I never cared for Seinfeld. In fact, I only found Kramer’s situations were hilarious, and he could act it up. As for the rest of 'em…ho-hum. Unfortuantely, Jerry had no real competition because TV writing was so terrible, so it all went to feed his fat head and fat ego, IMHO.
I’ve never watched an episode. Not a full one anyway. I never thought it was funny at all.
Ya know that embarassed feeling you get when you see someone doing something stupid? Thats what I got when Kramer did anything that was supposed to be ‘funny’.
So in essence, I’m with ya. I never liked the show.
I always liked Kramer and Newman. Jerry was pretty funny too, but George and Elaine were sometimes annoying. Overall, I like the show though. “Becker” is the only other modern sitcom that gets a lot of laughs from me, but then I don’t watch much TV.
After seeing a few episodes of Curb Your Enthusiam, I’ve concluded that Larry David was very funny and this crew were good at implementing the humor. The show was still funny after he left, but it wasn’t the same.
Another no vote. I’ve seen several episodes (I was at someone else’s house, so I was trapped). I never cared for Seinfeld’s standup act which became the basis, pretty much, for the show.
I like it a lot. Now regularly watch re-runs with my kids nearly every day. Still chuckle often. I find much of the writing quite clever. The only one I really don’t care for is Elaine, but that must be the mysogynist in me.
Not a fall down laugh riot every day, but most eps have several good laughs in them. And a few lines that have become pretty big pop culture refs in themselves.
Right off the top of my head - without even pausing to think: "Not that there’s anything wrong with it."
"Master of my own domain."
I liked the first half-season and the first full season. It was funny, and it really broke a lot of sitcom rules - that was neat.
It was refreshing to see, in a sitcom, a character get away with something underhanded, without getting his or her comeuppance. I loved seeing things get sort of resolved, but with no particular moral.
Then it all went to hell. I don’t know why. Every episode had to implode, and usually in the most forced manner imaginable. The characters all got too extreme so that they weren’t human, just caricatures. George Costanza was the worst example - he went from being a neurotic put-upon guy who made bad choices, to an actively aggressive jerk.
George (I didn’t even know his last name) seemed like such a weenie! A grown man, he couldn’t tell parents anything, IIRC! He was tied to BOTH his parents’ apron strings! Now, I respect my parents, but there comes a point where George should have stood up for himself. It seemed like they walked all over him…only viewing his as their “little boy”. I know there are some people like this, but it was too much for me to stomach.
Even in his relationships with women (on the show), his character seemed like such a weenie. I’m not boasting to be some casanova, but it was too gross to watch!
Because of all this, I can’t even tolerate Jason Alexander’s KFC ads! (Sorry, Colonel!) “Jason, you give chicken a bad name…”
I really liked the show because they made light of all the little annoyances in life that aren’t serious enough to cause alarm, but that nag away at your peace of mind. I find the show to be a great stress reliever.
Yes, I will give the cast that much…such as The Soup Natzi, and the marble rye bread incident. Yes, the writers captured such annoyances and put it on a level everyone could relate to.
But, why this show was rated #1 is beyond me! - Jinx
I also never cared much for his standup. But, strangely enough, I loved the show. I still watch it in reruns occasionally. The later seasons weren’t as consistently good as the earlier ones but the show continued to have some great moments up until the end. Except, of course, for the very last episode which basically sucked.
I liked the first four shows. Then they started featuring that utterly talentless hack Jason Alexander, a man who can ruin anything he touches. His early “poor man’s Woody Allen” schtick grew tired after about three minutes, and he was such an utter moron that you wanted to slap the dumb bastard silly every time he showed up on screen.
I didn’t care much for Kramer, either, though I can understand the character’s popularity. And as I’d revisit the show, I’d find everyone on it continued to be dumber and dumber, and the shows more and more puerile. Even now, when I try to watch in reruns, I can’t go more than five minutes before I begin wretching.
Jerry’s standup sequences are the only parts with any value whatsoever. The rest of the show is utter garbage.