"Breaking Out Is Hard to Do" is the first
Family Guy episode to be written by Tom Devanney. When Stewie attempts to asphyxiate himself in the supermarket, he was originally meant to state "Either I was a C-section or you're Stretch Vagstrong", which would have been a reference to the
Stretch Armstrong action figure, but broadcasting standards prohibited them from showing it. During the "
Take On Me" sequence,
Family Guy had obtained full rights to use the "Take On Me" music video completely, but animators re-produced the video to make it easier for production. The Matisse painting shown in the Griffins' dining room is only animated similar to an actual Matisse painting due to a legal issue with the paintings. The episode production staff spent a lot of time deciding what would be Lois' motivation for stealing en masse. An unused scene was drafted showing Chris, directly after hearing Lois' prison term, flashbacking back to him watching
Six Feet Under, seeing a same-sex couple kissing, and exclaiming "Oh, come on!" The song based around
Glenn Quagmire was sung and recorded by professional studio singers who sing at events such as the
Academy Awards. The scene following Peter saying to Lois: "I had to do, well you know, that thing that you usually do for me every Thursday night" showing Peter attempting to give himself
fellatio, hitting his head on the wall and falling down the stairs was repeatedly fought by broadcasting standards, but they eventually allowed the scene. In the original episode draft, Peter was to be seen falling down the stairs, and Stewie's foot was to be lodged inside Peter's
anus, where he was to lose his shoe. Peter breaks the
fourth wall and begins to speak with viewers during his interview with the sumo wrestling employee; Executive Producer
David A. Goodman comments in the episode DVD commentary that this is "one of the few times, maybe the only time, when [the show] can step out of format and point out the format." The "
CBS Asiantown" logo shown on the Griffins' television was prohibited from broadcast on the televised version of the episode. ==Cultural references==