After many years spent at the “Cheers” bar, Frasier moves back home to Seattle to work as a radio psychiatrist after his policeman father gets shot in the hip on duty.
The best episode of "Frasier" season 11 is "No Sex, Please, We're Skittish", rated 7.9/10 from 825 user votes. It was directed by David Clark Lee and written by Bob Daily. "No Sex, Please, We're Skittish" aired on 9/23/2003 and is rated 0.1 point(s) higher than the second highest rated, "A Man, a Plan and a Gal: Julia".
Roz's return to KACL rattles Frasier, who's reinvolved with Julia; Niles' fatherhood plans get an unexpected setback he determines to remedy with an unorthodox virility enhancer.
Director: David Clark Lee
Writer: Bob Daily
Love blinds Frasier to the faults of Julia, who behaves obnoxiously and insensitively at a Crane dinner gathering. For starters, she embarrasses Daphne, then winds up chattering incessantly on her cell phone.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Jon Sherman
Frasier and Niles suspect that Roz's new boyfriend, Barry, is gay. They see Barry on the street and believe that he has gone into a gay bar. Frasier, worried that Barry is leading Roz on, goes inside to confront him.
Director: David Clark Lee
Writer: Joe Keenan
A courtship makes rivals of Martin and Frasier, who are vying for the affections of the latter's former baby-sitter, now a lounge singer with a vivacious personality and a quick wit that's appealing to both Crane senior and junior.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Jeffrey Richman
Roz tries to convince Frasier to go out with her friend Ann. She feels that Frasier is too particular about who he dates, and adds that there is nothing wrong with continuing to date around until the right person comes along.
Director: Sheldon Epps
Writer: Lori Kirkland Baker
Frasier overhears Ronee making a date with another man. He tells Martin, who is furious at him for eavesdropping. Ronee later breaks the news to Martin herself, explaining that she didn't think they had an exclusive relationship.
Director: Sheldon Epps
Writer: Heide Perlman
Niles receives a phone call from a panicked Maris, who asks to meet him for lunch. She asks for advice on how to handle her violent, philandering lover. Niles recommends that she leave him immediately.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Chris Marcil
Niles is questioned by the police because he loaned Maris the murder weapon--an antique crossbow--for use in a play. Maris insists that she acted in self-defense. She continually calls Niles from jail, leaving Daphne extremely angry.
Director: Scott Ellis
Writer: Sam Johnson
Lilith comes to town for a one-day conference. She and Frasier try to get together, but keep having to cancel. Lilith discusses her romantic problems with a colleague at Cafe Nervosa before having to return to the conference.
Director: Scott Ellis
Writer: Jon Sherman
Niles gains notoriety throughout Seattle because of his involvement in Maris's murder case. He and Daphne mingle with the city's social elite (including Bill Gates), and he is able to finagle reservations at booked restaurants.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Patricia Breen
Frasier is shocked when Frederick comes to visit sporting his new 'goth' look. Meanwhile, realising that he never rebelled in his adolescence, Niles decides to try marijuana...with unexpected results.
Director: Sheldon Epps
Writer: Christopher Lloyd
Weight loss challenges KACL, enrolled in a pound-shedding contest that pits Frasier against a taunting nemesis who bullied him in high school.
Director: Sheldon Epps, Wil Shriner
Writer: Bob Daily, Sam Johnson, Chris Marcil, Jeffrey Richman
Lawsuit fears plague Frasier over an accident in his kitchen that befell his insurer: a former date named Ann he snubbed. Now, Frasier entreats her to recuperate at his place, where Ann takes full advantage of the situation.
Director: Scott Ellis
Writer: Chris Marcil
Strange dreams dominate this episode, which finds Frasier wed to Daphne, now a vociferous eater; Niles a carefree philanderer, dallying with bikini-clad repairwomen; and Martin a dashing hoofer, performing with Ronee.
Director: Cynthia J. Popp
Writer: Lori Kirkland Baker
Roz is disappointed when she is unable to get Alice tickets to a concert by children's performer Nanny G. After his family reveals that he used to be married to her, Frasier agrees to help Roz secure tickets.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Joe Keenan
A practical joke backfires, giving Martin a 'mild cardiac event' that he's anxious to keep secret from Ronee, fearing that she'll think he's become 'some feeble old guy'.
Director: Katy Garretson
Writer: Jeffrey Richman
Guilty feelings seize Frasier, who, just for a thrill, swipes a medallion from his neighbor, a chatty, trusting widow. Now he sets out to secretly return the object, with the reluctant help of Niles.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Heide Perlman
Lovelorn Frasier engages a matchmaker, who mismatches him with dinner dates that turn disastrous; well-meaning Niles hires a kooky helpmate for Daphne's delivery who works with a shaman ...and a drummer.
Director: Katy Garretson
Writer: Bob Daily
Martin worries about a visit from Ronee's mother. She dislikes him because she once saw Martin innocently comforting the teenage Ronee and assumed he was trying to 'take her virtue'.
Director: Scott Ellis
Writer: Ken Levine, David Isaacs
Courting unnerves Frasier, whose wooing of a winsome matchmaker is constantly interrupted by her disarming beau, a dedicated environmentalist who's also quite cosmopolitan.
Director: Scott Ellis
Writer: Sam Johnson
Country ways test Frasier and Charlotte, who're stranded at a farmhouse with a very odd family that has no idea who he is. Back home, a physical therapist is mistaken for a stripper in a situation that greatly embarrasses Niles.
Director: Kelsey Grammer
Writer: Chris Marcil
As Frasier prepares for a dinner party, he considers throwing away an old broken crock pot. However, the crock pot stirs many memories of past experiences with his friends and family.
Director: Sheldon Epps
Writer: Bob Daily, Jon Sherman
During an especially bumpy flight Frasier tells a fellow passenger about his eventful past few weeks which are recounted in a long flashback. Bebe tells Frasier that he has been offered the chance to replace a recently deceased San Francisco radio host.
Director: David Clark Lee
Writer: Joe Keenan, Christopher Lloyd
Daphne gives birth to a healthy son David. Frasier marries Martin and Ronee in the vet's office before Daphne and the baby leave for the hospital. Frasier grows very lonely with Martin out of the apartment and Daphne and Niles busy with their son.
Director: David Clark Lee
Writer: Joe Keenan, Christopher Lloyd