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"The Susie" is the 149th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld. This was the 15th episode for the eighth season, originally airing on February 13, 1997. [1] In this episode, Jerry unintentionally terrorizes a bookie, George avoids all contact with his girlfriend so that she cannot break up with him, and Elaine ends up leading a double life at the office after a co-worker starts mistakenly calling her ...
In "The Susie", co-worker Peggy tells Elaine — who she thinks is a woman named Susie — that Elaine is a "dolt" and "disaster". Later, in " The Apology ", Peggy thinks Elaine has germs, and in retaliation Elaine intentionally coughs on Peggy's doorknob, rubs her stapler in her armpit, and rubs her keyboard on her backside.
In "The Slicer", Kramer tells Elaine that Lomez blew his neighbor's circuit to stop an incessant alarm, prompting her to do the same. Later in the same episode, Kramer tells Elaine that, in blowing his neighbor's circuit, Lomez caused the automatic cat feeder to stop functioning, resulting in incessant meowing from the neighbor's cat.
This upward-panning camera technique is repeated by George in "The Dealership" and by Elaine in "The Susie". One of the things being auctioned off at the foundation is Susan's doll collection, seen in "The Doll." The episode's Kramer story was inspired by a college friend of writers Alec Berg and Jeff Schaffer.
Jerry takes Elaine to the auction, where they bump into Sue Ellen Mischke, Elaine's rival. The two snipe at each other, provoking a bidding war between them over the clubs. Elaine ends up paying $20,000, twice what she was authorized by Peterman to spend. Elaine leaves the clubs in Jerry's car.
Elaine LaLanne says her life can be divided into two acts: before Jack and after Jack. Jack, of course, is Jack LaLanne, her late husband whose television program The Jack LaLanne Show (1951 to ...
January February March April May June July August September October November December 1954: Margie Harrison: Margaret Scott (a.k.a. Marilyn Waltz) Dolores Del Monte
Donald Trump will take the oath of office in front of an elite audience of about 600 people inside the Capitol Rotunda.