PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Quahog, R.I., the fictional hometown of Peter Griffin and his dysfunctional "Family Guy" relatives, is coming to life.
The show will meld with reality this weekend when a local tourism council sponsors an all-day bus tour highlighting the Rhode Island institutions featured — for better or worse — on the Fox network's hit series.
Fans will get to visit the bar in Johnston known as The Drunken Clam, a "Family Guy" neighborhood haunt, and drive past a downtown Providence skyscraper off which the often clueless, almost always politically incorrect character jumps in one episode because he's "immortal."
The show, created by Seth MacFarlane, who attended the Rhode Island School of Design, pretty accurately depicts a slew of real-life Rhode Island places, including the iconic Van Wickle Gates at Brown University and the Breakers mansion in Newport. It takes generous liberties with others.
And that's part of the entertainment.
"Pretty much any time you see something local on `Family Guy,' it's fun," said Christopher Martin, whose work cataloging the show's Rhode Island connections would eventually lead to the tour. The event Saturday is put on by the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council — 30 people have signed up, shelling out $49 apiece — and is now in its second year.
Martin runs a website called Quahog.org about Rhode Island fact and folklore. Although his site had nothing to do with "Family Guy," he started getting a lot of inquiries about it because of the shared name. (A quahog is a clam.) So about seven years ago, he decided to start compiling all the references.
The 45-year-old from Johnston, who works as an analyst at a health care company, records all the episodes. He usually watches each one twice, the first time for fun and the second to take notes; he now has 88 typed pages.