[s6e5] Man In The Moonbounce May 2026

Meanwhile, back at the Smith house, the cycle of trauma repeats itself. With Stan in prison, . In a classic American Dad! visual gag, the sheer weight of mortgages, car repairs, and family stress causes Steve to rapidly age , turning him into a grey-haired, overworked version of himself in a matter of weeks. The Emotional Core: Breaking the Cycle

While Stan is in jail, Hayley tries to give Klaus a haircut using a doll’s wig, leading to a hilarious (and predictably disastrous) outcome. [S6E5] Man in the Moonbounce

The episode kicks off on . While Steve is just looking for a bit of teenage fun, Stan is busy being his typical, overbearing self—until a moonbounce enters the picture. After a therapist persona from Roger (the first appearance of Dr. Penguin ) encourages Stan to "let loose his inner child," Stan has a literal and figurative breakdown. Meanwhile, back at the Smith house, the cycle

He realizes that because his father abandoned him and his mother forced him to be the "man of the house" too early, he never actually got to be a kid. The result? Stan goes full "man-child," trading the family car for a coin-operated rocket ship and eventually getting arrested for egging a house. visual gag, the sheer weight of mortgages, car

Meanwhile, back at the Smith house, the cycle of trauma repeats itself. With Stan in prison, . In a classic American Dad! visual gag, the sheer weight of mortgages, car repairs, and family stress causes Steve to rapidly age , turning him into a grey-haired, overworked version of himself in a matter of weeks. The Emotional Core: Breaking the Cycle

While Stan is in jail, Hayley tries to give Klaus a haircut using a doll’s wig, leading to a hilarious (and predictably disastrous) outcome.

The episode kicks off on . While Steve is just looking for a bit of teenage fun, Stan is busy being his typical, overbearing self—until a moonbounce enters the picture. After a therapist persona from Roger (the first appearance of Dr. Penguin ) encourages Stan to "let loose his inner child," Stan has a literal and figurative breakdown.

He realizes that because his father abandoned him and his mother forced him to be the "man of the house" too early, he never actually got to be a kid. The result? Stan goes full "man-child," trading the family car for a coin-operated rocket ship and eventually getting arrested for egging a house.