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Seinfeld, Season Seven, Episode Seventeen, “The Friar’s Club”

George tries to fix up Jerry with Susan’s best friend so they can continue to hang out all the time after they get married, only for Jerry to look a fool in front of her by losing the member’s jacket from a club he’s trying to join at a stage show. Elaine starts working with a man with a hearing aid and she suspects he’s faking his disability to get out of work. Kramer tries going on da Vinci’s sleep schedule and it interferes with his love life.

Written by: David Mandel
Directed by: Andy Ackerman

This is another one of those episodes that does a lot of little Seinfeld things really well. The central idea of Elaine’s plot is quintessential Seinfeld; for starters it was based on an actual observation writer David Mandel took from his life, of a kid who had a hearing aid and used it to get out of work he didn’t want to do. This is the sort of thing that separates Seinfeld from many of its imitators and even comedy writers who are just trying to be funny; there is a cliche of the guy who makes up someone and then gets mad at them (usually, a political opponent), but Seinfeld brings a sense of reality in simply by bringing actual reality in. The imagination comes into how the characters respond to it; Jerry immediately testing Bob’s hearing at the first opportunity is an incredible moment, because of course his curiosity would be sparked and of course he’d give it a shot. Seinfeld is the perfect mixture of plausible and absurd; realistic behaviour, realistic response, and the whole thing is still so stupid.

There’s also the complete lack of actual explanation that also feels true to reality. Bob’s one real behaviour is that he’s horny, and we never quite figure out what his deal is; the same goes for Connie, Kramer’s girl o’ the week, who is clearly going through something strange and spectacular, but we’re never quite given an explanation beyond a few words (it’s a very Cowboy Bebop moment, and yes, it’s weird to me to put those two shows in the same bed). It feels like the show doing the minimum amount of work to get to ‘making people laugh’, which I deeply respect.

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