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Seinfeld Coffee Mug
Sale Price: $15.95
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Even if you burn your tongue on your coffee, you will still be laughing at this memorable quote from Jerry.
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The Concert For New York City
List Price: $17.98
Sale Price: $11.99
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On October 20, 2001, this now-historic concert took place at Madison Square Garden, a mere six weeks after the horrific terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Thousands of firefighters, police officers, survivors, families, and fans witnessed a once-in-a-lifetime event as, in the space of nearly six hours, many legendary musical performers donated their time and their talent to one of the greatest causes ever, in the process giving their audience an unforgettable burst of pure emotion. Organized by Sir Paul McCartney, the Concert for New York City was an overwhelming experience that deserves to be saved for posterity. The two-CD audio recording is crammed with dozens of superb performances but doesn't give a sense of the whole show that this two-DVD set certainly does. Not only can we relive such seminal performers from that evening as the Who, David Bowie, John Mellencamp, and Sir Paul himself, we can see the charming and personal short films made for the occasion by such New York filmmakers as Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese, or the dozens of celebrities and unsung firefighters and police officers who immortalized that day with their stories and musical introductions. There is one quibble: the Goo Goo Dolls' "Iris," one of the blues standards Eric Clapton and Buddy Guy played, and McCartney's "From a Lover to a Friend" and "Lonely Road" are all missing, which seems curious, considering that the entire show could have easily fit onto two DVDs. So don't erase that videotape you made of the concert the night it aired, because that remains the definitive version. But this DVD (with very good Dolby 5.1 surround sound) comes close. --Kevin Filipski
Studio: Sony Music Release Date: 01/29/2002
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Jerry Seinfeld Live on Broadway: I'm Telling You for the Last Time
List Price: $5.98
Sale Price: $1.79
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When Seinfeld wrapped up its ninth and final season in the spring of 1998, the popular show's namesake and cocreator decided to offer a symbolic gesture to his fans. Taped for HBO in August 1998, on the final date of Jerry Seinfeld's tour appearances at New York City's Broadhurst Theater, I'm Telling You for the Last Time presents the standup comedian's so-called "final" standup, or at least his final tour with the standup material that made him famous. The video opens with a great prologue in which Seinfeld's old material is literally laid to rest, with many of Seinfeld's comedy colleagues in attendance at the "funeral." (Jay Leno is there, but David Letterman is conspicuously absent, and while it's a bit self-congratulatory to show Seinfeld's fellow comedians fighting like vultures over his abandoned jokes, it's worth it just to see Garry Shandling pilfering from the catering table like a homeless intruder.) Whether he's talking about airline flights, cab drivers, or memories of Halloween and an ill-fitting Superman costume, Seinfeld's observational humor is as timeless and sharp as the day he first performed it. Even the most familiar routines (such as the one about pharmacists with a superiority complex) are like old friends who still haven't overstayed their welcome. Seinfeld's delivery is polished to a shine--he's a consummate professional--and an impromptu Q&A with his appreciative audience demonstrates that he's equally adept with a fast and witty comeback. This performance certainly wouldn't be the last we'd see of Jerry Seinfeld, but from the perspective of phenomenal fame and fortune, it's a fitting farewell to the classic "bits" that took him to the top. --Jeff Shannon
No Description Available.Genre: Performing Arts - ConcertsRating: UNRelease Date: 14-SEP-2004Media Type: DVD
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I'm Telling You for the Last Time
List Price: $11.98
Sale Price: $5.00
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On Jerry Seinfeld's debut CD, he already sounds sick of his material. Of course, the point of the performance that it captures--the HBO special I'm Telling You for the Last Time--was to perform the routine one last time and then retire it forever. This recording was taped just a couple of months after Seinfeld went off the air, and the crowd sounds like it's jonesing for a fix--they laugh at everything, even Seinfeld's setup lines ("So what's with the cabdrivers and the BO?"). Still, Seinfeld's humor--that now-familiar observation from a satisfyingly elitist point of view--delivers. But after all the late-night talk-show appearances, the book Seinlanguage, and nine years of the series, was there really any question? --Randy Silver
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Seinfeld - Seasons 1 & 2
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $10.99
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Nothing? Seinfeld is a show about everything! It's about the appeal of the posse and coma etiquette. It's about importing and exporting. It's about sneaking a peek, and seeing the baby. It's about this, that, and the other. TV Guide ranked Seinfeld the best TV series of all time. It has become the master of its syndication domain. Its most devoted fans can quote each episode chapter and verse; their absorption of each scene's minutiae anything but a trivial pursuit. With such fervent devotion to the show, and demand for its DVD release, series creators Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David could have easily just OK'd a bare-bones set containing nothing but the episodes. Not that there would have been anything wrong with that, but instead, the creative team came together to create extensive and encyclopedic features that make this four-disc set buy-worthy. The candid and revealing audio commentaries and interviews, deleted scenes and original episode promos, and optional "Notes About Nothing" pop-ups are as irresistible as a Drake's coffee cake. It's always fun and instructive to return to the humble beginnings of a series that became a pop culture benchmark. Here are Kramer's first not-so-grand entrance, Jerry's first contemptuous "Hello, Newman," and Elaine's first "Get Out!" shove. But what is most revelatory about these episodes from the first two seasons is what Jason Alexander, during his commentary for the episode "The Revenge," calls a "sweet quality" that somehow redeems these characters' more base instincts. Consider the scene in which Jerry gives a freshly unemployed George some career guidance, or Jerry and Elaine's palpably affectionate banter throughout. The "Inside Look" episode intros offer fascinating insights into this singular show that subverted sitcom convention with such now-classic episodes as "The Chinese Restaurant," in which Jerry, George, and Elaine wait in vain for a table. We learn, for example, why movie tough guy Lawrence Tierney, who guest starred in "The Jacket," never reprised his role as Elaine's father. All of this, of course, is yadda yadda yadda to Seinfeld fans, whose patience for the show's DVD debut has been amply rewarded. As Elaine screams in the third-season episode, "The Subway," "It's not nothing, it's something!" --Donald Liebenson
Video DVDs in a box set
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Seinfeld: Season Four
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $11.13
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It's hard to believe, but for the first three seasons nobody really knew that Seinfeld was about, well, you know. It wasn't until season 4--unleashed here in a four-disc set that's equal in scope, quality, and quantity of bonus material to its predecessors--that the show really became something. In a series which can claim every installment as classic, the two-parter on disc 1 titled "The Pitch/The Ticket" truly stands out as a defining episode and, in retrospect, marked Seinfeld 4 as the breakthrough season. It's the one where (fake) NBC executives express their interest in working with Jerry Seinfeld on a TV show, then moves to the who's-on-first shtick of George successfully pitching Jerry on creating "a show about nothing." Scattered throughout the discs in commentaries by cast and creators and in numerous "Inside Look" documentaries, nearly everyone expresses some anxiety about the season having a story "arc" depicting Jerry and his "real" life becoming a sitcom. The show had been only marginally successful up to that point anyway, and with the edict, "no hugging, no learning," still in place, maybe messing with nothing was a bad idea. What makes the arc so arch is the self-reflexive way it details the reality of Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David coming up with the concept and pitching it to (real) NBC executives as a show that really was about, well, you know. In one of the many informally informative interview segments, Jerry remembers hitting a stride during this time when a lot of crazy ideas started to make sense. "Everything was just a wild guess," he says, "and it takes a while to get confident that you're guessing pretty good. I think sometime in season 4 we realized we were guessing pretty good." Oh, that we could all be so good at nothing. Season 4 also gave us the episodes "The Bubble Boy" ("He lives in a bubble!"), "The Pick" ("There was no pick!"), and, perhaps most memorably, "The Contest." Recalling how nervous he thought NBC might be about a show based on how long a person can remain--ahem--master of his domain, Larry David says that he kept the idea hidden for a long time. He may have had NBC sweating, but the episode goes by without anyone uttering the word that it's really about. The curmudgeonly David also observes that another famous season 4 episode, "The Outing," only made it on the air due to a network "note" about making sure it wouldn't be offensive to homosexuals. Hence we have the addition of another standard to the Seinfeld lexicon of American pop culture: "Not that there's anything wrong with that!" Not only wasn't there anything wrong with it, the episode won a GLAAD Media Award. Season 4 also brought Seinfeldits first Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series. Stay tuned for season 5 (and a move to the coveted Thursday-at-9 slot) when the volcano we now know was always brewing really blew its comedic top. --Ted Fry
The show about nothing is finally a DVD about something. Packed with all-new special features created in partnership with Jerry Seinfeld, this four-disc set includes all 24 episodes from the seminal, critically-acclaimed fourth season.Genre: TelevisionRating: NRRelease Date: 17-MAY-2005Media Type: DVD
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Pez Candy Dispensers Bee Movie 12 Pack
Sale Price: $17.59
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Characters from the Dreamworks hit movie Bee Movie, Barry, Vanessa, Adam, and Pollen Jock Buzz. These are one of the new Pez for 2007 so make sure to complete your entire collection. Please note: These 12 packs come straight from the manufacturer in assorted packs, so we cannot guarantee what assortment you will receive and cannot take special requests for certain characters.
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Scene It? Seinfeld
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $6.83
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The trivia game about nothing with real Seinfeld Clips!Ages: Adult, Players: 2 or more teams/playersRequires a TV, DVD player and remote controlDVD includes on-screen demonstration of game playDeluxe Edition Includes: Bonus Trivia Cards: Loaded with unique Seinfeld puzzlers like What the Bleep and On Location, and Trivia Card categories like The Details, The Dialogue and The Yada Yada Yada!Seinfeld Inspired Tokens!Party Play! No need to use the remote, just let Scene It? deal up one great puzzler or clip after another!Featuring all nine seasons with clips from your favorite episodes!Man hands, Manssieres, Yo-Yo Ma, and Yada Yada Yada - Scene It? Deluxe Seinfeld Edition has everything you love from the show about nothing. Race around the Flextime game board as you relive your favorite Seinfeld moments and test your knowledge with on-screen puzzlers more challenging than the Festivus feats of strength. We opened The Vault to include classic clips from all nine seasons and enough trivia to keep you double dipping! ...and remember, when we say Moops, we mean Moops.Think you've got hand? Prove it!Scene It? is more than Seinfeld trivia - use observation, memory, word play and puzzle-solving to answer different challenges about what you see on-screen:Sure you know that George came to the aid of a beached whale by removing on "obstruction" from its blowhole but how many stories high does George say the whale was? Don't know? Don't worry! You'll see for yourself in the clip!So if you think you know about Seinfeld, let Scene It? put your knowledge to the test! Giddyup!Contents:1 DVD1 Flextime® Game Board1 Six-sided Numbered Die1 Eight-sided Category Die4 Collectible Metal Tokens30 Buzz Cards200 Trivia Cards4 Category Reference Cards1 Instruction SheetOptreve® technology randomizes tv clips for a different game every time you play!Flextime® Game Board ca
Prove your TV trivia prowess to friends and family with the Scene It? Seinfeld Deluxe Edition DVD board game for adults. This entertaining trivia game will have you racing around the game board as you try to tackle brainteasers and answer questions as you relive some of your favorite scenes from all nine seasons of one of America's most popular television shows. .caption { font-family: Verdana, Helvetica neue, Arial, serif; font-size: 10px; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic; } ul.indent { list-style: inside disc; text-indent: -15px; } table.callout { font-family: verdana; font-size: 11px; line-height: 1.3em; } td.think { height: 125px; background: #9DC4D8 url(http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/electronics/detail-page/callout-bg.png) repeat-x; border-left: 1px solid #999999; border-right: 1px solid #999999; border-bottom: 1px dotted #000000; padding-left: 20px; padding-right: 20px; padding-bottom: 10px; width: 250px; } td.glance { height: 100%; background: #9DC4D8; border-left: 1px solid #999999; border-right: 1px solid #999999; padding-top: 10px; padding-left: 20px; padding-right: 20px; padding-bottom: 10px; width: 250px; } img.withlink {border:1px black solid;} What We Think Fun Factor: Durability: (what this means) The Good: Easy to set up and fun to play The Bad: Occasional occurrence of less-than-challenging brainbuster questions In a Nutshell: A witty, engaging DVD board game that highlights the hilarity and fun of the popular television show At a Glance Ages: Adult Requires: Television and DVD player with remote control Scene It? Seinfeld Deluxe Edition DVD game is a fun way to challenge your brain while enjoying popular scenes from the hit television show about nothing. View larger. Game includes a DVD, trivia cards, and dice -- everything you need to gets started. So You Think You Know Seinfeld...? The Scene It? Seinfeld Deluxe Edition DVD game is a fun, entertaining way to challenge your brain while enjoying popular scenes from the famous hit television show. Before getting started players will benefit from using either the included quick start guide or the on-screen tutorial for a run-through of how the game is played. To set up the game put the included DVD into your player and choose one player as the DVD Master who will operate the remote control throughout the game. Next, decide whether you'd like to play a shorter or longer version of the game and fold the included Flextime game board accordingly. Each player then chooses a metal token and places it on the start space. Each turn a player rolls both the numbered die and the eight-sided category die. The numbered die indicates how many spaces forward the player may move upon successfully completing the challenge associated with the category indicated on the category die. Challenges associated with the various categories range from answering questions following a scene played on the DVD to answering questions indicated on the included trivia Cards. Once a player has made their way to the end of the game path, they have the opportunity to win the game by either successfully beating all players in a final All Play To Win challenge or by successfully completing the Final Cut challenge. Alternatively, if a board game is not your style or if you'd simply like to entertain party guests throughout the evening, you may choose the Party Play function on the Main Menu of the DVD. In this mode the DVD shuffles among a variety of scenes and challenges automatically so that you and your guests can enjoy one great clip or puzzler after the other all night long. Yada-Yada-Yada! The Scene It? Deluxe Seinfeld Edition DVD board game is a witty, entertaining game that is ingeniously designed to engage an entire room full of players. The versatile Flextime game board features brightly colored graphics and allows players to choose between a longer or shorter game. The cleverly designed metal game tokens are modeled after props made famous in some of Seinfeld's most beloved scenes. The included DVD is full of hilarious clips and brain-busting trivia from all nine seasons of the witty television show. One of the best features of the Seinfeld DVD game is the Party Play option that allows fans and players to watch clips and answer brainteasers one after another on the DVD automatically without having to navigate with a remote control. What's in the Box Game DVD, one Flextime game board, four metal game tokens, one six-sided numbered die, one eight-sided category die, 16 Buzz cards, and 175 Trivia cards.
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Here are some more information for Seinfeld Jerry:

Stand up comedians are a dime a dozen, but very few actually have the talent and the longevity to entertain audiences for years. Most comedians just end up rehashing old material as they run out of creativity. Only a few of the very best keep coming up with relevant material, while others just fade into obscurity.
These three comedians listed below are truly among comedy royalty:
1. George Carlin
Without doubt, Carlin was among the finest of comedians to perform on stage. Naturally gifted, what's remarkable about Carlin is his dramatic transformation from a clean cut, straight laced funny man to an iconoclastic rebel whose jokes were aimed primarily at destroying the status quo. While his "Seven Words You Can't Say on TV" routine is a classic, Carlin stayed relevant even until his death, perfomring in several HBO specials and releasing everything from books to DVDs well into his late years.
2. Jerry Seinfeld
Jerry Seinfeld's show, "Seinfeld", was at one point, the no.1 show in the US. Its finale had a whopping 75 million viewers. Even today, reruns of the show enjoy considerable popularity. Seinfeld's brand of humor, with its dry sarcasm and observations on the banal and trivial details of daily life, is followed now by pretty much every young comedian. If you like your humor intelligent and deeply observational, Seinfeld is the man for you.
3. Dave Chapelle
Dave Chapelle is easily one of the funniest men alive. At one point, the "Dave Chapelle Show" commanded a huge audience and was all set for its 3rd season before Dave opted out due to stress and general creative dissatisfaction with the show's format (and this AFTER the show had been universally lauded by fans and critics alike for its humor). Chapelle's brand of humor is highly subversive and he routinely takes on controversial topics while still staying funny.
John is a blogger who has been writing online for 3 years. His latest blog is about ipod accessories. Check it out here.
Seinfeld: a Show About Nothing With Something for Everyone
Jerry Seinfeld, a New York-born stand-up comedian, had little interest in doing a TV show when he was approached in 1988 by American TV channel NBC to attend a creative meeting. Unhappy with his small recurring role on the TV show 'Benson', he felt like it was a limited medium and not right for his brand of comedy. He had already appeared several times on the 'Tonight Show' with Johnny Carson and on a Rodney Dangerfield HBO special, giving him enough publicity to make a living of the touring comedy circuit.
Nevertheless, after some negotiation with NBC, Jerry agreed that he and good friend and fellow comedian Larry David would create a pilot for a TV show blurring the lines of reality and fiction, showing footage of Seinfeld performing his act in between scenes from a fictionalised version of his life, thereby expanding upon, or showing how Seinfeld got the inspiration for his act.
Initial reactions to the pilot were bad. People claimed it was too Jewish, too New York and ironically enough, too appealing to young adults. Nevertheless, Rick Ludwin, Seinfeld’s champion at NBC got the show commissioned for an additional 4 episodes. These episodes were highly rated as they were broadcast after 'Cheers', and the show was commissioned for a second season of 12 episodes, slowly becoming a cult hit with late-night TV audiences and breaking into the Nielsen Ratings Top 30 by season 4.
Ostensibly a show about nothing, apart from the footage of Jerry onstage, the show relied heavily on dialogue and sly observations to become the first television series since 'Monty Python's Flying Circus' to be widely described as post-modern. For example, one episode is set in the reception of a Chinese restaurant where three of the main characters are waiting for a table. Set in real-time, the humour of the episode is driven by the increasing desperation of the characters waiting for a table, as they’re meant to go to the cinema afterwards, as well as the neurotic obsessions about their personal lives discussed while waiting.
The main characters themselves were four thirty-something singles: Jerry, George, Kramer and Elaine, with no roots, vague identities and a conscious indifference to morals. They would often involve themselves in the lives of others, typically with disastrous results. However, despite the damage caused, they never grew from their experiences and continued to be egotistical, self-centred people. This notion was completely at odds with other US sitcoms at the time, which would often end with a lesson on morals. Regardless of this, audiences were attracted by the dialogue and the somewhat absurd and neurotic approach to everyday situations and conflicts that the characters would find themselves in.
From season 4 onwards, the show reached meteoric levels of success and by the end of its 9 year run was the most viewed show in the US, with 75 million viewers tuning in for the series finale. All the actors on the show became identified with their characters to the general public. This was a new level of success for the hitherto unknown actors, especially Jerry, who became the first person to get a Black AmEx credit card and even appeared on the cover of Time Magazine when he announced the end of production for the show.
Though fans and critics would have liked Seinfeld to continue, by finishing on a high note Seinfeld avoided jumping the shark like so many of its contemporaries, and left an untarnished legacy that would go on to influence other successful and critically acclaimed shows like 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' and 'Arrested Development'.
About the Author
Andrew Regan is an online, freelance author from Scotland. He is a keen rugby player and enjoys travelling.
Would you pay $500 to see Jerry Seinfeld do a stand-up comedy act?
90 minutes of "what's the deal?" jokes?
Yes I would. I need some new material.
I never thought Jerry was that funny, but in a world of smut-based comedians who only talk about sex, periods, or swear every second word.. Jerry Seinfeld is a comedy genius.
Seinfeld Appears On 'SNL' To Rip Eric Massa (VIDEO)
Continuing to promote "The Marriage Ref" by simply being Jerry Seinfeld, the comedian joined Seth Meyers last night for the segment "Really!?! With Seth And Jerry." Seinfeld took on the role originated by Amy Poehler as he and Meyers laid into Eric Massa.
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