
Watch S16, EP17: Switch the Flip with Fubo for $0 Today
To help get Brian's life in order, Stewie and Brian swap bodies using a machine that Stewie invents; chaos quickly ensues around Quahog when Stewie's machine goes haywire.
To help get Brian's life in order, Stewie and Brian swap bodies using a machine that Stewie invents; chaos quickly ensues around Quahog when Stewie's machine goes haywire.
More episodes
Family Guy
S16, EP19 "The Unkindest Cut"Quagmire loses his most treasured body part and must learn to live without it; Stewie and Brian search for Mort after learning there is a reward for turning him into the police for his involvement in a drug scam.
Family Guy
S3, EP3 "Mr. Griffin Goes to Washington"Peter's company sends him to Washington, D.C., to give a speech on the benefits of smoking cigarettes.
Family Guy
S16, EP20 "Are You There God? It's Me, Peter"Peter falls into a coma and meets God face to face; he asks God some of life's tough questions.
Family Guy
S3, EP4 "One if by Clam, Two if by Sea"Peter's favorite bar, the Drunken Clam, is turned into a British-style pub after being razed by a hurricane.
Family Guy
S24, EP9 "Phony Montana"After going on a date with a Cuban-American woman named Carmen, Brian inexplicably develops a Cuban accent.
Family Guy
S24, EP8 "Play Time"In this three-act parody, the Griffins spoof the stage by putting up "To Kill a Mockingbird," "The Odd Couple" and "Hamlet."
Family Guy
S24, EP7 "Scent of a Woman"Brian discovers his nose can detect diseases and smells that someone in the Griffin house has cancer.
Family Guy
S24, EP6 "Viewer DMs"The Griffin family retells "The Lord of the Rings," explains how the Griffins' ancestors arrived in Quahog and looks back at Quagmire's 1960s variety show.
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Mensa-fied best friends and roommates Leonard and Sheldon, physicists who work at the California Institute of Technology, may be able to tell everybody more than they want to know about quantum physics, but getting through most basic social situations, especially ones involving women, totally baffles them. How lucky, then, that babe-alicious waitress/aspiring actress Penny moves in next door. Frequently seen hanging out with Leonard and Sheldon are friends and fellow Caltech scientists Wolowitz and Koothrappali. Will worlds collide? Does Einstein theorize in the woods?
Seinfeld
Four single friends -- comic Jerry Seinfeld, bungling George Costanza, frustrated working gal Elaine Benes and eccentric neighbor Cosmo Kramer -- deal with the absurdities of everyday life in New York City.
The Office
This U.S. adaptation -- set at a paper company based in Scranton, Pa. -- has a similar documentary style to that of the Ricky Gervais-led British original. It features the Dunder-Mifflin staff, which includes characters based on roles in the British show -- and, quite possibly, people with whom you work in your office. There's Jim, the likable employee who's a bit of an every man. Jim has a thing for receptionist-turned-sales-rep Pam -- because office romances are always a good idea! There's also Dwight, the co-worker who is successful but devoid of social skills and common sense.
South Park
The animated series is not for children. In fact, its goal seems to be to offend as many as possible as it presents the adventures of Stan, Kyle, Kenny and Cartman. The show has taken on Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, politicians of every stripe and self-important celebrities. Oh, and Kenny is killed in many episodes.