Always my fave. He made this show IMO. You got it right. Jason Alexander was an awesome actor. Flawless. Really better than Jerry Seinfeld. Julia Dreyfuss was excellent too.!
Kirsi Laholer Not a 'guy', Kirsi -- the incomparable Jason Alexander. Along with Michael Richards' Kramer, one of the great comic creations in the history of television.
@@m.e.d.7997 I'm not sure I understand you, M. You praised Jason Alexander (and Julia) as being the best, but then said that George was no Kramer. Did you mean the reverse -- that Kramer was no George? I think Michael Richards' Kramer is great, too, in its own very different way -- just a more eccentric, quirky, oddball creation. Richards is a great physical comedian, in the tradition of Sid Caesar.
@@rickrose5377 George was IMO awesome. Not Kramer IMO. I thought he was acting like a jerk most of the time. The others played off him well though. He was NEVER as funny as George to me. Many loved him, I know.
Nice to see George putting all this effort into something that he doesn't benefit from. He actually just wants to do something for his friend. The pure excitement and triumph when he runs back into the apartment with a plan gets me every time.
George is a hollow invertebrate without the first ounce of honor to help a "friend", he acts purely out of emptiness in his own life. A Nexus 6 is more of a person than him.
wow, this is the show that just keeps giving. I have probably watched the entire series over 5-6 times and I had never picked up on that. I always thought that might be a very sick idea that George has come up with and written on paper for Jerry to read, but the subtlety of it just being the check makes this so much better. Thanks for pointing it out fellow internet citizen.
When this episode originally aired in 1995 I was a senior in high school and watching it with my grandparents. My 76-year-old grandmother kept asking what a ménage a trois was. My grandfather was sitting in the chair next to her and pretended not to hear her but I know he knew. She kept saying ménage a trois over and over and we both finally told her we had no idea. During a commercial break I had to get up and leave the room to keep from laughing.
In the 80s I was in high school as well, and watching Letterman with my parents. Dave was holding up funny ads, and it was for a beauty salon, and it said "free blow job with every wash". Dave's joke was "don't forget to adjust the chair". My mom didn't get it....
How Jason Alexander never won an award for playing George on this show is one of the biggest snubs of all time! You can't watch an episode and not see some part of yourself in George, just an absolute great character acted out brilliantly!
@@ElvarMasson no I mean how as in he carried the first 2 seasons because Kramer wasn't himself yet, Jerry wasn't quite there yet and Elaine didn't have strong stories yet
@@jaymilo8425 Most of the stuff with Elaine was bizarre and beyond belief. Didn't help the show at all. It was her romantic inclinations and suitors that were funny enough to make the show better.
@@angbaac He was right though. Jerry's not an orgy guy. He doesnt want to live in an apartment with thick shag carpeting and weirdo lighting, or wear robes and keep various creams and ungwents well stocked at all times. Besides, two women at the same time is overrated. I think on some level even George realized this, which is why he admits he wouldnt be able to go through with it either.
@@DDD-qt8bw I'll take one good over one good and one mediocre. Usually, you only really are interested in one especially out of the two anyway, the other is just lagniappe or is already old hat.
Can we talk about how adorable these two are as best friends? George taking up the fight with his best pal although it’s doomed to fail...them getting so mentally invested that they’re walking down the street fussing at each other, staying up late into the the night working out the plan until finally George has to announce, that’s enough for today...you’re tired...get some sleep...I’ll see you first thing in the morning. I love the friendship!
One of my favorite parts of this is that at the imaginary phone call with Jerry and the roommate, George is there with him, lol. He is narrating that part of the plan, so he incorporated himself to the scene.
They could have done a whole episode about Bania that didn't include the main characters, and it probably would have worked. Maybe some interaction with Kramer included, as a conclusion or something.
Being a geek here, but during roman empire. Rental plebian appartments were common. Mostly on top floors. They landlord had some bakery below and rent rooms on top. Many plebians accommodated and shared single rooms. They had no bathrooms or kitchen. Roman had public baths and toilets and lots of bakery where bread and other goods were cooked bought by people.
Is this the best episode? Come on every episode feels that way in Seinfeld. The writing is top notch! George's acting is out of the world. I laughed so much! When George says" You disappoint me my friend " Only George can deliver that in a funny way
@@MsDudette21 thank you! A lot of time I would know the name of this song in this Seinfeld episode. I already put it in my playlist from Deezer. Cheers from Brazil!
Not for the episode. He never won a single Emmy in 9 seasons of this show portraying one of the most iconic comedic characters in TV history. Disgraceful.
One of the most perfectly executed sequences in the history of television comedy: the writing, the direction, the acting -- inspired. "This is what I do."
@@seabrarafael I love his show. We'll never get television at this level of quality again. Truly lightning in a bottle, or as Jerry puts it, "dumb luck".
The competition was really strong. Michael Richards for 5 seasons (3 of which he won), and Niles on Frasier was not half bad either. Just tight competition and a dose of bad luck, methinks.
I watched Seinfeld in prison, in the mid 90’s. It sounds crazy but we inmates would dissect these scenes and laugh about these episodes for days after watching them. Black, White, Latino, cliqued-up, not cliqued-up, it didn’t matter. We all kind of bonded over this show. It made the moments of abject violence, degradation and abuse that were always around the corner seem more tolerable.
You and I were cell mates. I recall staying up late many-a-night with you, holding you close, giving kisses on your head as you wept into my lap. Good times.
@@derp8575 Man, it’s great to hear from you. I owe you an apology. I know I sold you for a pack of cigarettes, but I felt I didn’t have too many options. I hope your time in Cell block C wasn’t as bad as they said it was.
@andrion waser In the words of Charlie Harper who is not at all related to this show, an orgy requires six participants minimum. 1 is masturbation 2 is one-on-one 3 is a threesome 4 is two couples swinging 5 is two couples swinging with a looky loo 6 is an orgy
@@Russell_Rieckenberg But that's so different. He turned down a threesome with two guys and a girl. That is a bit more understandable. Jerry turned down a threesome with him and two women. They both may have been offered threesomes but those types of threesomes are very different.
The music heard when they're initially concocting "The Switch "is reminiscent of that used in Taxi Driver when Travis is driving during the night scenes
I love the little scene of Sandy being "busy" at work,shes "busy" cos she looks really annoyed which links to another epic George episode.Of course later on George tries to get out of a relationship buy suggesting a menage a trois and the male flatmate is into it,freaking George out so the idea comes back to bite him
Just gave me a mental image of the male roommate closing in on George, and the episode ending with a close-up of him soundlessly screaming with his hands up, hahaha.
...and remember...in the next episode, S6E12, "The Label Maker", George tried to use the menage a trois suggestion to get out of a relationship, but it didn't quite work out as planned, lol
Thanks for sharing! I couldn't log to Netflix and had to have a good laugh. I think what is brilliant in Seinfeld is that if each of them had invested as much time solving real problems, they could have solved world hunger.
I love these rare moments where George us an expert in how to navigate through the complexities of a woman,yet the majority of the time he just strikes out with them 😂
Except every plan inevitable backfires, so not sure how much of an expert he is. George is an interesting mix of delusion, overconfidence and insecurity.
“...Qualities prized by the superficial man” Been there and surprisingly how would I have worded it. You know, when you use verbosity to cover the degree of shame you feel for the less than holy thoughts that enter your mind about “the superficial man”
Of all the great lines in this sequence, that one's the best. Even 25 years ago, Seinfeld's creators/writers had the guts to not shy away from the existence of sexism, racism and homophobia, but the cleverness to avoid being accused of such labels. It's what will make the appeal of the show enduring.
At the enacting of the Plan at 3:52, Jerry looks to someone to his right before making the call. So the Plan was for George to be there, probably as a supportive coach!
Some wonderful little acting beats from Jason Alexander here. The way he looks at Jerry before saying "and I think that I do". How flustered he gets before "Alright dammit I'm in!" The peanut butter on his finger as he's saying "This is what I do".
the more I watch "Seinfeld" , the more I realize how brilliant of an actor the guy who plays George is.
Jason Alexander - respect to you.
Always my fave. He made this show IMO. You got it right. Jason Alexander was an awesome actor. Flawless. Really better than Jerry Seinfeld. Julia Dreyfuss was excellent too.!
Kirsi Laholer
Not a 'guy', Kirsi -- the incomparable Jason Alexander. Along with Michael Richards' Kramer, one of the great comic creations in the history of television.
@@rickrose5377 Goerge was; not Kramer IMO.
@@m.e.d.7997
I'm not sure I understand you, M. You praised Jason Alexander (and Julia) as being the best, but then said that George was no Kramer. Did you mean the reverse -- that Kramer was no George?
I think Michael Richards' Kramer is great, too, in its own very different way -- just a more eccentric, quirky, oddball creation. Richards is a great physical comedian, in the tradition of Sid Caesar.
@@rickrose5377 George was IMO awesome. Not Kramer IMO. I thought he was acting like a jerk most of the time. The others played off him well though. He was NEVER as funny as George to me. Many loved him, I know.
Nice to see George putting all this effort into something that he doesn't benefit from. He actually just wants to do something for his friend. The pure excitement and triumph when he runs back into the apartment with a plan gets me every time.
George wanted to see if his deviant insanity could solve the insurmounable problem of the Roommate Switch
Knowing George i think he did it for selfish reasons, he wanted to live through Jerry
Sort of. He’s an incredibly immature person. He gets off on trying to get involved in stupid situations like this. Funny as hell though.
George is a hollow invertebrate without the first ounce of honor to help a "friend", he acts purely out of emptiness in his own life. A Nexus 6 is more of a person than him.
@@Ramkumatic You make it sound like George Costanza came into your house and pissed in your oatmeal.
Jerry's wild hair at the end is a great comedic touch...like he has been racking his brain all night.
The funniest thing to me in this video is George picking up the check & then quietly sliding it over to Jerry
wow, this is the show that just keeps giving. I have probably watched the entire series over 5-6 times and I had never picked up on that. I always thought that might be a very sick idea that George has come up with and written on paper for Jerry to read, but the subtlety of it just being the check makes this so much better. Thanks for pointing it out fellow internet citizen.
koolkat518 I always loved part haha 😂
koolkat518
A beautiful character touch. "God is in the details."
I don’t think it was the cheque. It was one of the ideas written down that was being considered
Agreed one of my fav scenes
When this episode originally aired in 1995 I was a senior in high school and watching it with my grandparents. My 76-year-old grandmother kept asking what a ménage a trois was. My grandfather was sitting in the chair next to her and pretended not to hear her but I know he knew. She kept saying ménage a trois over and over and we both finally told her we had no idea. During a commercial break I had to get up and leave the room to keep from laughing.
Sounds like a Seinfeld moment in real life !
Your grandmother was from a time when people were wholesome.
That’s hilarious 😹😹😹😹
In the 80s I was in high school as well, and watching Letterman with my parents. Dave was holding up funny ads, and it was for a beauty salon, and it said "free blow job with every wash".
Dave's joke was "don't forget to adjust the chair".
My mom didn't get it....
@@jussiuutaniemi3767 A Costanza moment!
"You disappoint me my friend" - absolutely brilliant writing
That line and delivery made me laugh so hard the first time I heard it.
😂😂😂 FrFr
He's just so cocky--lol! Like when he tells Jerry to get some sleep, it has such a smug tone. Classic George
The Switch was one of the best episodes of Seinfeld.
ciprian rufius luca truth
I agree I love the planning scenes
I personally believe to be one of the best sequences in Seinfeld.
Comedy Gold my friend!
@@nomaamguyplusseinfeldandco2870 Same here, the music and the dialogue free acting is perfection.
the person who wrote the script is absolutely brilliant. I can't get enough of that.
Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David in addition to other writers
Windows Sucks oh yeah
It’s called being a .....
Persons.
That is obviously a Larry David dialogue. Its has his name written all over it. Genius!!
The pause before "I think that I do" is perfection.
The writing is pure comedic brilliance, as well as the acting, editing, and choice of music, God I love this scene haha
How Jason Alexander never won an award for playing George on this show is one of the biggest snubs of all time! You can't watch an episode and not see some part of yourself in George, just an absolute great character acted out brilliantly!
"How" ? You mean "why".
@@ElvarMasson no I mean how as in he carried the first 2 seasons because Kramer wasn't himself yet, Jerry wasn't quite there yet and Elaine didn't have strong stories yet
Every single Seinfeld video clip has this same comment lol
Watch Woody Allen movies. Jason Alexander is mimicking.
@@jaymilo8425 Most of the stuff with Elaine was bizarre and beyond belief. Didn't help the show at all. It was her romantic inclinations and suitors that were funny enough to make the show better.
It's actually a solid plan. Not foolproof, but solid!
I would say it worked even better than intended. It's just that Jerry wussed out
@@angbaac He was right though. Jerry's not an orgy guy. He doesnt want to live in an apartment with thick shag carpeting and weirdo lighting, or wear robes and keep various creams and ungwents well stocked at all times. Besides, two women at the same time is overrated. I think on some level even George realized this, which is why he admits he wouldnt be able to go through with it either.
@@Tony_Cardoza you disappoint me my friend, it’s not overrated.
@@DDD-qt8bw I'll take one good over one good and one mediocre. Usually, you only really are interested in one especially out of the two anyway, the other is just lagniappe or is already old hat.
1:41 let's get to work...
2:46 ...HE'S GOT IT!
"Do you ever get on your knees and thank God that you have access to my dementia?!"
"I can't, I'm not an orgy guy!" *can't control his laughter*
Alexander Nashel
Ladies and gentlemen: the depraved mind of Larry David.
@@EdForceOne-p1z "I'd have to grow a moustache and get all kinds of robes and lotions.."
@@EdForceOne-p1zit’s like discovering Plutonium…BY ACCIDENT
Can we talk about how adorable these two are as best friends? George taking up the fight with his best pal although it’s doomed to fail...them getting so mentally invested that they’re walking down the street fussing at each other, staying up late into the the night working out the plan until finally George has to announce, that’s enough for today...you’re tired...get some sleep...I’ll see you first thing in the morning. I love the friendship!
Agreed. They're both terrible people to most of society in general, but to themselves they have a very sweet friendship.
Good point, i felt this watching
Lol it's also because they have nothing else to do.
Ironically, this plan ended up working - the conclusion to this storyline is absolutely hysterical ;D. (th-cam.com/video/j6_pv_vRHKI/w-d-xo.html)
Lol, awesome comment. 🙂
I love: "Once the inital awkwardness is relieved with a little playful humor, which we know she can't resist." And we see her laughing on the phone.
The over-acting in the whole hypothetical sequence was classic, hahaha.
Especially the cut away to her friend furiously typing "while she's at work" lol@@yellowblanka6058
It's always Philly def took influence from it
One of my favorite parts of this is that at the imaginary phone call with Jerry and the roommate, George is there with him, lol. He is narrating that part of the plan, so he incorporated himself to the scene.
One of the greatest subplots of any episode. The banter George and Jerry have is impeccable with comedic writing at the highest level.
God this show was gold... Gold Jerry GOLD!
They could have done a whole episode about Bania that didn't include the main characters, and it probably would have worked. Maybe some interaction with Kramer included, as a conclusion or something.
George’s reaction when first clueing in on what Jerry is scheming is priceless. Excellent comedic actor!
I like it when he says "this is what I do" and scoops the peanut butter out of the jar with his bare finger and then licks it right off.
@@shanekeenaNYC .. +1. The small details are hilarious!
The non verbal eye brow raise and Quick Look around the diner before saying “I see” is brilliant
Being a geek here, but during roman empire. Rental plebian appartments were common. Mostly on top floors. They landlord had some bakery below and rent rooms on top. Many plebians accommodated and shared single rooms.
They had no bathrooms or kitchen. Roman had public baths and toilets and lots of bakery where bread and other goods were cooked bought by people.
Just the way George slams his hand down on the table... Too funny... 0:52
I just love that NY Jazz at 1:44
I always refer to that music as film noir music.
Everything I love about Seinfeld in one, five minute clip. Jason & Jerry’s comedic timing is absolutely perfect.
Agreed. It's arguably my very favorite sequence in all of Seinfeld, which is saying a lot.
The song is Westside Blues by John Cameron. Great piece of music
Is this the best episode? Come on every episode feels that way in Seinfeld. The writing is top notch!
George's acting is out of the world. I laughed so much! When George says" You disappoint me my friend "
Only George can deliver that in a funny way
Yes. This and the opposite.
Love that jazz music 😏
Name of the tune please?
@@TchockyPuritan just look up the switch music if you want to listen to it somebody made a loop of it on youtube
@@thehydronator3021 i still cant find it
West Side Blues by John Cameron :)
@@MsDudette21 thank you! A lot of time I would know the name of this song in this Seinfeld episode. I already put it in my playlist from Deezer. Cheers from Brazil!
How did Jason Alexander not win an Emmy for this episode?
Not for the episode. He never won a single Emmy in 9 seasons of this show portraying one of the most iconic comedic characters in TV history. Disgraceful.
This comment, again?
Who gives a flying frack who won anyway. Everybody remembers Jason Alexander as George, and that's what matters.
One of the best scenes in Seinfeld history, and that's saying something.
Let me guess; it’s underrated
@@steverogers7601 It's definitely rated.
Sustained brilliance throughout that scene is what makes it special. Not a wasted word.
Jerry's face and hair when he says its perfect plan. greatest comedic sitcom scene ever.
One thing I learned from this video is that Jerry likes cream in his coffee, and George likes his coffee black with loads of sugar.
Also, George will slide the check over to you after you both have coffee and pie.
jerry is literally me
One of the most perfectly executed sequences in the history of television comedy: the writing, the direction, the acting -- inspired.
"This is what I do."
Few moments before: "...so inspired, so devious, yet so simple!"
"I eat Jon; it's what I do."
It's just perfect
@@seabrarafael I love his show. We'll never get television at this level of quality again. Truly lightning in a bottle, or as Jerry puts it, "dumb luck".
Love the piano accompaniment, setting the mood. Reminiscent of Newman and Kramer's mom sharing a smoke in the "Cosmo" ep.
How Jason Alexander never got an Emmy is mind-boggling
It was an over sight. There can be no other reason. They all should have run…several times over.
The competition was really strong. Michael Richards for 5 seasons (3 of which he won), and Niles on Frasier was not half bad either. Just tight competition and a dose of bad luck, methinks.
Sandy's outfits and hair are very Elaine in this sequence.
90s hair
Dani Late 80s early 90s my friend.
The gestures and body language too‼️
The soda can crush gets me every time. Pure genius. THE SWITCH
I watched Seinfeld in prison, in the mid 90’s. It sounds crazy but we inmates would dissect these scenes and laugh about these episodes for days after watching them.
Black, White, Latino, cliqued-up, not cliqued-up, it didn’t matter. We all kind of bonded over this show. It made the moments of abject violence, degradation and abuse that were always around the corner seem more tolerable.
finally, some one who can point to actual redeeming social value of this show.
That was interesting. Thanks for sharing
You and I were cell mates. I recall staying up late many-a-night with you, holding you close, giving kisses on your head as you wept into my lap. Good times.
@@derp8575
Man, it’s great to hear from you. I owe you an apology. I know I sold you for a pack of cigarettes, but I felt I didn’t have too many options. I hope your time in Cell block C wasn’t as bad as they said it was.
@@user-user-user-user. 😂😂😆😆
And Jerry actually turns down the opportunity. Insane!
It’s like discovering plutonium by accident!!!
Oh it’s a scene
@andrion waser In the words of Charlie Harper who is not at all related to this show, an orgy requires six participants minimum.
1 is masturbation
2 is one-on-one
3 is a threesome
4 is two couples swinging
5 is two couples swinging with a looky loo
6 is an orgy
Well George also turned down the opportunity in another episode.
@@Russell_Rieckenberg But that's so different. He turned down a threesome with two guys and a girl. That is a bit more understandable. Jerry turned down a threesome with him and two women. They both may have been offered threesomes but those types of threesomes are very different.
George’s facial expressions and body language when he’s realizing what Jerry is really thinking is goddamn genius.
The music heard when they're initially concocting "The Switch "is reminiscent of that used in Taxi Driver when Travis is driving during the night scenes
I just love how seriously they take it.
"This is what I do."
This is my all time fav episode. Not only for the Switch storyline, but it is also the episode we find out Kramers first name is Cosmo!
I love how George just moves the check over to Jerry, like i dont have any money.
He never does lol
"you disappoint me my friend" George at his finest
Well i'm sure at some point between the years 800 and 1200, somewhere there were 2 women living together :)
Nope, homosexuality started in western Europe after WW2.
@Waltt
You're an idiot :)
@@waltt5134 go on...
@@waltt5134 living together and homosexuality has nothing to do with each other dumbass
I don't get it. Why is this os funny?
When you intentionally put yourself in a situation where you win no matter what the outcome, you’re a certified genius
Everyone says the Bet was the greatest single 22 minutes of sitcom history, but I argue this has to be tied with it
One of my favorite episodes. Brilliant writing and acting!!
that 'i gooooot it" was just stunning and so satisfying
George deserved an Emmy for these scenes alone!
I love the little scene of Sandy being "busy" at work,shes "busy" cos she looks really annoyed which links to another epic George episode.Of course later on George tries to get out of a relationship buy suggesting a menage a trois and the male flatmate is into it,freaking George out so the idea comes back to bite him
Just gave me a mental image of the male roommate closing in on George, and the episode ending with a close-up of him soundlessly screaming with his hands up, hahaha.
...and remember...in the next episode, S6E12, "The Label Maker", George tried to use the menage a trois suggestion to get out of a relationship, but it didn't quite work out as planned, lol
George Costanza ladies and gentlemen
Rare video of Bernard Montgomery and Dwight Eisenhower planning the D-Day landings
After years and years Seinfeld hast some of the funniest Episode that i ever Seen. Brilliant. Greetings from Germany🇩🇪. Peter Dieter
its brilliant writing, so devious, yet so simple
“It’s a perfect plan…”
-crazy hair Jerry
Arguably the finest bit written for TV....evvver.
Sheeeees into it.
This was one of my favourite episodes. Ménage a trios!
I have to say, the plan was genuinely brilliant.
Words cannot describe how much I love the song at 1:43
West Side Blues by John Cameron
I know someone who tried this plan. He now has a high voice, has one eye and walks with a limp.
The Switch or a Ménage et Troi?
Smelting accident?
It's a perfect plan...
so inspired, so deviace, yet so simple
This is what George does.
I love the 50s noir detective music as they’re scheming in the diner
The best part of the episode is Jerry's monologue acknowledging he didn't have what it took to go through with a menage a trois.
Thanks for sharing! I couldn't log to Netflix and had to have a good laugh.
I think what is brilliant in Seinfeld is that if each of them had invested as much time solving real problems, they could have solved world hunger.
I love these rare moments where George us an expert in how to navigate through the complexities of a woman,yet the majority of the time he just strikes out with them 😂
I lead others to a treasure i cannot posses
Except every plan inevitable backfires, so not sure how much of an expert he is. George is an interesting mix of delusion, overconfidence and insecurity.
You can tell how engrossed Jerry is in this plan as he says nothing to George about eating his peanut butter out of the fridge with his finger.
Henry the 8th managed a Switch once but his methods were...different.
That plan was the most twisted depraved idea, PURE Genius
A perfect performance about a perfect plan!
The montage is legit awesome cinematography. It's a whole vibe.
Among the greatest episodes
they didn't have roomates in middle ages 😂😂
Akash Gupta How do you know?
*They did have roommates during the Renaissance though...*
the first time in history when large numbers of people lived on their own away from home.
Well I’m sure at some point between the years 800 and 1200 there were two women living together
@2:40 George storms back in "IIIIIIII GOT IT!"
I can only describe this conversation as epic. The writers on Seinfeld deserve all the credit.
“...Qualities prized by the superficial man”
Been there and surprisingly how would I have worded it. You know, when you use verbosity to cover the degree of shame you feel for the less than holy thoughts that enter your mind about “the superficial man”
/r/iamverysmart
Help Me. I’m smarter
Of all the great lines in this sequence, that one's the best. Even 25 years ago, Seinfeld's creators/writers had the guts to not shy away from the existence of sexism, racism and homophobia, but the cleverness to avoid being accused of such labels. It's what will make the appeal of the show enduring.
Unbelievable writing. Incredible scenes haha
Jason Alexander's body language as George is genius work.
They didn't have roommates in the midgle ages. LOL!! !cracks me up every time.
The craziest part about this scene is the fact that George knew about the time period of the High Middle Ages.
I actually Googled "were there roommates in the Middle Ages' after this episode.
1:41 - 2:10 This is why The Switch is my favorite episode of Seinfeld.
"This is what I do" while knuckle-deep in peanut butter.
This is like discovering plutonium BY ACCIDENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Jason made that line his own.
I love that they used the same music here as when Newman hooked up with Babs Kramer.
The level of comedy Seinfeld was running on back in the day is astonishing.
The tune playing in the middle was gorgeous.
I fucking love George. Especially when he gets dramatic..... or angry.
My favourite character in any sitcom ever.
The point is I intend to undertake this and I’ll do it with or without you lol
At the enacting of the Plan at 3:52, Jerry looks to someone to his right before making the call. So the Plan was for George to be there, probably as a supportive coach!
"You disappoint me my friend" and "This is what I do"...are quintessential Costanza in a nutshell!
Great cinematography and really makes you realize how much more towering of an acting talent Jason Alexander is than Jerry Seinfeld.
hey, layman here. could you tell me what is great cinemtaography? like examples from the episode/clip would be helpful
Some wonderful little acting beats from Jason Alexander here. The way he looks at Jerry before saying "and I think that I do". How flustered he gets before "Alright dammit I'm in!" The peanut butter on his finger as he's saying "This is what I do".
I love when george slams his fist on the table 🤣
Then he eats the peanut butter with his finger to give Jerry his approval. Lol
This might be the best example to show someone that hasnt seen Seinfeld to show what the show is like
Damnit, I only just noticed how messed up Jerry’s hair is after George comes back with his solution.
“I couldn’t do it without you.” That’s actually…really sweet.
1:44 it's the soundtrack from the movie Indecent Proposal.
It's called west side blues by John cameron
George’s comeback to “There weren’t roommates in the Middle Ages” is actually pretty good for someone like him lol