frequently leads to workplace mishaps and temporary unemployment. His childlike immaturity manifests in habitual irresponsibility, such as abandoning his family during a to watch a film in a stranger's vehicle or exploiting a perceived genius status after performing well on a children's trivia game, only to be reclassified as intellectually disabled following formal testing. These traits underscore a pattern of relapses into poor judgment, often resolved through contrived episodic resets rather than sustained growth. Griffin's defining physical confrontations include an escalating rivalry with Ernie the Giant Chicken, originating in the "Da Boom" (season 2, episode 3, aired December 26, 1999), triggered by a disputed at a supermarket. This feud has recurred in over a dozen episodes, escalating into city-destroying brawls that action tropes and highlight Griffin's unyielding stubbornness, with fights extending from urban chases to airborne dogfights and historical recreations. Historical flashback sequences depict his working-class origins without sentimentality, showing realistic struggles like factory drudgery and economic precarity in mid-20th-century America, emphasizing causal factors such as limited education and familial instability over heroic narratives. Satirically, Griffin embodies and mocks blue-collar stereotypes of the disaffected , exaggerating traits like beer-fueled , , and unchecked —such as or pursuing get-rich-quick schemes—to critique suburban malaise and male entitlement. Episodes like "PTV" (season 4, episode 14, aired June 12, 2005) position him as an enabler of family dysfunction by launching an uncensored from his home, directly challenging FCC indecency rules through raw, unfiltered programming that amplifies the household's moral laxity and exposes causal links between and amplified vice. This arc critiques media while illustrating how Griffin's leadership perpetuates enabling cycles, where his whims override parental duties toward wife and children , , and Stewie, or the family's anthropomorphic dog . The character's unvarnished portrayal has elicited divided responses: fans value its empirical realism in depicting flawed paternal without softening edges, fostering appreciation for humor rooted in failings like relapses or rage outbursts. Conversely, critics highlight controversies over ableist gags, such as those in "Petarded" (season 4, episode 6, aired November 20, 2005), where is weaponized for laughs via exploitative schemes and slurs, and racial insensitivities in cutaway bits that generalize ethnic tropes, prompting backlash for lacking substantive redemption or beyond . These elements reflect the series' commitment to provocative over palatable narratives, prioritizing behavioral veracity drawn from episodic evidence.

Lois Griffin

Lois Griffin functions as the matriarch of the in , serving as Peter Griffin's wife and the primary homemaker who intermittently reins in his disruptive impulses while revealing her own inconsistencies in upholding family stability. Voiced by since the series' 1999 debut, Lois embodies a traditional suburban mother with occasional forays into assertiveness, such as her role as a teacher demonstrated in early episodes like "Wasted Talent" (2000), where Peter's hidden piano talent emerges during family interactions. Her character draws from real marital tensions, often excusing Peter's recklessness despite its consequences, which underscores a dynamic of enabling amid chaos rather than consistent boundary enforcement. Lois's traits include a suppressed wild side, evidenced by episodes depicting her sadomasochistic inclinations and moral hypocrisies, such as criticizing others' flaws while overlooking her own indulgences. In "Lethal Weapons" (season 3, episode 7, aired August 22, 2001), she pursues training to combat Peter's neglect and external annoyances like tourist influxes, momentarily empowering herself against physical and emotional strain—yet this feminist-leaning assertion contrasts sharply with her routine reversion to dependency and tolerance of Peter's antics, highlighting undercut attempts at within a codependent framework. Such contradictions portray marital realism: Lois preaches restraint but participates in or overlooks excesses, as seen in her selective outrage over family missteps. Appearing in 421 of Family Guy's episodes as of 2023 tallies—over 95% of the series' output—Lois anchors the narrative's exploration of domestic , praised by viewers for her determined, conscience-like role in navigating dysfunction without fully dissolving the household. Critics, however, note her enabling of Peter's abusive tendencies—ranging from physical outbursts to financial irresponsibility—as a unflattering realism in spousal dynamics, where her persistence in the marriage perpetuates cycles of tolerance over confrontation, differing from Peter's outward escapades by internalizing conflict through rationalization. This duality avoids idealized portrayals, emphasizing causal links between her hypocrisies and sustained family discord.

Meg Griffin

Meg Griffin is the eldest child and only daughter of Peter and Lois Griffin in the animated series Family Guy, portrayed as a socially awkward and insecure teenager enduring consistent ridicule from her family and peers. She attends James Woods Regional High School, where her attempts at fitting in often highlight themes of adolescent isolation and unrequited crushes, such as her infatuation with Brian or schoolmates who exploit her vulnerability. Voiced by Mila Kunis since the second season premiere in 1999—after initial appearances by Lacey Chabert in the first season and Rachael MacFarlane in the pilot—Meg's character embodies a pattern of familial neglect that underscores causal failures in parental oversight, with Peter frequently directing physical and verbal abuse toward her as a punchline. Episodic arcs explore Meg's identity struggles through exaggerated scenarios, critiquing the realism of unchecked adolescent angst without romanticizing victimhood; for instance, in the season 8 episode "Dial Meg for Murder" (aired January 31, 2010), Meg is imprisoned for harboring her escaped convict boyfriend, emerging hardened and retaliating violently against her family, including forcing Peter into submission via a prison shank threat. This plot illustrates rare instances of agency, where Meg's response stems from accumulated grievances rather than inherent malice, aligning with satirical jabs at dysfunctional dynamics where breeds . The show's unfiltered humor, including body-shaming gags targeting Meg's appearance, deliberately subverts idealized teen portrayals by emphasizing empirical awkwardness over narratives. In recent seasons 22 and 23 (2023–2025), Meg's depiction shows tonal shifts, with some episodes attempting to expand her personality beyond perpetual victimhood—such as portraying her with "outrageous" traits tied to —though this often reverts to mistreatment for comedic effect, as seen in season 23's "Martian Meg" where her exclusion drives the plot without resolution. Fan discussions debate her as a relatable reflecting real teen resilience amid rejection versus a whiny whose complaints amplify her isolation, with some attributing family disdain to subconscious resentments like Lois's reminders in Meg's existence. These viewpoints highlight the character's role in exposing causal links between and behavioral escalation, without softening the satire's edge.

Chris Griffin

Chris Griffin serves as the adolescent son of Peter and Lois Griffin in the Family Guy series, depicted as an overweight teenager with blonde hair, typically around 15 years old, whose physical and cognitive traits closely mirror those of his father. Voiced by Seth Green since the show's 1999 premiere, Chris embodies dim-wittedness and pubescent awkwardness, often displaying low academic performance and impulsive behaviors that underscore familial patterns of underachievement. His character highlights biological inheritance through shared obesity and limited intellect, with episodes portraying these as outcomes of genetic predispositions combined with sedentary habits and poor dietary choices within the household. In episodes like "He's Too Sexy for His Fat" (season 2, episode 17, aired July 27, 2000), confronts embarrassment over his weight, prompting interventions that fail due to underlying and reliance on quick fixes like , rather than sustained effort. This narrative arc illustrates causal connections between inactivity, familial overeating, and escalating body mass, without resolution through , emphasizing inherited vulnerabilities over external motivations. occasionally reveals artistic inclinations, such as or musical attempts, but these are overshadowed by his general and hormone-driven distractions, distinguishing his portrayal from the intellectual precocity of brother Stewie or the cultured pretensions of dog Brian. The embedded in targets the realities of adolescent entitlement and deterministic family dynamics, exaggerating how parental flaws propagate through via unaddressed behavioral loops, yielding relatable humor in his bungled pursuits and voiced frustrations. Critics have pointed to such depictions as potentially normalizing , yet the show's first-principles approach to causation—linking traits to observable and environment—avoids sanitization, opting for raw comedic exaggeration of puberty's clumsiness and its toll on potential. This contrasts with more aspirational sibling arcs, positioning as a mirror to unfiltered in a dysfunctional .

Stewie Griffin

Stewart "Stewie" Griffin is the youngest child of Peter and Lois Griffin in the Family Guy series, portrayed as an infant genius with a posh British accent and a penchant for megalomaniacal schemes, voiced exclusively by series creator Seth MacFarlane. His character embodies a stark duality: intellectual sophistication evidenced by fluent adult vocabulary, scientific inventions like weather-control devices, and strategic plots for global conquest, juxtaposed against the physical and emotional limitations of infancy, including tantrums and diaper dependency. This tension highlights raw psychological realism, where Stewie's villainous ambitions—chiefly matricide against Lois, driven by resentment over perceived neglect and birth trauma—stem from Oedipal conflicts, as his schemes repeatedly circle back to eliminating or dominating his mother to resolve deep-seated familial grievances. Stewie's numerous attempts at , often involving elaborate machinery or alliances with figures like Bertram, his half-brother, underscore causal patterns of overambition leading to empirical failure; these plots succeed briefly in isolated scenarios but collapse due to his immaturity, such as miscalculations in execution or interference from or Peter, privileging realistic incompetence over contrived triumphs. Episodes like "Stewie Kills ," which aired on November 4, 2007, delve into these dark fantasies, depicting Stewie shooting during a family cruise and assuming her identity, only for the narrative to expose the scheme's fragility and tie it to underlying neglect-induced rage, without romanticizing the violence. Post-2010, Stewie's portrayal evolved toward greater emotional vulnerability, with diminished focus on unrelenting —evident in arcs emphasizing friendships and self-doubt—reflecting production shifts amid external pressures, though retaining core traits like . This humanization has sparked : defenders view his early iterations as satirical of precocious child egos, exaggerating innate drives without causal endorsement of harm, while detractors, including groups like the Parents Television Council, cite episodes' as potentially desensitizing, overlooking the show's consistent framing of schemes as absurd failures rather than models.

Brian Griffin

Brian Griffin is an anthropomorphic and a central member of the in the animated series, voiced by series creator using a tone close to his natural speaking voice but amplified with smugness. Introduced as the family's intelligent pet who walks upright, converses fluently, and consumes alcohol and cigarettes like a human adult, Brian positions himself as an aspiring , staunch atheist, and progressive intellectual, often dispensing unsolicited commentary on , , and . His includes dramatic events such as his apparent death by vehicular collision in the episode "Life of Brian," which aired on November 24, 2013, followed by a revival in a subsequent special, highlighting the show's willingness to deploy high-stakes plot twists for comedic effect. Brian's intellectual pretensions serve as a vehicle for targeting self-congratulatory , exemplified by his authorship of the critically panned Faster Than the Speed of Love, a deliberate of derivative tropes and amateurish prose that underscores his delusions of literary grandeur despite universal rejection by publishers and readers. Episodes portray him railing against perceived societal ills like or with fervent liberal rhetoric, only for his advocacy to unravel into or —such as failed attempts at eco-activism that devolve into personal or endorsements of socialist policies that ignore practical incentives and , thereby mocking the disconnect between ideological posturing and real-world outcomes. These depictions the of the coastal urban sophisticate by revealing Brian's vices, including chronic addressed in storylines like attending meetings after public benders and relapses into substance dependency, which erode his and expose inconsistencies between his professed ethics and self-destructive habits. In meta-commentary, Brian occasionally breaks the to critique the series' own formula, as in episodes where the Griffins provide DVD commentary on prior installments, allowing him to lampoon contrivances and character motivations from an insider perspective. Fan reception ranks him as divisive, with polls showing him trailing behind more comedic family members like Peter or Stewie in popularity due to perceptions of insufferable smugness and inconsistent —such as preaching temperance while nursing hangovers—contrasting his adult-oriented foibles against the juvenile antics of other Griffins. This positioning critiques liberal self-importance by portraying intellectualism not as elevated virtue but as a facade masking , , and relational dysfunction within the Quahog setting.

Extended Griffin Family Members

The Pewterschmidt family, as Lois Griffin's parents, represents the affluent in-law dynamic that frequently exacerbates the Griffins' socioeconomic tensions and exposes underlying prejudices through episodic confrontations. Carter Pewterschmidt, a multimillionaire industrialist voiced by , embodies old-money entitlement and overt conservatism, often clashing with Peter's blue-collar antics while displaying antisemitic and racist behaviors satirized for humor in class-based rivalries. In the season 5 episode "" (aired May 13, 2007), Carter's interactions highlight family inheritance disputes amid Peter's search for his biological father, underscoring causal strains from wealth disparities rather than mere caricature. His appearances, such as in "Welcome Back, Carter" (season 13, episode 10, aired January 25, 2015), involve infidelity and blackmail plots that reinforce themes of moral hypocrisy in elite circles, though such episodes diminish in frequency after season 10 as the series shifts toward self-contained Griffin narratives. Barbara "Babs" Pewterschmidt (voiced by ), Carter's wife and Lois's mother, complements this portrayal with her own history of bigotry, including a Jewish maiden name (Hebrewberg) retconned to explain antisemitic remarks, used to lampoon inherited prejudices within family gatherings. Episodes like "" (season 2, episode 13, aired August 12, 2000) feature her in travel mishaps that amplify dysfunction, such as abandoning the family mid-trip, while later ones like "Nanny Goats" (season 15, episode 14, aired February 19, 2017) depict bonding attempts with Peter over alcohol, satirizing generational divides without resolving core incompatibilities. These traits, while offensively stereotypical, drive causal realism in depicting how upper-class insularity perpetuates family rifts, with Babs's reduced roles post-2010 reflecting the show's pivot from extended relative arcs. On Peter's side, Thelma Griffin (voiced by until her death in 2012, then briefly recast), his biological mother, appears as a neglectful, working-class figure whose failures—such as prioritizing performances over childcare—directly contribute to Peter's immaturity and . Introduced retrospectively in episodes like "Peter Griffin: Husband, Father... Brother?" (season 3, episode 14, aired November 21, 2001), she reveals Peter's non-biological ties to stepfather Francis, framing abandonment as a root cause of intergenerational trauma satirized through absurd flashbacks. Her death in "" (season 12, episode 12, aired March 9, 2014) prompts Peter's brief maturity arc, but subsequent rare mentions emphasize episodic reinforcement of dysfunction over sustained development, aligning with the franchise's pattern of peripheral relatives amplifying flaws without narrative permanence.

The Tubbs-Brown Family

Cleveland Brown


Cleveland Brown serves as Peter Griffin's affable neighbor in Quahog, characterized by his laid-back personality, patience, and role as the level-headed counterpoint to his friends' antics. Often depicted as the token black resident in the predominantly white town, he rarely loses his temper except in response to overt racism, embodying an everyman archetype with subtle flaws like occasional passivity. His humor derives from slow, deliberate speech patterns and ironic detachment from chaos, as seen in group interactions where he absorbs absurdity without escalation.
A pivotal arc occurs in the 2005 episode "The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire" (season 4, episode 5), where Cleveland learns of his wife Loretta's affair with Quagmire, citing his lack of passion as the cause, resulting in divorce and his temporary exit from Quahog. This catalyzes his lead role in the spin-off The Cleveland Show (2009–2013), relocating him to Stoolbend, Virginia, for a fresh start as a single father emphasizing everyday struggles and racial dynamics through direct satire. The series portrays unvarnished aspects of black family life, diverging from polished media stereotypes by incorporating raw humor on identity and community tensions. Following the spin-off's 2013 cancellation, Cleveland reintegrates into Family Guy via the 2014 episode "He's Bla-ack!" (season 12, episode 18), resuming his Quahog residency while retaining spin-off traits for continuity. Voiced initially by Mike Henry from the character's 1999 debut, the role shifted to in 2020 after Henry stepped down amid scrutiny over a white actor voicing a black character, aiming for greater authenticity despite mixed reception on vocal fidelity. This change highlights broader debates on representation, with the franchise's racial —evident in episodes addressing reparations or stereotypes—prioritizing irreverence over convention.

Donna Tubbs-Brown

Donna Tubbs-Brown is a central character in , the spin-off that premiered on on September 27, 2009, where she serves as the second wife of protagonist . Voiced by , Donna is portrayed as a competent professional employed as the principal's assistant at Stoolbend High School in the series' setting of Stoolbend, Virginia. Her introduction coincides with Cleveland's relocation from Quahog, , following his divorce, positioning her as the catalyst for his new family dynamic and suburban life. The character embodies an assertive who juggles career demands with household management, often employing a strict, hands-on approach to that includes occasional physical corrections toward members, as depicted in various episodes. This portrayal satirizes of overworked mothers in dual-income households, emphasizing Donna's resourcefulness and tolerance for Cleveland's shortcomings while highlighting tensions in balancing professional ambition with domestic stability. Episodes frequently explore her influence in decisions, such as adapting to Cleveland's step-parenting role, without romanticizing the arrangement's challenges. Donna's , revealed through flashbacks and dialogue, includes elements of premarital and relational , which the series uses for humor centered on adult consequences and redemption arcs, though these aspects draw mixed commentary for potentially perpetuating caricatures of urban family histories. She appears in Family Guy crossovers starting with the 2010 episode "The Splendid Source," maintaining her established traits amid interactions with the . Critics have praised her as a of female agency in , yet noted causal links to broader tropes of welfare-adjacent or inner-city influences in character motivations, reflecting the show's provocative style without endorsement from production sources.

Cleveland Brown Jr.

Cleveland Brown Jr., the biological son of Cleveland Brown from his first marriage to Loretta Brown, undergoes a stark transformation across the Family Guy franchise. Initially portrayed in Family Guy as a thin, hyperactive child with rapid speech and fleeting attention, he reemerges in The Cleveland Show (2009–2013) as a 14-year-old obese teenager sporting glasses and exhibiting a sluggish voice and demeanor. This redesign, implemented starting with the spin-off pilot aired September 27, 2009, shifts him from an energetic minor figure to a more prominent, awkward adolescent grappling with physical and social limitations. Voiced initially by Mike Henry in early Family Guy appearances, the role later shifted to Kevin Michael Richardson, aligning with the character's evolved traits and the franchise's voice recasting trends. In The Cleveland Show, Cleveland Jr.'s nerdy persona emphasizes his obesity, limited , and initial obliviousness to personal awkwardness, marking him as a sheltered, blissfully ignorant youth in Stoolbend, . Early episodes depict him as lazy and socially inept, yet he experiences character development through interactions that gradually build his awareness and skills, such as befriending Ernie Kruntz in "The One About Friends" (November 22, 2009), where misguided parental efforts highlight his isolation risks. Other arcs, like clashing with local rapper "Killer" Khammad in "Brotherly Love" (March 14, 2010), showcase his navigation of peer conflicts using emerging wit rather than physical prowess. This progression satirizes portrayals of disadvantaged youth by illustrating causal pathways to competence via personal initiative and realism, eschewing narratives of inherent victimhood or external salvation—Jr. succeeds incrementally through self-reliant adaptation, countering dependency tropes prevalent in media. Upon The Cleveland Show's conclusion in May 2013, Cleveland Jr. returns sporadically to alongside his family, with appearances persisting into the 2020s amid reduced reliance on gag-based humor tied to his physique or speech patterns. Post-2020 episodes integrate him more narratively, reflecting the franchise's tonal shifts toward sustained character beats over isolated punchlines, as seen in compilation footage from seasons up to 2021. This evolution underscores a franchise-wide move away from exploitative stereotypes, favoring arcs where challenged figures like Jr. demonstrate resilience through and , informed by empirical observations of adaptability rather than scripted .

Roberta Tubbs

Roberta Tubbs is the biological daughter of Donna Tubbs from her previous marriage and the stepdaughter of in the animated series , a spin-off of that aired from 2009 to 2013. Introduced as a main character, she is depicted as a 15-year-old high school student living in Stoolbend, Virginia, often central to storylines involving and family dynamics. Voiced initially by in the first season before being recast with starting in season 2, Roberta's character embodies a sassy, outspoken urban teenager with a strong attitude, frequently prioritizing social life, , and independence over parental authority. Her portrayals highlight causal tensions arising from Donna's strict control, leading to rebellions such as sneaking out or unsuitable partners, as seen in episodes like "How Do You Solve a Problem Like ?" (season 2, episode 11, aired January 23, 2011), where she becomes involved with a member, prompting Cleveland's intervention. While granted an empowered voice in navigating teen pressures like popularity and relationships—often shown as boy-crazy and socially adept—her aggression and stereotypical "sassy Black girl" tropes draw criticism for reinforcing clichés, evident in physical confrontations such as singlehandedly fighting off drunken assailants in "B.M.O.C." (season 3, episode 5). These elements reflect the show's comedic intent but limit depth, with plots occasionally touching maturity through scares like potential teen pregnancy or family compromises, though rarely resolving into sustained growth. Post-spin-off, Roberta's crossovers to Family Guy are minimal and non-speaking, appearing mostly as background in Quahog scenes without dialogue or subplots, preserving her spin-off identity while avoiding narrative overlap.

Rallo Tubbs

Rallo Tubbs, whose full name is Montclair Tubbs, serves as the stepson of Cleveland Brown and biological son of Donna Tubbs-Brown in the animated spin-off series The Cleveland Show. Portrayed as a hyperactive five-year-old boy, Rallo exhibits mischievous and disruptive tendencies, frequently engaging in pranks that escalate family tensions, such as schemes leading to his stepbrother Cleveland Jr. being expelled from the Boy Scouts. Voiced by Mike Henry across all 88 episodes from the show's premiere on September 27, 2009, to its conclusion in 2013, the character delivers precocious, adult-like commentary amid his chaotic energy. Distinct from Family Guy's Stewie Griffin, whose plots revolve around calculated villainy and genius-level intellect, Rallo embodies unbridled toddler impulsivity, often manifesting in spontaneous dance routines and that child performer tropes and sibling rivalries. Episodes highlight his role in family disruptions, including dance competition subplots where his antics contribute to comedic mishaps, as seen in "Dancing with the Stools," aired in 2012. Rallo's appearances in the parent series Family Guy remain limited, primarily as brief cameos without extending his spin-off-centric hyperactive persona.

Extended Tubbs-Brown Family Members

LeVar "Freight Train" Brown serves as Cleveland Brown's father and the grandfather to Cleveland Brown Jr., portraying a boisterous, hyper-masculine archetype rooted in his career as a railroad engineer, which manifests in exaggerated physical feats and domineering family interactions. His episodic appearances, such as in the 2012 episode "When a Man (or a Freight Train) Loves His Cookie," emphasize comedic tensions from his infidelity and attempts to reclaim past relationships, satirizing rigid macho stereotypes within African American family structures without developing sustained narrative arcs. Freight Train's adoption of Donna's ex-husband Robert Tubbs in the 2013 episode "Hustle 'N' Bros" further highlights impulsive bonding over shared bravado, reinforcing causal links between generational machismo and familial loyalty through humor rather than resolution. Evelyn "Cookie" Brown, Cleveland's mother, appears primarily in flashbacks and holiday visits, depicted as a resilient yet frustrated figure enduring Freight Train's belittling, often retaliating through passive-aggressive schemes against her son as a displaced outlet for marital discontent. Voiced by , she features in episodes like the 2010 "Murray Christmas," where family gatherings expose underlying resentments, and the 2012 "Flush of Genius," underscoring episodic on spousal dynamics without advancing core plots. Her character's death, referenced in later crossovers around 2023, aligns with the franchise's casual handling of mortality for comedic effect, limiting her role to supportive lore that critiques enabling behaviors in strained parental bonds. Dee Dee Tubbs, Donna Tubbs-Brown's sister, provides brief comedic relief through sibling rivalries, appearing in select episodes to amplify Donna's authoritative persona via mirrored traits like and meddling. Her limited , such as in interactions highlighting Tubbs women's shared resilience, contributes to cultural on matriarchal influences without independent storylines. Broderick Brown, Cleveland's lesser-seen brother, emerges in isolated gags reinforcing sibling underachievement tropes, tying into ' episodic reinforcement of inherited dysfunctions like evasion of responsibility. These relatives collectively underscore the spin-off's focus on peripheral satire, prioritizing humor over character evolution.

Quahog Neighbors and Associates

Quagmire and Associates

Glenn (full name Glenn Quagglechek) is the Griffin family's next-door neighbor in Quahog, , depicted as a U.S. Navy veteran and commercial airline pilot for Vought International. Voiced by series creator , whose vocal style draws from 1930s-1940s radio pitchmen, Quagmire embodies through relentless pursuit of women, often punctuated by his signature "giggity" or variations like "giggity giggity" to signal . His lifestyle involves frequent one-night stands and boasts of extensive conquests, satirizing male by exaggerating its absurd, consequence-laden outcomes, such as STD scares or relational fallout. Quagmire's character arc reveals darker undercurrents to his promiscuity, including unintended fatherhood. In the season 7 episode "Quagmire's Baby" (aired May 10, 2009), an abandoned infant girl is left at his door, confirming his paternity via DNA test and forcing temporary caregiving responsibilities amid his bachelor habits. Similarly, the season 17 episode "No Giggity, No Doubt" (aired March 10, 2019) introduces his teenage daughter Courtney, conceived during a high school fling, whom he initially pursues romantically before the revelation halts his advances. These plots underscore causal realism in critiquing unchecked sexual excess, portraying it as breeding familial complications rather than unbridled fulfillment. As a satirical figure, Quagmire contrasts unapologetic with modern sensitivities; his humor derives from Rat Pack-era bravado clashing against contemporary norms, occasionally sparking debate over boundary-pushing gags like implied non-consent scenarios played for . In the season 8 episode "Jerome Is the New Black" (aired November 22, 2009), Quagmire's antagonism toward originates from Brian's unwitting romantic overtures toward his sister, highlighting interpersonal tensions from his possessive worldview and aversion to rivals encroaching on "his" domain. Quagmire's minor associates include peripheral figures tied to his pilot career or escapades, such as fleeting girlfriends like Sonja or (parodied in episodes), who serve as foils to expose his relational ineptitude, and bar acquaintances at The Drunken Clam who enable his antics without deep loyalty. These connections reinforce his isolated persona, where professional colleagues and conquests rarely evolve beyond transactional utility, critiquing superficial bonds in hedonistic pursuits.

Swanson Family

Joe Swanson is the patriarch of the Swanson family, depicted as a tough, paraplegic Quahog resident confined to a due to injuries sustained during a confrontation with a criminal who struck him with a pipe and shot him in both legs. Voiced by , Joe's character embodies a mix of bitterness from his physical limitations and underlying heroism, often pushing his into action during family crises or neighborhood escapades, highlighting resilience without sentimentality. The show's portrayal satirizes aspects of through dark humor, such as Joe's explosive temper or attempts to adapt with prosthetic enhancements, critiquing self-pity while admiring his determination to maintain normalcy in household roles like disciplining his children or attempting intimacy with his wife. Bonnie Swanson, Joe's wife, is frequently shown as frustrated by the constraints of their paraplegic-led household, leading to arcs where her dissatisfaction manifests in neglectful or vengeful behavior toward Joe, including and . Voiced by , Bonnie's traits underscore the strains of long-term caregiving, with episodes depicting her resentment boiling over into exaggerated acts of rebellion, such as pursuing affairs or prioritizing personal freedom, which the series uses to lampoon marital dynamics under physical adversity without endorsing victimhood. Despite these quirks, the family unit persists through satirical resilience, as Bonnie occasionally reverts to supportive roles during collective challenges, reflecting a realistic portrayal of enduring familial bonds amid dysfunction. Kevin Swanson, the elder child, evolves from a typical awkward teenager interested in military enlistment to a war who fakes his death to escape service, later reuniting with the family after being presumed . Initially voiced by and later by , Kevin's arc emphasizes youthful impulsivity clashing with adult consequences, contributing to household tension through his rebellious streaks and strained sibling interactions. Susie Swanson, the younger daughter born on November 11, 2008, in the episode "," is portrayed as an unusually precocious infant or toddler with mischievous tendencies, voiced by in a distinctive, gravelly tone that amplifies the family's offbeat quirks. Together, the Swansons' dynamics satirize suburban family life under , balancing gritty perseverance—such as Joe's unyielding authority—with comedic exaggerations of parental frustration and child antics, avoiding maudlin narratives in favor of causal realism in relational strains.

Goldman Family

The Goldman family comprises Mort Goldman, a pharmacist in Quahog, , his late wife Muriel Goldman, and their son Neil Goldman. The family embodies satirical portrayals of Jewish cultural traits, including , self-deprecating humor, and commercial enterprise, often through Mort's ownership of a that doubles as a greeting card retailer. Recurring since early seasons, their depictions draw on unfiltered ethnic stereotypes for comedic effect, such as hypochondria and awkward social interactions, without narrative sanitization. Mort Goldman, voiced by John G. Brennan, serves as the family's patriarch and a staple Quahog , frequently appearing in episodes highlighting his whiny demeanor and obsessions. In "Stuck Together, Torn Apart" (season 3, episode 19, aired July 14, 2002), 's neurotic traits are central as he navigates personal insecurities alongside . His business underscores the family's mercantile role, satirizing Jewish stereotypes of commerce and frugality through gags involving overpriced remedies and petty haggling. Later episodes, like "Road to " (season 7, episode 3, aired November 16, 2008), extend this to historical parodies where 's ethnicity drives plot absurdities. Following Muriel's death, remarries Goldman, maintaining the family's ongoing presence in Quahog's social fabric. Muriel Goldman, voiced by Nicole Sullivan, appeared as Mort's supportive yet exasperated wife and Neil's mother in multiple early episodes, often reacting to the family's eccentricities with resignation. Her character arc concluded in "And Then There Were Fewer" (season 9, episode 1, aired November 21, 2010), where she is murdered by Diane Simmons during a gathering at ' mansion, emphasizing the show's penchant for abrupt character eliminations to refresh dynamics. This event amplifies the on domestic stability within the Goldmans' neurotic household. Neil Goldman, Mort and Muriel's son, is portrayed as an awkward, intellectually inclined teenager with a persistent romantic fixation on Meg Griffin, fueling episodes centered on unrequited adolescent pursuits. In "The Kiss Seen Around the World" (season 3, episode 5, aired July 25, 2001), Neil shares a coerced kiss with Meg during a news internship crisis, which becomes a viral spectacle and highlights his social ineptitude. Appearing in at least 41 episodes, Neil's traits mirror his father's nerdiness but emphasize isolation and futile courtship, as seen in "8 Simple Rules for Buying My Teenage Daughter" (season 4, episode 8, aired November 21, 2004), where Meg attempts to provoke his jealousy. By later seasons, his interest in Meg wanes, shifting focus to broader high school satire without resolving the family's core ethnic comedic tropes.

Other Spooner Street Residents

Seamus is a recurring Spooner Street resident characterized as a one-legged fisherman with wooden prosthetic arms and legs, an covering a blind eye, and a pronounced Irish accent. Voiced by , he operates as a and engages in episodic neighborly antics with the Griffins and their associates, often involving maritime mishaps or group escapades that heighten street-level absurdity. His debut occurred in the season 4 episode "The Perfect Castaway," broadcast on September 18, 2005. 's portrayal satirizes the rugged, seafaring archetype, with traits like claiming extreme age (e.g., 600 years) and delivering folksy, profane wisdom in cutaway gags or plots. These interactions typically serve as foils to Peter Griffin's , such as collaborative pranks or schemes gone awry, reinforcing the neighborhood's collective dysfunction without deeper narrative arcs. Consuela, voiced by Mike Henry, functions as an occasional housekeeper for the Griffin household, depicted as an elderly, heavy-set Latina woman who communicates in and adamantly refuses requests with the phrase ", I no do that." She gained prominence in the season 8 episode "," which aired on November 22, 2009, where the family hires her amid domestic chaos, only for her to exacerbate problems through incompetence and entitlement, like lounging excessively or mishandling chores. Her appearances, spanning over 40 episodes, lampoon stereotypes of immigrant domestic laborers via exaggerated obstinacy and cultural clashes, such as ignoring instructions or imposing personal habits on employers. Though not a fixed resident, Consuela's repeated involvement in Griffin home invasions or neighborhood vignettes positions her as a disruptive local presence, amplifying satirical commentary on service industry tropes through minor roles in street-adjacent conflicts.

Professional and Community Figures

Workplace Colleagues

Angela was Peter Griffin's supervisor at the Pawtucket Brewery, where she engaged in repeated toward him, including propositions and threats to his job security if he did not comply. Voiced by , Angela's character emphasized satirical reversals of power dynamics in blue-collar environments, with her advances culminating in Peter's complaints to . Following Fisher's death on December 27, 2016, Angela was written out in the season 17 episode "Pawtucket Pete," aired January 7, 2018, where her by gunshot is referenced off-screen, prompting new corporate ownership and mascot changes at the brewery. Opie serves as a recurring co-worker at the Pawtucket Brewery, depicted as mentally disabled, cross-eyed, and a ward of the state, yet exceptionally productive and awarded Employee of the Month at least 20 times. Introduced in the season 4 episode "Jungle Love," aired February 19, 2006, Opie is positioned as Peter's superior in the shipping department, biting Peter's finger during their first meeting and embodying incompetence contrasted with undue recognition in workplace hierarchies. His portrayal underscores the brewery's absurd labor practices, including state-subsidized employment for the unfit. Other brewery staff include Stella, a fellow employee involved in operational mishaps, and Fouad, an Arab-American worker who interacts with Peter during shifts. These figures appear sporadically, often in contexts of firings, promotions, or brewery crises like the 2018 mascot controversy following Angela's death. Earlier in the series, at the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Factory—Peter's initial employer until approximately 2001—colleagues were minimally developed, with owner Jonathan Weed overseeing production until his fatal fall in the season 3 episode "Mr. Saturday Knight," aired July 18, 2001, amid Peter's heroic but disastrous intervention. Minor toy factory workers, such as and John, feature in isolated incidents like Peter's drug-related antics but lack ongoing roles.

News and Media Personalities

Tom Tucker serves as the lead anchor for Quahog 5 News, delivering broadcasts characterized by and absurdity, often interrupting serious reports with personal anecdotes or unrelated tangents. Voiced by , Tucker debuted in the series premiere "," aired January 31, 1999, where he reported on local events with detached professionalism amid chaotic cutaways. His character embodies media detachment, as seen in episodes like "" (season 2, episode 3, December 26, 1999), where he and co-anchor Diane Simmons resort to of reporter Tricia Takanawa during a post-apocalyptic , highlighting the show's critique of journalistic ethics under pressure. Diane Simmons, Tucker's longtime co-anchor, portrayed a competent yet complicit figure in the team's exaggerated reporting style, frequently participating in on-air flirtations and unethical decisions. She appeared regularly from the pilot until her death in the special episode "" (season 9, aired November 21, 2010), where murders her after she threatens to expose ' secrets, underscoring the franchise's satirical take on media scandals and violence. Simmons' arc satirized real-world anchor dynamics, including an affair with Tucker revealed in multiple episodes, such as "Tales of a Third Grade Nothing" (season 7, episode 6, November 16, 2008). Tricia Takanawa functions as the field reporter for Channel 5, often dispatched to cover bizarre local stories with a stereotypical accent and minimal depth, amplifying the show's mockery of token diversity hires and superficial coverage. Her appearances, starting in "Death Has a Shadow," include reporting on trivial events like animal attacks or celebrity gossip, as in "The Cleveland-Loretta Quagmire" (season 4, episode 5, June 12, 2005), where her segments devolve into chaos. Takanawa's portrayal critiques media's prioritization of visuals over substance, with gags like her being eaten in "" emphasizing expendability in sensationalist journalism. Ollie Williams, the station's weatherman and sports correspondent, delivers ultra-concise, shouted forecasts that parody incompetent meteorology and racial stereotypes in broadcasting. Voiced by , he first appeared in "Death Has a Shadow," responding to queries with abrupt phrases like "It's gon' rain," regardless of actual conditions, as featured in clips from "Let's Go to the Hop" (season 2, episode 14, February 6, 2000). Williams' segments, such as the "BlaccuWeather" report in multiple episodes, satirize the brevity and inaccuracy of TV weather, often cutting off mid-sentence for comedic effect. Joyce Kinney replaced Simmons as co-anchor from season 9 onward, introducing a vengeful edge in her debut episode "" (season 9, episode 9, February 13, 2011), where she befriends only to publicly humiliate her by revealing a past career on air. Voiced by , Kinney's character mocks entertainment-news crossovers and personal vendettas in media, with appearances in 28 episodes spanning a decade, often amplifying the team's bias toward scandal over facts. Her role perpetuates the franchise's depiction of news as a vehicle for ratings-driven outrage rather than objective reporting. The Channel 5 team collectively satirizes journalistic sensationalism and bias, frequently fabricating stories or ignoring context for humor, as in cutaways mocking "fake news" dynamics predating similar real-world terms. Episodes like "Viewer Mail #1" (season 3, episode 21, February 14, 2001) feature them endorsing absurd public reactions, critiquing how media amplifies hysteria without verification. This portrayal aligns with the show's broader lampooning of institutional incompetence, prioritizing empirical absurdity over ideological agendas.

Political and Authority Figures

Mayor Adam West is the long-serving mayor of Quahog, depicted as an eccentric and detached leader prone to bizarre and self-serving decisions that ineffective governance. Voiced by actor beginning with the character's debut in the episode "Let's Go to the Hop" on November 19, 2000, he frequently exhibits erratic behavior, such as attempting to gain superpowers or engaging in childish antics like ringing doorbells and fleeing. In "You May Now Kiss the... Uh... Guy Who Receives," aired January 6, 2008, West bans gay marriage as a diversion from his administration's financial scandal, illustrating corrupt deflection tactics. West's tenure includes episodes highlighting his incompetence, such as standing trial for murder in "12 and a Half Angry Men," aired November 24, 2013, where juror Brian Griffin argues his innocence despite overwhelming evidence of guilt, underscoring flawed judicial deference to authority. The character continued appearing posthumously after Adam West's death on June 9, 2017, from leukemia, with five episodes in season 15 featuring archived audio. In-show, West's death is referenced in the season 17 episode "Adam West High," aired May 12, 2019, where Brian campaigns to rename James Woods High School after him, implying his passing occurred around 2018 amid the show's timeline inconsistencies. Quahog's authority structures extend to law enforcement, where SWAT teams recurrently deploy in disproportionate responses to trivial disturbances, satirizing excessive police militarization; for instance, they storm locations over minor infractions in multiple episodes, often at West's erratic behest, without individualized recurring personalities beyond departmental roles. These portrayals emphasize causal breakdowns in public order, where authority figures prioritize spectacle over efficacy, as seen in West's demands for exhaustive searches lacking leads. No other named political officials achieve similar recurrence, with guest appearances by real-world figures like presidents serving as one-off gags rather than franchise staples.

Educational Characters

High School Students and Staff

Adam West High School, renamed from James Woods Regional High School in July 2018 to commemorate actor following his death, functions as Quahog's central secondary institution in the series, satirizing adolescent social dynamics, academic failures, and institutional dysfunction through recurring teen-focused plots. Episodes often depict the school as a microcosm of exaggerated high school hierarchies, with storylines involving , sports rivalries, and administrative mishandling, particularly in arcs centered on students like navigating vocational pressures or enduring social ostracism. Principal John Shepherd, voiced by , oversees school operations and appears in disciplinary scenarios, such as advising on Griffin's educational options or mediating family disputes. Recurring faculty portrayals emphasize incompetence, with teachers and staff occasionally escalating conflicts, as seen in season 20 where extends to administrative levels. Among students, Connie D'Amico stands out as the archetypal antagonist, serving as head cheerleader and ringleader of social exclusion tactics against less popular peers; voiced mainly by Lisa Wilhoit with occasional appearances by , she features in multiple episodes tormenting before her expulsion in season 18. Supporting bullies include jock archetypes who enforce hierarchies through , often in homoerotically charged taunts as depicted in season 7's "." Nerdy counterparts, such as Goldman, represent intellectual outcasts involved in science clubs or anti-social pursuits, contrasting the dominant athletic cliques. In 2020s episodes, high school satire intensifies with plots like Meg's basketball recruitment in "White Meg Can't Jump" (2023), exposing gender and athletic biases, and administrative crises in "Hard Times at Adam West High" (2025). These arcs underscore causal links between unchecked bullying and broader teen alienation, without resolution through progressive interventions, aligning with the series' irreverent critique of institutional responses.

Elementary School Characters

Rallo Tubbs, the 5-year-old stepson of in The Cleveland Show, attends Harper Elementary School in Stoolbend, where his interactions with peers underscore absurd playground hierarchies and juvenile mischief often mirroring adult stereotypes in exaggerated form. Voiced by Mike Henry, Rallo exhibits a precocious, streetwise demeanor akin to a diminutive gangster, leading group escapades that highlight child rivalries and impulsive behaviors, such as pranks and talent show performances gone awry. His core group of friends at the school includes Walt (voiced by Al Thompson), Julius (voiced by ), and Bernard Bernard (voiced by ), who join Rallo in episodes depicting schoolyard dynamics, including a fiscal responsibility rap at a that fails to resonate with classmates, emphasizing the disconnect between childish logic and real-world concepts. Jr. III also recurs as part of this circle, contributing to collective antics that amplify the show's satirical take on early education absurdities. Hadassah Lowenstein serves as Rallo's kindergarten teacher, dealing with his disruptive tendencies, including an incident where he pulls down her pants, leading to temporary expulsion discussions resolved through parental intervention. This portrayal underscores recurring gags around authority figures ill-equipped for precocious troublemakers. Other minor students, such as , Marco Moreno, and Dylan, appear sporadically in classroom and recess scenes, reinforcing themes of and nonsensical child hierarchies without deeper development.

Additional Recurring Residents

Quahog Locals

Dr. Hartman, also known as Dr. Elmer Hartman, serves as the primary physician for the and other residents of Quahog, , frequently appearing in episodes involving medical consultations where his incompetence leads to comedic mishaps. He is depicted as habitually delivering dire diagnoses followed by puns before revealing less severe outcomes, satirizing medical professionals' detachment and errors. Voiced by , Hartman embodies the town's flawed healthcare system through recurring portrayals of surgical blunders and inappropriate interactions. Herbert, whose full name is John Herbert, is an elderly Quahog resident residing near Spooner Street, characterized by his use of a walker and overt pedophilic fixation on teenager , often approaching him under innocuous pretexts like offering candy or invitations. Voiced by Mike Henry, the character was introduced in the episode "To Love and Die in " (season 7, episode 12, aired May 17, 2009), evolving from a one-off into a recurring figure highlighting suburban dangers through exaggerated . His episodic pursuits of Chris underscore the series' on predatory behavior masked by feigned friendliness, with Herbert's veteran backstory adding layers to his eccentric menace.

Stoolbend-Affiliated Characters

Lester Krinklesac, voiced by , is depicted as Brown's crude, stereotypical rural neighbor in Stoolbend, characterized by his foul language, large family of unkempt children, and frequent involvement in lowbrow schemes. He recurs across episodes, such as "Brown History Month" (aired March 27, 2010), where he and are court-ordered to collaborate on a float after a physical altercation, underscoring their uneasy camaraderie amid cultural clashes. Krinklesac's portrayal satirizes Appalachian archetypes through exaggerated incestuous family dynamics and dim-witted bravado, as seen in interactions like his skepticism toward 's domestic life in "Da Doggone Daddy-Daughter Dinner Dance" (aired December 13, 2009). After ended in May 2013, he appeared in cameo form in the episode "No Giggity " (season 12, episode 8, aired December 8, 2013), integrating spin-off elements back into the Quahog narrative. Federline Jones, another Stoolbend resident and Cleveland's erstwhile friend, is portrayed as a sleazy former with a penchant for exploitative schemes and ostentatious style, voiced initially by in the pilot before recurring with other actors. He features in early episodes like the "Pilot" (aired November 22, 2009), where Cleveland confronts him over personal betrayals, highlighting themes of misplaced loyalty in a rundown community. Jones embodies urban hustler tropes through his manipulative antics, such as organizing illicit gatherings, but remains tied to Stoolbend's underbelly without relocating to Quahog post-spin-off. Gus, the bartender and proprietor of The Broken Stool tavern—a central Stoolbend hangout—serves as a gruff, no-nonsense fixture for Cleveland's social circle, facilitating rowdy group escapades. Voiced to resemble real-life inspirations, he appears in episodes involving bar-based conflicts, like preparations for local events, reinforcing the town's blue-collar drinking culture. His role emphasizes communal dysfunction without individual spotlight returns to Family Guy.

Guest Recurring Figures

James Woods voices himself in multiple episodes, beginning with "The Perfect Castaway" in season 4 (2005), where he joins on a disastrous trip, and continuing in arcs like "Lethal Weapons" (season 7, 2009), portraying an obsessive stalker of , and "The Gift of the Maggie" (season 20, 2022), emphasizing his recurring role in satirical takes on obsession and entitlement. These appearances leverage Woods' real-life persona for humor, often positioning him as a chaotic antagonist or unlikely ally to the Griffins, amplifying the series' critique of Hollywood narcissism without resident ties to Quahog. Norm Macdonald provides the voice for , a grim reaper figure debuting in the season 2 episode "Death Is a Bitch" (2000), who returns in installments such as "" (season 4, 2006) and "Tales of a Third Grade Nothing" (season 7, 2009), enforcing mortality rules through poker games or bureaucratic mishaps with Peter. This character's semi-regular interventions underscore causal consequences of the Griffins' recklessness, blending with Macdonald's delivery to subvert expectations of divine authority. Other semi-regular celebrity parodies include , who appears as himself in "The Tan Aquatic with Steve Zissou" (season 5, 2007), promoting neutering in a dog-fighting context, and reprises elements in related gags, satirizing hosts' moral posturing. These outsider cameos, distinct from local residents, frequently catalyze episodic chaos or cutaways, enabling the franchise to lampoon fame's absurdities while maintaining narrative detachment from Quahog's core ensemble.

Minor and Gag Characters

One-Off Satirical Figures

One-off satirical figures in the Family Guy franchise primarily appear in cutaway gags or isolated episode segments, serving as exaggerated parodies of celebrities, politicians, or historical personas to deliver pointed humor through absurdity and . These depictions often highlight perceived flaws, cultural , or ironic twists on public images, detached from the to enable rapid-fire commentary. Unlike recurring characters, they exist solely within a single gag, emphasizing the show's reliance on non-sequiturs for satirical effect. A notable example is the portrayal of former U.S. President in a cutaway, where he futilely attempts to manipulate a toy down stairs, lampooning associations with simplistic or bungled decision-making. In the season 4 episode "," actor features in a wedding cutaway fumbling his vows with repetitive stutters, satirizing his distinctive speech impediments observed in public appearances. Similarly, the season 9 episode "Friends Without Benefits" includes a 3D movie gag with actress aggressively lunging from the screen at , mocking the immersive intensity of her dramatic performances in films like those employing advanced visual effects. These figures underscore Family Guy's humor structure by condensing satire into brief, self-contained bursts, often amplifying real-life quirks—such as Travolta's verbal hesitations documented in interviews or Bush's public gaffes reported in media coverage—for comedic exaggeration without ongoing narrative commitment. Historical parodies, like twisted depictions of figures such as as a frustrated artist in cutaways, further exemplify this approach, twisting factual biographical elements (e.g., Hitler's rejected Vienna Academy application in 1907) into absurd failures to critique authoritarian pretensions. Such gags prioritize and cultural critique over character development, aligning with the franchise's empirical observation of vulnerabilities as fodder for commentary.

Archetypal Gag Recurring Elements

The Evil Monkey is a chimpanzee that resides in Chris Griffin's bedroom closet and serves as a personification of irrational childhood fears through its menacing gestures toward Chris, forming a core running gag in the series. First prominently featured in the episode "Dammit Janet!" aired on November 12, 2006, the character persists across multiple seasons, with Chris repeatedly claiming its malevolent intent despite family skepticism, culminating in "Hannah Banana" on November 8, 2009, where Chris captures it, revealing it communicates via sign language but retains its antagonistic motif. This gag underscores causal persistence, as the monkey's presence defies logical resolution and interrupts domestic scenes absurdly, satirizing unfounded phobias without narrative closure. Ernie the Giant Chicken embodies an archetypal vendetta gag, manifesting as a colossal rooster that inexplicably engages Peter Griffin in prolonged, destructive brawls triggered by trivial disputes, such as a defective coupon in the post-apocalyptic episode "Da Boom" originally aired December 26, 1999. These confrontations escalate into city-wide chaos, parodying irrational grudges through their repetitive, physics-defying endurance, with Ernie interrupting Peter's activities across episodes spanning over two decades. The motif's causal realism is highlighted by its unyielding recurrence, where each fight builds on prior ones without permanent resolution until producers confirmed Ernie's death in season 23's "The Chicken or the Meg," aired earlier in 2025, marking the gag's conclusion after 25 years. These elements exemplify non-human gag archetypes in the franchise, prioritizing absurd, motif-driven interruptions over character development, with the Evil Monkey tapping into psychological fears and the Giant Chicken amplifying petty conflicts to hyperbolic extremes, both iconic since the late 1990s and early 2000s seasons.

References

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