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"The Junior Mint" is the 60th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld. It is the 20th episode of the fourth season. [1] It aired on March 18, 1993. [1] In the episode, Jerry cannot remember the name of the woman he is dating, but knows it rhymes with a part of the female anatomy.
Dolores (played by Susan Walters) – One of Jerry's many girlfriends; he can't remember her name, only that it rhymes with a female body part ("clitoris" doesn't occur to him and his best guess is "Mulva"). ("The Junior Mint"). Jerry reunites with her in "The Foundation".
Susan Walters' Seinfeld role is proving to be memorable even almost 30 years later.. At the Young and the Restless 13,000th episode celebration in Los Angeles, Calif. on Thursday, Oct. 24, Walters ...
"The Highlights of 100" is the 14th and 15th episode of the sixth season of the American sitcom Seinfeld, [1] and the 100th and 101st episode overall. Written by Peter Mehlman and directed by Andy Ackerman , the episode originally aired on NBC on February 2, 1995. [ 1 ]
Melanie Smith (born December 16, 1962) is an American former actress. She appeared as Jerry Seinfeld's girlfriend, Rachel, in three episodes of Seinfeld.She was also the third actress to portray Tora Ziyal on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and had a starring role as Emily Stewart on As the World Turns from 1987 to 1992. [1]
"The Switch" is the 97th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld, and the 11th episode of the show's sixth season. [1] It aired on January 5, 1995. [1] In this episode, Jerry wants to switch from dating a non-laughing woman to dating her roommate, Elaine has difficulty retrieving a tennis racket she loaned out, and George enlists Kramer's mother to spy on his seemingly bulimic girlfriend, leading ...
The pair welcomed their first child, Sascha Betty Seinfeld, the following year. In 2003, their family grew once more with the arrival of Julian Kal Seinfeld and two years later, their youngest son ...
The episode feels more like a bunch of distinct jokes cobbled together in the writer's room. Even when [it's] about nothing Seinfeld is best when it does a lot with that nothingness. [5] Vulture Ranked the episode the 12th worst in the series, criticizing the dead parrot subplot as too dark even by the standards of Seinfeld. [6]