The sixth season opens with the show still dominating Monday nights and the family chemistry stronger than ever.
Ray and Debra navigate a new phase of their marriage with the humor and tension that define them.
Marie takes on a new interest that she pursues with the intensity she brings to controlling her family.
Robert makes a major life decision that shifts the family dynamic in exciting ways.
Frank delivers his most cutting observation of the season, then goes back to watching TV.
Debra confronts a truth about her marriage that the show handles with its characteristic honesty.
The Barones face a family crisis that brings out both their worst instincts and their best selves.
Ray's attempts at being romantic prove that effort counts even when execution fails spectacularly.
Marie and Frank's relationship gets one of its most revealing and funny episodes.
Robert and Ray share a scene that captures everything about sibling relationships in two minutes.
The show delivers a classic episode that new viewers could use as their perfect introduction to the Barones.
Debra and Ray have a fight that escalates in the way that only married arguments can.
Marie's cooking once again becomes the centerpiece of a family power struggle.
Frank and Ray attend something together that neither wants to attend, creating reluctant-bonding comedy.
Robert finds happiness, and the family's reaction ranges from supportive to predictably complicated.
The sixth season continues the show's incredible consistency of quality and relatability.
Ray makes a promise he can't keep, and his scramble to avoid consequences is classic Raymond.
Debra gets the victory she deserves in a family showdown that Patricia Heaton owns.
The season builds toward its conclusion with the characters in interesting new situations.
Marie's influence on the family is examined in an episode that reveals both her flaws and her love.
The season wraps with the Barone family changed by the year's events but fundamentally the same.
Season six closes with the show proving that great family comedy never gets old.
The season finale delivers a Barone family moment that captures nine characters' worth of dynamics in one scene.
Another season of loving Raymond comes to a satisfying close, with the family as entertaining as ever.