Tag Archives: stan smith

Dec. 3 – American Dad! – “Season’s Beatings”

Original air date December 11, 2011.

It feels like it has been a minute since we took a look at an American Dad! Christmas episode. The show can be counted on to produce such an episode almost annually and often times the Christmas episode is among the best of the season. 2024 is also the year we had to say goodbye to actor Martin Mull. It’s possible you don’t immediately conjure up a role for Mull upon hearing his name, but he’s definitely one of those “Hey, it’s that guy!” type of actors that most have encountered. He seemed to get a lot of work in TV in the 90s and I can’t think of a program he was a part of that wasn’t better off for having him. And, to no surprise, he’s great on this episode of American Dad!.

Included a couple of years ago as one of the top Christmas specials of all-time was the season seven episode of American Dad! titled “For Whom the Sleigh Bell Tolls,” so it only makes sense that we return to American Dad! with the season eight episode “Season’s Beatings.” We’ve gone out of order with the show as I wanted to jump ahead to the sequel episode of “For Whom the Sleigh Bell Tolls” with “Minstrel Krampus,” so now I’m here to rectify that.

American Dad! is old news around here so I’m not going to make the usual preamble in this space, just know that you’re getting a subversive Christmas special. It’s not going to be for everyone. I hesitate to use the word “edgy” because it’s too often relied on and seems to be a favored descriptor for those with bad takes, but this episode is probably on the edgier side since it’s going to deal with the main character trying to murder a kid at Christmas. He’s the antichrist though so it’s okay! Still, if your idea of a good Christmas special is something like an episode of Full House or The Little Drummer Boy then this probably won’t be for you.

Roger is here to whip up some good old-fashioned eggnog!

The episode begins in conventional fashion with no Christmas theming added to the opening title. Lame. Once over, we at least are immediately treated with an exterior shot of the Smith household all decked out for the holidays with a fresh blanket of snow. Inside, Francine (Wendy Schaal) and son Steve (Scott Grimes) are making cookies while Roger (Seth MacFarlane) is mixing up a batch of his special eggnog. Steve scolds him for taking so long with the ‘nog and Roger assures him it’s almost ready, but it just needs a final test. His slurred speech would suggest he’s already tested the drink extensively, but just to be sure he pulls out a cage containing two rats. He offers a ladle full of the stuff to a brown rat who sniffs it before taking a few licks. It immediately starts screaming and tares off the head of the other rat in the cage with it. After making out furiously with the severed head, the rat dawns it like a headdress and runs in circles until it stops to vomit out blood until it collapses and explodes sending rat pieces flying. I told you this wasn’t the sort of Christmas special for everyone.

The eggnog may feature some side effects…

After Roger declares his eggnog perfect, Stan (MacFarlane) enters the room with exciting news: Father Donovan is putting on a Christmas pageant at the mall all about the life of Jesus! Fran asks if he’ll be trying out and Stan smugly announces that he’s sure to land the lead role of Jesus for the play because he’s the most devout member of the congregation. Roger drunkenly laughs about the concept of Christianity, referring to it as his favorite deadbeat dad story (comparing it to the real song “Biological Didn’t Bother” by Shaq) as he slurs his speech and somehow manages to not fall off of the stool he’s standing on. Stan angrily slams down the pamphlets he was holding and demands that Roger not insult his religion. Roger, rather calmly, gathers up his jewel encrusted “pimp cup” and stumbles over to Stan as if he’s about to offer some retort, only to point out that Stan as a pimple under the skin of his chin that’s likely to reach its apex in about two weeks. He then saunters off into the living room.

She sure is flexible.

In the dimly lit living room, Hayley (Rachael MacFarlane) and her husband Jeff (Jeff Fischer) are cuddling on the couch watching TV. Hayley asks her husband if everything is all right noting that he cried a lot more than usual during sex this morning. Jeff sits up and announces that he wants to have a baby. He feels they have a lot of love to give plus he also feels broken inside and kids are sure to fix everything! Hayley wants nothing to do with being a mother declaring she has no maternal instincts and only animal ones. She lists off eating and pooping as such instincts and casually tosses in a “laying on the ground ahead of a storm” which she immediately demonstrates by walking around in circles and curling up on the carpet as thunder booms outside. She punctuates the joke by scratching her ear with her foot.

Not the role Stan was anticipating.

At the mall the next day, some parishioners are setting up for the play while Father Donovan (Martin Mull) looks on with a lit cigarette casually placed between his fingers. Stan comes into frame to enthusiastically confirm that he’s willing to play Jesus in the play, but Donovan shoots him down immediately. Stan can’t believe it and points out that he’s the most devout member of Donovan’s flock, but Donovan just laughs him off and informs him the role has nothing to do with devotion – it’s all about the abs, baby! Jesus is shredded, and Stan is, well, not. Stan tries to convince him other wise by laying on the cross that’s being worked on at the moment, but it snaps in half under Stan’s weight causing the female worker who was painting it to declare, “Now what am I going to burn on my ethnic neighbor’s lawn?” Father Donovan assures Stan he has the perfect role for him and holds up a red jacket and pants. Stan thinks this is a reference to Fireman Jesus, but Donovan confirms for him that he wants him to play Santa. To try and convince him how great a role is he produces some Bratz dolls that Santa gave him – for free – last Christmas! He then darkly adds that he can’t believe this is the suit Earl died in.

The Smith family has added a new member, and he’s an orphan! Maybe this will be a wholesome Christmas special after all?

Back at the Smith home, we see Jeff’s van pulling into the driveway and then cut to the living room. Jeff has an announcement to make – he’s adopted a son! He has named the little guy (who I would guess is 2 or 3) Nemo, after his favorite character from his favorite book: the novelization of the movie Finding Nemo. Hayley is outraged that Jeff went and did this while Francine is shocked and delighted. She can’t believe she’s a grandmother and felt her only chance at becoming one was if Steve got raped by a confused lesbian. She runs to Nemo and scoops him up covering him with kisses. Jeff says he wanted a son to carry on his legacy – his Suburu Legacy, so maybe this is going to be a running joke with him. Hayley is confused because adoption should be a lengthy process and asks Jeff how he pulled this off. He’s dumbfounded and chalks it up to an end of month clearance event while adding that the orphanage seemed real eager to get rid of this kid. Nemo then walks over to Hayley who backs away declaring “Eww, get it away from me!” He grabs her hand and nuzzles it which triggers Hayley’s maternal instincts to kick in times ten. She starts sobbing uncontrollably and wraps Nemo up declaring him her baby. Aww! Stan then comes down the stairs in full Santa costume and demands to know who Nemo is. Francine declares they’re grandparents, and he just responds, “Steve was raped by a confused lesbian?”

“Don’t worry about it.”

Back at the mall, Stan is apparently not playing Santa in the play, he’s just playing the part of Santa for the mall. There’s a kid sitting on his knee and Stan curtly asks him what does he want? The kid, in a deep, gravelly, voice, replies with “Umm, let me think about it?” Upon hearing how deep his voice is, Stan demands to know if he’s even a little boy, but the guy just tells him “Don’t worry about it.” After telling him he can’t be here, the not kid says “Come on, I waited in line let me just sit here a minute.” Stan doesn’t agree to that and tells him to get off, but the not kid assures him he’s almost done. When Stan asks what he’s almost done with, he just responds “Don’t worry about it.”

I’m sure Stan will have a rational reaction to Roger landing the role of Jesus.

The performers in the pageant then enter and Stan declares he has to see this. Tossing the not kid from his lap, Stan hurries over to the stage to find out who is playing Jesus. It’s Roger, who is wearing a wig and a loincloth and has some impressive abs on display. Stan is outraged to find Roger as Jesus and demands to know why he would want to do this. He says that Stan made it sound like a big deal and notes it gave him an excuse to work on his abs and his…savior bulge, as he gestures to his groin. Stan can’t believe it and when he finds out that Roger is also drunk he loses it. He punches Roger in the face and climbs on top of him to rain blow upon blow upon this false idol. Roger gets away momentarily and crawls to one of the female performers. He doesn’t ask her for help though, just calls her ugly. He’s definitely not Jesus material.

Looks like I was wrong.

We return to the Smith home as Stan pulls into the driveway. Inside, Nemo has Jeff’s hat on which I’m assuming everyone finds cute. Hayley is filming him and still sobbing uncontrollable prompting Francine to remark that her “bitch crying” is ruining the home movie. Stan then enters still in his Santa suit only now it’s covered in blood. Francine jumps up and asks him what happened. His cover? He was sitting on the bus next to Courtney Love and she sneezed. Even if that were believable, it’s ruined by good old television which Jeff points out as a news story covering the beating at the mall is played. Stan insists it’s not what it looks like and that he was defending Jesus while the anchor describes the beating as an unprovoked attack on Christianity. It’s not helped by the soundbite of Stan shouting at Roger as he wails on him “You can’t play Jesus you lazy, wine-loving, bisexual!” We then pull out from the TV to reveal a female priest is watching the coverage. She picks up the phone which cuts to another priest type doing the same and this goes on until it reaches the pope who asks “Are you watching this shit?”

Very wrong.

Stan insists to his family he wasn’t slandering Jesus, but Roger. The news then alerts the viewing audience that the mall Santa has been identified as none other than Stan Smith. The phone rings immediately and Steve answers informing his father that it’s Father Donovan, and he sounds punitive. We cut to the church where Stan is having a face to face with Donovan who has some bad news: he’s being excommunicated from all of Christianity. Stan can’t believe it and asks how he can get back in. Donovan tells him there are only three ways: find the Holy Grail, kill the antichrist, or donate ten million dollars to charity adding that’s how Jared Fogle from the Subway ads got back in (this episode was made before Fogle was arrested and jailed for being a pedophile so this joke reads quite dark now). Stan points out that he can’t do any of those things, but Donovan can only offer his apologies. He demands that Stan turn in his badge and he apparently does have a gold, Christianity, badge that he places on Donovan’s desk. As he goes to leave, Father Donovan calls out to him to wait! He doesn’t have anything to add, he just wants Stan’s opinion on if he should grow a mustache or not further asking, “What do hookers like?”

Klaus doesn’t get a line this entire episode, but at least he looks cute.

The only thing for Stan to do is go home and cry in front of his family about being excommunicated. Roger is still nursing his injuries from his encounter with Stan at the mall (and really seems to be taking it all in stride, probably because he achieved orgasm during the fight which he confirms to Steve) while Klaus, the goldfish, can be seen wearing an adorable little Santa hat in his fish bowl. Steve tries to suggest to his dad that he just get a new religion and Francine remarks it worked for Mohammed Ali and thinks he changed religions, and his name, to Kareem Abdul Jabar. No, Francine, those are two different people. Stan doesn’t want to change religions, so he just sobs instead.

That’s quite the discovery, Stan.

In his office, Stan is grabbing all of his kitschy religious items and tossing them into a box. As he does, he cries some more until his wails are interrupted by little Nemo who comes walking into the room doing the same. Stan seems to have taken to his new grandson better than I would have guessed as he picks him up and goes in for some snuggles. He then notices a mark on the boy’s head. It reads 6…6…2, phew! Wait! Below the 2 is a “+4” and then under that is the number 666! Nemo is the antichrist! Roger then enters with one of those tins filled with caramel corn. He claims to Stan that he made it just for him, but there’s a card on it indicating it was a gift to their neighbors Terry and Greg from someone named Trevor. We then get a quick cutaway of the pair looking for the gift under their tree while an angry Trevor, who thinks they regifted it, looks on. Trevor declares that they’re worse than Connor and everyone, including Trevor, gasps at the outburst. Connor must be pretty bad. Back in the study, Stan tells Roger to forget the corn because he has found a way back into Christianity and all he has to do is murder his grandson! And I thought they were bonding.

I’d call Father Donovan out on this boast, but I’m afraid he’ll try and prove it.

It’s nighttime and Father Donovan is pulling up to the Smith house in a car that features a license plate which reads “12 Inches.” Sure, buddy. Donovan enters the house and Stan shows him Nemo’s mark as the kid sleeps in a crib in the living room. Donovan tells Smith that he better make sure he knows for certain that Nemo is the antichrist before he kills him. Apparently, he’s made some mistakes in the past. Roger and Jeff then enter the house with Roger remarking that was some of his worst caroling, but best tagging, ever. We get a quick cut to someone’s garage door which features an image of Santa and what looks like strippers. Stan informs Jeff that he needs to take them to the orphanage where he got Nemo so that he can find evidence that proves he’s the antichrist so he can kill him. Jeff just says “Okay,” either not grasping what’s going on here or he just doesn’t care. Roger tells Stan to give the cutest orphan a crisp bill of some kind and the ugliest one a…he backhands Stan for dramatic effect. Stan then informs Roger that he’s coming too since he got him into this mess. Roger is fine with that, but informs everyone that before he can go anywhere he needs to…wipe…better. Gross.

This probably doesn’t bode well for the priest.

Outside the burned down remnants of the orphanage, an old groundskeeper is there to tell the gang the place burned down last week, the day after Jeff adopted Nemo. He also shares with them that was the day he got his cholesterol test results back which no one seems to care about. The group split up and look amongst the wreckage for any clues they can find about Nemo. Only Father Donovan seems to have found anything as he looks over a manilla folder and calls Stan to tell him to meet him outside. As he waits for the others to come out, a crow observes Father Donovan pacing back and forth. Its eyes glow red and we cut back to Nemo who is playing with blocks with his mother. His eyes glow red and then in slow motion he knocks his little block tower over which causes the orphanage to shake and collapse on Father Donovan.

This is probably something the orphanage should have shared with Jeff.

Stan and the others race outside seemingly avoiding catastrophe, but Father Donovan is not so lucky. His torso is sticking out of a pile of flaming rubble. He tells Stan he can’t feel his legs and asks if they’re okay. We pan over to see the man’s severed legs on fire prompting Stan to deadpan “They’re fine.” Donovan hands over what he found which is Nemo’s file confirming that he is indeed the son of Satan with a jackal for a mother. There’s even a nice family portrait of Nemo, a jackal, and a Satan that resembles Tim Curry from Legend. It’s at this point that Jeff realizes that Nemo spelled backwards is Omen, but Roger is quick to point out that doesn’t make sense since Jeff was the one who named him. They choose not to dwell on it as Father Donovan outlines what it means for Nemo to be the antichrist. He tells Stan that he needs to retrieve the sacred daggers from the Vatican as they are the only items that can kill Nemo. When Stan asks if he’s sure, Father Donovan says “Yes, I read it on Wikipedia.” He then goes into a long history on musician Jon Bon Jovi which he also read about on Wikipedia. As he does this, he’s clearly struggling to breathe, but he manages to finish the lesson before finally passing. Stan informs Jeff and Roger that they need to hurry to the Vatican, but Father Donovan wakes up and continues his history lesson. His last words are “Kenny…Loggins.” Stan seems afraid to say anything else in fear that it will prompt Father Donovan to share more last words. Godspeed Father Donovan. I hope there are hookers in Heaven waiting for you and they don’t care if you have a moustache or not.

Something tells me Steve will not enjoy this.

Our next scene reveals that Stan has apparently managed to utilize CIA resources to get a plane and head to the Vatican. Stan calls home to let his family know what’s going on and he gets Steve. Steve immediately starts to share the results of his latest eye exam, but Stan obviously doesn’t care. He just blurts out the Nemo is the antichrist. Steve pauses, looks annoyed, then resumes sharing the details of his exam. At the next pause, Stan just shouts what they’re doing and passes on a warning to beware of Nemo before hanging up. Steve, clearly agitated, puts the phone down only to be startled by the presence of his nephew on the couch beside him. Nemo’s eyes glow red once more and Steve shivers beside him until his eyes turn red in response. He drones that he is here to serve him as his buddy Snot (Curtis Armstrong) enters the house. Steve’s head spins around with a snapping sound and Snot rightly is freaked out and makes a hasty retreat.

What did Seth do? I don’t think I want to know what Andy Dick did.

Stan, Roger, and Jeff arrive at the Vatican. Roger is already bored and complaining of thirst while Stan ignores him and outlines the plan. They need to gain access to the catacombs in order to find the daggers they seek, but when they arrive at the gate the two guards inform Stan he’s not allowed to enter. We get a close-up shot of a flier of banned persons. One is Jared from Subway with an “OK” stamped over him. Stan is there and below him it looks like maybe Christian Slater and Andy Dick? The one that looks like Slater might just be Seth MacFarlane, I don’t know. It is! When the camera zooms out we can clearly see his name below. Odd that they didn’t include it in the frame for the close-up. Anyway, Stan informs Jeff and Roger that they’ll have to retrieve the daggers, but Roger doesn’t want to. Stan then asks him why he can’t just assume a persona that’s eager to do this? Roger likes the suggestion and morphs into Roland Chang – Super Positive Asian! He basically wears a wig and smiley face hat and gets slanted eyes. It’s kind of racist? Roger is certainly not PC.

We know what this means…

The catacombs are pretty creepy as we see Jeff and Roger walk amongst some dusty, old corpses. Roger tells Jeff to be on the lookout for the daggers and empty boxes since he has a friend that needs boxes in preparation for a move. A rat emerges from a hole in the wall to spy the pair and its eyes immediately turn red. We cut back to Nemo who is seated in a highchair with a sippy cup and army men splayed before him on the kitchen table. His eyes in turn glow red and he removes the lid to his cup and dumps it upon the army men. In the catacombs, Roger asks Jeff if he does coke and gets no reply so he just says “Yeah, me neither.” Suddenly, a rush of water comes surging in and Jeff and Roger are forced to try and get to safety. Roger manages to get onto a ledge, but the water sweeps Jeff away. Roger cries out, “Jeff!” in response to this only for Jeff to shout back “What?”

That is just a fantastic nut shot. Look at how the eyes go cross.

We then see Roger emerge from a floor vent into an ornately decorated sanctum. A group of cardinals, or bishops, or whatever they’re called are just standing around a bit surprised to see a super positive Asian fellow emerge from their basement. Roger has to break the bad news to them that they have a bit of a moisture problem in the basement. He then spies the ceremonial daggers right there on the wall! He informs them he can prepare an estimate for repairs, but then just kicks the first bishop in front of him right, square, in the nuts. We cut to Stan waiting outside as Roger comes running out shouting “We’ve got the daggers Jeff died run, run, run!”

Well, at least in this state Steve should be more helpful when it comes to stringing lights and such.

We now return to the Smith household where Hayley is tossing a football with Nemo while Steve looks on speaking in tongues. Francine is on a ladder and hanging lights when she scolds Steve to stop speaking in Aramaic – it’s a dead language. Stan and Roger come speeding in and Francine demands to know where they’ve been. Stan asks her if she got his message, but as illustrated by Steve crawling around on the roof in some kind of a reverse crab walk pose, she did not. When Stan points out that Nemo turned Steve into an apostate of Satan, Francine confirms he’s been a pill all day. They also find time to slip in casually that Jeff is dead which shocks Hayley. When Stan tells her that they have to kill Nemo, he tries to use Steve like a club of sorts to telekinetically beat back Stan. Francine still doesn’t buy into this and just thinks Steve is hungry. She tells him she just made a Trader Joe’s run and lists off a bunch of digs at Trader Joe’s ending with something about a mushroom flatbread pizza that smells like nutsack.

Get ready for an extended brawl as our main character tries to kill a toddler!

Hayley, despite all of this, isn’t willing to let her father murder her son. She grabs him after Stan gets tossed into the ladder Francine was on forcing her to grab onto the lights to stop herself from falling. Roger leaps into action to stop Hayley from taking off, but Francine comes inadvertently swinging in and knocks Roger to the ground. The lights end up causing a fire which provides a distraction for Stan to grab Nemo and run. Hayley tackles him through the living room window of Terry (Mike Barker) and Greg’s (MacFarlane) and they roll around their house destroying a bunch of stuff in the process. Stan kicks his kids out of the house, but Nemo uses his telekinetic powers to throw Stan through the ceiling. He dangles for a second, then falls and resumes chasing after Nemo. Terry realizes this is the perfect opportunity to destroy some figurines of Greg’s he hates so he awkwardly swats them off an end table, well after the Smith’s have vacated their home, and does a pretty poor job of acting like it was an accident.

Did we really need to mock the blind here? This one was a little too dark for me to be funny.

Back outside, Hayley pounces on her dad and demands he not harm her Satan baby indicating she’s accepted the reality of the situation, but still would prefer to not have her son murdered. A menacing looking dog leaps to Nemo’s defense so Stan pulls out his gun and shoots it. A blind man then wanders over asking if they’ve seen his dog, Clancy. Hayley and Stan don’t move or say a word and just let the poor guy pathetically call out for his service dog while receiving no response. He decides to move on, and is promptly run over for his efforts. That was just unnecessarily cruel.

It’s all come down to this. Is American Dad! really going to show toddler murder on network television?!

With the blind man dead, Hayley and Stan resume their brawl only to be interrupted by Steve. He jumps on his father, still speaking in tongues, but Roland is here to put him down! He sprays Steve with some bug killer that causes him to fall off and act like a spider that just died. Roland tells Stan now they can kill that boy together and punctuates his optimism with a hearty thumb’s up. Stan grabs the daggers while Nemo tries to flee through the backyard. He uses his mind powers to chuck a charcoal grill at Stan, but Roland grabs him and pins him to a patio table. Stan goes in for the kill, and misses Nemo stabbing Roland in the hand. Roger immediately snaps back into his standard persona and begins to insult Stan, but then has to remind himself that’s not who Roland is and instead offers words of encouragement. Stan regathers the daggers and looks to try again, only for Hayley to pull his own gun on him. He gives her one look, then decides to kill the kid.

Don’t worry, this isn’t The Wizard of Oz.

The screen goes white as we hear the sound of a gunshot. We’re at the hospital and Stan is waking up in his hospital bed surrounded by his family – including Jeff! If you’re thinking this whole episode was a dream, well you’re wrong. All of that stuff really happened, and Hayley did shoot Stan! It’s not explained how Jeff survived, he just did. Nemo was not murdered, but the family has good news regardless. Turns out, Roger’s pimp cup from act one was actually the Holy Grail so Stan has been readmitted into Christianity! As for Nemo, Hayley sent him somewhere far from Stan where he’ll be safe. We then cut to someone tucking little Nemo into bed – it’s Sarah Palin (Schaal). She offers up some encouragement about sleeping in the White House soon and then leaves the boy because her new issue of Highlights magazine has arrived. With his new mother gone, Nemo pops out from under the covers. He takes off his onesie pajamas, which are covered with crosses, and puts them on upside down. He then speaks in a shrill voice threatening Stan Smith that he’ll see him at the Rapture! His head spins around and he vomits a whole bunch while a voice over lets us know that Baby Antichrist wants to wish us a Merry Christmas! The screen is then covered in green vomit and the credits roll.

Merry Christmas to you too, Baby Antichrist!

I told you it wasn’t going to be one of those warm, fuzzy, Christmas episodes. American Dad! knows how to deliver the subversive, and since its main character is a devout Christian it makes it pretty easy to craft a Christmas special. There are probably some uncomfortable images in this one for those who take their religion seriously, but there isn’t much here truly mocking Christianity. Father Donovan isn’t really a wholesome take on a priest while the suggestion that anyone with money can buy their way into the good graces of the Pope could certainly be taken as a jab at the faith. On the other hand, Donovan did say “charity” when mentioning how Stan could pay his way out of trouble so it’s not like he was enriching any one person had he been able to go that route.

Sarah Palin jokes were pretty dated in 2011. They’re even more so now.

No, what’s really the aim of this episode is just to fashion a Christmas episode around a grandfather seeking to kill his newly adopted grandson. That’s pretty messed up, especially because Stan seems completely fine with the whole thing. Then again, Nemo is pretty clearly the antichrist and I suppose a good Christian would want to kill such a creature. And it’s not as if Nemo had been around all that long. I find it funny, and the episode is chock full of Christmas theming which I do so enjoy. We get lots of decorations and fun Christmas outfits for most of the family. I definitely could have used a bit more of Father Donovan so I was a bit sad to see him killed off about halfway through, but at least he didn’t overstay his welcome. The Palin joke at the end wasn’t very good. They insulted her intelligence with the crack about Highlights magazine, but it’s a pretty toothless joke. And Nemo did leave us with a taunt, but he would not return. There’s even a later Christmas episode about The Rapture, but no Nemo. I guess he’s still biding his time up there in Alaska, but he should probably ditch Palin and hitch himself onto another wagon if he wants to get into Washington.

Bless you, Father Donovan. Hopefully, you’re in a better place.

Should you wish to partake in this non-traditional Christmas special the easiest way to do so is via Hulu. If you’re outside the US, then Disney+ will have it. TBS is still the cable home for American Dad! and you can probably find this one playing throughout the month there as well. It’s not my favorite American Dad! holiday episode, but it’s up there. Maybe even number two, so I give it a strong recommend with the caveat that it’s not for everyone. Now let’s all strive to be a little less like the antichrist this holiday season and a little more like Roland Chang – Super Positive Asian!

Can’t wait until tomorrow for more Christmas? Check out what we had to say on this day last year and beyond:

Dec. 3 – Animaniacs – ‘Twas the Day Before Christmas

Children’s cartoons often take to Christmas when the season rolls around. The holiday is usually ripe for parody or just direct adaptations so it’s easy for the writers to kind of phone it in. What’s not customary is for a cartoon series to feature two dedicated Christmas episodes in a single season! That’s what Animaniacs…

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Dec. 3 – Popeye the Sailor – “Mister and Mistletoe”

Last year for the Christmas Spot we took a look at the 1960’s TV series Popeye the Sailor and its Christmas episode “Spinach Greetings.” There are a lot of Popeye fans in the world and my assumption is that most would not put Popeye the Sailor above the theatrical shorts that helped catapult Popeye to…

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Dec. 1 – American Dad! – “The Best Christmas Story Never Told”

img_1104Oh hell yeah, it’s time for Christmas posts! Welcome back for the year 2020 as The Christmas Spot comes at you with 25 days of Christmas posts! 2020 has been a crazy year with a lot of new normals tossed our way, but at least each year the calendar gets turned over to Christmas and for close to one month things seem consistent with prior years. And like year’s past, we’re turning this place into an advent calendar and looking at 25 festive topics. Most of which will be like this one, a write-up of a beloved or not so beloved Christmas television special. It may be one from the past, or it may be relatively current, but one thing is certain and that’s it will be Christmas. I have nothing against the other seasonal holidays occurring around this time, it’s just that Christmas is my jam and I want to share my enthusiasm with all of you.

For this year, we’re turning things over to an animated sitcom that has become fairly reliable when it comes to Christmas. American Dad! premiered after the Super Bowl in 2005 and immediately found itself in the shadow of Family Guy. That’s because the show is co-created by Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane and at the time it premiered it was being billed as the Family Guy replacement. This was during the hiatus for Family Guy following its cancellation, though the show would eventually return. As such, it felt like many Family Guy fans were immediately dismissive of American Dad! because it wasn’t the show they wanted. They wanted more Family Guy, not an imitation. You would think things would improve following the revival of Family Guy, but instead fans of that show once again seemed to look down on American Dad! as now that their beloved show had returned, what need of this new one did anyone have?

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Like Family Guy and Bob’s Burgers, American Dad! has become a reliable source for Christmas specials over the years.

Which was unfortunate, because American Dad! had very little in common with Family Guy. I suppose it resembled Season One of Family Guy to a point as both shows were influenced by the classic sitcom All in the Family. While Family Guy only borrowed from that show a little, American Dad! was practically a reimagining of that program in animated form. The show was co-created by eventual show-runners Mike Barker and Matt Weitzman and once the pilot was basically sold to Fox, MacFarlane backed away as he was soon pulled back into Family Guy duty. The show was conceived as a liberal’s answer to the Bush era political climate of the time. The conservative leading man, Stan Smith (MacFarlane) would be positioned opposite his young adult daughter Hayley (Rachael MacFarlane), a college-educated liberal, and rely on the conflict inherent in that relationship for several plots. Stan was presented as boorish and unfailingly patriotic, and as a member of the CIA he took national security very seriously to the point of suspecting anyone with brown skin as being a terrorist. Hayley was often the voice of reason, though also saddled with the usual college stereotype of being lazy and more interested in getting high than actually working to promote change in the political landscape. She would be paired with a boyfriend turned husband, Jeff Fischer (Jeff Fischer), that Stan hates which is basically the same relationship Archie Bunker had with “Meathead” in All in the Family.

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In this episode, Stan is going to learn the true meaning of Christmas and we’re going to learn about Roger’s past, seen here laying face-down in a mix of snow and vomit.

Eventually, the show found a niche and relied less on the Stan/Hayley dynamic. The rest of the family would play a more prominent role in furthering stories. Francine (Wendy Schaal) is portrayed as a stay-at-home mom and is the caretaker of the house and kids. She began life in the show as being a stereotypical conservative ideal, but over the years has developed her own quirks and failings, making her feel like a more fleshed-out character. Son Steve (Scott Grimes) has been molded into being Stan’s opposite ideal for a son. He’s a geek who likes comics and Dungeons & Dragons, but also is emotionally Stan’s opposite as he’s sensitive and comfortable with expressing his “non manly” emotions. As is the case with all MacFarlane shows, there’s a talking animal and in this one it’s a goldfish named Klaus (Dee Bradley Baker) who is a former German athlete trapped in the body of a fish. He’s mostly just there to make observations and the family often ignores him. By far, the big breakout character of the show is definitely Roger the alien (MacFarlane), who saved Stan’s life years ago and as reward is being kept safe from the government in the Smith household. He begins the show as an Alf knock-off, but the writers eventually found another role for him and that’s as an alien of many personalities. He often leaves the home in disguise and will even live other lives as he devotes himself to the roles he plays. He’s also literally the show’s worst character as he’s a sociopathic narcissist and will do whatever it takes to get what he wants. In that aspect, he somewhat resembles Cartman of South Park fame.

For what Wikipedia considers the show’s third season (it’s complicated), a Christmas episode was commissioned. It would be the first of several, as the very conservative Stan and his family naturally lend themselves well to the holiday. The episodes have become some of the show’s finest as they’re pretty big in spectacle and only seem to grow more and more outlandish. There would be a continuity established as well as the Smith family becomes the enemy of Santa. Because the show’s broadcast schedule is a bit erratic, not every year brings with it a new Christmas episode, but it’s certainly something I look for each year.

Since I have never covered American Dad! before in one of these countdowns, it would seem the best place to start is with that first Christmas special. “The Best Christmas Story Never Told” premiered on December 17, 2006. Some places consider that Season 3 of the show, though it would appear it’s production Season Two. Writing of the episode is credited to Brian Boyle with staff writers Laura McCreary and Erik Durbin also receiving credits. Boyle is also executive producer on the series, but has received a written by credit on several other episodes, including the 2014 Christmas episode “Dreaming of a White Porsche Christmas” which interestingly is similar to this one as it presents an alternate reality for Stan at Christmas.

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The Smith family ready to bask in the glow of the town Christmas tree.

While I do think American Dad! is quite different from Family Guy, it does amuse me that this inaugural Christmas episode begins the same way as Family Guy’s first Christmas episode. The whole family is gathered in the town square for the annual lighting of the town Christmas tree. Stan is quite jubilant about the whole thing, while Roger is face-down in the snow and booze (and vomit) since Christmas makes him feel like a failure. It’s here Roger’s origin is retconned a bit, possibly for the first time, as he reveals he’s been on Earth for over 40 years. In other words, he had a lengthy existence before meeting the Smith family. Stan doesn’t care and implores him to acknowledge the holiday. When it’s announced the lighting has been cancelled at the last minute due to the town being unable to celebrate a secular holiday on town property, Stan gets angry as a crew moves in to demolish the place. Stan rages it’s the liberals and atheists telling them how to celebrate their holiday, and when a passerby tries to reason with Stan, Stan laments he can’t wait for The Rapture. As Stan tells them they’ll be left behind, Francine tries to smooth things over by telling the other family they’re free to use their pool after they’ve been raptured, provided it’s not boiling. Francine then suggests they go to church instead and Stan dismisses that suggestion on account of church being boring. He then declares he needs to go someplace where he can learn the true meaning of Christmas – the mall!

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Take note of the little person working the camera.

Stan contentedly looks on as his kids sit on Santa’s lap and ask him for toys. He remarks that this is what Christmas is all about and as he does so the show decides to use a regrettable slur for little people and even has Hayley, who should know better, use it casually as well. The kids then implore their father to get something for Roger for Christmas, but Stan doesn’t want to since Roger isn’t Christian. Roger has no say at the moment for he’s passed out in a baby stroller. Stan then takes sight of The 99 Cent Depot and decides he can spare a buck for Roger.

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I bet you expected Stan to react this way to “Happy Holidays.”

Stan heads to the register and asks for one of the store’s wares. The clerk hands him a cassette of disco’s greatest hits from 1974-1980 and Stan deems this satisfactory. When the clerk tells him it costs $1.07 due to taxes, Stan suggests they change the store’s name, but the clerk points out that’s not his decision. Stan smiles and is satisfied with that response, but when he wishes the clerk a “Merry Christmas,” (you know where this is going) and gets a “Happy Holidays” in return his mood changes. Angry, he demands that the clerk acknowledge his holiday, but the same excuse about the sign is not enough to sway Stan this time. He pulls out a gun to demand action and we cut to Stan being tossed outside by security. When he calls back to remind them he had a gun, a gift-wrapped gun is tossed to him.

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Did you take note of that little person two pictures ago?!

At the Smith household, Stan is still visibly outraged by the “liberals” who are destroying Christmas. The family tries to reason with him, but he’s more than a little stubborn. Stan then rhetorically asks the family who is to blame for all of this, and they respond with exhaustion in their voices because this is something Stan must remind them of often, Jane Fonda. Apparently Stan blames Ms. Fonda for spreading liberal ideas through her protests against the war in Vietnam and it’s not something he’s about to let go of. A ring of the doorbell gets Stan’s hopes up momentarily as he thinks carolers have arrived. He opens the door to the costumed group, but finds out they’re only here to spread awareness of the Holiday Rapist and hold up a flier. This is the tipping point for Stan as he demands they refer to him as the Christmas Rapist. He slams the door and sets to destroying the festive decorations in the house, including tossing most of them through the living room window. Steve begins to cry that Daddy destroyed the toys Chinese kids made for him while Francine scolds Stan for his behavior. She tells him he’s sleeping on the couch tonight which Stan tries to protest by pointing out the now missing window and the presence of the Christmas Rapist on the loose.

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The Ghost of Christmas Past has been assigned Stan Smith this year. Unlike other ghosts, she apparently works alone on Christmas.

Stan is shown sleeping on the couch (in his suit, for some reason) looking a bit cold when a woman materializes beside him. She’s quite fairy-like I suppose, and when she wakes Stan he snaps open his eyes and shouts “Holiday Rapist!” and dives behind the couch before quickly correcting himself with “Christmas Rapist.” The woman then explains, in a faux British accent, that she’s the Ghost of Christmas Past (Lisa Kudrow) and she’s here to help Stan lean the true meaning of Christmas. He soon brightens up and the ghost takes him all the way back to 1970.

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The idyllic Christmas of Stan’s youth.

There the two peek into the Smith home where a young Stan is opening his Christmas presents. Stan is amazed that they’re really back in 1970 and the woman reassures him by mentioning how things are different. One of those mentions is Jane Fonda, who is presently filming to movie Klute nearby causing Stan’s eyes to narrow in a menacing fashion. He then takes off running, much to the bewilderment of the ghost, who just calls for him to come back, dropping the accent. When he doesn’t obey, she just starts grumbling to herself about how this is her first turn as Past and she already screwed it up. Apparently, she used to be a Tooth Fairy. She then reveals to us her name is Michelle, and mentions she should have just stayed with some guy named Chad.

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Jane Fonda on the set of Klute. Fonda, and the other celebrities of this episode, were offered to voice themselves, but all turned the show down. I bet they would have said “Yes,” to The Simpsons.

Stan is able to track down the filming location for Klute and watches as Jane Fonda (uncredited, but sounds like Wendy Schaal) is filmed feeding a cat, and then herself. She explains her decision to eat the cat food to the director which just irritates Stan even further. Stan is grossed out and remarks “You are so dead,” to himself.

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In order to find Stan, Michelle is going to need Francine’s help.

Back in the present, Michelle appears in Francine’s room and splashes her with water in order to wake her up. She explains to Francine what happened, and when Francine gets mad Michelle asks rhetorically if she blames mothers who lose their kids at the mall. When Francine gives her an “Are you serious?” look in response, Michelle answers the question emphatically herself with a, “No! No, you don’t!” Realizing what Stan is up to, Francine reluctantly drags herself out of bed and heads for the bathroom. When Michelle expresses her impatience, Francine tells her she isn’t going back to that filthy decade without some Purell.

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Stan makes an important discovery, and we find out Donald Sutherland is a real creep. Maybe that’s why he declined to voice himself.

Filming wraps for the day and Stan keeps close as Fonda retreats to her dressing room accompanied by Donald Sutherland (Chris Diamontopoulis). It’s while watching these two interact that Stan realizes it was Sutherland who put those liberal ideas into Fonda’s head. He then corrects himself that Fonda isn’t his target and that he must instead kill Donald Sutherland! Sutherland immediately confronts him as he was apparently standing beside Stan, but he’s a bit clueless and asks Stan if he’s here to give Fonda her massage. Stan decides that he is indeed here to do just that remarking that it would be rather nice to do so. Sutherland then leaves him to it and as Stan closes the door to Fonda’s dressing room we hear him announce his arrival and tells her to finish her cat food.

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Roger, about to make a life-changing discovery.

Stan then follows Sutherland and Fonda out to a restaurant, Elaine’s, but is prevented from entering since he’s not on the list. He then goes around the back to sneak in with the restaurant staff while stashing his gun in his pants. Once he disappears inside, we see some waiters come out for a smoke break. One of them is clearly Roger in disguise. When the other waiter asks if he got the part he tried out for he replies, “No, they were looking for someone more flesh-colored with a nose.” The other waiter tells him to give up on his dreams and leaves him. As Roger sits dejected, he notices something in the snow. It’s the disco tape that fell out of Stan’s jacket before he went inside. When Roger reads the title he announces it’s from the future! And since he’s an alien from outer space, he deems that plausible.

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The encounter that will doom Christmas.

At the restaurant, Stan is finishing up in a restroom when a hairy-looking dude emerges from a stall. Stan notices the man is smoking marijuana, and Stan admonishes him for doing so. The guy doesn’t seem bothered by it, and goes on to introduce himself as Marty, Marty Scorsese (Grimes). When Stan begins to gush and says he loves his films, Marty is shocked and assumes Stan has seen his film of a guy shaving. Stan is amused, but then assures him he’s going to be great, but that he’ll never win an Oscar if he’s hooked on drugs. Marty agrees, and starts humorously removing all of the drug paraphernalia on his person which includes many bags, joints, and even a bong in his pants. Stan is touched, and the two have a nice, men’s room, hug.

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The artists don’t usually get to draw dinosaurs so let’s throw ’em a bone!

Meanwhile, Michelle has overshot her magic and taken Francine back to the Jurassic period. They observe some cute little dinosaurs running past before a T-Rex eats them causing the two to scream before Michelle gets them out of there. You can’t play around with time travel and not show a dinosaur at some point.

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Stan assuming his cool, assassin, pose.

Feeling quite satisfied, Stan returns to the task at hand:  killing Donald Sutherland. He spots Sutherland and Fonda having dinner and when Sutherland suggests Fonda get involved in politics, he offers to talk about them over a drink at “my place.” Stan counters as he pulls out his gun with, “Let’s talk about it over your brains. Maybe all over the place?” Before he can pull the trigger, and before anyone seems to notice him, Michelle and Francine appear and pull him aside. The two express their anger with Stan, and when Francine says they won’t allow him to kill Jane Fonda, Stan corrects them to point out he’s now targeting Sutherland, the lanky, Canadian, Kiefer-spawning bastard! That doesn’t matter much to Michelle and Francine as they’re not about to let Stan murder anyone and they quickly take him back to the present.

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Something clearly went wrong.

Or do they? When the trio arrive, they find the Smith living room looks different. It’s drab, with cinderblocks for furniture and Communist posters on the wall. When Francine calls out for Steve and Hayley, a Russian man comes down the stairs firing a shotgun at them. They quickly run out into the street and find the country is now under the dominion of the Russians! Michelle gets to turn all glowy and dramatic as she informs Stan that he destroyed America! Francine then pauses to pee beside a car as she’s been holding it in since the 70s.

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A monument commemorating the birth of this new, Russian, empire.

Michelle then does some sleuthing on some tablet she has to try and figure out what happened. She knows Stan did something, but he insists he did nothing that would change the past. She has him go over what he did while in 1970 and when he gets to the part about meeting Scorsese in the bathroom Michelle gets a hit. It seems by getting Scorsese off drugs, he never went on to make Taxi Driver. And since he didn’t make Taxi Driver, John Hinckley never became obsessed with actress Jodi Foster and thus never attempted to impress her by assassinating President Reagan. Since Reagan didn’t survive an assassination attempt, he lacked the good will to beat back Mondale in the presidential election of 1984 and upon becoming president, Mondale would hand the country over to Russia. Stan then realizes that in order to stop Russia from overtaking America, he needs to travel back to the past and film Taxi Driver. When Francine objects to point out how crazy that conclusion is, Michelle steps in to say Stan is right as she’s apparently just as crazy as he is.

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Roger and his precious tape.

As those three set out to right Stan’s wrong, we check-in on Roger who’s about to make his first million selling disco songs to Clive Davis. He’s been milking that cassette he found like Biff from Back to the Future Part II and having a good time of it. He celebrates his fortune by heading to a nightclub and shouts at the sky for his mom to see him now! He then tells her to stop looking while he snorts some cocaine, and then tells her she can look again as he resumes dancing.

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Stan Smith is not a Robert DeNiro fan.

On the set of Taxi Driver, Stan is watching as Robert DeNiro (Diamantopoulis) rehearses. DeNiro is talking to himself in the mirror and Stan objects. He instructs DeNiro to talk at himself in the mirror and not at the mirror, which DeNiro finds absurd and quits. Francine is pissed at Stan for driving DeNiro away, but he assures her it’s fine since they only need Hinkley to fall for Jodi Foster. Michelle, once again, goes along with Stan who is now delighted he can make Taxi Driver with the leading man he thinks would be best:  John Wayne.

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Ever wonder what Taxi Driver would look like with John Wayne in the lead role?

At a showing of the finished film, Stan, Francine, and Michelle find John Hinckley in the audience and observe him watching the film’s climax. In it, Foster’s character is tied up and about to be set on fire by Native Americans doing an inflammatory dance routine. Wayne shows up in his cab and emerges, old and fat and with a mohawk under his traditional cowboy hat. He shoots all of the Native Americans and rescues Foster as a boom mic comes into the shot and knocks over a background, indicating they shot and edited this thing rather poorly. When it’s over, Francine immediately starts asking Hinckley what he thought and when Francine suggests that Foster was pretty hot he acts disgusted. Realizing their plan failed, Michelle identifies one last resort.

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Roger did not take Larry’s advice and switch off speaker phone.

In 1981, Regan is staying at the Hilton and he’s about to be shot. Only now, he’s not. Meanwhile, high above Roger is partying away when his phone rings. It’s someone named Larry, who informs Roger his last album only sold 90 copies and that disco is dead. He’s broke. Roger can’t believe it and when he asks how he could be broke when he has a bunch of investments and race horses, he then says “I thought you were feeding them?!” indicating there was some confusion over what to do with the race horses once purchased. Roger then tries to kill himself by jumping through the window of his penthouse, but that glass is pretty damn thick and he just gets knocked out.

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It’s time for Stan to get nuts!

At ground level, Michelle has spelled it out for Stan that in order to save Christmas (remember, this is a Christmas episode) he needs to shoot his idol, Ronald Reagan. Stan insists he can’t do it, but he’s reminded he needs to do it if he wants Christmas back. Stan reasons they could learn Russian and be happy, though he also laments he’ll probably miss a lot of elevators at first while he learns how to say “Hold the door,” in Russian. He then reminds Francine that they’ll be fine as long as they’re together as a family, indicating that maybe he has learned the true meaning of Christmas. Or at least one of them. Michelle then informs him there’s no guarantee Hayley and Steve exist now, and if he really wants to save Christmas and his family, he’s going to have to shoot Reagan. Stan reluctantly agrees, and when Michelle reminds him that he just has to “wing him” Stan laughs and thanks her for reminding him indicating that he was probably going to shoot to kill.

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If you’re doing A Christmas Carol, even loosely like this one, you still have to have this scene.

As Reagan is shown leaving the hotel. Stan makes his way through the crowd like a crazy person. He pulls out his gun and then starts shouting “Merry Christmas!” over and over as he opens fire. The screen goes white and then fades to reveal Stan and Francine asleep in their bed. Francine wakes up and immediately wakes Stan who runs to the window and opens it. He sees a paper boy outside who looks almost exactly like the kid on the cover of Paper Boy for the Nintendo Entertainment System. When he asks the kid what day it is, he responds that it’s Christmas and Stan then barks at him to get off his lawn!

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Stan mostly puts Christmas back together.

Downstairs, Stan has boarded up the broken window and re-setup the mangled tree. The gifts are re-wrapped and Hayley and Steve come down the stairs overjoyed to see that Christmas is back. Roger then comes into the room drunk explaining that Christmas reminds him how he created disco and then lost all of his money. The family laughs at him and then Stan is summoned into the kitchen by Michelle. There she thanks him for bailing her ass out by giving him a gift. He opens it to find a shiny, new, Glock. Michelle says she had just enough time to hit the mall last night for it, and when Stan questions how she got it so fast apparently bypassing the waiting period, she reminds him that he only shot Reagan. He never hit James Brady, and thus there was never passage of The Brady Bill which means guns are as easy to buy as a stick of gum. Stan is delighted and mugs for the camera with a “Best Christmas ever!”

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Roger no longer needs to be depressed that he hasn’t accomplished anything in his time on Earth, now he can lament that he lost his fortune when disco died. Also, his genitals are located near his armpit.

This is a pretty great early episode of American Dad! Stan is very much the conservative whack-job throughout and it’s obvious that the absurd War on Christmas notion is what drove the writers to craft this plot. It’s also possible they worked backward from the premise of what if Stan had to shoot his hero in order to save Christmas? The show is jam-packed with jokes as almost every sentence Stan utters is a joke of some kind. They’re just understated jokes, which is one of the main differences between American Dad! and Family Guy. Family Guy seems to rarely trust its audience with knowing what is and isn’t a joke and everything is practically screamed at the audience. American Dad! is far more confident, and while it does get absurd and thrust things into the forefront at times, it rarely feels obnoxious.

Since Stan is essentially an easy target, there are some jokes in this episode that could be considered easy, maybe even lazy. Even with those though, the show goes the extra mile to add a spin to make them seem less conventional. A perfect example is Stan’s argument with the clerk over his holiday greeting. The episode makes a point of demonstrating that Stan can be agreeable and even sympathetic to the plight of the working man who has to do as he’s commanded when the clerk makes the comment about not being able to change the name of the store from The 99 Cent Depot to The $1.07 Store to account for tax. Stan accepts that, but he can’t accept the kid saying “Happy Holidays” even though he’s directed to by his boss who can and probably will fire him for saying anything else. And because Stan’s a maniac, it has to escalate to Stan pulling a gun for added comedic effect.

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Coming up with a plot that involves Stan finding the true meaning of Christmas thus saving the holiday doesn’t take a ton of creativity. Having Stan replace John Hinckley Jr. as Reagan’s would-be assassin? Now that’s genius!

If the episode did begin with the premise of Stan shooting Reagan to save Christmas, then the writers also did a good job of making that happen. While American Dad! mostly behaves like a sitcom, it’s not afraid to get fantastical and do some crazy stuff. Granted, so many shows have done a variation of A Christmas Carol or It’s a Wonderful Life that weren’t particularly crazy, but it’s still quite a leap to have your characters time travel. This show will get way more fantastic in that regard, but this episode is largely able to rise above the notion of being an adaptation of that holiday classic without really feeling like one. Normally I hate to give time to anything that indulges in the trope, but American Dad! makes it work quite well.

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Lisa Kudrow is pretty wonderful as Michelle, The Ghost of Christmas Past. The show gives her a lot to work with and her personality meshes well with the character.

The only downside with this episode is that it’s actually pretty light on Christmas. It begins festive enough, but once we jump back in time it’s actually easy to forget that this is a Christmas episode of American Dad! It manages to hang onto its premise though and that’s Stan needing to learn the true meaning of Christmas, which the episode defines as basically family time. It’s actually a surprisingly warm conclusion for a show not afraid to do cynical or dark endings. Of course, there’s a touch of the show’s cynicism in the ending since Stan has created a world in which guns are even more accessible. This probably isn’t my favorite Christmas episode from this show, but it’s definitely a good measuring stick for all of them. And since I’ve managed to avoid American Dad! (not intentionally, it just happened that way) while doing this countdown for years now, you can safely assume it will return next year as there’s a lot more I can turn to.

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“Best Christmas ever!”

American Dad! currently airs on both TBS and Cartoon Network almost daily. As a result, you should have no problem finding an airing of this episode at some point this month, and probably more than once. And if cable isn’t your thing, the show is streaming on Hulu and also available on physical media and for digital purchase all over the place. This should be an easy one to find and it comes recommended.

Can’t wait until tomorrow for more Christmas? Check out what we had to say on this day last year and beyond:

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