The complete fourth season of the US sitcom about a beleaguered courier driver and his family. Doug Heffernan (Kevin James) and his wife Carrie (Leah Remini) are a young Queens couple who should be sitting pretty. Doug is a courier driver with a cheeky, playful nature who, given a choice, almost always chooses what's most likely to rile his wife's fiery temper. Episodes comprise: 'Walk, Man', 'Sight Gag', 'Mean Streak', 'Friender Bender', 'No Retreat', 'Ticker Treat', 'Lyin' Hearted', 'Life Sentence', 'Veiled Threat', 'Oxy Moron', 'Depo Man', 'Ovary Action', 'Food Fight', 'Double Downer', 'Dougie Nights', 'No Orleans', 'Missing Links', 'Hero Worship', 'Screwed Driver', 'Lush Life', 'Bun Dummy', 'Patrons Ain't', 'Eddie Money', 'Shrink Wrap' and 'Two Thirty'. The fourth season of The King of Queens opens with a perfect example of how the show spins real life into farce: Delivery guy Doug and his sardonic wife Carrie (Kevin James and Leah Remini) want to get pregnant, but can't get Carrie's cantankerous father Arthur (Jerry Stiller) out of the house; the only solution their budget will allow is hiring a dog-walker named Holly (Nicole Sullivan) to take Arthur to the park. A more banal sitcom would conclude with Arthur's rage when he discovers the truth, but The King of Queens finds a grace note with Arthur and Holly beginning a genuine friendship. Which is not to say that The King of Queens goes for easy sentiment; some of the fourth season's best moments walk a distinctly unsentimental line. When Arthur goes into the hospital for a heart problem, Carrie discovers that he hid a college acceptance letter from her in order to keep her at home. While Arthur lies unconscious, Carrie wrestles with anger and grief--and, thanks to smart writing and Remini's deft performance, it's almost uncomfortably funny. James, Remini, and Stiller form the sitcom equivalent of a rock'n'roll power trio--it's astonishing that so much comedy can come out of just three people. The King of Queens has solid supporting players (and, towards the end of this season, succumbs to the questionable trend of casting celebrity guest stars), but the skillful interplay between Doug, Carrie, and Arthur drives the vast majority of the show's stories. The fourth season has a handful of episodes that wallow in typical sitcom schtick, but it's impressive how many more episodes remain fresh, lively, and true to these vivid characters. Even an episode that flashes back to Doug and Carrie's wedding--a premise that usually guarantees a saccharine kiss of death--finds a balance of tartness and genuine warmth. Satisfying and well-crafted. -- Bret Fetzer Synopsis The Heffernans are a loving couple who live in Queens; Doug (Kevin James, Everybody Loves Raymond) is a man's man who works as a carrier for UPS and loves his 70-inch television. His wife Carrie (Leah Remini, Fired Up) tends to wear the pants in the family, however, and when her father, Arthur (Jerry Stiller, Seinfeld), comes to live with them, Doug, his beer-drinking buddies, and his TV are relegated to the garage. Life at home becomes a little more eventful, as Doug and Carrie try to navigate their relationship while dealing with the decidedly eccentric habits of the quirky, opinionated Arthur. In this series, Doug and Carrie are trying to conceive again after Carrie's previous miscarriage; Deacon and Kelly break up, leading Doug to dabble in a 'singles' lifestyle; and the whole family goes to psychotherapy. Episodes include 'Sight Gag', 'Ovary Action', 'Hero Worship', and 'Two Thirty'.