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"The Keys" is the 40th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld. It is the 23rd, and final, episode of the third season and the first of a three-episode story arc. [1] It first aired on NBC on May 6, 1992. [1] In this episode, Jerry takes back his spare keys from Kramer, straining their friendship.
"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).
Later Jerry bumps into Phil in the elevator, and learns he lives right next door to Kramer. Giving up on Jerry's apartment, Kramer hides his key at Phil's, in his parrot's food dish. The parrot chokes on the key and dies. Since Kramer never told Phil about the key, Phil assumes Jerry poisoned the parrot as revenge for it making a mess on Jerry ...
The Larry King Show, 2007. Back in 2007, Seinfeld appeared on The Larry King Show and was almost lost for words when host King, who died in 2021 aged 87, questioned whether his show had been ...
More than 25 years after the finale of “Seinfeld,” it seems the beloved sitcom might be getting a second ending. When asked if he liked the ending of “Seinfeld” during a stand-up set on ...
In 2001, Jerry and Jessica Seinfeld created the charitable organization The Good+Foundation after their first child was born. Good+Foundation grants donations of products and services to programs that have demonstrated a capacity to address family poverty in three focus areas: supporting new mothers, investing in early childhood, and engaging ...
Speaking to The New Yorker, Seinfeld rallied against the apparent death of TV comedy, blaming “the extreme left [and] PC crap and people worrying so much about offending other people”. He ...
Seinfeld began as a 23-minute pilot titled "The Seinfeld Chronicles".Created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, developed by NBC executive Rick Ludwin, and produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, it was a mix of Seinfeld's stand-up comedy routines and idiosyncratic, conversational scenes focusing on mundane aspects of everyday life like laundry, the buttoning of the top button on one's shirt ...