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It assured the audience it would be a comedy adults would like, and not a revamp Full House or the sitcom equivalent of a mommy blog (although I don’t think those existed they when Everybody Loves Raymond first came out). And he said he had three kids “but the show’s not about them.” And that was good. I don’t know if anyone else remembers this, but when CBS was first advertising Everybody Loves Raymond before it hit the airway, it had previews/commercials that featured Ray telling the premise of the show. The scene is there, and we see what Doc is doing immediately before this scene, and where he goes immediately after, which is a nice change from the Marty centric stories we’ve been seeing.

And as much as I hate writing (and for that case, reading) reviews with plot points and possible spoilers in them, the fact that a picture from this scene (with the last line from BTTF III) is on the cover, I think it’s safe to talk about it being in the book. Turns out, Gale wants it to mean more than that, and that is what he and Barber plan to give us with this series. Yes, we’ve spent three movies going back to the future. Bob Gale gave an interview to the Hollywood Reporter saying he it will address the last line of the series, when Marty asks Doc if he’s going back to the future, and Doc replies, “Nope, already been there.” Now, for the last 27 years, I’ve thought that line was pretty surface. Let’s start off by saying why everyone is anxious to read this comic.
