. "Force Majeure"@en . "1"^^ . "\"The Thin White Line\" is the fourteenth episode of the first season of Millennium."@en . . "Richard Alan Hance is interviewed by Frank Black.jpg"@en . . . . . . . "Sacrament"@en . "Brian Does Hollywood"@en . . . "Brian sniffing Cocaine"@en . . . . . . . . "The Thin White Line"@en . . . "Fore Father"@en . . "Plot: Peter wins a paid vacation at work, and the family gets ready to go on a cruise. Joe Swanson recognizes the strength of Brian\u2019s nose and offers him a job as a police dog to look for drugs. Brian proves instrumental in finding drugs at the airport and busting a midget gang\u2019s drug ring. When they nail the guy with the drugs Brian Griffin sniffs some and gets a thin white line on his nose of cocaine. But when Brian gets addicted to cocaine and goes to rehab, Lois insists the family has to cancel the vacation to help Brian. Peter, however, joins Brian at the rehab center and causes chaos and distress. After leaving the center, Brian stuns the family when he announces that he is leaving Quahog, setting the stage for the next episode, \u201CBrian Does Hollywood.\u201D"@en . "1997"^^ . "2001-07-11"^^ . . . . . . "The Thin White Line"@en . "1"^^ . "\"The Thin White Line\" is the fourteenth episode of the first season of Millennium."@en . . . . . . "1997-02-14"^^ . "3"^^ . "29"^^ . . "1"^^ . "Part 1 of 2"@en . . "2"^^ . . . . "Plot: Peter wins a paid vacation at work, and the family gets ready to go on a cruise. Joe Swanson recognizes the strength of Brian\u2019s nose and offers him a job as a police dog to look for drugs. Brian proves instrumental in finding drugs at the airport and busting a midget gang\u2019s drug ring. When they nail the guy with the drugs Brian Griffin sniffs some and gets a thin white line on his nose of cocaine. After leaving the center, Brian stuns the family when he announces that he is leaving Quahog, setting the stage for the next episode, \u201CBrian Does Hollywood.\u201D"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Millennium"@en . . . . "right|250px\nWhen Brian tells his therapist that he is in a bit of an emotional rut, his doctor suggests that he may be too inwardly focused and that perhaps doing some volunteer work may be a good idea. Brian takes him up on his advice, serving as a guide dog for the blind and elderly. But it isn't until Joe gives Brian the chance to be a drug-sniffing dog for the Quahog Police Department that he really finds something he takes to. In fact, on his first day on duty at the airport, Brian successfully tracks down a suitcase full of cocaine, but inadvertently takes a snort of it himself.\n\nMeanwhile, Peter attends the Happy-Go-Lucky Toy Company Picnic and wins Mr. Weed's challenge, walking away with the prize of a week's paid vacation.\n250px|left\nBrian continues to excel as a member of the police force, but his problems with cocaine mount until he ends up with a full-blown addiction. After he shows up at the house high on drugs, the family decides to stage an intervention. Ultimately Brian agrees to enter rehab, forcing Peter and the family have to cancel the cruise they had planned until after Brian's treatment. Peter, disappointed at not being able to sail the seas in style and in awe of the fancy amenities at Brian's rehab rehab facility, decides to fake his own addiction in order to \"vacation\" at the detox clinic.\n\nBefore long, Peter's obnoxious behavior attracts the attention of the clinic's head doctor, and despite his initial attempts to ignore Peter, Brian gets sucked into Peter's antics. When the doctor claims that Peter is the \"X Factor\" responsible for driving Brian to his addiction, Brian indignantly exits rehab with Peter. Back at home, the family celebrates Brian's return, but he drops a bombshell on them. Saying his experience has shown him that everyone is responsible for his own destiny, Brian says he's off to follow his own personal journey. With that, Brian hails a cab, drives off, and the episode ends with a \"To Be Continued...\" setting the stage for the next episode, \u201CBrian Does Hollywood.\u201D"@en . . . .