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"The Package" is the 139th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld. This was the fifth episode for the eighth season, originally airing on NBC on October 17, 1996. [1]In this episode, Elaine cannot receive medical treatment for her rash because of a reputation for being a "difficult" patient, Kramer offers Jerry a method to get a refund on a stereo that is two years out of warranty, and George ...
Like most two-part Seinfeld episodes, "The Bottle Deposit" was originally conceived as a normal half-hour time slot episode, ran considerably over the allotted 23 minutes during filming, and was filled out to an hour-long time slot with additional scenes after the producers concluded that editing it down to 23 minutes would be too difficult. [2]
George Louis Costanza is a fictional character in the American television sitcom Seinfeld (1989–1998), played by Jason Alexander.He is a short, stocky, balding man who struggles with numerous insecurities, often dooming his romantic relationships through his own fear of being dumped.
1.) When George's girlfriend says, "Yada Yada" In "The Yada Yada" episode, it is hard to pick one moment. You've got Tim Whatley, Jerry's dentist and played by the amazing Bryan Cranston ...
"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.
"The Handicap Spot" is the 22nd episode of the fourth season and the 62nd overall episode of Seinfeld. [1] It aired on May 13, 1993 on NBC. [1] The episode deals with the numerous misfortunes which befall the characters as a result of their illegally parking in a handicapped space.
George comments on Eva’s attractiveness and their mutual connection but Jerry angrily scolds him. Tim comes back and begins to suspect something is amiss, but George bluffs him into exiting the limo again and giving George and Jerry the chance to plan on having the limo drive back to the Upper West Side and jump out when they see Elaine and ...
Kavet and Robin consciously scripted the scenes where Jerry, Elaine, and Kramer try to talk George out of the "jerk store" comeback as a satire of the writing-by-committee method which was common in television (and which Seinfeld had just switched to after seven years in which individual writers and writing partners wrote their episodes largely ...