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  1. Summaries. Riley worked in an aircraft plant in California, but viewers usually saw him at home, cheerfully disrupting life with his malapropisms and ill timed intervention into minor problems. His stock answer to every turn of fate became a catch phrase: 'What a revoltin' development this is!" — Anonymous.

  2. The Life of Riley is an American radio situation comedy series of the 1940s that was adapted into a 1949 feature film, as well as two different television series, and a comic book.

  3. The Life of Riley: With Rosemary DeCamp, Jackie Gleason, Lanny Rees, Sid Tomack. Riley worked in an aircraft plant in California, but viewers usually saw him at home, cheerfully disrupting life with his malapropisms and ill timed intervention into minor problems.

    • (136)
    • 1948
    • Comedy
    • 30
  4. Summaries. Riley worked in an aircraft plant in California, but viewers usually saw him at home, cheerfully disrupting life with his malapropisms and ill timed intervention into minor problems. His stock answer to every turn of fate became a catch phrase: 'What a revoltin' development this is!" — Anonymous. Synopsis.

  5. Literary analysis for the phrase 'The Life of Riley', with meaning, origin, and examples in literature and sentences.

  6. The Life of Riley. The 1950s family television program The Life of Riley offered one of situation comedy's original "dopey dads" as a protagonist, and was successful in laying the foundation for later working-class sitcoms such as The Honeymooners and Roseanne.

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  8. Dec 22, 1999 · One authority says it comes from a song of the 1880s, “Is that Mr Reilly?” popularized by Pat Rooney, founder of the great American song-and-dance dynasty “The Dancing Rooneys.” Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable supports this notion. The Morrises continue:

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