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Happy Mother’s Day! We Love These 8 Classic TV Moms—But Would We Actually Want to Be Raised by Them?

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Courtesy the Everett Collection

Mother’s Day is the perfect time to celebrate the classic TV moms who kept their television families running—whether it was Doris Roberts serving up guilt and lasagna as Marie Barone on Everybody Loves Raymond, Patricia Heaton barely surviving suburban chaos on The Middle or Jane Kaczmarek trying to control absolute mayhem on Malcolm in the Middle. From the outside looking in, television motherhood often seems warm, funny, and comforting.

But step a little closer—and actually imagine growing up in some of those households—and things get a bit more… shall we say, complicated. Because for every nurturing TV mom (Margaret Anderson of Father Knows Best, Donna Stone of The Donna Reed Show, June Cleaver of Leave It to Beaver), there’s another who hovers a little too much, yells a little too loudly, forgets a few too many things… or simply opts out of parenting altogether. Whether it’s Katey Sagal turning laziness into an art form on Married… with Children or Agnes Moorehead causing magical chaos on Bewitched, these moms remain unforgettable for all the wrong—and very entertaining—reasons.

We love watching them. We laugh at them. We quote them. But would we want them raising us? Well… that’s a different story. What follows are eight unforgettable TV moms who made motherhood look entertaining, but not always easy.

1. Marie Barone (Doris Roberts)

The cast of ‘Everybody Loves Raymond’CBS / Courtesy: Everett Collection
The cast of ‘Everybody Loves Raymond’CBS / Courtesy: Everett Collection

Show: Everybody Loves Raymond (1996-2005)

Why we love her: Marie is warm, attentive and always ready with a home-cooked meal. Doris Roberts makes even her most over-the-top moments feel lovable, grounding her in genuine devotion to her family.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because boundaries simply don’t exist. Marie inserts herself into everything, often disguising criticism as concern. Being loved that much sounds great—until it becomes suffocating.

2. Peggy Bundy (Katey Sagal)

Show: Married… with Children (1987–1997)

Why we love her: Peggy is bold, funny and unapologetically herself. Katey Sagal turns her into a comic icon who rejects every traditional expectation of what a TV mom “should” be.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because someone has to do the parenting—and it’s definitely not Peggy. The kids are largely on their own, which makes for great comedy but not the most stable upbringing.

3. Blanche Devereaux (Rue McClanahan)

Blanche always dressed fabulously!@goldengirls/Instagram
Blanche always dressed fabulously!@goldengirls/Instagram

Show: The Golden Girls (1985-1992)

Why we love her: Blanche is confident, charismatic and endlessly entertaining. Rue McClanahan gives her warmth beneath the glamour and constant state of horniness, making her both funny and surprisingly vulnerable.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Her children often take a back seat to her own priorities. Blanche loves them—but her world tends to revolve around Blanche and her seemingly never-ending quest for male companionship.

4. Endora (Agnes Moorehead)

Show: Bewitched (1964-1972)

Why we love her: Endora is elegant, mischievous and endlessly entertaining. Agnes Moorehead steals scenes with a mix of wit and magical flair.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because she doesn’t just interfere—she sabotages. Endora actively disrupts her daughter’s life by using magic on her husband, often just for her own amusement.

5. Frankie Heck (Patricia Heaton)

The cast of ‘The Middle’Richard Foreman / © ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection
The cast of ‘The Middle’Richard Foreman / © ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection

Show: The Middle (2009-2018)

Why we love her: Frankie is relatable in the best way—doing her best to juggle work, family and chaos with humor and heart, and Patricia Heaton does a great job of separating this mom from Everybody Loves Raymond‘s, Debra Barone.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because the chaos never quite settles. Important moments slip through the cracks and the house often feels one step away from total meltdown.

6. Ida Morgenstern (Nancy Walker)

RHODA, Valerie Harper, Nancy Walker, Julie Kavner, 1974-78Courtesy the Everett Collection
RHODA, Valerie Harper, Nancy Walker, Julie Kavner, 1974-78Courtesy the Everett Collection Courtesy Everett Collection Courtesy Everett Collection

Show: Rhoda (1974-1978)

Why we love her: Ida is loving, invested and always concerned about her daughter’s happiness. Nancy Walker turns her into a wonderfully relatable sitcom mom.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because the concern never stops. Ida’s constant involvement leaves little room to breathe—or grow independently—and then there’s her constant sarcasm.

7. Sophia Petrillo (Estelle Getty)

You’d never be able to pick up on Estelle Getty’s anxiety!@goldengirls/Instagram
You’d never be able to pick up on Estelle Getty’s anxiety!@goldengirls/Instagram

Show: The Golden Girls (1985-1992)

Why we love her: Sophia is quick-witted, fearless and hilarious. Her no-filter observations and “Picture it…” stories make her unforgettable.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: Because that same honesty can really sting. Her blunt comments often hit where they hurt—especially for Dorothy (Bea Arthur). But, man, are they funny!

8. Lois Wilkerson (Jane Kaczmarek)

Show: Malcolm in the Middle (2000-2006)

Why we love her: Lois is the engine that keeps her chaotic household from completely spinning off its axis. Fiercely intelligent, deeply committed and absolutely unwilling to let her boys slide by on excuses, she brings a kind of moral clarity that’s rare in sitcom parenting.

Why we wouldn’t want to be raised by her: The downside is that the intensity never really turns off. Lois parents at full volume, full force, all the time, creating a home that often feels more like a pressure cooker than a place to relax.

Copyright 2026 A360 Media

This story was originally published May 10, 2026 at 3:00 AM.

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