Seinfeld: Classic or Dud

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Is there a UK version of seinfeld? I always thought of coupling as a UK version of friends (similarly insipid but about 1000x more cleverly written).

Philip Nunez, Friday, 7 January 2011 01:01 (thirteen years ago) link

http://www.sitcom.co.uk/sitcoms/baddiels_syndrome.shtml

Alba, Friday, 7 January 2011 01:11 (thirteen years ago) link

alan yentob otm imo

all i gotta do is akh nachivly (darraghmac), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:15 (thirteen years ago) link

A lot of the appeal of Seinfeld comes from New York attitudes & culture. It's not going to translate well to pish-posh London.

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:25 (thirteen years ago) link

But somehow appealed to the rest of america?

À la recherche du temps Pardew (jim in glasgow), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:26 (thirteen years ago) link

I didn't say it was exclusively New Yorker affair, but it was definitely there. I remember the episode about locks, in which everybody knew the make and model number of their locks and what was the latest kind or whatever - and this wasn't part of the joke.

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:29 (thirteen years ago) link

although NOBODY else in my entire school as far as i know watched the show. either never seen it, or just didn't get the humour.

Ha, I totally bonded with a girl in 9th grade b/c she was the only other person I knew who watched it. (She was also the only Jewish person I knew.) That started to change about a year later -- not sure whether because my peer group was getting older or because the show had started to attract more fans across the board.

Zsa Zsa Gay Bar (jaymc), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:29 (thirteen years ago) link

i think the jewish connection is otm. all my peers and i watched this really from like 5th grade and on (went to an all jewish school)

Mordy, Friday, 7 January 2011 01:32 (thirteen years ago) link

I loved Seinfeld when it was on but it was always second to NewsRadio IMO. I haven't watched it much since it ended but I've definitely seen every episode multiple times. Some of the living-in-NYC jokes of course fell flat to me, but the show had a lot more than just "lol new york!" going for it.

I have never been able to enjoy Curb Your Enthus. though.

no pop, no style -- all simply (Viceroy), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:57 (thirteen years ago) link

And its definitely a cultural touchstone for Millennials so I don't know wtf this "my generation hated it" shit is all about...

no pop, no style -- all simply (Viceroy), Friday, 7 January 2011 01:59 (thirteen years ago) link

It took me years to discover that Seinfeld was absolute fucking genius. I think what did it for me was watching it on an acid comedown. Specifically, this scene had me in absolute hysterics:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BurZnaBas6U

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 02:02 (thirteen years ago) link

ah, maybe that needs to be contextualized to understand.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 02:03 (thirteen years ago) link

LOL just write-it-off!! A classic bit!

no pop, no style -- all simply (Viceroy), Friday, 7 January 2011 02:05 (thirteen years ago) link

According to the "making of" documentary that comes with the season one DVD's, all the major networks turned down the pilot in part because the humor was "too Jewish." WTF does that even mean?

Mr. Snrub, Friday, 7 January 2011 02:50 (thirteen years ago) link

completely irrelevant, yet relevant:

Journalist/critic Frank Lovece in Newsday contrasted the humor tradition of Groening's two series, finding that, "The Simpsons echoes the strains of American-Irish vaudeville humor — the beer-soaked, sneaking-in-late-while-the-wife's-asleep comedy of Harrigan and Hart, McNulty and Murray, the Four Cohans (which, yes, included George M.) and countless others: knockabout yet sentimental, and ultimately about the bonds of blood family. Futurama, conversely, stems from Jewish-American humor, and not just in the obvious archetype of Dr. Zoidberg. From vaudeville to the Catskills to Woody Allen, it's that distinctly rueful humor built to ward away everything from despair to petty annoyance — the 'You gotta do what you gotta do' philosophy that helps the 'Futurama' characters cope in a mega-corporate world where the little guy is essentially powerless".[32] Animation maven Jerry Beck concurred: "I'm Jewish, and I know what you're saying. Fry has that [type of humor], Dr. Zoidberg, all the [vocal artist] Billy West characters. I see it. The bottom line is, the producers are trying to make sure the shows are completely different entities".[32]

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:05 (thirteen years ago) link

ok hold on, lemme give you the gift of indentation:

Journalist/critic Frank Lovece in Newsday contrasted the humor tradition of Groening's two series, finding that, "The Simpsons echoes the strains of American-Irish vaudeville humor — the beer-soaked, sneaking-in-late-while-the-wife's-asleep comedy of Harrigan and Hart, McNulty and Murray, the Four Cohans (which, yes, included George M.) and countless others: knockabout yet sentimental, and ultimately about the bonds of blood family.

Futurama, conversely, stems from Jewish-American humor, and not just in the obvious archetype of Dr. Zoidberg. From vaudeville to the Catskills to Woody Allen, it's that distinctly rueful humor built to ward away everything from despair to petty annoyance — the 'You gotta do what you gotta do' philosophy that helps the 'Futurama' characters cope in a mega-corporate world where the little guy is essentially powerless".[32]

Animation maven Jerry Beck concurred: "I'm Jewish, and I know what you're saying. Fry has that [type of humor], Dr. Zoidberg, all the [vocal artist] Billy West characters. I see it. The bottom line is, the producers are trying to make sure the shows are completely different entities".[32]

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:06 (thirteen years ago) link

triple post, but "petty annoyance" stands out most. 95% of seinfeld episodes are about trivialities and making an extremely huge deal about them.

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:07 (thirteen years ago) link

I was watching seinfeld pretty much from almost the beginning (first episode I remember seeing that made an impression on me was when George tried to poison his boss). I was 13 at the time (and non-jewish and not a new yorker) and it quickly became my second favorite show after the Simpsons, though I'm sure a lot of the humor went right over my head. So I don't really understand why people think teenagers wouldn't get this show.

If I remember correctly, the reason I started watching it in the first place was because it played immediately following Night Court.

peter in montreal, Friday, 7 January 2011 03:14 (thirteen years ago) link

I remember being a fresman in HS and this dorky friend of mine kept asking me if I was watching this new show 'Seinfeld' and how it was so funny. I think it was a year before I actually saw an episode. But this show is epic and should easily win this poll!

kind of chill and very rapegaze (rip van wanko), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:19 (thirteen years ago) link

it played immediately following Night Court.

My recollection was it was Unsolved Mysteries.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:20 (thirteen years ago) link

So I don't really understand why people think teenagers wouldn't get this show.

My three best friends in high school were fucking obsessed with this show and talked about it incessantly. I was the only one who didn't think it was exceptional-- maybe because it was too popular or something stupid like that. Boy, I really came around a decade-and-a-half later.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:25 (thirteen years ago) link

i actually remember when it was the seinfeld chronicles --i think i was in jr high & watched a shit ton of television & i was recommending it to my parents friends

johnny crunch, Friday, 7 January 2011 03:28 (thirteen years ago) link

I thought the first two seasons were kind of weak. I don't think this show would have survived into its maturity in the current cutthroat climate of network television.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 03:30 (thirteen years ago) link

I think the first two seasons look weak now, but at the time I thought they were incredible. This was just on a whole other level compared to most sitcoms at the time.

peter in montreal, Friday, 7 January 2011 03:39 (thirteen years ago) link

most dudes I know were watching this in middle-school, under influence of their parents

that was kind of my case. mom got really into it around '94-'95 when i was in 5th grade. followed the last few seasons and watched the hell out of the re-runs. i know and love Seinfeld pretty thoroughly.

circa1916, Friday, 7 January 2011 03:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Well I'm not saying that teenagers in general wouldn't like it. High school students, I understand. When the last two seasons of Seinfeld were aired, I was 12-13 and thought the show was boring and couldn't understand what was supposed to be so funny about it. My parents watched it all the time. The "final episode" hysteria was huge. On the other hand, I did enjoy pretty much all the other sitcoms that were big ...Cosby, Home Improvement, Fresh Prince, etc. etc. Obviously your results may vary but nobody in my age group that I know ever liked the show when it aired, but in the last few years I'm seeing a huge wave of obsession over this show, something I've never really seen before. It's like if there was a sudden revival of interest in Arrested Development in 6-7 years from people who will then be in their early 20's. Looking back, it totally makes sense. A lot of the jokes are character based and deal with subtle social interactions and sex, stuff the average 13 year old knows nothing about.

frogbs, Friday, 7 January 2011 15:42 (thirteen years ago) link

aside from Jerry Seinfeld's shoes, I think it's aged quite well.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 15:47 (thirteen years ago) link

I still find it odd people are still going on about Seinfeld's finale and yet seem relatively at ease about the scam that was Lost's. Like, I'm surprised no 4chan hackers or whatever sort took to arms and hacked into Damon Lindelof's...whatever thing.

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 15:49 (thirteen years ago) link

I feel a lot like Cunga - in the US this show just became part of the fabric and furniture of life in the late 90s. There were reruns EVERY DAY, several times a day, for years and years after the last episode aired.

progressive cuts (Tracer Hand), Friday, 7 January 2011 15:51 (thirteen years ago) link

as bad as the seinfeld finale was, it was nowhere near as bad as the lost finale, which most Lost fans are mostly just trying to erase from their memory

of course, now I'm imagining a Seinfeld finale where they figure out that they're in purgatory and have been dead all along

peter in montreal, Friday, 7 January 2011 15:53 (thirteen years ago) link

I didn't the Seinfeld finale was bad at all. It was poking fun at the inherent ridiculousness of the show's premise.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 15:56 (thirteen years ago) link

I can kind of understand the obsession with the fashion sense at the top of the thread. When I finally started getting into the re-runs I was almost fascinated and distracted by how plain all the characters were for people who lived in NYC. Not saying people like that don't exist in NYC, but they just seemed SO regular. Obviously if it was intentional it was so the show wouldn't alienate any viewers... just my theory.

I will always think of you, while (quite) fondly, myself (Evan), Friday, 7 January 2011 16:00 (thirteen years ago) link

it's not a really moving or cathartic finale (like maybe MASH or Friends or ST:TNG which resolve major storylines), but i think it certainly holds its own against like Bob Newhart or St. Elsewhere for shticky conclusions and even better than St. Elsewhere where the finale didn't really fit the tone of the show it def fit Seinfeld's tone to have an irreverent take on the show finale. If it were any better an episode it wouldn't be that good. Were Elaine and Jerry going to finally become a couple again? Obv not.

Mordy, Friday, 7 January 2011 16:02 (thirteen years ago) link

I was almost fascinated and distracted by how plain all the characters were for people who lived in NYC

As the series progressed they got much slicker, especially Elaine. I think part of it was fashion - the early 90s were still very much the 80s - but also part of it was higher budgets and a richer cast.

progressive cuts (Tracer Hand), Friday, 7 January 2011 16:11 (thirteen years ago) link

..and the general cult of affluence which took hold in the 90s, especially in New York.

progressive cuts (Tracer Hand), Friday, 7 January 2011 16:12 (thirteen years ago) link

i still watch the re-runs, they are broadcast on tnt and fox here.

Moonlight Graham (chrisv2010), Friday, 7 January 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago) link

tbs

Moonlight Graham (chrisv2010), Friday, 7 January 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago) link

I was really really into this show from about the beginning, which would mean i must have started watching it around 10 or at the latest right before i became a teenager. I'd never been to New York or known any Jews but it was still LOLtastic to me. I think it speaks to the success of the show that you can make something a 13-year-old kid will find fucking hilarious, even if he doesn't understand half of it. I don't remember not getting any parts of the show, but that is probably because it was so funny and i was laughing so consistently that even if i did miss something, it didnt affect my enjoyment one bit.

I think the only other show i looked forward to was the Simpsons, which kinda makes sense. Both are relentlessly witty and somewhat bitter, and both shows exuded a joyful surrealism that somehow felt more real than any watered-down traditional sitcom could hope to.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 7 January 2011 17:37 (thirteen years ago) link

A friend of mine made this interesting observation about Seinfeld: It's the one show where at the end of every episode, no one comes out better and everyone pretty much comes out worse. Their associations with each other never help each other, and only serve to drag them all down further. Nothing ever works out, and all their lives end up sucking.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\||||||( *__* )||||||/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ (res), Friday, 7 January 2011 17:52 (thirteen years ago) link

No lessons, no hugs.

Zsa Zsa Gay Bar (jaymc), Friday, 7 January 2011 17:57 (thirteen years ago) link

Two shows that came close to that: Larry Sanders and (surprisingly) Cheers. People often behave creepily on Larry Sanders, and only on rare occasions would the show cross the line into pathos (sometimes brilliantly). Cheers had a habit of going right up to the line where things turn maudlin, then there'd be a joke to undercut everything. They crossed the line, too, but far less often than most pre-Seinfeld sitcoms; I thought of it almost as a precursor to Seinfeld in that regard.

clemenza, Friday, 7 January 2011 18:07 (thirteen years ago) link

there are lots of shows like that now - It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, for one. but yeah it was original at the time.

congratulations (n/a), Friday, 7 January 2011 18:11 (thirteen years ago) link

The structure/characters/feel of It's Always Sunny always make me think of Seinfeld if all the characters were even less empathetic and stupider

congratulations (n/a), Friday, 7 January 2011 18:13 (thirteen years ago) link

I just hope Always Sunny will never have to forever live in the shadow of Seinfeld, written off in pop-culture lit by nostalgia fetishist whom find it heresay that something so well liked could actually be not that good. See videogame phenomenon: Halo.

heh (kelpolaris), Friday, 7 January 2011 21:02 (thirteen years ago) link

I assumed this revive was due to the death of an actor who played some character Sid Fields on an episode, obv named after the character/actor/writer from David & Seinfeld's fave The Abbott & Costello Show. (Fields was their apoplectic landlord.)

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 January 2011 21:12 (thirteen years ago) link

re: sunny, huh?
1. popularity is a pretty good indicator of crap (see weekly TV ratings)
2. Always Sunny isn't that popular (see weekly TV ratings)

Their getting short shrift from critical attention is more likely that it isn't popular enough, no matter how many dick towels they sold.

Philip Nunez, Friday, 7 January 2011 21:16 (thirteen years ago) link

Morbs, I don't remember that guy from Seinfeld, but I just watched a West Wing episode a few days ago that he was in. Dude got steady work.

Zsa Zsa Gay Bar (jaymc), Friday, 7 January 2011 21:38 (thirteen years ago) link

Looked at a picture of Fields and recognized him immediately as the ornery old guy who owned all the LPs that Kramer and Newman tried to sell.

clemenza, Saturday, 8 January 2011 00:09 (thirteen years ago) link

five months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wE_WXM93WdU

british sb power (dayo), Sunday, 12 June 2011 02:30 (thirteen years ago) link

four weeks pass...

so

do beckham and posh watch Seinfeld?

Ste, Monday, 11 July 2011 15:40 (thirteen years ago) link


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