The 2000-Year-Old Virgin

"The 2000-Year-Old Virgin" is the sixth episode of the thirteenth season of the animated sitcom Family Guy, and the 237th episode overall. It aired on Fox in the United States on December 7, 2014, and is written by Ted Jessup and directed by Joseph Lee.[1] The title is a play on the film The 40-Year-Old Virgin and the skit 2000 Year Old Man.

"The 2000-Year-Old Virgin"
Family Guy episode
Episode no.Season 13
Episode 6
Directed byJoseph Lee
Written byTed Jessup
Production codeCACX03
Original air dateDecember 7, 2014 (2014-12-07)
Guest appearance(s)

Uncredited:

In the episode, Peter lets Jesus have sex with his wife Lois after Jesus repeats his annual tradition of lying to a friend that he is still a virgin.

Plot

On a trip to the Quahog Mall before Christmas, Peter and Lois bump into Jesus and discover that he is still hanging around Quahog due to not being entirely comfortable dealing with his own home life with God. Jesus invites Peter over to his place. However, since it is a depressing bachelor apartment, Peter invites him out with Quagmire, Cleveland, and Joe to have a drink. At the Drunken Clam, they start planning a birthday party for Jesus, and Jesus tells them that he has never had sex: to make his birthday special, they promise to help him lose his virginity. Their attempts to achieve this through speed dating fail, upsetting Peter. Lois tries to find out what Jesus likes, but her nice manners cause him to want to sleep with her. Approaching Peter about his issue to help him, Peter is shocked but agrees to help when Jesus promises him an expensive massage chair in return for sleeping with Lois. He lets Lois know about Jesus' interest in her and she reluctantly agrees.

As they head out together, Peter enjoys his chair at the Drunken Clam. During this time, Peter has a fantasy of Lois and Jesus having sex and has second thoughts. Other people at the bar confirm to Peter that Jesus is not a virgin, but pulls this annual stunt every Christmas by bribing men with gifts just so he can sleep with their wives. Peter tries multiple ways to get to their liaison to stop things. Peter rushes to the room to find that no cheating took place as Lois decided that their marriage was too good. Jesus applauds them for learning their “lesson” that he intended, making the excuse that he concocted this charade as a test for them to appreciate loved ones and resist temptation, then Jesus says "Who cares? I'm not even real", and leaves.

On Christmas Day, Rupert gives Stewie a Joni Mitchell CD for Christmas, disappointing him because Stewie had observed Rupert picking out a heart-shaped necklace. As Stewie tearfully listens to "Both Sides, Now" on the CD, he wonders whom the necklace was for, and it is revealed to be for Mayor Adam West.

Reception

The episode received an audience of 4.44 million, making it the second most watched show on Fox that night after The Simpsons episode "I Won't Be Home for Christmas".[2]

Controversy

Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, an atheist, received criticism for the episode's portrayal of Jesus

In an interview ahead of the start of the thirteenth season, Family Guy executive producer Steve Callaghan said, when asked in an interview with Entertainment Weekly whether the episode would provoke a negative backlash, "We have a joke that addresses that exact point, that we're probably going to irritate some people with that episode."[3] TheBlaze's Billy Hallowell noted that viewer reaction on Twitter to the episode's portrayal of Jesus ranged from highly positive to highly negative: while some users appreciated the comedy and were surprised at opposition to it, others found it lazy or criticized what they saw as unfair portrayals of Jesus compared with other deities.[4]

Tianna DiMartino of the Media Research Center was strongly critical of the episode, saying "MacFarlane, the liberal atheist behind Family Guy, seems to be feeling especially spiteful this Christmas, going above and beyond the usual sacrilege...Family Guy is known for constantly crossing the lines with vulgarity and blasphemy but thus far this latest "Christmas" episode takes the cake for most blasphemous and vulgar".[5]

gollark: Now my role looks too similar to theirs.
gollark: Terra is intelligence 1.03.
gollark: The b-word.
gollark: It already censors b[REDACTED]g.
gollark: Hey, I could implement that in potatOS.

References

  1. "Listings - FAMILY GUY on FOX - TheFutonCritic.com". thefutoncritic.com. Retrieved December 8, 2014.
  2. Bibel, Amanda (December 9, 2014). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'The SImpsons' & 'Family Guy' Adjusted Up, '60 Minutes' Adjusted Down & Final Football Numbers". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved December 9, 2014.
  3. Snierson, Dan (September 28, 2014). "Peter gets 'Taken,' Stewie gets pregnant, and more 'Family Guy' scoop". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  4. Hallowell, Billy (December 8, 2014). "'The 2,000-Year-Old Virgin': 'Family Guy' Christmas Episode Portrays Jesus as a Lying, Sex-Crazed Adulterer". TheBlaze. Archived from the original on April 21, 2015. Retrieved December 8, 2014.
  5. DiMartino, Tianna (December 8, 2014). "'Family Guy' Christmas: 'The 2000 Year-Old Virgin'". Media Research Center. Retrieved December 8, 2014.
  • The plot description was adapted from The 2000-Year-Old Virgin at Family Guy Wiki, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
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