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Seinfeld, Season Five, Episode Sixteen, “The Stand-In”

Jerry is trying to entertain a friend in the hospital. George is dating a woman he’s considering breaking up with, only for a mutual friend to warn her about him, causing him to double his efforts to keep the relationship working. Elaine dates a man who flashes his penis at her. Kramer and his friend Mickey are standins on a television show; Mickey is under fire for using lifts to match his actor’s growing height.

Written by: Larry David
Directed by: Tom Cherones

One fascinating element of this show is its low-key somewhat feminist approach. A friend of mine has observed that many of Elaine’s romantic problems come off very effectively because she dresses just as dogshit and every-day as the male characters; people have remarked that Julia Louis-Dreyfuss is more attractive the older she gets, which is largely down to the fact that Elaine dressed like an asshole, and my friend’s argument is that, because Elaine is not presented as attractive, her problems can’t be ‘blamed’ on her appearance, but on men just treating her like shit. My addition onto this is that Elaine’s very traditionally female problems are treated just like any other problem on the show – not only lifted from reality as ruthlessly as possible, but explored to the extent that it’s funny with no commentary.

JLD makes an entire meal out of the plot; not just her incredible reaction to It being Taken Out, but her deeply exasperated delivery of the story of how It got Taken Out. I find myself wondering who had the idea to have her breathe on her glasses, the perfect underlining of her controlled rage. Jerry’s baffled reaction (and later, George’s) is so funny to me too, as a representation of those of us who simply would not have thought to do that – I find myself thinking of the first time I heard about unsolicited dick pics, where more than anything I was baffled who told them to do that.

(I also love that Kramer, unlike Jerry, immediately grasps the meaning of “He took it out”.)

Meanwhile, the stuff with Mickey is incredibly amusing and strikes me as very Larry David; it’s hilarious that he would assume an elaborate system of rules and unspoken codes about little people working in the film industry, probably not incorrectly even if the precise rules probably aren’t about lifts. Like many of Larry David’s social rules, there is a weird logic to it – wearing lifts feels unfair to the other little people, right? Though if I understand industries, when losing one job to growing actors, the powers that be that you’re reliable for will tend to pass you along to another.

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