Everybody Loves Raymond

Everybody Loves Raymond

Everybody Loves Raymond is an American sitcom television series created by Philip Rosenthal that aired on CBS from September 13, 1996, to May 16, 2005, with a total of 210 episodes spanning over nine seasons. It was produced by Where's Lunch and Worldwide Pants, in association with HBO Independent Productions. The cast members are Ray Romano, Patricia Heaton, Brad Garrett, Doris Roberts, Peter Boyle, Madylin Sweeten, and Monica Horan. Most episodes of the nine season series were filmed in front of a live studio audience, with a few exceptions.

Year:
1996
15,759 Views

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
[to Gerard] You even talk strange. You're all nasally and whinily and - like the word you just said, right... [points]

Gerard:
[Now, in nasal] Ne-ow?

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
[shakes head] Okay, what does a cat say?

Gerard:
[confused] You mean a talking cat?

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
No! A regular cat, a regular cat. What does a regular cat say?

Gerard:
Meow?

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Meow, now, meow, now. You see how annoying that can be?

Gerard:
Yeah, but what do you want?

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Try it like this. [deep round tone] right NOW.

Gerard:
Right ne-ow.

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Try it again.

Gerard:
Right ne-ow.

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
[normal] Right now.

Gerard:
[all in nasal] Right ne-ow

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Now!

Gerard:
Neow!

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Now!

Gerard:
Neow!

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
Now!

Gerard:
Neow! It's the same.

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
[more Now's until Ray says] It isn't... this isn't about me Gerard.

Gerard:
Well, knock it off! You're really annoying. That's right! You know what? I quit! I've had it with you and your whole side of the family. I only took this job because my mom owes Aunt Marie.

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
My mom owes your mom!

Gerard:
Yeah yeah , believe whatever you want. I'm outta here, you crazy bastard!

Raymond "Ray" Barone:
[yells up basement steps] You got problems, pal! You got problems, all right?... And I'll tell you something, you're gonna go through life blind to your problems and there's no call for that kind of language! [to self] Ne-ow. Ugh. Right ne-ow. Agh! Right now now! [Round deep tone again] "Right NOW! Right NOW!

Ray Barone:
[on the phone] Hello? Yes, he is. May I ask who's calling? Okay, just a minute. Angelina.

Ray Barone:
Angelina? Don't know anyone by that name.

Debra Barone:
Does he know what this is regarding? Okay, yeah thanks for calling. Bye-bye. She's got your wallet.

Ray Barone:
What? My wallet?

Debra Barone:
Yeah. It's at Nemo's.

Ray Barone:
I didn't go to Nemo's.

Debra Barone:
Well your wallet made it there somehow. Do you have your wallet? Ray, she said she just waited on you.

Ray Barone:
Oh Nemo's Nemo's, yeah. Might have been a waitress over there. Even though we usually go to the counter. But today Nemo forced us into this table, where the waitresses go. So we had to have a waitress. Not *have* a waitress. We uh we had waitress service.

Debra Barone:
So how pretty is she?

Ray Barone:
I didn't say she was pretty.

Debra Barone:
You didn't have to. You're being so defensive about it. My gosh, you'd think there was something going on.

Ray Barone:
[laughs uncomfortably] No, no, no, no. no, no, no.

Debra Barone:
You're a freak.

Ray Barone:
What? What did I do?

Debra Barone:
Come on, can't you be honest? I mean, look Ray, if you saw someone pretty today, you could tell me.

Ray Barone:
I saw nothing.

Debra Barone:
Wow, she must be beautiful.

Ray Barone:
Look, she's Nemo's niece. How beautiful can she be? You've seen Nemo. All right, some men might find her attractive. Nothing like you, though.

[Debra glares at Ray]

Ray Barone:
Which means that you are the more attractive one. I... I have the right to an attorney.

Marie Barone:
Debra, I don't know why your rolls are all left. I liked them. The burnt part gave them some flavor. Don't worry about those pots and pans, honey. I know how to do those.

Debra Barone:
Well, cleaning is cleaning.

Marie Barone:
[exiting] You'd think so.

[Debra picks up a frying pan and starts charging toward Marie. Ray grabs the pan out of her hands]

Ray Barone:
All right. There it is. The raising of the pan. Thanksgiving is officially over.

Debra Barone:
And always with that little smile. She's so good at that.

Ray Barone:
Yeah. That was like a drive-by.

Debra Barone:
I should just tell her to...

Ray Barone:
You know what you could do?

Debra Barone:
What?

Ray Barone:
Gobble. Yeah, if you gobble, then she'll get bored, and she'll just leave you alone.

Debra Barone:
Thanks.

Ray Barone:
"Oh, Debra, I envy you, the way you can just roll out of bed and put on anything and not even care" Gobble gobble gobble gobble!

Debra Barone:
You know what? You might be right.

Ray Barone:
What?

Debra Barone:
Everything I told Ally about pretending it doesn't bother her, why haven't I tried that with your mother?

Ray Barone:
Because that's how you deal with children. Yeah, okay... but normal children. This one's big and a little off her nut.

Debra Barone:
No no. Every time Marie says something mean or insulting, I get mad. Maybe that's why she keeps doing it. I should just change the way I react to her. God, that's in every book.

Ray Barone:
Books. There's nothing wrong with how you react.

Debra Barone:
Ray, I wanted to hit her with a frying pan.

Ray Barone:
Get in line.

Eileen:
We do have counselors. Father Hubley is very good.

Ray Barone:
No, no. That's the last thing that we need.

Eileen:
Why do you say that?

Ray Barone:
Because then everybody's talking about it and...

Debra Barone:
Look what are you... Why do you have to be so closed minded? You see this is the attitude.

Ray Barone:
I'm not close minded.

Debra Barone:
Ugh! What are you doing? Right now? This is who you are! Why can't you just talk about things? Huh? Talk!

Eileen:
You know I have to say that you're actually exhibiting some of the very traits that seemed to jump off the page in Michael's book.

Debra Barone:
Who?

Eileen:
Um. well, uh, you.

Debra Barone:
Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. First of all, it's not a book. It's pieces of construction paper.

Ray Barone:
You sound a bit close minded.

Debra Barone:
Hey!

[she turns towards Eiieen and throughout the next statement grows increasingly upset]

Debra Barone:
Eileen, you have no idea what I have to put up with. When I got married I didn't just get a husband. I got an entire freak show that put up their tent right across the street. And that would be fine if they stayed there. But every day, *every* day. They drop a truckload of their insane family drek into my lap. How would you like to sit through two people in their sixties fighting over who invented the lawn? The lawn! And then the brother!

[She starts imitating Robert]

Debra Barone:
I live in an apartment. I don't even have a lawn. Raymond has a lawn.

Debra Barone:
[as herself again] But you can't blame him when you see who the mother is. She has this sick hold on the both of them! And the father is about as disgusting a creature as God has ever dropped on this planet. So no wonder the kid writes stories! I should be writing stories! My life is a gothic novel. And until you have lived in that house with all of them in there with you, day after day, week after week, year after friggin' year, then you are in no position to judge me!

Robert Barone:
If there is anything that I have learned in my years of experience with domestic disputes it is this. It is never just about the can opener.

Frank Barone:
Yeah, sometimes it's about a jar of fat.

Marie Barone:
How could you mention that.

Frank Barone:
I'll mention it. You went nuts over nothing

Marie Barone:
I had every right to go nuts with YOU for a husband.

Debra Barone:
Wait, wait, wait... what jar of fat?

Robert Barone:
[Robert and Ray both groan]

Marie Barone:
I'll tell you what jar of fat. It was beautiful. It was fat from pancetta and golden brown sausage.

Marie Barone:
[looks at Debra] You'd have to be a cook to understand. But it was months of carefully selecting only the best drippings [looks at Frank again] to prepare meals for Il Duce.

Frank Barone:
Yeah, you made all those meals just for me, and then YOU went out jogging.

Marie Barone:
That was my kitchen! You had no right to go in there and throw out my fat!

Frank Barone:
That jar was for my coins! I needed that!

Marie Barone:
YOU'RE SELFISH!

Frank Barone:
FAT COLLECTOR!

Marie Barone:
Ah you never appreciated me, EVER! You never, ever, appreciated me! I would work my fingers to the bone all day with the kids... with the cooking and the cleaning... and the laundry. Then you'd waltz in with your list of demands... and not even a thank you!

Debra Barone:
That's right!

Marie Barone:
Debra understands

Frank Barone:
You wanted a thank you? Where was my thank you? I waltzed in huh? I dragged my ass home everyday after ten hours stuck in a suit, stuck in an office, stuck in a car, and if I needed coins to pay the toll... that got me to that job... THAT PAID FOR THAT MEAT... THAT MADE THAT FAT... THEN I'LL DUMP IT OUT WHENEVER I WANT AND I DON'T CARE WHAT YOU SAY!

Ray Barone:
[He swings a fist in the air happily]

Frank Barone:
That's right, you don't care. You have NEVER cared about how hard I work just to serve you!

Frank Barone:
Hey, I don't have to care... that's your JOB!

Debra Barone:
You know, I don't think I'm gonna have Lisa sit for us anymore.

Ray Barone:
What? No! Listen, I never think of her, ever.

Debra Barone:
Uck. No, idiot. God! No, I was just thinking... I don't know, leaving the kids with a sitter so much. It just... It feels wrong.

Ray Barone:
Wrong? What - it gives us more time to love each other. And if loving you is wrong... Baby, I don't want be right.

Debra Barone:
Well, it just doesn't feel right to me.

Ray Barone:
Come on. She's a great babysitter. It's what we always dreamed of. Come on. Look, because of her, you've got nail polish on. Don't you love that? I love it. Look at the little piggies and wee-wee-wee-wee-wee

Debra Barone:
Stop it! No, you don't care about nail polish.

Debra Barone:
I know, but - you wanna go back to the way it was with the kids covered in salsa and you wanting me to help? That's... I mean, that's... That's no kind of life.

Debra Barone:
Yeah, but Ray, look, they are only young once. This is our only chance to enjoy this age.

Ray Barone:
Well, what about my age? When do we get to enjoy my age?

Debra Barone:
All right, okay. If we have to leave the kids with somebody, then you know... maybe it should be your mom. Because after all she is... family. Think of how your mom must feel with this. She comes over here and she sees Geoffrey and Michael and Ally playing with some stranger and they're having so much more fun with her than they ever had with... her

Ray Barone:
Okay, okay, we'll get my mom then. Look, the bottom line is quality time, that's all. And by quality time, of course, I mean...

[Ray starts singing "Loving You" in falsetto]


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