"Jason Alexander"@en . . . . "Seinfeld"@en . "Seinfeld is a show about nothing. No hugging, no learning. Okay, seriously. One of the most popular shows of The Nineties, it mostly centered around unpleasant people doing unpleasant things to Innocent Bystanders, following Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonists Jerry, Elaine, George and Kramer. It lasted for nine years (1989 to 1998) and as many seasons, only ending when Jerry Seinfeld himself refused to go on, even after being offered 5 million dollars an episode for a tenth season. And then there's Jerry's other neighbor. Hello, Newman."@en . . "It stars Jerry Seinfeld playing \"Jerry Seinfeld\", a character based largely on himself, and is set predominantly in an apartment block in Manhattan's Upper West Side (see Geography of Seinfeld). It features an eclectic cast of characters, mainly Jerry's friends and acquaintances such as Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), George Costanza (Jason Alexander) and Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards). It was produced by Castle Rock Entertainment (then helmed by actor-producer Rob Reiner) and distributed by Columbia Pictures Television (now Sony Pictures Television)."@en . "Jerry Seinfeld"@en . "Peter Griffin has \"The Contest\" reenacted by villagers of a South American tribe in Jungle Love. In \"If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'\", when Peter and Chris go to NBC, the sign outside the building says, \"We Used to Have Seinfeld, Remember?\" Glenn Quagmire's license plate reads \"BUSHMAN\" in \"Fore Father\", a parody of Kramer getting a plate reading 'ASSMAN'. In \"When You Wish Upon a Weinstein\", Jerry Seinfeld and Jason Alexander go into a bit about a woman being a tickler, and Jerry not being a \"stlicka for a tickla\". After this, both continue to say \"stickler\" and \"tickler\" continuously. Brian, while watching this part of the show, screams in frustration in regards to his inability to find the remote. Peter calls one of his wives his \"Kramer\" when he tries to become Mormon in \"The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz\". \"The Junior Mint\", an episode of the series, is discussed by Saddam Hussein and Muammar al-Gaddafi at the Petoria pool party in \"E. Peterbus Unum\". In \"Go, Stewie, Go!\", when Lois lies to Meg, telling her that Anthony is raping her, the Seinfeld music plays, making fun of how episodes end with something equally awkward but certainly less dark happening. NBC's low standings among the viewership of the major networks is exploited in \"You Can Find It on TV\", performed at the 59th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards. In a desperate attempt to move up, Brian mentions rumors about reviving the show. Non-animated pictures of Jerry, and one of the entire principal cast, are seen. Stewie mentions a rumor that Isaiah Washington would replace Richards as Kramer, referencing their recent homophobia and racism controversies, respectively. In \"Lois Comes Out of Her Shell\", Stewie compares Sheldon without his shell to a \"nude Larry David\", comparing him to the co-creator of Seinfeld. Brian steals a line from Seinfeld for his play in \"Brian's Play\", although he denies seeing that particular episode. In \"The Boys in the Band\", one of Chris' \"references\" is \"yada yada,\" a catchphrase originating the Seinfeld episode \"The Yada Yada\"."@en . "Larry David, Jerry Seinfeld"@en . "It premiered on July 5, 1989 under the title \"The Seinfeld Chronicles\" and was originally offered to the FOX network, but NBC picked up the series and it was later renamed \"Seinfeld.\" After 9 seasons and 180 episodes, \"Seinfeld\" came to an end on May 14, 1998."@en . "1989"^^ . . "Seinfeld logo."@en . "Seinfeld"@de . "It premiered on July 5, 1989 under the title \"The Seinfeld Chronicles\" and was originally offered to the FOX network, but NBC picked up the series and it was later renamed \"Seinfeld.\" After 9 seasons and 180 episodes, \"Seinfeld\" came to an end on May 14, 1998."@en . "Seinfeld is a sitcom show created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. The show aired on NBC from 1989 to 1998 lasting nine seasons. It is referenced in Arrested Development several times."@en . "de.seinfeld"@de . "No. of episodes"@en . . "Seinfeld"@nl . . "Inaktiv"@de . . . . . "Genre"@en . "Seinfeld is a sitcom show created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. The show aired on NBC from 1989 to 1998 lasting nine seasons. It is referenced in Arrested Development several times."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Julia Louis-Dreyfus"@en . . . . "200"^^ . "1989"^^ . "Seinfeld is an American television sitcom that aired on NBC for nine seasons from 5 July 1989 to 14 May 1998. The eponymous series was created by Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld, with the latter starring as a fictionalized version of himself. Although filmed mainly in Los Angeles, the show is set predominantly in an apartment block on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Adapted from the Wikipedia article on Seinfeld."@en . "Seinfeld"@en . "Seinfeld was a popular television show on Earth. When meeting Major Dean Newman for the first time in 2000, Colonel Jack O'Neill imitated Jerry Seinfeld when he saied \"Hello Newman.\" (SG1: \"Shades of Grey\") O'Neill greets Nevin with \"Hello...NEVIN\" with the same inflection that Jerry would always greet Newman. (SG1: \"Revisions\")"@en . "Seinfeld"@en . . "television series"@en . "Country of origin"@en . . . . "Seinfeld var en popul\u00E4r tv-show p\u00E5 Jorden som s\u00E4ndes mellan 1989 och 1998.. N\u00E4r m\u00F6tet Major Dean Newman f\u00F6r f\u00F6rsta g\u00E5ngen, \u00D6verste Jonathan J. O'Neill imiterar Jerry Seinfeld n\u00E4r han s\u00E4ger \"Hej Newman\". (SG1: \"Shades of Grey\")"@sv . "Seinfeld"@en . . "Starring"@en . "Seinfeld.png"@en . . "Seinfeld"@de . . . "\"For British Eyes Only\", \"S.O.B.s\", \"Flight of the Phoenix\", \"It Gets Better\""@en . "Seinfeld"@fr . . "\"The Bizarro Jerry\" introduces characters who are Bizarros. They are bizarro versions of the seinfeld cast. Throughout the episode, they all display the opposite qualities to those of the cast of Seinfeld, and Jerry Seinfeld suspects them to be Bizarros. In the end, this is confirmed, when Kevin speaks in Bizarro language."@en . "Seinfeld-Wiki"@de . "Original channel"@en . . "9"^^ . . "Seinfeld"@de . . . . "Seinfeld was a popular television show on Earth. When meeting Major Dean Newman for the first time in 2000, Colonel Jack O'Neill imitated Jerry Seinfeld when he saied \"Hello Newman.\" (SG1: \"Shades of Grey\") O'Neill greets Nevin with \"Hello...NEVIN\" with the same inflection that Jerry would always greet Newman. (SG1: \"Revisions\")"@en . . "Language"@en . "It stars Jerry Seinfeld playing \"Jerry Seinfeld\", a character based largely on himself, and is set predominantly in an apartment block in Manhattan's Upper West Side (see Geography of Seinfeld). It features an eclectic cast of characters, mainly Jerry's friends and acquaintances such as Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), George Costanza (Jason Alexander) and Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards). It was produced by Castle Rock Entertainment (then helmed by actor-producer Rob Reiner) and distributed by Columbia Pictures Television (now Sony Pictures Television)."@en . . . . . "Seinfeld was an American TV show that ran from 1990 to 1998, in which Jewish comedian Jerry Seinfeld and his friends had wacky adventures that you didn't necessarily have to understand to find funny. It was a \"show about nothing\" in which whiny, marginally attractive people lived in nice Manhattan apartments without working and had sex without dating. Plus, its all-white cast, coupled with its extraordinary success in the free market, proves that are no black people in New York (if there were, Michael Richards probably would have said something)."@en . . "English"@en . . "Seinfeld is a show about nothing. No hugging, no learning. Okay, seriously. One of the most popular shows of The Nineties, it mostly centered around unpleasant people doing unpleasant things to Innocent Bystanders, following Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonists Jerry, Elaine, George and Kramer. It lasted for nine years (1989 to 1998) and as many seasons, only ending when Jerry Seinfeld himself refused to go on, even after being offered 5 million dollars an episode for a tenth season. Revolutionary for its time, as the idea of characters spending whole episodes doing and resolving basically nothing, with all humor based on the minutiae of everyday life, was unheard of in 1989 in America Seinfeld was so revolutionary in America, in fact, that it was mercilessly copied. It remains very difficult to describe to the younger generation just how huge the show was in the '90s, and how memetic its plots and sayings became. To use an analogy, Seinfeld is to TV shows what The Godfather is to movies. Part of what contributed to the authenticity of the \"about nothing\" theme was the fact that a great deal of the plots were based on personal stories from the lives of Larry David, Jerry Seinfeld, and various members of the writing team. Jerry Seinfeld plays a fictionalized, Jerkass version of himself as the ostensible main (though in practice arguably least interesting) character, who works mostly as a foil for his eccentric neighbour Cosmo Kramer, his best friend George Costanza, a man who can make your regular Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist look like a winner, and his sassy ex-girlfriend Elaine Benes, who couldn't spell \"tact\" if her life depended on it. Jerry was the technical Only Sane Man between these colorful personalities, but a highly ineffective one because, like his friends, he is supremely indifferent towards others, opting instead for the role of Deadpan Snarker extraordinaire. This quality of Jerry's, flavored with co-creator Larry David's gift for irony, coupled with the characters' propensity for Snowball Lies and Fawlty Towers Plots is what fueled most of the elaborate yet utterly mundane plots of the episodes. Although none of the characters worked together, lived together, or were related by blood, and even though -- or perhaps even because -- no emotional or deliberately touching moments of friendship were ever shown between them, the four remained close friends throughout the show's run, spending a great deal of their waking hours in each other's company and seemingly going by an unspoken rule to always brush off their friends' minor offenses and to never inflict any gross offenses against one another in order to preserve real-life Status Quo Is God -- one of the only social rules they bothered themselves to follow. And then there's Jerry's other neighbor. Hello, Newman."@en . "Sitcom"@en . . . "Seinfeld is a sitcom based on the comedy of Jerry Seinfeld that aired on NBC from July 1989 to May 1998."@en . . . . . "Peter Griffin has \"The Contest\" reenacted by villagers of a South American tribe in Jungle Love. In \"If I'm Dyin', I'm Lyin'\", when Peter and Chris go to NBC, the sign outside the building says, \"We Used to Have Seinfeld, Remember?\" Glenn Quagmire's license plate reads \"BUSHMAN\" in \"Fore Father\", a parody of Kramer getting a plate reading 'ASSMAN'. Peter calls one of his wives his \"Kramer\" when he tries to become Mormon in \"The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz\". Brian steals a line from Seinfeld for his play in \"Brian's Play\", although he denies seeing that particular episode."@en . . . . . . "Seinfeld is a sitcom based on the comedy of Jerry Seinfeld that aired on NBC from July 1989 to May 1998."@en . . . "Michael Richards"@en . "USA"@en . . "Seinfeld var en popul\u00E4r tv-show p\u00E5 Jorden som s\u00E4ndes mellan 1989 och 1998.. N\u00E4r m\u00F6tet Major Dean Newman f\u00F6r f\u00F6rsta g\u00E5ngen, \u00D6verste Jonathan J. O'Neill imiterar Jerry Seinfeld n\u00E4r han s\u00E4ger \"Hej Newman\". (SG1: \"Shades of Grey\")"@sv . "de.seinfeld"@de . . . . . "Seinfeld is an American television sitcom that aired on NBC for nine seasons from 5 July 1989 to 14 May 1998. The eponymous series was created by Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld, with the latter starring as a fictionalized version of himself. Although filmed mainly in Los Angeles, the show is set predominantly in an apartment block on Manhattan's Upper West Side. The show's main characters and many secondary characters were modeled after Seinfeld's and David's real-life acquaintances. Jerry's apartment is the center of a world visited by his eccentric friends: in particular, George Costanza (Jason Alexander), his best friend, who is a dishonest, petty loser; Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), his ex-girlfriend, who is intelligent and assertive, but superficial; and Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards), his eccentric neighbour, who invents wacky money-making schemes. The show kept a strong sense of continuity\u2014characters and plots from past episodes were frequently referenced or expanded upon. Occasionally, story arcs would span multiple episodes and even entire seasons. Seinfeld stood out from the many family and group sitcoms of its time. None of the principal characters was related by blood or occupation, nor was there a central theme. Instead, many episodes of Seinfeld focused on the minutiae of daily living and coping with the petty injustices of life. The view presented in Seinfeld is arguably consistent with the philosophy of nihilism, the idea that life is pointless. Adapted from the Wikipedia article on Seinfeld."@en . . . "Seinfeld was an American TV show that ran from 1990 to 1998, in which Jewish comedian Jerry Seinfeld and his friends had wacky adventures that you didn't necessarily have to understand to find funny. It was a \"show about nothing\" in which whiny, marginally attractive people lived in nice Manhattan apartments without working and had sex without dating. Plus, its all-white cast, coupled with its extraordinary success in the free market, proves that are no black people in New York (if there were, Michael Richards probably would have said something)."@en . . "Wikipedia has an article on Seinfeld here Seinfeld was a television comedy series that aired from 1989 to 1998. Dale Gribble was a fan of the show, as was Boomhauer (\"Pilot\")"@en . "No. of seasons"@en . "Seinfeld"@sv . "Larry David"@en . . "Jerry Seinfeld"@en . . "NBC"@en . "ja"@de . "Wikipedia has an article on Seinfeld here Seinfeld was a television comedy series that aired from 1989 to 1998. Dale Gribble was a fan of the show, as was Boomhauer (\"Pilot\")"@en . . "24032006"^^ . . "Original run"@en . . . "\"The Bizarro Jerry\" introduces characters who are Bizarros. They are bizarro versions of the seinfeld cast. Throughout the episode, they all display the opposite qualities to those of the cast of Seinfeld, and Jerry Seinfeld suspects them to be Bizarros. In the end, this is confirmed, when Kevin speaks in Bizarro language. \n* Kevin is the name of the Bizarro version of Jerry Seinfeld. Where Jerry is considered forgetful and inconsiderate, Kevin is reliable and kind. His appartment is the exact reverse of Jerry's, and he has a figure of Bizarro in place of Jerry's statue of Superman. He appears in the Seinfeld episode, The Bizarro Jerry. In the end of the episode, he speaks Bizarro language, saying \"Oh... me so happy. Me want to cry.\" \n* Gene is the Bizarro version of George Costanza, a character from the television series, Seinfeld. Being the opposite of George, who is selfish and irresponsible, Gene is selfless and responsible. \n* Feldman is the Bizarro version of Cosmo Kramer, who is a character from the television series, Seinfeld. His personality is the exact opposite of Kramer's. He appeared in the episode, The Bizarro Jerry of the Seinfeld television series. \n* Vargas is the Bizarro version of Newman. Vargas appeared in the episode, The Bizarro Jerry. His personality is the exact opposite of Newman's, and as such he's great friends with Kevin, the bizarro version of Jerry Seinfeld."@en . "Created by"@en . "180"^^ . . . . "Ken Keeler"@de . "Seinfeld is an American sitcom about Jerry Seinfeld and his friends George, Kramer, and Elaine and their comedic mishaps in New York. Seinfeld was named \"The Greatest Television Program Of All Time\" by TV Guide and was also named \"No. 3 Best TV Series Of All Time\" by Entertainment Weekly."@en . . "Seinfeld is an American sitcom about Jerry Seinfeld and his friends George, Kramer, and Elaine and their comedic mishaps in New York. Seinfeld was named \"The Greatest Television Program Of All Time\" by TV Guide and was also named \"No. 3 Best TV Series Of All Time\" by Entertainment Weekly."@en . "NBC"@en . . . .