Master of the Dark Side Read Online Free

20th episode of the 8th season of Family Guy

"Something, Something, Something, Dark Side"
Family Guy episode
SomethingDarkSidePoster.jpg

The poster for "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side".

Episode no. Flavour eight
Episode 20
Directed past Dominic Polcino
Written past Kirker Butler
Production codes 6ACX21
6ACX22
Original air date May 26, 2010 (2010-05-26)
Invitee appearances
  • Jon Benjamin every bit Carl/Yoda
  • John Bunnell as himself
  • James Caan as himself
  • Jackson Douglas
  • Joe Flaherty every bit Western Union worker
  • James Greene
  • Phil LaMarr
  • Dolph Lundgren (alive action)
  • Brigitte Nielsen (live action)
  • Michael Pataki (live action)
  • Kevin G. Richardson as Strong Black Man
  • George Rogan
  • Tom Selleck as himself (live action)
  • James Forest as himself/General Veers
Episode chronology
Previous
"The Splendid Source"
Side by side →
"Partial Terms of Endearment"
Family Guy (season 8)
List of episodes

"Something, Something, Something, Night Side" is a straight-to-video special of the animated series Family unit Guy which later on served equally the 20th episode of the evidence'southward eighth flavour and is the second part of the serial' Star Wars parody trilogy Laugh Information technology Up, Fuzzball. Information technology originally was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on December 22, 2009, and afterwards aired on Fox in the United states of america on May 23, 2010. The episode is a retelling and parody of the 1980 Star Wars picture show sequel The Empire Strikes Back, recasting characters from Family Guy into roles from the motion picture.

The episode was written by Kirker Butler and directed by Dominic Polcino. Information technology received high praise from critics for its accurate depiction of the original moving-picture show, every bit well as its inclusion of many cultural references. According to Nielsen ratings, it was viewed in 6.13 million homes in its original airing. The episode featured invitee performances past Jon Benjamin, John Bunnell, James Caan, Jackson Douglas, Joe Flaherty, James Greene, Phil LaMarr, Kevin Michael Richardson, George Rogan and James Woods, forth with several recurring invitee vocalism actors for the serial.

Plot [edit]

As the Griffin family is watching tv set, the power of a sudden goes out again, leading Peter to retell the story of The Empire Strikes Back.

Afterward the "opening crawl" an Imperial Star Destroyer deploys a series of probe droids in search of the Rebel Alliance. One of the probe droids (Joe) lands on the water ice planet Hoth, where the Rebels take prepare up a base. Rebel commander Luke Skywalker (Chris) is patrolling when he is attacked by a big wampa (Cookie Monster) and taken back to its lair. At the base, Han Solo (Peter) announces his intention to leave the Rebellion to Princess Leia (Lois) and Carlist Rieekan (Dr. Hartman), with Leia objecting to his determination, however she denies it when confronted, saying she would rather osculation George Takei. When he finds out that Luke has non yet returned, Han sets out on his "Dondon" to find him. Luke escapes the wampa lair and has a vision of his late mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi (Herbert), who tells him to go to the Dagobah system to larn the ways of the Forcefulness from Jedi Main Yoda, after offering him a bowl of Zima soup. Han speedily locates Luke, and the two are rescued soon later.

Before long subsequently, the Empire discovers the Rebel base, and Darth Vader (Stewie) orders an attack. The Imperial fleet exits hyperspace as well early, giving the Rebels time to evacuate the base while Luke leads his squadron of snowspeeders to concord off the Empire'due south battalion of Imperial Walkers. Imperial stormtroopers intermission into the base of operations, forcing Han to escape in the Millennium Falcon with Leia, C-3PO (Quagmire) and Chewbacca (Brian), while Luke escapes in his Ten-wing with R2-D2 (Cleveland), stopping to see R2's niece's violin recital. The Millennium Falcon enters an asteroid field and Han decides to dock inside a cavern to repair the send. They flee when they detect they take actually landed in the belly of a infinite slug (1000000). Meanwhile, Luke crash-lands in the swamps of Dagobah and finds Yoda (Carl) amid the foggy landscape. Yoda trains Luke, guiding him through a series of grooming exercises, including watching "sweet-ass DVD releases", and a preparation montage that parodies Rocky IV.

Darth Vader is ordered by the Emperor (Carter) to capture Luke and turn him to the night side of the Force. Vader recruits bounty hunters to track down and capture Luke's friends, intending to use them equally bait to trap Luke, including Raggedy Andy, whom he orders to leave. With the Millennium Falcon 's hyperdrive broken, Han and visitor escape by hiding amid a field of disposed trash, but are tracked past Boba Fett (Ernie the Giant Chicken), afterwards hit a "space bum" collecting some of the garbage. Luke has a premonition that his friends are in danger and leaves Dagobah to salvage them, although he has not finished his Jedi training. Yoda initially doesn't want him to go, merely encourages it after Luke suggests Yoda fight Vader himself.

Han and the others go to Cloud Metropolis on the planet Bespin to obtain assistance from Han's friend Lando Calrissian (Mort), "the merely blackness guy in the milky way", merely to be turned over to Darth Vader. Han willingly reveals the location of Luke and the Rebel base merely is tortured by existence forced to listen to Paula Cole's "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?", as punishment for bottleneck a toilet on the 16th floor of Deject Urban center, which forced Vader to apply the "little grunter people'southward" bathroom. Han is used to test a carbon freezing chamber Vader intends to use on Luke to take him to the Emperor. Leia professes her love to Han, but Han tells her to "fuck off" and is then frozen in carbonite for posterity. Lando later double-crosses the Empire, freeing Leia, Chewbacca and C-3PO, motivating the guards with a pizza party. Despite R2-D2 having sexual activity with the combination lock, and subsequently being discovered by her husband, to get the door open up, they are too late to stop Boba Fett from flying off with Han. Luke arrives at Deject Metropolis and, afterwards existence briefly interrupted by Ryan Seacrest on American Idol, engages Vader in a lightsaber duel. Vader cuts off Luke's right manus. With Luke cornered and caught, Vader goads Luke to join the dark side, revealing that he is his begetter. Luke casts himself into an air shaft and, later discovering that a worker has shoved his severed manus down his pants, ends up hanging on an antenna beneath the urban center, calling out to Ben, Leia, and Tom Selleck. Leia senses Luke's phone call from within the Millennium Falcon and has him rescued. On board a Nebulon-B frigate, Luke is fitted with an bogus hand, but told to practice masturbating with a hot canis familiaris first. Lando, dressed in Han's clothes, sets off with Chewbacca on the Millennium Falcon to rescue Han. Luke angrily protests the story's cryptic ending, but and then he receives a letter of the alphabet from Doc Brown, a reference to the ending of Back to the Time to come Part 2.

In the Griffins' dwelling house, the ability returns as Peter finishes his story, only to get into some other argument with Chris over Robot Chicken. Chris vows to not let Peter get his goat this time, but eventually storms off when Peter brings up Without a Paddle.

Production and development [edit]

A man with black hair, and tan skin with a black shirt on, leans forward while laughing into a microphone.

Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane served as executive producer for the episode.

The episode was written by serial regular Kirker Butler, before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, and before his leave from the series in gild to become co-executive producer of the Family Guy spinoff series The Cleveland Prove. Butler wrote the first draft of the episode in four weeks, under the guidance of series creator Seth MacFarlane. The episode was directed by Dominic Polcino, who had previously directed "Blue Harvest". This was the concluding episode in the series to use manus-drawn animatics, before transitioning to computer-designed animatics.

In addition to the regular cast, voice actor Jon Benjamin reprised his function as Carl, who portrays Yoda, and Sheriff John Bunnell fabricated his second appearance in the serial, the outset existence in the eighth season episode "Quagmire'due south Baby". Actor James Woods, in his third appearance in the series, as an exaggerated version of himself, guest starred. Actors James Caan, Jackson Douglas and Joe Flaherty, along with phonation actors James Greene, Phil LaMarr, Kevin Michael Richardson and George Rogan made appearances. Recurring guest vox actors Johnny Brennan, Chris Cox, Ralph Garman, Wally Wingert, writers Kirker Butler, Danny Smith, Alec Sulkin, John Viener, writer and showrunner Mark Hentemann, and producer Chris Sheridan also made small-scale appearances in the episode. Live-action clips of thespian Dolph Lundgren, extra Brigitte Nielsen and player Michael Pataki from the film Rocky IV, and actor Tom Selleck from the picture show Her Alibi were besides used in multiple sequences throughout the episode.

The DVD release of "Blue Harvest" on January 15, 2008, contained an easter egg of a brief read through of $.25 from "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", equally well as a teaser trailer for the episode every bit another easter egg.

The title of this episode is a reference to a specific line from the season five episode "Barely Legal", which was used in a cutaway relating to Star Wars. The line is an within joke relating to the Emperor "figuring out the formula for bang-up dialogue" for Star Wars. While the Emperor talks to a kneeling Darth Vader, he says "Something, something, something, dark side. Something, something, something, complete". "Barely Legal" was written by Kirker Butler, who likewise wrote this episode.

Cultural references [edit]

As the episode opens with a shot of the Griffin family unit, they are seen sitting in front of the television watching a parody of several Aaron Sorkin shows, including Studio sixty on the Sunset Strip, entitled The Kitchen. One time the scene ends, the power unexpectedly goes out, to which Stewie responds by asking "What are we in, Iraq?" Reminiscent of the previous Star Wars-inspired episode, "Blue Harvest", Meg insists her begetter tell some other story about Star Wars. Peter then begins to retell the film Blackness Snake Moan earlier beingness interrupted by Stewie and Chris.

In the same manner as the original Star Wars films, the story opens with a large, yellow crawl of text, with the text in this variation calling out 20th Century Fox for their lack of foresight in terms of merchandising rights, thus allowing George Lucas and Lucasfilm to go on all the rights to every film in the Star Wars franchise. The text then addresses the stockholders of 20th Century Play a trick on, and cites Family Guy 's ii cancellations as some other example of the company's short-sighted decisions, and spending upkeep money in a useless mode.[2] As the Imperial Armada approaches, a Star Destroyer deploys Elroy Jetson, a character from the Hanna-Barbera animated sitcom The Jetsons, along with a series of probe droids. Elroy Jetson proceeds to the Piddling Dipper School, in simulated of the original intro to The Jetsons. One of the probe droids, portrayed past Joe Swanson, and so lands in the snowfall near Luke Skywalker.[three] Luke mistakes the droid for a meteorite and approaches the device, earlier existence attacked past a snow animal, which looks like Cookie Monster from PBS' Sesame Street.[3] [iv] The grapheme had previously appeared in the fourth flavor episode "Model Misbehavior" every bit a "cookie aficionado".[ii] [5]

Before leaving, Han Solo runs into Princess Leia, who insists on Han staying with her. Apologizing to Leia for having to leave her, Han gives her his email address, which is hosted past the nigh defunct visitor CompuServe at "hansolo64@compuserve.com." Han Solo and then questions why Leia wants him to stay, and suggests that she is afraid that she will not get a "goodbye osculation" before he leaves. Leia and then mulls over the thought, and tells him that she would rather kiss Star Trek actor George Takei. Abruptly entering, C-3PO and R2-D2 warning Han Solo of Luke Skywalker's disappearance. Han goes out to wait for Luke on his "Dondon", which has the torso of a tauntaun, and the caput of actor Don Knotts.[iii] [v] Once Han locates Luke, comedian Rodney Dangerfield appears, to which Han responds, "There are fashion too many elderly comedians out hither in the snow."[6] [7] Before being rescued, Han starting time appears in a 1980s commercial for the chewing gum Juicy Fruit, with the original audio from the commercial and Juicy Fruit's current logo.[iv] [5] [8] The sequence was originally planned for the fifth flavor episode "Road to Rupert", with Stewie and Brian taking the identify of Peter.

Continuing on their approach to the Hoth arrangement, the Majestic Fleet passes by a mailbox with the surname 'Nimoy' on it. Darth Vader, every bit portrayed by Stewie, hits the mailbox with a baseball bat as the send passes.[9] As the Royal Walkers, or "robot camels", begin to arroyo the rebels, i of the rebels looks through his binoculars at the grouping of robots and spots one of the Walkers wearing Crocs, a type of shoe reminiscent of the wooden clog only made out of plastic.[10] When Luke'southward shipping is shot downwardly during the boxing, he contacts OnStar, a company that provides vehicle security. As Han decides to outrun a series of TIE fighters, Sheriff John Bunnell so begins narrating the chase, in a parody of World'southward Wildest Police Videos,[3] which Bunnell hosted from 1998 to 2002.[9] [eleven] This is Family Guy 's second reference to the show, too as Bunnell's second appearance in the serial. His first appearance was in "Quagmire's Baby", which starting time aired presently before the DVD release of "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side".[11] Han and so seemingly goes through an asteroid field, much to Leia's chagrin. Han responds by stating that it is better than going through the nearby strawberry field, with The Beatles members John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison and so actualization. The other Beatles are and so seen teasing Paul most Heather Mills having one leg, calling her "Peg" and "Eileen". After much maneuvering, Han is able to escape the TIE fighters, eventually parking in a handicapped zone, citing vertigo as his medical condition. This leads Leia to question Han'due south decision making, and causes Han to film a "video confession" similar to those on the MTV reality testify The Real Earth.

When Luke reaches the Dagobah system, he crash lands into a swamp, prompting Allstate spokesperson and actor Dennis Haysbert to announced, in a parody of his commercials. Haysbert was reportedly approached to voice himself, merely rejected the offer for unspecified reasons. Later getting out of the crashed transport, R2-D2 is eaten and spat back out by a swamp monster, prompting R2 to question what else is located beneath the swamp water. The Legion of Doom lair then rises from the swamp, which angers Luke. Later Luke meets him, Yoda, as portrayed by Carl, reveals that the hole-and-corner to mastering the Force is to "check out sweet-ass DVD releases", and goes on to reference several films, including National Lampoon'due south Van Wilder and Iron Man, also equally Atomic number 26 Man 's director Jon Favreau.[12] [13] A montage depicts Luke performing various able-bodied feats nether Yoda's guidance, interlaced with clips of Dolph Lundgren as Ivan Drago from the 1985 movie Rocky 4.[7] [14] Going on to test Luke'due south knowledge of various films, Yoda begins to enquire the all-time and worst "naked chick" scenes, with Luke responding past citing the best as Rebecca De Mornay in Risky Business, and the worst equally Kathy Bates in Virtually Schmidt. Yoda and so asks about the best scene in the 1985 film Teen Wolf and Luke picks the scene in which Michael J. Flim-flam in wolf make-upwardly opens the bathroom door to run across his father is also a werewolf. Yoda says Luke is correct, but that he also would have accustomed the end celebration in which an extra allegedly exposes himself.[10]

In one case the Emperor, portrayed past Carter Pewterschmidt, contacts Darth Vader, he first begins by telling him that he is getting rid of all his CDs because he is "downloading all his music to his new iPod", and then proceeds to listing several albums, including vocalizer Natalie Merchant's 1995 album Tigerlily, Alanis Morissette'due south album Jagged Little Pill, and finally Richard Marx'south single "Hold On to the Nights", the last of which Darth Vader excitedly agrees to take. Calling upon various bounty hunters, Darth Vader reviews a lineup of auditioning hunters, including Dog the Compensation Hunter, IG-88, Zuckuss, Bossk, Boba Fett as portrayed by the Giant Craven, and finally Raggedy Andy, who Vader angrily dismisses.[v] During a confrontation with Han, Darth Vader deflects lasers using his gloves and sings the theme song from the Wonder Adult female tv set serial. Once Han Solo is captured past Darth Vader, he is tortured into confessing his bottleneck 1 of the bathrooms on Cloud Metropolis. Vader then forces Han to listen to Paula Cole's "Where Accept All the Cowboys Gone?" on full blast.[3] When Luke lands on Cloud City to fight Vader, he is start subjected to appearing on the popular reality competition American Idol, with Ryan Seacrest as host of the ensuing "lightsaber battle" before he is speedily killed past Luke.[8] After losing his battle against Darth Vader, Luke falls to the bottom of the floating city and calls out for Leia, forth with Obi-Wan and actor Tom Selleck, the terminal of which is then seen briefly looking up from his book in a real-life cameo from the movie Her Alibi.[12] Sensing this, Leia then orders Chewbacca to turn the ship effectually, prompting a parody of Vicki Sue Robinson'southward single "Plow The Beat Around", reworded to "Turn the Ship Around".[12]

A young man with red hair, and stubble, looks slightly to his right. He is wearing a black jacket, and white shirt.

Seth Dark-green also created a series of Star Wars episodes for Robot Chicken.

Equally the story comes to a close, Luke interrupts the ending sequence and raises the viewer's awareness to all of the "unanswered questions" that the movie leaves behind. The Western Union postal worker from the 1989 film Back to the Time to come Part 2 then appears, and hands Luke a message delivered by Doc Brown from the twelvemonth 1885, with the story then ending on the words "To be Concluded", in the same manner of Back to the Future.[2] [3] [15] Composer Alan Silvestri allowed the producers to utilise his Back to the Future theme since he's a fan of Family Guy.

The episode then cuts back to the Griffin family household, with Peter immediately rehashing the argument between him and Chris that starting time started in "Blueish Harvest",[ii] a joke grounded in the fact that Chris' vocalism thespian, Seth Greenish, is one of the creators and producers of the finish motility comedy series Robot Craven. Peter begins by suggesting that Robot Craven would never exist able to top the story he had but told. Hearing this, Chris defends Robot Chicken. Peter continues to poke at Chris and finally states that he "may accept more time to tell another story" entitled Without a Paddle, a critically panned motion picture in which Seth Dark-green starred. Chris so angrily storms off yelling "Fuck you" to Peter.[iii] [7]

Reception [edit]

In a meaning decrease from the previous episode, "Something, Something, Something, Night Side" was viewed in half-dozen.13 one thousand thousand homes in its offset one-half-hour, and half-dozen.39 in its 2d (previous episode was viewed in vii.59 meg homes). It aired simultaneously with the season finale of The Celebrity Apprentice on NBC, the series finale of Lost on ABC, and Brooks & Dunn – The Terminal Rodeo on CBS. The episode acquired a 3.0 and 3.ii rating, in the get-go and 2d half-hours respectively, in the 18–49 demographic. The episode beat the season finales of The Simpsons and The Cleveland Evidence in both the 18–49 demographic and in total viewership.[16]

Reviews of the telly broadcast were highly positive, praising its shut attention to detail in parodying the original film. Jason Hughes of Television set Squad found the episode to exist "incredibly [impressive]," going on to note, "Equally much as nosotros fans honey the films, we know they're non perfect, and that they're downright ridiculous in places. Family unit Guy managed to point out nigh all of those moments in this parody."[three] Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Guild found the episode to have "a lot of solid laughs", and admired the show for "throwing itself into these outsized moving picture parody things".[6] Critics of the DVD and Blu-ray Disc releases gave the episode loftier praise for its power to accurately reflect the original film.[10] Cindy White of IGN gave the episode an 8 out of x, noting that it "lives up to its predecessor and, like the film information technology spoofs, arguably exceeds it in some ways".[7] John Scott Lewinski of Wired praised the faithfulness to the original film, maxim that information technology "becomes clear that MacFarlane and his writers are legit Star Wars fans".[10] Adam Rosenberg of MTV Movies Blog called the episode "hilarious"[17] and Paul Semel of Metromix praised the episode for featuring "some very ribald sense of humor", and "[skewering] the original film with some rather insightful moments".[18] In a subsequent review of Family unit Guy 'southward eighth flavor, Ramsey Isler of IGN listed "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side" as being a "pretty entertaining parody, and a safety mode to wrap things up."[nineteen] Tom Eames of entertainment website Digital Spy placed the episode at number six on his listing of the best Family Guy episodes in order of "yukyukyuks" and described the episode as "almost as expert equally the first [Star Wars parody], only much better than the tertiary [Star Wars parody]."[20] He added that the episode is "a bit bizarre on paper, simply it works", and noted that you need to be a fan of the Star Wars franchise to empathise the jokes.[xx]

Home media [edit]

On Dec 22, 2009, before the episode commencement aired, information technology was released on DVD in Region i, and — in a first for the series — the episode was available on Blu-ray Disc.[21] Information technology was released on December 26, 2009 in Region ii,[22] and on December 23, 2009 in Region 4.[23] As with "Blueish Harvest", a express edition version is available in the region two version, and comes with collectible items, including a T-shirt of The Giant Craven as Boba Fett.[24] The Blu-ray Disc release features a second disc containing a "digital copy" of the episode.

Something, Something, Something, Dark Side
Gear up details Special features [25]
  • Full, uncensored episode
  • 2-disc set (Blu-ray Disc only)
  • 1.33:one aspect ratio
  • Languages:
    • English (Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles)
    • Spanish (Dolby Digital, with subtitles)
    • French (Dolby Digital)
  • Sound commentary by Seth MacFarlane with Mark Hentemann, David A. Goodman, Kirker Butler, Dominic Polcino and Seth Dark-green
  • Family unit Guy Fact-Ups
  • The Dark Side of Poster Art
  • An animatic version of the episode
  • Family Guy: Something, Something, Something, Night Side Table Read
  • Family unit Guy — Episode VI: "We Have a Bad Feeling About This" Tabular array Read (sneak peek)
Release dates
Region ane Region 2 Region 4
December 22, 2009 Dec 26, 2009 December 23, 2009

Sequel [edit]

With the success of "Blue Harvest" and "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side", a sequel episode, entitled "Information technology's a Trap!" and parodying the movie Return of the Jedi, aired during the ninth season of Family Guy. The episode was written by David A. Goodman and Scarlet Chevapravatdumrong, and directed past Peter Shin, in his offset episode since the fourth season.[26]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Phillips, Gary (2009-12-17). "Review: Family Guy Something Something Something Dark Side". HeyUGuys.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  2. ^ a b c d due east f g h Hughes, Jason (2010-05-24). "Sundays With Seth: Cleveland Strikes Dorsum". Idiot box Squad. Retrieved 2010-05-25 .
  3. ^ a b Bhatt, Pranav (2009-12-07). "Family unit Guy: Something, Something, Something, Dark Side (Review)". Bhatt.id.au. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  4. ^ a b c d Cortez, Carl. "DVD Review: Family Guy: Something, Something, Something, Dark Side". IF Magazine. Archived from the original on 2009-12-27. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  5. ^ a b VanDerWerff, Emily (2010-05-24). ""Judge Me Tender"/"You're the Best Man, Cleveland Brown"/"Something, Something, Something, Dark Side"". The A.Five. Club . Retrieved 2010-05-25 .
  6. ^ a b c d White, Cindy. "Something, Something, Something Dark Side Blu-ray Review". IGN. Archived from the original on 2012-ten-18. Retrieved 2009-12-24 .
  7. ^ a b Amith, Dennis. "Family unit Guy: Something, Something, Something, Night Side (a J!-ENT Review)". J!-ENT.com. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  8. ^ a b Surpless, Brendan. "Family unit Guy: Something, Something, Something, Nighttime Side Review". HighDefDiscNews.com. Archived from the original on 2009-12-30. Retrieved 2009-12-28 .
  9. ^ a b c d Lewinski, John Scott (2009-12-21). "Review: Family Guy Embraces Dark Side in Star Wars Spoof". Wired . Retrieved 2009-12-24 .
  10. ^ a b "Something, Something, Something, Darkside Review". MillionairePlayboy. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  11. ^ a b c Anderson, Troy. "Family Guy: Something, Something, Something, Nighttime Side". Anderson Vision. Retrieved 2009-12-27 .
  12. ^ Gibron, Pecker. "Family unit Guy — Something, Something, Something, Dark Side (2009) : Blu-ray". PopMatters . Retrieved 2009-12-28 .
  13. ^ Sullivan, Jeffrey. "'Something Something Something Nighttime Side' Preview". The Celebrity Cafe. Archived from the original on 2009-12-26. Retrieved 2009-12-25 .
  14. ^ Firecloud, Johnny. "Family Guy: Something Something Something Dark Side". Crave Online. Archived from the original on 2009-12-21. Retrieved 2009-12-25 .
  15. ^ Gorman, Nib (2010-05-24). "Telly Ratings: Lost Finale Ratings Season High, But Not Ballsy, Celebrity Apprentice Finale Up". TVbytheNumbers. Archived from the original on 2010-05-26. Retrieved 2010-05-25 .
  16. ^ Rosenberg, Adam. "The Roots Of The 'Family Guy: Something Something Something Dark Side' Poster". MTV. Retrieved 2009-12-24 .
  17. ^ Semel, Paul. "'Something, Something, Something, Night Side' gets released". Metromix. Retrieved 2009-12-24 .
  18. ^ Isler, Ramsey (2010-06-02). "Family unit Guy: Season viii Review". IGN . Retrieved 2010-08-28 .
  19. ^ a b Eames, Tom (19 March 2017). "The 16 best ever Family Guy episodes in guild of yukyukyuks". Digital Spy . Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  20. ^ "Announcement for Family unit Guy — Something, Something, Something Dark Side". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2012-04-11. Retrieved 2009-08-xix .
  21. ^ "Family unit Guy Presents: Something Something Something Nighttime Side". Retrieved 2009-12-24 .
  22. ^ "Family Guy - Something, Something, Something Dark Side on DVD & Blu-ray Disc: Date, Packages and Pricing". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2012-04-xi. Retrieved 2016-07-01 .
  23. ^ "Family Guy — Something, Something, Something, Dark Side". Play.com. Archived from the original on 2009-10-30. Retrieved 2009-11-23 .
  24. ^ Iverson, Dan (2009-07-25). "SDCC 09: Family Guy Strikes Dorsum". IGN . Retrieved 2009-07-25 .

External links [edit]

  • "Something, Something, Something, Dark Side" at IMDb

goinshimme1986.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Something,_Something,_Something,_Dark_Side

0 Response to "Master of the Dark Side Read Online Free"

Postar um comentário

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel