
Age: 61
male
Patrick John Warburton (born November 14, 1964) is an American actor of television, film, and voice. He is best known for his several TV roles, including the title role of The Tick, David Puddy on Seinfeld, the evil Johnny Johnson on NewsRadio, and anchorman Jeb Denton on Less Than Perfect. As a voice actor, his distinctive deep voice has been lent to well-known roles including Ken in Bee Movie, Kronk in The Emperor's New Groove and its sequels, bodyguard Brock Samson on The Venture Bros., paraplegic police officer Joe Swanson on Family Guy, Steve Barkin on Kim Possible, Buzz Lightyear in the Buzz Lightyear of Star Command TV series, and The Wolf in Hoodwinked, among others. He currently stars as macho married man Jeff Bingham in the CBS television program Rules of Engagement. Description above from the Wikipedia article Patrick Warburton, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Patrick Warburton

Joe Swanson and Variants
for Joe Swanson and Variants in Family Guy: Into the Griffinverse
Suggested by matthewfenner

When Peter Griffin’s latest drunken stunt—a nuclear-level explosion at the Pawtucket Brewery—rips a hole in the fabric of reality, the Griffin family finds themselves hurled into a chaotic multiverse war that’s part Star Wars, part Rick and Morty, and 100% Family Guy. As Quahog collapses into madness, alternate versions of Peter, Lois, and Stewie battle across universes for control of existence itself. From a dystopian Quahog ruled by Meg the Conqueror to a timeline where Brian’s a talking cop car, every world gets darker and more deranged. Amid the chaos, the Griffins must team up with their most absurd variants to undo Peter’s cosmic screw-up before the entire multiverse collapses into an endless cutaway gag. Armed with fart jokes, violent slapstick, and moments of shocking heart, Family Guy: Into the Griffinverse takes the series’ trademark irreverence to R-rated heights. As Stewie and Brian scramble through twisted realities and Lois questions her entire marriage, Peter remains obliviously destructive—believing he’s in a “really long Halloween episode.” From brutal interdimensional fights to fourth-wall-breaking chaos that skewers modern pop culture, the movie pushes every boundary imaginable. In the end, the Griffins learn that no matter how many universes there are, stupidity—especially Peter’s—might just be the one constant holding it all together.