Everybody Loves Raymond 1996ã¢â‚¬â€œ2005 7 7 10 211 Rate This Working Late Again
| Everybody Loves Raymond | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Genre | Sitcom |
| Created by | Philip Rosenthal |
| Starring |
|
| Opening theme | "Everybody Loves Raymond Theme" (seasons 1–ii) "Ode to Joy" (seasons 3–5) "Drunken Sailor" (season 6) "Jungle Beloved" by Steve Miller Band (seasons 7–9) |
| Ending theme | "Everybody Loves Raymond Theme" |
| Composer | Rick Marotta |
| Land of origin | U.s. |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | nine |
| No. of episodes | 210 (list of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
|
| Production locations |
|
| Camera setup | Multi-camera |
| Running time | 22 minutes |
| Production companies |
|
| Benefactor | CBS Television receiver Distribution |
| Release | |
| Original network | CBS |
| Picture show format |
|
| Audio format | Dolby Environment 2.0 |
| Original release | September 13, 1996 (1996-09-13) – May 16, 2005 (2005-05-sixteen) |
Everybody Loves Raymond is an American sitcom television set series created by Philip Rosenthal that aired on CBS from September 13, 1996, to May sixteen, 2005, with a total of 210 episodes spanning over ix seasons. It was produced by Where's Lunch and Worldwide Pants Incorporated, in association with HBO Independent Productions. The cast members were Ray Romano, Patricia Heaton, Brad Garrett, Doris Roberts, Peter Boyle, Madylin Sweeten, and Monica Horan. Nigh episodes of the nine-season series were filmed in forepart of a alive studio audience.
The serial received positive reviews and has been ranked the 49th all-fourth dimension funniest television comedy by Circuitous,[1] the 60th best all-fourth dimension series by Goggle box Guide,[2] the eleventh-all-time sitcom starring a stand-up comedian and the 35th best sitcom of all fourth dimension by Rolling Stone,[3] [4] and (aslope South Park) the 63rd best written boob tube series past the Writers Guild of America.[5] In a Hollywood Reporter poll of all-fourth dimension boob tube programs surveying 779 actors, 365 producers and 268 directors, Everybody Loves Raymond ranked 96th.[vi]
Serial overview [edit]
The testify is centered on the life of an Italian-American everyman named Raymond Barone, a sportswriter for Newsday living with his family unit on Long Island. Beleaguered, diffident and dryly sarcastic, Raymond takes few things seriously, making jokes in virtually every situation, no thing how troubling or serious. He often avoids responsibilities around the house and with his kids, leaving this to his wife, Debra.
Raymond and Debra have a girl Marry (Alexandra) and twin sons Michael and Geoffrey (originally Matthew and Gregory in the pilot). The Barone children are regular characters but not a major focus. Raymond'south parents, Marie and Frank, live across the street with older son Robert (who, subsequently in the series, has his own apartment). All Barone relatives frequently make their presence known to the annoyance of Raymond and Debra. Although she loves them, Debra'southward justifiable complaints near Raymond'south overbearing family serve as i of the show'south comedic elements. Out of the three unwanted visitors, Debra is peculiarly intimidated by Marie, an insulting, decision-making, manipulative (though ultimately caring) adult female who criticizes Debra passive-aggressively and praises Ray, clearly favoring him over other son "Robbie," whose birth necessitated her union (a fact revealed in the episode "Good Girls").
Raymond typically falls in the eye of family arguments, incapable of taking any decisive stand, especially if it might invoke his mother'due south disapproval. Robert, a miserable gentle behemothic, jealous of his younger sibling'south position every bit favorite son and also of the success his brother has accomplished both professionally and personally, is Ray'south biggest rival. Robert and Raymond frequently debate like overgrown children, focusing much of their energy on picking on or one upping each other, although deep down they beloved each other dearly.
Frank Barone is a fiery retiree prone to directing insults and merciless put-downs at any and all targets. Largely an absentee father when the boys were growing up, Frank buries his feelings and rarely yields to sentiment. As the series progresses, however, several episodes demonstrate that the senior Barone loves his family immensely. Different everyone else, Frank has no problem comically criticizing Marie and oft comes to Debra's defense whenever Marie comments disparagingly about their girl-in-law.
Raymond and Debra's marriage is fraught with conflicts. Raymond prefers sports idiot box over discussions with Debra on marital matters. Raymond works full-time, equally his father had, leaving nearly child-rearing responsibilities to his married woman; and he is frequently forced to aid around the business firm. 1 of the show'southward recurring elements finds the couple having a long discussion in bed each night before going to sleep.
Episodes [edit]
Characters [edit]
- Ray Barone (Ray Romano) is a sportswriter for Newsday. He lives in Lynbrook, Long Island with his wife, Debra, and their three children Alexandra ("Ally"), Geoffrey, and Michael. His parents Frank and Marie and brother Robert alive across the street. Raymond's graphic symbol is loosely based on the real-life Romano, equally he is the father of twin boys and a girl. Ray is emotionally unable to take any sort of stand up on anything, peculiarly if it brings him to any sort of conflict with his female parent—the exception is when he protests about sexual practice or some little matter. Raymond's mother favors him over Robert.
- Debra Barone (Patricia Heaton) is Raymond'southward wife, and mother of Ally, Michael and Geoffrey. Every bit a housewife, Debra claims she is frequently overworked, underappreciated, and stressed out. This leads to her yelling and occasionally attacking inanimate objects, largely considering she has to bargain with all the housework and her iii rambunctious children with about no assistance or support from Raymond; additionally, she constantly puts up with Marie'south intrusiveness and criticism. On frequent occasions this frustration boils over and is vented towards Raymond. While Debra has a fractious relationship with Marie, she is shown to share many tender moments with Robert, and occasionally Frank.
- Robert Barone (Brad Garrett) is Raymond's older brother and the son of Frank and Marie. Standing at 6'8½" (2.04 k), he is the tallest Barone, and has several quirks, the biggest being a nervous habit of touching food to his chin earlier eating information technology, once referred to every bit "crazy chin." Robert is often jealous of the attention that Raymond receives from their female parent, to the exclusion of his every achievement. Robert has been a New York City police officer for over 23 years (explicitly stated as 15 years early on in flavour i) and attains the rank of lieutenant by the cease of the series. His summit, appearance, and depressed demeanor are the source of much humor. Nonetheless, despite his imposing size, Robert is a very skilled dancer. Divorced from first wife Joanne prior to the beginning of the series, he is oftentimes unlucky with women, until his on-off relationship with his girlfriend Amy McDougall finally results in wedlock. Also, despite his tough appearance, he appears to be more sensitive, appreciating, tender and open to sharing his emotions compared to the remainder of his family unit.
- Marie Barone (Doris Roberts) is Raymond and Robert's mother and the wife of Frank. Intrusive, controlling, manipulative, and over-nurturing (at least with Raymond), she is a housewife who excels in cooking, cleaning, and other things dealing with keeping a good dwelling and family. Marie and Frank live across the street from Raymond and Debra in Lynbrook, Long Isle, New York which often irritates the latter couple. Marie'south meddling tendencies include going through their mail, redoing their laundry, and upstaging Debra in the kitchen. She also goes to great lengths to control Robert's love life and get him to settle down and bring her more grandchildren.
- Frank Barone (Peter Boyle) is Raymond'south father and Marie'south husband, a retired bookkeeper, and registered real estate agent, with a stubborn masculine personality and no involvement in personal hygiene. A United states Army veteran, Frank served in the Korean War, which he frequently brings up to everyone's annoyance. He mocks his sons' inability to handle their ain personal and domestic problems; dissimilar his sons, he is not intimidated by Marie and disparages her regularly with picayune to no provocation. Although both he and Marie maintain that he only married her for her cooking, he is shown to intendance about her genuinely. He is a member of the Order of the Caribou Lodge, and was named Man of the Twelvemonth by his fellow members.
- Amy McDougall-Barone (Monica Horan) (recurring seasons ane–7, starring seasons 8–9) becomes Robert Barone'south 2d wife (in flavor seven), and is the all-time friend of Debra, who introduces her to Robert. A recurring graphic symbol for the first vii seasons of the series, Amy became essentially a regular bandage member for the balance of the show'south run. However, Horan'south name did not get added to the opening credits until the final season. Many problems cause Amy and Robert to break upwards in the first six seasons, with one beingness blamed on Raymond, and another happening considering Robert was seeing other women, i of whom was his ex-married woman. Quite oftentimes, Amy apologizes to someone even if she did non exercise anything wrong. She was born to very religious parents who, co-ordinate to Amy, "wouldn't yell if they were on fire." In real life, Horan is the wife of creator/executive producer Philip Rosenthal.
- Ally Barone (Madylin Sweeten) is the daughter of Raymond and Debra. She is the oldest of the Barone children. She is not seen much, even though she is credited in the main cast. She is said to be a amend melt than her mother, and maybe anytime her grandmother. In real life, Madylin is the sister of Sawyer and Sullivan Sweeten.
- Geoffrey Barone (Sawyer Sweeten) and Michael Barone (Sullivan Sweeten) are the twin sons of Raymond and Debra. Their names in the pilot were Gregory and Matthew. In real life, twins Sawyer and Sullivan are brothers of Madylin Sweeten.
Development [edit]
Formulation [edit]
Everybody Loves Raymond is based on the real lives of not simply Ray Romano (left) but too show-runner Phil Rosenthal (right).
In the 1990s, several boob tube shows based on work from stand-up comedians, such equally Home Comeback (1991–99) and Roseanne (1988–97), were successful.[7] Ray Romano, a comedian for 12 years past the time Everybody Loves Raymond first aired, was one such comic to become development deals following a v-minute performance on the Late Evidence with David Letterman (1993–2015) in the center of 1995. David Letterman executive producer Rob Burnett recalled that "by the end [of the monologue] we already had lawyers lined up to piece of work a deal with him."[7]
In looking for a show-runner, Romano wanted somebody to share his tastes in humor, fugitive those who were into writing "devicey" material. Around a dozen candidates for the evidence-runner position were considered before Passenger vehicle author Philip Rosenthal,[8] who sent a Frasier spec script to Letterman'due south Worldwide Pants.[9] The visitor read the spec and sent Rosenthal a tape of Romano asking screenwriters to help him with an upcoming prove based on his work; also in the tape, he stated that he had a hard time coming up with new material because of having to raise twin sons, and showcased a "new flake" of him shaking keys while saying "hey."[10] Romano's sense of humor intrigued Rosenthal, reminding him of Neb Cosby'due south early on work.[11]
Subsequently viewing the tape, Rosenthal met with Romano in person at Art's Delicatessen & Restaurant on Ventura Boulevard about being a potential bear witness runner.[12] The encounter consisted of Romano and Rosenthal each discussing their families.[13] Romano told Rosenthal he wanted to practice a serial almost a comedian discussing current issues with friends at a coffee shop, only Rosenthal responded that kind of sitcom already existed and was a hit.[14] Rosenthal, intrigued by Romano's crazy family fables and wanting to work around his lack of previous interim experience, and then stated information technology would exist most "comfortable" for Romano to have the Raymond character exist very shut to his existent personality and in family unit circumstances reflective of Romano's habitation life.[15] Although Romano has a blood brother named Robert in real life, he based the Robert in Raymond on another ane of his brothers, Richard.[16] Rosenthal also incorporated his own family experiences into the show, with his female parent and married woman serving as the basis for Marie and Debra respectively.[17]
Most aspects of Romano's real life are replicated in the series,[18] except for its setting of Long Island instead of Queens; Romano and the writers initially wanted the show to be set in Queens, but CBS executives ultimately chose Long Island due to its broad appeal, every bit information technology was a suburb with urban elements.[7] Previous prime-time television receiver series prepare in Long Isle, such equally The Hamptons (1983) and The Pruitts of Southampton (1966–67), never went beyond one season.[vii] Romano too explained, "There's a lot more kissing on the show than in existent life;" and his married woman Anna continued, "and they talk a lot more in the bear witness than nosotros always do at domicile."[18] The title Everybody Loves Raymond originated from a response Romano's blood brother Richard made after Ray won a CableACE stand up-up award: "I had a solar day where people were shooting at me, and y'all're bringing dwelling house trophies. Everybody loves Raymond, don't they?"[19] In the bear witness's pilot, Robert states "Everybody loves Raymond."[20]
Rosenthal pitched the show to CBS president Les Moonves, CBS comedy vice president David Himelfarb, CBS one-act development executive Wendi Goldstein, and CBS comedy and drama development caput Gene Stein.[21] He kept the pitch very simple: "it's [Romano] and his family, and his parents live beyond the street with his brother."[22] CBS was lukewarm towards the show's low concept, merely plant it plenty of a low-risk investment for the series to be green-lit.[23] Letterman's involvement with Raymond amounted to cipher more than a coming together where he signed Rosenthal's prove-runner contract and told him, "only don't embarrass us."[24]
Casting [edit]
Patricia Heaton (left), Peter Boyle (middle), and Doris Roberts (right) were in emotional states that reflected their characters when auditioning for Everybody Loves Raymond.
For the non-titular lead roles of Everybody Loves Raymond, casting director Lisa Miller chose actors with previous professional person experience in acting, such every bit Patricia Heaton and Brad Garrett, who made several appearances in sitcoms before; and Doris Roberts and Peter Boyle, both film actors.[25] Everybody Loves Raymond was Heaton's fourth lead role in a sitcom later the brusk-lived Room for 2 (1992–1993), Some Similar Me (1994), and Women of the House (1995).[26] When she read the pilot script during airplane pilot season, she thought it was "beautifully written" although constitute the character of Debra uninteresting.[27] Miller explained that she had to "Taft-Hartley" Romano, who didn't have much acting experience before Everybody Loves Raymond, in guild to go around legal Screen Actors Guild requirements to star in the evidence. He besides needed trainers to brand certain he performed the character of a likable protagonist well.[25]
Garrett was the first role player to be cast afterward Romano, as well equally the only histrion to audition without Romano in the room.[28] Garrett explained that while CBS initially wanted a small, Danny DeVito-esque graphic symbol who had a "bulldog" mental attitude towards Raymond, he, a much taller histrion, portrayed Robert equally more than "browbeaten-downwards" and "succumb to the fact that he's a loser" when auditioning.[29]
For the auditions of Heaton, Boyle, and Roberts, they were in the moods of the characters in the scenes they performed, and their auditions were very quick. Heaton was in the middle of getting-by doing babysitting work and clipping coupons when auditioning, making her very stressed.[thirty] Miller chose Heaton for the function of Debra for beingness "very focused, real, like Helen Chase in Mad About Y'all."[25] Boyle, an role player recommended for Frank by Moonves,[31] had a troublesome time getting to his audition location due to schedule changes and poor directions, which made him very grumpy and "in character" when he arrived.[32] Rosenthal admitted to casting Boyle "out of fear" in response to Boyle'south bitter mental attitude.[31] Roberts was called by the casting team for the office of Marie after going through more than 100 actresses.[33] She was initially reluctant to audition due to being busy with directing a 23-character play, but her agents insisted she had time;[34] an "overwhelmed" Roberts did cypher preparation, which was unusual for her, and performed her audition from her "gut reaction."[35]
Production [edit]
Each episode was created in a workweek that consisted of actors reading through and rehearsing the script on Monday, actors rehearsing and the writers tweaking the script on Tuesday, CBS running through what the actors rehearsed on Midweek, camera blocking on Thursday, and filming on Friday.[36] A typical writing session started with each of the writers discussing their lives, which served as the basis for episode scripts; as Rosenthal summarized the process, "talking, talking, talking so suddenly, that's a story."[37] Will MacKenzie, who directed for Everybody Loves Raymond on the 2d, tertiary, and fourth seasons, recalled the writers being so efficient that thirteen episode scripts were completed by the time a flavor began ambulation.[38] When shooting episodes, Rosenthal was very stern about the actors sticking to the script and avoiding ad libing, although "culling" lines were put in the script for some episodes.[39]
Garrett compared acting in episodes of Raymond to the improvisational methods used by the cast in Seinfeld (1989–98).[25]
The house used for exterior shots of Ray and Debra'south homes is located at 135 Margaret Boulevard in Merrick, New York and was $500,000 as of August 2018; equally in the prove, information technology's located beyond the street from the home used for exteriors of Frank and Marie'due south house.[40]
Style [edit]
For Everybody Loves Raymond, Rosenthal went for a classic sitcom style a la The Honeymooners (1955–56), avoiding references to current civilisation in order to give information technology a timeless quality.[41] Explained Jeremy Stevens, the show differed from most sitcoms of its time for its focus on storytelling and reflection on near people's real lives.[37]
Julie Pernworth, a comedy evolution president at CBS, categorized Everybody Loves Raymond as "one of the virtually traditional sitcoms to come along in a long time."[42] Equally Rosenthal put information technology, Raymond was a "sophisticated" version of a family sitcom, which was emphasized via the testify's piano-heavy background music and the utilise of The New Yorker typeface for credits.[43] In composing the prove's theme, Terry Trotter and Rick Marotta used the first few measures of a song from Woody Allen'southward moving-picture show Manhattan (1979) and improvised the rest of the piece.[44] Episodes of Everybody Loves Raymond are emotionally dynamic presentations of otherwise prosaic premises typical for traditional sitcoms.[45]
SUNY Press' book The Sitcom Reader (2016) analyzed Raymond was part of a trend in 1990s television of family unit sitcoms geared towards older audiences, which resulted in the scripts not focusing so much on the child characters and being entirely most grown-ups grouse at each other.[46] While the second season was in product, Romano expressed the claiming of having to write "weird" developed humour within "parameters" of a prove about a family: "I want to write a testify where I accept anxiety attacks, and we're all very concerned about that. Can the star of the show be a begetter who has feet attacks and flips out? Will that sit well with people?"[eighteen] This involved trying to keep the presence of the child characters equally piddling equally possible: "To be upstaged by toddlers? I get enough of that at domicile."[eighteen] As Romano described the stand-up textile the bear witness is based on upon the show'due south first season ambulation, "I don't desire to be a spokesman for family values, but that's the way my standup is perceived. My character is a father who loves his family unit but who would as well love a little liberty."[7] Explained Television receiver critic Jones Ostrow, Raymond "explored the tortuous/loving relationships of parents and developed children, of couples, of siblings and the Peter Pan syndrome that attaches to infant boomer males, sports nuts in detail."[47]
Connexion to other sitcoms [edit]
Kevin James was an actor and writer on Everybody Loves Raymond. Once James got his own bear witness, The King of Queens, the two shows crossed over.
The first crossover happened on The Rex of Queens. In information technology, Ray Barone and Doug Heffernan become friends. Later on the same night, Kevin James showed up on Everybody Loves Raymond as Doug Heffernan.[48] The shows crossed over several more times.
Ray Romano also turned upwards in an episode of The Nanny: when that show's Fran Fine (Fran Drescher) attends her high schoolhouse reunion, one of her classmates is revealed to be Ray Barone. (Romano and Drescher were real-life classmates at Hillcrest High Schoolhouse in Jamaica, Queens in the 1970s.)
Foreign remakes [edit]
Russian version and documentary [edit]
In 2009, series creator/producer Philip Rosenthal traveled to Russia to adapt the testify for local audiences. His experience was documented by a film coiffure and released as the documentary characteristic Exporting Raymond.[49] The Russian version is titled (in Russian) Воронины [50] (Voronin'due south Family, a Russian surname sounding similar to the family's name, The Barones).[51]
Other versions [edit]
The show was adapted in Poland under the title Wszyscy kochają Romana (Everybody Loves Roman).[52] Information technology was picked upwards by TVN and premiered on September 2, 2011. However, due to low ratings (fewer than 2 million viewers a week), the station put the prove on hiatus afterwards four episodes.[53]
In Egypt, a sitcom chosen El Bab Fil Bab (الباب في الباب ), which means "Close Doors" in Standard arabic, is produced past Sony Pictures Tv, translating Everybody Loves Raymond with minor changes to conform the Eastern Culture. The showtime season aired in the month of Ramadan 2011; second flavor in 2012.
A Dutch remake called Iedereen is gek op Jack (Everybody is crazy near Jack) premiered in February 2011. The second flavour started airing in March 2012 and ended in May 2012.
An Israeli remake called "Mishpacah Lo Bochrim" (משפחה לא בוחרים) (You Can't Cull Your Family) premiered in October 2012, and was cancelled after 10 episodes aired.
A pilot for a British remake, titled The Smiths, has been commissioned to be produced for BBC I and was filmed in May 2013 at Elstree Studios. Lee Mack wrote and starred in the airplane pilot, as Michael Smith. The pilot too starred Catherine Tate, Tom Davis, Gwen Taylor and David Troughton.[54]
An Indian remake, titled "Sumit Sambhal Lega" ("सुमित संभाल लेगा" – "Sumit Will Handle Everything"), premiered on August 31, 2015, on STAR Plus.
A Czech remake called "Rudyho Má Každý Rád" (Everybody Loves Rudy) premiered on ČT1 on August 31, 2015, comprising 12 episodes.[55]
Syndication [edit]
On December 20, 1998, two Tribune Broadcasting channels, WPIX New York and KTLA Los Angeles, bought rights for syndication of Everybody Loves Raymond from Eyemark Entertainment; Variety reported Eyemark receiving a license fee of $90,000 to $100,000 per week and barter advertising of one-and-a-half minutes. Although Eyemark planned for the 2 channels to commencement the re-runs in fall 2000, it moved the appointment to fall 2001 to avert competition with other sitcoms beginning off-network runs in 2000. The deal allowed the two channels to re-run the testify for four-and-a-one-half years.[56] On Jan 26, 1999, the cable channel TBS paid Everybody Loves Raymond distributor Eyemark Entertainment for four years of syndication rights of the show starting in the autumn of 2004.[57]
The show reruns in syndication on diverse channels, such as TBS and Television receiver Land, and in most television markets on local stations.[58] The testify is all the same circulate regularly in the UK. From 2000 to 2007, King Earth distributed the show for off-network syndication and Warner Bros. International Television handled international distribution. In 2007, CBS Television Distribution took over King World's distribution. CBS just owns American syndication rights; ancillary rights are controlled by HBO and Warner Bros. Idiot box (WBIT distributes the series outside the United states of america in conjunction with HBO; while HBO Home Entertainment and Warner Home Video ain DVD rights worldwide). The show aired every morning equally a double bill on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom, as part of its Breakfast line upward from 08:00-09:00.
Everybody Loves Raymond besides airs on Comedy Central in the U.K. and in Commonwealth of australia on Seven Network (seasons 1-mid-2), on Network 10 (late-season ii–9), on 10 Peach (a sub-channel of Network x), on 9Go! ( a sub-channel of 9 Network) and on Foxtel's Pay Television set network TVH!TS previously chosen TV1 (formerly aired on Play a trick on Classics). The show reruns in India on the channel Romedy Now.
Home media [edit]
HBO released the Complete Series of Everybody Loves Raymond on DVD in Regions i, two, and 4. Region iv Complete Box Fix was released on Baronial 13, 2008. In Australia, the beginning five seasons were re-released in 2006 in slimmer packaging (originals were wide spine cases). As well, some were released with a paper-thin sideslip embrace. In North America the DVDs were repackaged betwixt 2009 and 2012 in standard sized DVD packaging. All episodes were bachelor on Netflix for streaming until September 1, 2016, as well the date Exporting Raymond was taken off the platform.[59] Also on September 14, 2004, The Complete 1st Season was released on VHS. The sixth-flavor DVD set independent the episode "Marie'southward Sculpture", which previously had not aired in the United Kingdom and was non released until almost v years afterward the end of the 6th season.
| DVD name | Ep # | Release dates | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region ane | Region 2 | Region 4 | ||
| The Complete 1st Flavor | 22 | September 14, 2004 | January 17, 2005 | December 16, 2004 |
| The Complete 2nd Season | 25 | December 14, 2004 | July 4, 2005 | April 27, 2005 |
| The Complete 3rd Season | 26 | May 3, 2005 | January 16, 2006 | July 12, 2005 |
| The Complete 4th Season | 24 | September 13, 2005 | May 1, 2006 | Apr v, 2006 |
| The Complete 5th Season | 25 | Dec half-dozen, 2005 | July 3, 2006 | July v, 2006 |
| Holidays with the Barones | three | December x, 2005 | ||
| The Complete 6th Season | 24 | May ix, 2006 | Oct 2, 2006 | October 4, 2006 |
| The Complete seventh Season | 25 | September xix, 2006 | January 15, 2007 | Apr 4, 2007 |
| The Complete 8th Season | 23 | May 8, 2007 | July xvi, 2007 | Oct 3, 2007 |
| The Complete 9th Season | 16 | September 18, 2007 | November 12, 2007 | Oct iii, 2007 |
| The Complete Series | 210 | October 30, 2007 | September 5, 2011 | Baronial 13, 2008 |
Streaming [edit]
Until 2016, the series was available on Netflix in the United states of america.[60] The serial joined Peacock's Premium tier on July 15, 2020.[61]
Reception [edit]
Critical response [edit]
Los Angeles Daily News critic David Kronke praised Raymond for being "the quintessentially honest sitcom. Information technology's neither too hokey nor too crass. It depicts families every bit dissolute yet inextricably bound together, just like they really are, and finds the humor in those existent frictions that threaten, notwithstanding never manage, to burst family units apart. Its characterizations are among the most finely defined on TV. Debra, with her vaguely no-nonsense disgust of Raymond's simpleton-ness, is unlike whatsoever sitcom mom e'er. Doris Roberts' Marie had a sinister streak long earlier Nancy Marchand'south Livia showed up on The Sopranos. Raymond is also one of the few gimmicky sitcoms that has figured out how to implement and fifty-fifty exploit the four-photographic camera, alive-audience situation, which is no simple feat."[62]
A 1997 review by Bruce Fretts, which gave the show the same score, said that the bear witness "may at present exist the best sitcom on the air."[63] Common Sense Media'south Betsy Wallace, who awarded the show four out of five stars, wrote: "the cast is stellar and plotlines shed light on universal homo insecurities, such as doubting that your spouse still finds you attractive every bit you grow older."[64] Plugged In said in their review, "Seven years and a drapery full of Emmys subsequently, Raymond is still smartly scripted, now with new characters added to a maturing, expanding family unit."[65]
Reviews named Garrett the show's "undercover weapon"[63] and responsible for "the bulk of the show's comic high points."[63]
Accolades [edit]
During its ix seasons, Everybody Loves Raymond was nominated for 69 Primetime Emmy Awards, winning xv of them, including ten for acting. The series was also nominated for 21 Screen Actors Guild Awards (1 win) and won the Writers Guild of America Honor for Episodic Comedy for "Italian republic" in 2002.
American television set ratings [edit]
- Note: Each U.S. network television season starts in belatedly September and ends in belatedly May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps. All times mentioned in this section were Eastern & Pacific
The serial finale scored a xx.2/29 rating/share, 32.94 million viewers[66] and an 11.2/26 rating/share among adults 18–49. At 8pm, Everybody Loves Raymond: The Last Laugh scored a xv.3/24 rating/share, 24.52 million viewers and a vii.5/21 rating/share among adults 18–49.[67] Throughout the latter six seasons of the testify, Everybody Loves Raymond maintained its position on the top ten rankings.
The highest boilerplate rating for the series is in italic text.
| Season | Episodes | Timeslot (EST) | Flavour premiere | Season finale | Telly flavour | Rank | Rating[68] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ane | 22 | Friday viii:30 p.m. (September 13, 1996 – Feb 28, 1997) Monday 8:30 p.m. (March iii, 1997 – April 7, 1997) | September 13, 1996 | April seven, 1997 | 1996-97 | #82 | 10.6 |
| 2 | 25 | Mon eight:30 p.m. | September 22, 1997 | May 18, 1998 | 1997-98 | #33 | 13.3[69] |
| three | 26 | Monday 9:00 p.m. | September 21, 1998 | May 24, 1999 | 1998-99 | #xi | 15.5[seventy] |
| 4 | 24 | September 20, 1999 | May 22, 2000 | 1999-2000 | #12 | 17.1[71] | |
| five | 25 | Oct 2, 2000 | May 21, 2001 | 2000-01 | #six | nineteen.1[72] | |
| 6 | 24 | September 24, 2001 | May 13, 2002 | 2001-02 | #half-dozen | twenty.0 [73] | |
| 7 | 25 | September 23, 2002 | May 19, 2003 | 2002-03 | #viii | 18.39 | |
| eight | 23 | September 22, 2003 | May 24, 2004 | 2003-04 | #x | 17.38 | |
| nine | sixteen | September xx, 2004 | May sixteen, 2005 | 2004-05 | #10 | 17.iv |
Notes [edit]
- ^ Figures for seasons 1 are in households, while figures for seasons 2-9 are in viewers (millions)
References [edit]
Citations [edit]
- ^ Barone, Matt (February 26, 2013). "The 50 Funniest TV Comedies of All Time". Complex. Complex Media. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
- ^ "Television receiver Guide Magazine'south sixty Best Series of All Time". Tv set Guide.
- ^ "12 Best Sitcoms Starring Stand-Ups". Rolling Stone. April 9, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2020.
- ^ "100 All-time Sitcoms of All Time". Rolling Stone. May iv, 2021. Retrieved May iv, 2021.
- ^ "101 Best Written Goggle box Series List". Writers Society of America. Archived from the original on January 10, 2014. Retrieved January 10, 2014.
- ^ "Hollywood's 100 Favorite TV Shows". The Hollywood Reporter. September 16, 2015. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Strickland, Carol (December 1, 1996). "Tin can Sitcom Make Information technology With L.I. Setting?". The New York Times . Retrieved December 29, 2019.
- ^ Cox, Ted (March 28, 1997). "'Oh-ho-ho male child': His job is dissimilar, just everything else on "Everybody Loves Raymond' is directly out of Romano's life". Daily Herald. p. 21.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter iii, effect occurs at 0:47–ane:32.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter three, issue occurs at 2:00–2:44.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter three, event occurs at two:44–2:57.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter three, upshot occurs at three:33–iii:44.
- ^ Herman 2005, affiliate three, outcome occurs at 3:47–3:57.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter three, result occurs at 4:02–four:18.
- ^ Herman 2005, chapter three, event occurs at 4:18–six:06.
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Works cited [edit]
- Herman, Karen (April 13, 2005). Phil Rosenthal (Interview). Academy of Tv Arts & Sciences. Retrieved January 2, 2020.
- Herman, Karen (October 23, 2006). Patricia Heaton (Interview). Academy of Boob tube Arts & Sciences. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
- Neuwirth, Allan (November 8, 2005). Peter Boyle (Interview). University of Telly Arts & Sciences. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
- Rutkowski, Gary (April 26, 2005). Doris Roberts (Interview). Academy of Telly Arts & Sciences. Retrieved Dec 31, 2019.
- Rutkowski, Gary (April 26, 2007). Brad Garrett (Interview). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved Dec 31, 2019.
- Rutkowski, Gary (March 7, 2008). Will Mackenzie (Interview). Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved January ii, 2020.
External links [edit]
- Official Website
- Official website
- Everybody Loves Raymond at IMDb
- Everybody Loves Raymond at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
gordonberaing1955.blogspot.com
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everybody_Loves_Raymond
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