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Many sitcoms have had their time in the limelight only to disappear from cultural awareness because they are either poorly aged or mixed with packaging. “Seinfeld”, a pioneering NBC comedy from a group of friends who bring problems in their orbit, is not one of these exhibitions. Placed as sitcom about how the comedian gets their materialLarry David and Jerry Seinfeld broke the television mold in episodes that circled countless possible jokes from that simple but fruitful idea. It was far from the show “nothing”.
“Seinfeld” stands out from the 90s Sitcomm’s wealth because it was not afraid to take risks and test whether there would be stories about masturbation tolerance or chip’s double bill at the funeral reception. However, some of the funniest “Seinfeld” moments were every time the show just got broken and just made everything that made the writers laugh. In the “Seinfeld” world, viewers grew to learn that big jokes could come from the knowledge of everyday environment or something foreigner who overshadowed the comedian’s brain.
As with other prestigious sitcoms such as “Parks and Recreation” and “Office” in terms of American reboot Usually took some time before the NBC sitcoms found their soles and build an identity feeling after the first season. But one of the funniest gag in the series took place in episode 2 of the season “The Baby Shower”. It was one of the first examples of the exhibition that introduced individual plots to Jerry (Jerry Seinfeld), George (Jason Alexander), Elaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and Kramer (Michael Richards) just to combine them by the end.
In the episode, Elaine hosts a baby shower in Jerry’s apartment and George worrying about the chocolate sauce spawn on a bad date, while the funniest plot is Kramer, who sells Jerry with an illegal cable climb. Jerry reluctantly agrees that Kramer’s Russian Russian friends will install more than 56 cable channels on their TV. However, something strange happens in the next scene: Jerry gets a quick visit from the FBI. The scene is played relatively straight without a laughing present, followed by the name of the exhibition, which has been cheerfully shot in his apartment. As an actor at Seinfeld, it was difficult to do it through the sequence, not because of the content itself, but how Richards delivered his line.
Immediately after FBI agents blast Jerry’s crowd with excessive passion, Kramer runs to his adjacent neighbor, urges him in his lap and screams, “What have you done for my little cable boy?!” In the first two seasons DVD Blooper, you can see the moment you are receiving several extracts because Jerry simply can’t make laughter as the Richards shakes when she says her line.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJD6A-MY6DY
It must be difficult to work in comedy because you are surrounded by a wall to the wall, but you can’t laugh directly at them and ruin a good grip. Sometimes the activities of professionals break down and you simply cannot suppress that laughter. For Jerry’s confession, it’s a very fun moment after a really unexpected scene.
Getting the FBI interrogation Jerry from the cable sounds like it would be a comic potential, but the fact that they do not even hesitate to “kill” the protagonist without the other idea became a shock, even if it was just a dream period. “Seinfeld” is not exactly a show that gives itself to the constant danger of the characters, as much as the people around them.
The episode provides an insightful look for a period of time when stealing the cable was such a big taboo because it was only a few months earlier that the same year that “The Simpsons” dealt with the subject “Homer and Lisa vs. Eighth Commandment”. I think there is also fun that “Seinfeld” follows “Trade”, the episode in which Jerry and Elaine decide so far, Not only by grating it into the plot to pieces, but also the main money, showing violently to pump a full lead on national television.
Each “Seinfeld” episode streams on Netflix.