Family guy stewie gay

Family Guy Will Speak to Stewie’s Sexuality in March Episode

Stewie Griffin is finally sitting down for a long-overdue therapy session.

As previously reported, Sir Ian McKellen will guest-star in an upcoming episode of Family Guy as the voice of Stewie’s therapist. And in a recent interview with TVLine, executive producer Prosperous Appel revealed that Stewie’s sexuality is among the topics they’ll be addressing — though he adds that it’s merely “the suggestion of the iceberg.”

“It’s just a two-character episode with Stewie in his therapist’s office for the first time,” Appel says. “It’s a wonderful episode, and Seth’s performance is spectacular. They delve into all sorts of things you would think would come up in a therapy session with a teen like Stewie. When Stewie’s with his therapist, they beautiful immediately address questions of sexuality. The episode covers that, and then goes to deeper issues for Stewie.”

The topic of Stewie’s sexuality has come up pretty consistently over the course of Family Guy‘s 300 episodes — watch no further than the compilation video em

​Family Guy is an adult animated TV show which was first aired on January 31, 1999. The show is known for its dark humor and bold content. The show focuses on Peter Griffin’s family, filled with quirky characters like Lois, Meg, Chris, Stewie, and Brian. The voice cast of Family Guy includes Alex Borstein, Seth MacFarlane, Mila Kunis, Seth Green, etc.

The show never shies away from controversial topics, and one of the speculations is Stewie's sexuality. Stewie is a different character because he is only one year former, but his conduct is very mature, sophisticated, and complicated compared to a typical kid of his age. From the early seasons, Stewie's behavior has made people wonder about his orientation.

Is Stewie gay on Family Guy?

Speculation around Stewie’s sexuality has always been a running joke in the show. Stewie is an erratic character who doesn’t align with traditional gender roles. He often flirts with female characters; however, over time the show has dropped hints that Stewie might be having romantic or sexual feelings for men. In Season 5, Episode 7, titled 'Chick Cancer,' Stewie tells Brian that he wouldn't brain being gay a

‘Family Guy’ Addresses Stewie’s Sexuality, His Accent & More

SPOILER ALERT: This story contains details of Sunday’s episode ofFamily Guy on Fox.

It was an eye-opening episode of Fox’s Family Guy Sunday. The “Send in Stewie, Please” episode, which aired commercial-free, took viewers into Stewie Griffin’s therapy session, exploring his sexuality (which has been a running joke) directly for the first time and other things that revealed Stewie has been pretending to be someone he’s not.

Ian McKellan guest-starred as Stewie’s therapist Dr. Cecil Pritchfield, who was called in to counsel Stewie after the Griffin’s youngest, most evil member did something terrible to a pre-school classmate.

It was apparent promptly on during the therapy session that there would still be questions about Stewie’s sexuality.

“Stewie’s consciousness of his sexuality is this uncertain thing, and that needs to stay as it is. His uncertainty gives him a vulnerability, which is something we need to maintain for the series, writer Gary Janetti told Deadline’s sister pub TVLine. Whether he is [gay] or not, tha

‘Family Guy’ Addresses Stewie’s Sexuality and Reveals His ‘Real’ Voice (VIDEO)

[Spoiler alert: This post contains spoilers from the March 18 Family Guy episode “Send in Stewie, Please”]

Since the beginning of its nearly 20 years (and counting) on the air, Fox’s animated hit Family Guy has played with the idea of toddler Stewie’s (voiced by series creator Seth MacFarlane) sexuality.

It has also given us hints as to just how in the earth the evil super-genius could have sprung from decidedly average parents like Peter and Lois Griffin, and how he could include developed his Rex Harrison-esque British accent. (Even the notion of whether everyone can even understand Stewie has been in flux over the years.)

On Sunday’s commercial-free, Stewie-centered episode of Family Guy, called “Send in Stewie, Please” (the series’ 300th episode), both of these characteristics of the troublemaking toddler came to the forefront during a therapy session with academy psychologist Dr. Cecil Pritchfield (voiced by Sir Ian McKellen).

One question seems to have been answered (at least, for the purposes of that particul