Site icon The Avocado

Seinfeld, Season Eight, Episode One, “The Foundation”

George is initially ecstatic to be a free bachelor after the mourning period, only for Susan’s parents to give him a spot on the board of directors of a foundation dedicated to her memory. J Peterman flees the country, leaving Elaine in charge of the company. Jerry discovers that having been engaged makes him more attractive. Kramer is learning karate alongside children.

Written by: Alec Berg & Jeff Schaffer
Directed by: Andy Ackerman

Beloved commentor Raven Wilder remarked recently that George was driven in an episode by trying to avoid responsibility, and I think you can see that all over this episode, to the point of it being all over the show. You could almost see it as the basic theme of Seinfeld – how do I avoid as much responsibility as possible? Part of the big joke with George this episode is thinking that he was entirely free, only to be sucked into the work of running a foundation (or at least being on the board of directors – isn’t that one of those once-a-month jobs?). When you think about it, Jerry and George are actually already living their ideal lifestyle – having coffee, going on dates, going to the movies and baseball games, etc – except Jerry is pretty close to self-aware and George, uh, isn’t.

It even works with Elaine’s story here; she’s put in charge on Peterman’s catalogue, enjoys the feeling of power for a few days, and then collapses when faced with actual responsibility. Cartoonist Tim Krieder remarked one of the pitfalls of being an autodidact is that you don’t have someone to tell you that ‘you’re headed down a blind alley, straying far from your area of competence, or just talking out of your ass’; Elaine, whilst having about as much self-awareness as George, is generally smart enough to realise she doesn’t want to be the one to clean up after other people. There’s a certain freedom in not being the guy up the top, and that freedom is ‘being able to say or do whatever stupid idea comes into your head without dealing with the consequences’.

TOPICS O’ THE WEEK

Biggest Laugh:

Next Week: “The Soul Mate”

Exit mobile version