Finally, Stewie unplugs the router. The helmet shatters. Peter collapses, clutching a single souvenir: a DVD copy of Season 16: The Director’s Rear End .
Meg looks directly at the camera—into the viewer’s soul—and says, “You’ve been watching from the 360p angle this whole time, haven’t you?” She winks. The screen glitches to black.
(to Lois) Lois, I’m bored. Regular TV is for chumps. I’ve seen every episode of King of Queens four times. I’ve memorized the UPS guy’s route. I need… immersion. Family Guy Season 16 - threesixtyp
(walking in, sipping a juice box) Mother, don’t interrupt. This is the most sophisticated torture device I’ve seen since I installed a mirror in Brian’s doghouse. He’s trapped in a 360-degree loop of every bad joke he’s ever told.
Peter tries to take off the helmet, but it’s fused to his head. The AI announces: “To exit, you must watch all of Season 16 simultaneously from every angle. Including the angles that don’t exist yet.” Finally, Stewie unplugs the router
Peter’s eyes light up. “In the future, you won’t just watch TV. The TV will watch you… from every angle. Brought to you by the same people who made the Clapper.”
Peter’s pants fly off. The helmet projects a 360-degree hologram of his lower half into the living room. Lois is horrified. Chris films it for his vlog. Meg looks directly at the camera—into the viewer’s
Inside the helmet, Peter is now forced to watch the infamous “Seahorse Seashell Party” from the back of Brian’s head. He screams.
Peter, why don’t you try that new streaming service, “Threesixtyp”? It has all those interactive 360-degree shows. You can look around while you watch.