The best part of Neflix's special Seinfeld isn't comedy

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The best part of Neflix's special Seinfeld isn't comedy

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There has always been music in Jerry Seinfeld. You don't need to own all nine seasons Seinfeld on the DVD to see how he makes a joke: first glance, a little annoyed repetition, and then directed by HOME BACK HOME. In his stand-up comics, and in others Seinfeld scenes where he is holding court (usually in the kitchen), something compelling quail, a way his voice almost breaks when he expresses some frustration. It says, “Yes, I'm upset about this, but I'm not indeed angry, pretending to be angry. ”Each syllabus is dangerously close to the falsetto balance plant.

After 30 years of hearing that the Seinfeldian patter as the center of the report on pop culture, calling these myths "cool" means not underestimating them completely. Netflix release 23 hours of execution, Seinfeld's first new material since 1998, almost two full months on coronavirus quarantine is not just a paradox, it's a panacea. Listening that word – that hyperlink for aical to young, relaxed days – as he drags minutes around (I don't like) the introduction of Pop-Tarts is an amygdala, a warm, warm bath of soma.

At the beginning of the one-hour service, Seinfeld did a lot about how painful it was to get to the theater. Who has tickets? How do we get along with our friends? Where is the parking? What do I eat? "Going out," said Seinfeld, is a pain in the neck, and the minute you get anywhere, you know it's about to be "time to go back." The gags still work, despite our current real estate regimen, because honesty to the point of not thinking is what this man was born to do. (Finally, we will feel the weight of the community needing to be strategic again.) But most important for the Jerry Seinfeld event is how the stage wraps up.

After asking why in hell any of us make an effort to get out of the house, he asks “If you were me, would you you been here? ”It's a self-aware laugh line that proves that Jerry understands the way his audience processes his thoughts. He is intellectually rich, shouldn't do anything he doesn't want to do, and, in fact, rarely does.

This is not possible with known colleagues. Seinfeld conspiracy with Larry David she builds for the whole community around "I don't want to be bothered with work and effort," but it's been 10 seasons Cease Your Enthusiasm proves that you actually put in hours. (Any show can happen be visible it's completely automated, requires a lot of work to look back.) Julia Louis-Dreyfus's Seven Seasons Veep Lately enough we might forget him New Adventures of Old Christine. Jason Alexander hasn't had a strong presence in rock lately, but he continues to have a strong career in TV and theater guests. If Michael Richards had never exploded with a Disgusting racist incident in 2006, who knows what to do.

But Jerry Seinfeld? "Seinfeld" itself Seinfeld, a 1990s sitcom event that fundamentally changed comedy, television, and social discourse? You're done (talk to me now in that crack, faux-shouting voice) NOTHING for a while! Oh, of course, he inspired a few Movie Movie memes, too wrote a children's book. But without the appearance of talk show and Saturday Night Live ifos, he hasn't been very visible since Seinfeld only. His biggest contribution to comedy has always been production Cars Comics Getting Coffee, and the whole point of that series is that he did what he was doing already – kibitzing with friends. There just happens to be someone with a camera picture while doing the kibitizing. AND I GET A COMPANY DOESN'T MAKE IT COFAFUL!

Photo: Jeffery Neira / Netflix

It's pretty cool, of course, that Jerry Seinfeld gets down off his ass to write something new. Netflix's special was shown while living at the Beacon Theater in New York City, premiering in 2016- 2007, then becoming a gig for one month in 2019. (Similar to one of Long Island's Jewish sons, Billy Joel, been down the road at Madison Square Garden.) Neither I nor any of my friends saw one of these concerts in Seinfeld, but our parents all went. Seinfeld, 65 at the time of tapping (66 days ago), has a great direct link to his sites, given how he keeps his articles trendy, non-stop, and almost intimidating.

Although surprising, the average episode Seinfeld since 1993 I feel more "modern" than 23 Hours of Murder. The new special is clean enough to keep even the most disappointed people feeling unworthy. With the exception of some thoughts of being evicted from public toilets, there is nothing here that would not be considered PG. Not that there's anything wrong with that – Jerry Seinfeld never relies on cheap jokes – but Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer hijinks back in the day from time to time showing blood pumps to their veins, sexual topics or angry outbursts. There is nothing 23 hours of execution it gets a smidge over 98.6 degrees, suggesting that anything in the old show with fire in it was the background of Larry David.

But Seinfeld still has a humorous beat, and the way he hits standard notes is more than an act of futility. His relentless style of exploring minutiae and social illusion fascinated viewers in the 1980s, and is still difficult. Admittedly, the first half is special, almost counter-intuitive, with “D & # 39; be careful? ”And“ What deeeeal? ”- a kind of schtick. There is a whole George Carlin-esque bit of words shaped about saying that something beautiful is basically the same as saying it sucks. If you blow that gun with a very small needle, it doesn't make sense, but when Seinfeld is up and running with this kind of humor, it all comes together.

The second half is devoted to a collection of amazingly captivating men — from Mars, women — from Venus gags who are in their teens. It's funny watching Seinfeld discuss how his wife complains about climate control on the passenger side of his car, but if this wasn't world-renowned, world-famous Jerry Seinfeld, you would think he was at the Poconos club in 1983. Pure jokes about the family unit are hard to crack, but compare to the back part 23 hours of execution by (and I see something out of line with what I'm going to say here) by Bill Cosby According to him, and no competition.

In the midst of his marriage breakdown, however, he made his view of his wife look to him. The sweetness is a bit more zanier than we expect from Seinfeld; She made a weird face, her voice lowered, her eyes bulged. Art. Also, there's a weirdo gag at the beginning when it actually (as the background photo proves) jumps out of a helicopter into the Hudson River.

That one-on-one business can be everything, if only amazing. But this kind of stage-based, busy comedy is not what people want in the Seinfeld process – the voice of Seinfeld, spiritual comfort. The popularity of his cadence is a great thing about this specialty. Listening to him before reading recalls the billionth anniversary of his late-night sales Seinfeld reruns, those little stand-up snippets would play like bumpers between show and ads. A full hour on stage is a lot for a man working in such a humorous mode, but it feels like what I hear in my head when I think of a joke. Perhaps those 30 changes, and the general validation that comes with them, are Seinfeld's true legacy.

Jerry Seinfeld: 23 hours to kill streaming on Netflix now.

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