Seinfeld‘s Kramer shows off his entrepreneurial skills as CEO of Kramerica Industries.
In the following collage of clips from the iconic sitcom, see Kramer’s product presentation, negotiating prowess and, finally, his ability to seal the deal in this venture into the lighter side of life. Video courtesy of Seinfeld.
In one of the longest anticipated reveals in sitcom history, George reveals Kramer’s first name in the following Season 6 clip from the iconic “Seinfeld” sitcom.
The reveal comes when George accompanies Kramer on a visit to his mother, who he hasn’t seen in five years. When he greet her, she turns and blurts, “Cosmo?” Here the clip, courtesy of the Seinfeld channel.
After Kramer is detained in the Los Angeles Central Jail as a suspect in a string of murders, George and Jerry try to clear Kramer’s name and reunite with their friend. Check out all the drama in this trek into the lighter side of life. Video courtesy of Seinfeld.
Jerry, Elaine and gang traipse into the lighter side of life in a clip from one of the more popular “Seinfeld” episodes, titled “The Gum.” Elaine inadvertently unclasps a button on her blouse while enjoying a movie with Jerry. The theatrics that follow are hilarious! Here’s the clip, courtesy of Admiral Titan Entertainment.
“Seinfeld,” the TV series about nothing, will go down among the greatest sitcoms of all-time, but contrary to adoring fans, the characters weren’t always perfect on set. In this week’s visit into the lighter side of life, the Plakyplak Channel features the very best of “Seinfeld” bloopers.
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Mark Dice offers a quick essay on changing mores in comedy — how what used to be funny is now considered outdated or moronic or reprehensible by today’s Liberal censors. It’s not even just the far-out stuff they are trying to ban, but comedy scenes from Seinfeld, All in the Family, even Saturday Night Live. Little will survive these twisted Michelangelos.
This home movie captures Sheree North performing a private dance at a Hollywood party. There’s no music, but North’s moves are expressive enough to carry the day. A trained dancer, she had the exact same measurements and weight as Twentieth Century Fox’s unreliable star — Marilyn Monroe — so the studio put North under contract as insurance. By the 1970s, North had became a mainstay on television, closing out her career with appearances as Cosmo Kramer’s mother Babs on Seinfeld.
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