In Family Guy, Cutaway Gags are commonly used in most episodes. They are used after a sentence or conversation, usually starting with "This is even worse/better than the time..." and are the main comedy part of Family Guy. It is implied that these gags are simply stories made up by the people that set up the gag, and that the incidents shown did not really happen. This is particularly obvious when it comes to parodies of movies and television shows, or incidents that show a character dying.
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| - Cutaway Gags
- Cutaway gags
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| - In Family Guy, Cutaway Gags are commonly used in most episodes. They are used after a sentence or conversation, usually starting with "This is even worse/better than the time..." and are the main comedy part of Family Guy. It is implied that these gags are simply stories made up by the people that set up the gag, and that the incidents shown did not really happen. This is particularly obvious when it comes to parodies of movies and television shows, or incidents that show a character dying.
- One of the distinguishing features in Drawn Together is that they tend to do Cutaway Gags every now and then. Every cutaway gag in the show varies from reason to reason. Most of them tie in with the plot, and some of them are just there to completely drift off and be completely random in a way that parodies Family Guy. A lot of the cutaway gags are projected through blue filters, as a way of giving the show a reality show feel.
- Unlike Family Guy, there are significantly fewer gags in each episode, usually only 3-4 as opposed to 8 or more on average.[1]
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| - In Family Guy, Cutaway Gags are commonly used in most episodes. They are used after a sentence or conversation, usually starting with "This is even worse/better than the time..." and are the main comedy part of Family Guy. It is implied that these gags are simply stories made up by the people that set up the gag, and that the incidents shown did not really happen. This is particularly obvious when it comes to parodies of movies and television shows, or incidents that show a character dying.
- One of the distinguishing features in Drawn Together is that they tend to do Cutaway Gags every now and then. Every cutaway gag in the show varies from reason to reason. Most of them tie in with the plot, and some of them are just there to completely drift off and be completely random in a way that parodies Family Guy. A lot of the cutaway gags are projected through blue filters, as a way of giving the show a reality show feel.
- Unlike Family Guy, there are significantly fewer gags in each episode, usually only 3-4 as opposed to 8 or more on average.[1]
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