The Angry Family

"The Angry Family" is the season six premiere of the American sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond (1996–2005), a series about the titular Newsday sportswriter Ray Barone and his oddball family. In the episode, all of the Barones are in a counseling session after Ray's son Michael (Sullivan Sweeten) presents a short story in class about an "Angry Family," which they assume is about them. Directed by Gary Halvorson and written by show creator and runner Philip Rosenthal, the episode also features early roles for future Empire star Rhyon Nicole Brown and Reba star Mitch Holleman. Originally airing on CBS on September 24, 2001, "The Angry Family" has been critically well-received and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series.

"The Angry Family"
Everybody Loves Raymond episode
Michael presenting a page of "The Angry Family" in class
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 1
Directed byGary Halvorson
Written byPhilip Rosenthal
Cinematography byMike Berlin
Editing byPatricia Barnett
Production code0101
Original air dateSeptember 24, 2001
Running time22 minutes
Guest appearance(s)

Plot

The Barones attend a gathering at Michael's school, where the students present their own short stories to their parents. Michael showcases "The Angry Family," which depicts parents and grandparents pissed off at each other and screaming to the point of "hurt[ing] the kids' ears." Most of the parents show a hint of discomfort with the story, the Barones horrified. Ray, Debra, Frank, and Marie are hurt by their supposed portrayals in the story, Robert concerned about not even being mentioned. Ray blames Debra for the yelling, while Debra retorts Ray is the source of it. At a parent-teacher meeting Ray and Debra have with Eileen, Michael's teacher, they try to act as normal of a family as possible. However, this fails and Eileen mentions Debra is behaving in a similar way to the characters in "The Angry Family." Debra lashes out at the teacher, stating her feelings about his husband's relatives.

This leads to a counseling session involving the family, Father Hubley, Eileen, and counselor Adam Burk. When Burk asks for the origins of the family's anger, Marie points to Debra, who reacts negatively to the accusation. Robert as a "outsider" of the family drama, claims Raymond to be the source due to being the center of love and affection by his relatives. Frank then suggests Marie, reasoning that she can't handle his son being married to Debra. The accusation leads to an enraged Marie commenting on modern society and child psychology system's over-rewarding of the children and constant blame on mothers. Father Hubley concludes that there is no one source to the problem, that it's a result of all the family members being very close to each other and that Michael's story was a "sweet" and "simple" way to send a message. The meeting ends with Hubley offering parenting books to the Barones. As Ray and Debra are about to go to bed, Michael comes to their room and tells them the book was actually inspired by the animated series Monster Maniacs, which depicts a family yelling at each other.

Production

Show-runner Philip Rosenthal wrote "The Angry Family" based on an experience he had in 2001, when he saw his son Ben read a story for his elementary school project, also titled "The Angry Family" and about a mother and father squabbling with each other. Rosenthal admitted to conceiving the episode at Ben's presentation: "At first, I was mortified. And the very next split-second, I thought, 'How lucky am I that I have a son who writes such beautiful material for my television show?' I apologize to Ben for his therapy later, but listen, I've got a show to do."[1] He later admitted "The Angry Family" was his favorite Raymond episode.[2] "The Angry Family" is Gary Halvorson's 15th directing credit for Everybody Loves Raymond, after "High School,"[3] "The Letter,"[4] "Civil War,"[5] "How They Met,"[6] and a plethora of fifth season episodes.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]

Analysis

Ashley Spurgeon described the premise of "The Angry Family" as a symbolic commentary of child characters being the worst parts of most sitcoms: "one of the kids writes a short story called 'The Angry Family,' and everyone has to go see a counselor."[18] SUNY Press' book The Sitcom Reader (2016) suggested the twist of Michael's inspiration for his story being a TV series was a message of most families in sitcoms, including Raymond: "the Baroness of Everybody Loves Raymond are flawed, hurtful, and selfish, but they love each other, and that premise endures everything will work out in the end."[19]

Reception

When "The Angry Family" first aired on September 24, 2001, it was the third highest-viewed program of the week; it had a Nielsen rating (a percentage of 100.8 million televisions) of 14.4 as a result of having 7 million viewers.[20] As of October 2019, "The Angry Family" is the eighth highest-rated Raymond episode on IMDb with a rating of 8.6/10.[21] Upon the initial airing of the episode, the Los Angeles Daily News scored it three-and-a-half stars out of four and claimed it "finds the writers and cast in championship-season form."[22] The first half of the sixth season of Everybody Loves Raymond topped lists of best fall 2001 series from the Daily Herald and the Orlando Sentinel, both of which claimed "The Angry Family" to be a highlight of the season.[23][24] Upon the 2005 end of Everybody Loves Raymond, Chris Hunt of The Oregonian ranked it the ninth best Raymond episode.[25] DVDTalk praised "The Angry Family" for starting the sixth season out "with a bang," elaborating that it was "full of fun moments."[26] Claimed Screen Rant in 2019, "[the] setup was perfect, considering all the trouble viewers had already seen play out over the previous five seasons. It started the show back on a solid and laugh-worthy note."[21]

Accolades

For writing "The Angry Family," Rosenthal was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series. Jennifer Crittenden, in the same ceremony, was also nominated for the award for writing "Marie's Sculpture."[27] This was the second time Everybody Loves Raymond was nominated for the writing accolade,[28] as Romano and Rosenthal were previously nominated in 2000 for their work on "Bad Moon Rising."[29] "The Angry Family" was also nominated for Best Episode of a Comedy Series at the Online Film and Television Association's 6th Annual TV awards.[30]

Home media

On May 9, 2006, "The Angry Family," along with the rest of the sixth season of Everybody Loves Raymond, was released to DVD.[26]

gollark: I mean, they're mostly heuristics for stuff which vaguely made sense in the savannah 100000 years ago.
gollark: Privacy, because apparently Humanity doesn't care about it.
gollark: Hmm, so nutrient paste with flavouring, then.
gollark: That doesn't really make it "rational" to eat that instead of nutrient paste when we are no longer constrained that way as much.
gollark: Yes, the whole thing of humans previously not having access to much energy from food in the environment they involved in, or whatever.]

See also

References

  1. Sepinwall, Alan (August 18, 2002). "From the archives: 'Raymond' writers' recipe for comedy". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  2. Rice, Lynette (May 6, 2005). "'Raymond' stars: Their favorite episodes". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 20, 2020.
  3. Gary Halvorson (director); Lew Schneider (writer) (November 24, 1997). "High School". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 2. Episode 10. CBS.
  4. Gary Halvorson (director); Kathy Ann Stumpe (writer) (December 8, 1997). "The Letter". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 2. Episode 11. CBS.
  5. Gary Halvorson (director); Tucker Cawley (writer) (January 5, 1998). "Civil War". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 2. Episode 13. CBS.
  6. Gary Halvorson (director); Ray Romano & Philip Rosenthal (writer) (May 24, 1999). "How They Met". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 3. Episode 26. CBS.
  7. Gary Halvorson (director); Philip Rosenthal (writer) (October 2, 2000). "Italy: Part One". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 1. CBS.
  8. Gary Halvorson (director); Philip Rosenthal (writer) (October 9, 2000). "Italy: Part Two". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 2. CBS.
  9. Gary Halvorson (director); Lew Schneider (writer) (October 9, 2000). "Wallpaper". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 3. CBS.
  10. Gary Halvorson (director); Kathy Ann Stumpe (writer) (December 11, 2000). "Christmas Present". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 11. CBS.
  11. Gary Halvorson (director); Joe Bolster, Ray Romano and Mike Royce (story); Ray Romano and Mike Royce (teleplay) (January 29, 2001). "Super Bowl". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 13. CBS.
  12. Gary Halvorson (director); Tucker Cawley (writer) (February 12, 2001). "Silent Partners". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 15. CBS.
  13. Gary Halvorson (director); Aaron Korsh (writer) (February 19, 2001). "Fairies". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 16. CBS.
  14. Gary Halvorson (director); Tucker Cawley and Lew Schneider (writer) (February 26, 2001). "Stefania Arrives". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 17. CBS.
  15. Gary Halvorson (director); Lew Schneider (writer) (March 19, 2001). "Humm Vac". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 18. CBS.
  16. Gary Halvorson (director); David Regal (writer) (April 9, 2001). "The Canister". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 19. CBS.
  17. Gary Halvorson (director); Jennifer Crittenden and Mike Royce (writer) (April 30, 2001). "Let's Fix Robert". Everybody Loves Raymond. Season 5. Episode 21. CBS.
  18. Spurgeon, Ashley (June 5, 2019). "And Another Thing: The Case for Everybody Loves Raymond". Nashville Scene. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  19. Dalton, Mary; Linder, Laura, eds. (2016). The Sitcom Reader, Second Edition: America Re-viewed, Still Skewed. SUNY Press. pp. 26–27. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  20. "The Week's TV Ratings". The San Francisco Chronicle (Final ed.). October 3, 2001. p. B2.
  21. Bajgrowicz, Brooke (October 4, 2019). "Everybody Loves Raymond: The 10 Best Episodes (According To IMDb)". Screen Rant. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  22. Kronke, David (September 24, 2001). "'Raymond' Still Hitting on All Cylinders". Los Angeles Daily News. p. L10.
  23. Boedeker, Hal (December 30, 2001). "Prime Time's Top 10". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  24. Cox, Ted (December 4, 2001). "Count your blessings: Ranking TV's best of the year". Daily Herald. p. 4.
  25. Hunt, Chris (May 16, 2005). "Television Review: 10 for the Road". The Oregonian. p. B01.
  26. Robinson, Jeffrey (June 4, 2006). "Everybody Loves Raymond – The Complete Sixth Season". DVDTalk. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  27. Schneider, Michael (July 18, 2002). "'Six Feet' has Emmy day to die for". Variety. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  28. "Everybody Loves Raymond". Emmys.com. Retrieved January 5, 2020.
  29. "52nd annual Primetime Emmy nominations, part 3: directing, writing, casting, music, choreography". Variety. August 12, 2000. Retrieved January 5, 2020.
  30. "6th Annual TV Awards (2001-02)". Online Film and Television Association. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
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