Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Seinfeld co-creator Larry David, who had left the series after season seven, returned to write this episode. This freed up co-creator/star Jerry Seinfeld , who had had his hands full running the show without David, to put together an opening stand-up comedy routine for the first time since David left the show.
"The Stock Tip" is the fifth and final episode of the first season of the American sitcom Seinfeld. [1]The episode first aired on NBC on June 21, 1990. [2] In the episode, George Costanza (Jason Alexander) tells Jerry Seinfeld and Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) that a friend of a friend of his has given him a stock tip, and he encourages them to invest with him.
Seinfeld is an American television sitcom created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. Seinfeld has been described by some as a "show about nothing", [1] similar to the self-parodying "show within a show" of fourth-season episode "The Pilot". Jerry Seinfeld is the lead character and played as a fictionalized version of himself.
"The Betrayal" is the 164th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld. This was the eighth episode for the ninth and final season. [2] It aired on November 20, 1997.
This was the final episode to be written by Larry Charles. In this episode, Elaine's co-worker Toby annoys her with her enthusiasm and ruins one of Jerry's shows with well-meaning heckling, Kramer becomes a hero while saving Toby's severed pinky toe, and George exposes his own cowardice when he discovers a fire at a children's birthday party.
"The Invitations" is the 24th and final episode of the seventh season of Seinfeld and the 134th overall episode. [1] It originally aired on NBC on May 16, 1996, [1] and was the last episode written by co-creator Larry David before he left the writing staff at the end of this season (returning only to write the series finale in 1998).
With just a few days left in 2023, one episode from Dr. Death‘s second season is suddenly in the running for the year’s most emotionally devastating hour of television. Season 2 of Peacock’s ...
"The Burning" is one of the few Seinfeld episodes in which religion plays a prominent role, [10] with Puddy's Christianity contrast against Elaine's lack of religious belief. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Whitley Kaufman, in his book Seinfeld and the Comic Vision , interpreted this subplot as highlighting the "emptiness and hypocrisy" of religious convictions ...