Creators Larry David Jerry Seinfeld. See more at IMDbPro. Top rated TV Episodes Browse episodes. Top Top-rated. Clip Seinfeld: Clip 4. Seinfeld: Clip 1. Seinfeld: Clip 3.
Seinfeld: Season 8 Clip 2. Trailer Official Trailer. Official Teaser. Seinfeld: Season Eight. Seinfeld: Season 4.
Photos Top cast Edit. Wayne Knight Newman as Newman. John O'Hurley J. Peterman as J. Richard Herd Wilhelm as Wilhelm. Richard Fancy Lippman as Lippman. Larry David Jerry Seinfeld. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Jerry's girlfriend has a vintage toy collection she won't let him touch.
A new co-worker is freaking Elaine out. Kramer rebuilds the set of "The Merv Griffin Show" in his apartment. S9, Ep7. Elaine borrows Kramer's meat slicer to feed her neighbor's cat while George tries to hide his not-so-great past from his new boss. S9, Ep8. Elaine and the gang head to India to attend a wedding; Jerry betrays George by having sex with his prospective girlfriend; Kramer grapples with a malignant wish.
S9, Ep9. George is angered when an old acquaintance withholds a Step-mandated apology; Jerry's girlfriend is too comfortable with her nudity; Elaine works with a germaphobe. S9, Ep Jerry goes out with a woman who is beautiful one day and ugly the next. George makes up a charity. Elaine gives a fake number to a man.
Jerry looks to buy a new car from Elaine's boyfriend. George tries to find a snack. Kramer test drives a car. Elaine is embarrassed by Puddy's fur coat.
Kramer tries to keep Newman from getting evicted. George carries everything in his wallet. Jerry is through with wallets. Sally Weaver makes fun of Jerry. George's new girlfriend looks just like Jerry. Kramer takes a vow of silence. Elaine gets a job drawing cartoons for the New Yorker. George's new girlfriend refuses to break up with him. Jerry doesn't help out a neighbor.
Elaine's new boyfriend is poor. Kramer tries to find a good place to hide his key for his strongbox. The one hitch: There's a microscopic red dot on the sweater. This a fine example of Costanza's cheapness, which comes to be one of his defining characteristics throughout the show. Another great bit here: Once George lands the job in the office, he ends up having sex with the maid on his office desk.
It then results in one of show's better lines, from George to his employer: " Was that wrong? Season 4: Episode 7, "The Bubble Boy" There are a handful episodes in the series that even the uninitiated will recognize. On a road trip up Susan's Heidi Swedberg family cabin, Jerry and Elaine devise a plan to make a quick stop at the home of a bubble boy the kid is a big fan of Seinfeld's.
When George speeds ahead of them "we're making great time! George, however, arrives at the kid's home, only to entangle himself in a fight with the bubble boy over a misprinted Trivial Pursuit question.
Murphy's law seems to be in effect here: Everything that can go wrong, absolutely does. Kramer burns down the cabin, George nearly kills the bubble boy, and Jerry can't take back a signed poster he gifted the diner. Season 5: Episode 21, "The Opposite" In the first episode of Seinfeld , George proclaims that he would find success if he just did the opposite of his instincts.
Jump ahead four seasons and Constanza is playing that fantasy out. Sure enough, life turns around for him. Once the pendulum swings in George's direction, Elaine is thrust into a downward spiral. Jerry, naturally, remains unchanged in the middle. The shift in dynamic between these friends makes you realize just how well-defined their roles are.
It's jarring to see George be happy, as it is surprising to see Elaine lose a man to Jujyfruits. This episode also marks the debut of George Steinbrenner voiced by David as George's boss at the Yankees. After going on a few dates with a woman named Lois Renee Props , Jerry discovers that her boss is his arch-nemesis from high school. His kryptonite. Still disgruntled about the time Jerry "unfairly" beat him in a footrace, Duncan Don McManus stages a rematch for everyone especially Lois to watch.
Dazzling subplots include Elaine and her influential communist boyfriend; Kramer working as a Santa Claus at shopping mall; and the Yankees suspecting George of having communist ties. The strongest episodes of the show have four quality plot-lines that run concurrently until they collide into one another. Season 7: Episode 5, "The Hot Tub" Like so many other episodes, "The Hot Tub" is a classic example of what happens when normal, functional people enter the lives of these four knuckleheads.
Jean Paul Jeremiah Birkett is a marathon runner who accidentally overslept and missed the Olympics four years ago. Now he's in New York, and is taking extra precaution staying with Elaine. Jerry sees the situation—the mediocrity of Elaine's alarm clock, her inability to take food out of the microwave on time—and intervenes.
There are countless genius bits here, from Kramer's scalding hot tub placed in his living room to George describing how he always "appears" busy. Of course, the fate of Jean Paul is tragic. How could it not be? Season 8: Episode 9, "The Abstinence" George and Elaine abstain from intercourse, and like in "The Opposite" their lives run in two wildly different directions.
Without an orgasm, Elaine's intellect rapidly degenerates. She becomes useless and unmotivated. Conversely, George—unencumbered by carnal cravings—is suddenly brilliant. He consumes books, speaks different languages, and focuses his complete attention on his studies. For 22 minutes, Costanza is an intellect to be reckoned with. Season 9: Episode 2, "The Voice" Every second of every day we are forced to make decisions.
Depending on the quality of person you are, some are painless and some are painstaking. So when Jerry must choose between a joke or a woman, it seems obvious that he should choose the human being.
But, that's not the nature of Seinfeld. Comedy always comes before reality, even if the former spawns misery. The golden subplot here comes in the form of Kramerica, an illusory company Kramer creates.
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