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Seth MacFarlane Slams Hollywood: “We’ve Forgotten How to Tell Stories of Hope”

August 23, 2025  ·
  Ron E. Bradley
Seth Macfarlane on The Orville

Seth Macfarlane on The Orville - Disney+

Seth MacFarlane, famously the voice behind Peter Griffin and Quagmire of Family Guy, believes much of today’s Hollywood television landscape is, well… depressing. MacFarlane appeared on the Where Everybody Knows Your Name podcast and shared his candid thoughts on Hollywood’s current offerings.

From Cheers to Jeers – Hope to Handmaids

The podcast, hosted by Cheers star Ted Danson, reflected on an era when TV could feel hopeful and welcoming—a place “where everybody knows your name.” Seth MacFarlane reminisced about shows from his youth, saying, “When I was a kid, Hollywood was providing that voice in various forms and there was a lot of hope.” He cited Star Trek: The Next Generation as inspiration for his own creation, The Orville, a fun, space-oriented take on the sci-fi genre.

Picard

Patrick Stewart as Captain Picard in Star Trek: Picard (2023), Paramount+

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By contrast, he said, “The dishes that we are serving up now are so dystopian and so pessimistic. And yeah, there’s a lot to be pessimistic about, but it’s so one-sided. There’s nothing we’re doing that’s providing anyone an image of hope.”

Shows like The Sopranos and The Handmaid’s Tale, he argued, exemplify this bleak turn.

Anti-Heroes and a Dystopian Outlook

Seth MacFarlane acknowledged the craftsmanship behind Hollywood TV hits like The Handmaid’s Tale, calling it “beautifully written, beautifully directed,” but emphasized its dismal outlook. “There is a lot more of that than what we used to get from Captain Picard,” he noted. He also pointed out Hollywood’s fixation on anti-heroes and suggested that the industry has perhaps lost its sense of purpose.

Michael Burnham Star Trek Discovery

Michael Burnham on Star Trek Discovery – YouTube, Star Trek

One of his most poignant statements to Danson: “What we do do well is tell stories. And we’re not doing the best job right now of telling those stories in a way that gives people hope.”

On Today’s Hollywood Menu: Bitter & Bland

Beyond Handmaid’s Tale and The Sopranos, shows like 13 Reasons Why and Drawn Together explore darker aspects of life than most audiences encounter daily. Even superhero and sci-fi shows often skew grim.

Ironheart Trailer

Ironheart in the trailer for Ironheart – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

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Take Marvel’s Ironheart, for instance: Riri Williams, a genius with extraordinary opportunities, turns her back on these gifts, scams fellow students, complains about not being Tony Stark, and joins a gang of criminals—hardly the lighthearted, hopeful fare viewers expect from a superhero series.

Joy From the Past – Hope for the Future

Where does this leave us? Trends in entertainment cycle, and perhaps the era of relentlessly dark stories is waning. There was a time when television could tackle life’s lessons while still offering hope. Shows like Good Times, The Facts of Life, Cheers, Friends, and The Office made audiences laugh, fall in love with characters, learn something, and leave with a smile. Television should inspire the best in humanity.

Seth Macfarlane on Saturday Night Live

Even if Hollywood strays from that path, we live in a time where platforms like YouTube allow creators to inspire and uplift. The human spirit is resilient, and as Doc Brown once said, “The future is whatever you make of it. So make it a good one!”

What do you think of the current state of television? Do you agree with Seth MacFarlane about Hollywood? Are there shows today that inspire you? What do you believe the future holds? Sound off in the comments below.

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Author: Ron E. Bradley
Ron E. Bradley is a YouTube content creator covering all things theme parks along with his family on his channel, Follow The Bradleys Fun. A former longtime Walt Disney World cast member and actor, Ron has done just about every job there is to do at the House of Mouse and appeared on screen with the legendary Dean Cain. Ron lives in the Orlando Florida area with his wife and son and can typically be found broadcasting from one of the area's many theme parks. YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@followthebradleysfun X: https://x.com/BradleysFunFam
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CleatusDefeatus

There is an episode of “Family Guy” whose entire plot revolves around Quagmire’s sister being beaten by her boyfriend so badly that all four main male characters decide to go him. Quagmire ends up killing by ramming and pinning him to a tree with his car. AFTER a prolonged, violent, and bloody fist fight scene… That was a :30 animated sitcom on an early Sunday evening.
This doutche mcfarland has zero moral high ground to stand on and lament the loss of “hopeful” entertainment. A 35 year old rerun of “the Love Boat” is loaded with more hope than the entirety of seth’s career.

keimosabe

That soounds great Seth! You currently have the rights to “dDungeon Crawler Carl” and are supposedly working on the project. Take yer own advice, REMAIN FAITHFUL TO THE BOOKS AND DON’T SCREW IT UP!!!!

BTW, if you have not read the Dungeon Crawler Carl books, I HIGHLY, HIGHLY recommend you get the full voice cast versions on Audible and listen to them. You won’t be able to put them down, they are incredibly good👍

ReaderX

Honestly if Hollywood would be able to “do well” in telling stories, people would go to the movies more often. Even if the story is bleak and dystopian. There are no well told stories though, current Hollywood just doesn’t have the talent anymore. And when it comes to hope, I disagree that the writers can’t transport hope as a feeling. It’s just that what they hope for and express through their movies is so divergent from what the audience hopes for, so mired in the perspective of their own self and their own specific world view, that the general audience either cannot connect, or outright disapproves. As long as current writers cannot set aside their ego, jump over their own shadow and speak to a broader audience, that they maybe not 110% agree with themselves, nothings gonna change.

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Vallor

What a joker! “We gud with dem stories!” is bunk. Good stories are few and far between. Maybe the only ones this year that could be considered a good, original stories are horror movies (Sinners and Weapons) all the rest were derivate and most were poorly acted or directed. I can’t think of a good, original TV show worth anything. The fact Seth needs to go all the way back to The Next Generation to find good hopeful stories is pretty telling.

Including Seth’s own work, which hasn’t exactly set the charts afire in either TV or Movies.

IMO the best storytellers out there today may very well come from the Comedy sphere. Dave Chapelle weaves stories better than 99.9% of the rest of TV and Movies these days.