![]() ![]() Takeaway: Writing isn’t glamorous, so just get started. (1 episode, 1995), Man in Cafe Jerry Seinfeld stars as a stand-up comedian whose life in New York City is made even more chaotic by his quirky group of friends who join him in wrestling with lifes most perplexing, yet often. What we learn is you’ve got a 50:50 shot at it being successful. Pensky is here (uncredited) to the door) One second. The process of writing involves a lot of napping (again, see rule two), nonstarter ideas and explaining what a show about nothing involves (yes, still nothing). Interestingly, this is the only episode to flashback on Jerry and Georges high school life, deriving its comedy from having the adult actors play their adolescent selves. They pitch a show about nothing, which eventually becomes the Jerry show. In this episode, Stevie Wildcard and Anthony discuss brain burnout, answer a bunch of fun viewer questions, and laugh way too hard at way too many things. Its not just any arcade cabinet, though its a. ![]() Rule number six: Write your TV pilot! What about? Nothing! Series four of Seinfeld becomes incredibly meta when Jerry is tasked with pitching a show to NBC, along with George. Episode 18 of Season 9 In one of the most famous scenes of Seinfeld, George is seen trying to wheel an arcade cabinet across a busy road. Takeway: When it comes to hygiene, be more Puddy, less Kramer. Elaine challenges the germophobes (by rubbing Peggy’s stapler under her armpit and coughing on her doorknob), although it really climaxes when Kramer prepares a meal for Peggy, Puddy and Elaine (that he made in his bath). In the Emmy Award-winning, 'The Contest' (Season 4, episode 11), Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer enter into a competition to see who can last the longest without. In “The Apology” we find out he’s a germaphobe, as is Elaine's coworker Peggy. Master of my domain It is co-creator Larry David’s pin-sharp writing that makes the episode one of the funniest in Seinfeld history (though admittedly the subject matter can elicit a few. A man of few words, Elaine’s on again, off again boyfriend, Puddy, was the token meathead who really came into his own in series nine. The episode actually garnered Larry David an Emmy Award for Best Writing, and it launched the catchphrase Master of my Domain as a euphemism for masturbation. ![]()
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