![]() Jerry agrees to let Milos win at Tennis to save face, but Milos goes too far with the taunts ("Another Game for Milos!") and a series of events causes the tennis ball machine to pelt Kramer in the head. Jerry threatens to expose Milos as a tennis hack but doesn't, so Milos sends his wife to have sex with Jerry, but he can't go through with it. Kramer decides to get a living will after watching only half a movie about someone in a coma. He gets her to bring him vodka, cigarettes, and fireworks but then gets busted because he is only a teenager. Elaine is a fan of Vincent's picks at the video store and she wants to meet him after he mysteriously calls her. He gets zinged back with 'Why, you're their best-seller!' and then he retorts 'I had sex with you're wife!' which doesn't work because it turns out the guy's wife was in a coma. Current Top 3: The Opposite, The Marine Biologist, The Soup Nazi. It is intended for fans of the show, not so much newbies. Hopefully there will be more commentary added later. Till now Ive covered close to 100 episodes. George has a great comeback, 'The Jerkstore called, and they're running out of you.' and he goes to great lengths to use it. Over 2K TV viewers have voted on the 100+ items on Best Seinfeld Episodes Of All Time. Seinfeld - The Best & The Weakest by fedor8 created - 3 weeks ago updated - 15 hours ago Public This list is INCOMPLETE. I remember it being great but it isn't as funny when the central idea isn't fresh and as a result it fell in the middle of the list. ![]() For instance, The Label Maker episode contains the 'Re-Gifting' storyline. I was aware of this as I put my list together, but I kept true to how I enjoyed the episodes this time around. Season 1 (avg: 146) *A note about this list is that I was an avid Seinfeld fan during the initial run in the '90s, so many of the jokes fell flat on me during this viewing stretch, some 15 years later. I did an average of the ranking per season to see how the seasons ranked from best to worst.ĩ. I am posting spoilers in the descriptions. I list these hour long episodes only once with one rating and occupying one spot in the list. There are several hour long episodes that are now shown in syndication as part 1 and 2. ![]() I ranked all the episodes in order of how much I enjoyed each entry (basically how much I laughed). List of the best seasons of Seinfeld, listed from best to worst with DVD cover pictures when available. I kept a running list and rating (1 to 10) for each episode. Ranker TV Updated Ma1.6K votes 480 voters 20.3K views Voting Rules Vote up the best seasons of Seinfeld. Frank responds with a nod, his eyes wide with sincerity, “She was.” And Stiller was some kind of actor.I recently watched Seinfeld from beginning to end, starting in May 2013 and ending early July 2013. “That must have been some kind of doll,” Kramer says. The doll was destroyed, but a new holiday was born, “a Festivus for the rest of us,” he says while pantomiming to the sky as if dunking an invisible basketball. With a far-off look in his eyes, he recounts the invention of the holiday-it involved trying to buy a doll for George and physically fighting with another man over it, but Stiller commits to the ridiculous things he’s saying with total certitude. The Festivus episode may be his best showcase: He visits Kramer to tell him about a holiday he celebrated while George was growing up, Festivus. Though Frank was George’s father, the show found a way to work him into other plotlines and scenes with other characters, and his scenes with Kramer are particularly memorable. 9 Season 1 Seinfeld season 1 is rough around the edges, containing the germ of what would make it one of the great American sitcoms. ![]() Season 9, the show’s last, included a few episodes that were arguably built around Stiller, including “The Serenity Now,” featuring another of Seinfeld’s instantly recognizable phrases, as well as the episode that gave us Festivus. Frank then decisively closes his menu, the screaming of a moment ago forgotten, and looks at George and asks, “Now, George, what do you want to know about your childhood?” George, who’s just been reminded of everything that was miserable about his upbringing, says, “Actually, I think I’m pretty clear on it.” As Frank, Stiller, in the light-blue jacket his character often wore, goes from barely looking up from reading the menu while dismissing his wife to, in a matter of seconds, yelling at top volume and gesticulating wildly. Before they can even get into it, though, his parents get into a fight-Estelle wants to sit elsewhere because she’s cold, but Frank doesn’t want to give up the booth they’re sitting in. ![]() So he invites his parents to the coffee shop to jog his memory a bit about what his adolescence was like. The best joke about George’s sorry lineage may have come in a Season 8 episode, “The Andrea Doria.” Long story, but George is trying to come up with examples of hardships he’s endured in his life to impress a tenant association to land an apartment he wants. ![]()
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