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Party of One: Unpopular TV Opinions


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7 hours ago, Dimity said:

I found all the characters on Seinfeld and on King of Queens to be annoying.  Hardpressed to say if I even liked one of them!  The thing with the Jerry Stiller characters was he was essentially playing the same person though on both shows.  I half expected George to show up as Carrie's long lost brother.

Yeah, all the characters on Seinfeld were horrible.  On King of Queens, I liked Deacon, and Doug had some good episodes, he just also had some bad ones.

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On 10/5/2024 at 7:30 AM, Haleth said:

To be fair every character on that show was annoying.

That's one of the reasons I hated Seinfeld.

On 10/6/2024 at 12:46 PM, Dimity said:

I found all the characters on Seinfeld and on King of Queens to be annoying.  Hardpressed to say if I even liked one of them! 

Lou Ferrigno was cool on KoQ.

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On 10/6/2024 at 7:47 PM, Katy M said:

Yeah, all the characters on Seinfeld were horrible. 

When it was on NBC airing once a week during the TV season it was easy for me to just laugh at them.  But when I watched  reruns every day I didn't find them as funny.  First I found them annoying then I just outright despised them.   I so identified the actors with their characters I still mostly dislike any character they play.  

 

I could never quite figure out if the audience was supposed to think the Seinfeld characters were horrible or not.  I feel like we were supposed to think yeah they suck but so what.

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I think they first half of the show they were mostly ok people who were flawed, some more than others (George, for example), and while Kramer could be annoying, the writing of many earlier episodes was good enough to cover it up. But definitely in the last few seasons they were all horrible, and the decline in writing meant the show just wasn't as funny as it used to be.

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18 hours ago, bluegirl147 said:

I could never quite figure out if the audience was supposed to think the Seinfeld characters were horrible or not.  I feel like we were supposed to think yeah they suck but so what.

I think the proposed hook of the show is 'no hugging and nobody learns.' I think it was one of the first sitcoms where they didn't necessarily ask that you root for the characters.  Sometimes you're on their side.  Often times you're not. Sometimes things work out for them.  Other times things don't.

And in the end, they went to jail for being awful people.  I think that sums up how the creators wanted you to view them.

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On 10/9/2024 at 2:49 AM, Irlandesa said:

I think the proposed hook of the show is 'no hugging and nobody learns.' I think it was one of the first sitcoms where they didn't necessarily ask that you root for the characters.  Sometimes you're on their side.  Often times you're not. Sometimes things work out for them.  Other times things don't.

And in the end, they went to jail for being awful people.  I think that sums up how the creators wanted you to view them.

Having grown up in the 80s, the era of the family sitcom and the VSE, it was DEFINTELY different than sitcoms before it. 

 

I really don't think they were awful people though.  They wrote just typical people who didn't always do the right thing or what was expected.   We are all like that.  There was no coming around to a happy resolution.   It was truly like no other show before it

 

There was also no will they / won't they make female relationship except briefly with jerry /Elaine.  That was also new with a male and female lead. 

 

If you compare them to say the characters of always sunny though no they weren't awful people.  And no more awful than many of the characters they interacted with.  

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15 hours ago, DrSpaceman73 said:

I really don't think they were awful people though.  They wrote just typical people who didn't always do the right thing or what was expected.   We are all like that.  There was no coming around to a happy resolution.   It was truly like no other show before it

They were awful and only very rarely the least bit like real people.

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(edited)

Diff'rent Strokes did a lot of VSE. I remember one about smoking too. 

I don't think jaded is the correct term, though I take the point. I think it's more taking things in stride and not really buying into or spreading nonsense in general (not necessarily politically speaking) frankly. 

I love the meme of the woman being hysterical and being held back pointing at the cat with the plate of vegetables. The woman is supposed to be boomers and the cat millennials (or gen z, I don't know nor care to look it up so you can guess me), and then underneath is the boozy woman from Will and Grace with a glass of wine, smirking with Gen X as the caption. 

7 minutes ago, bluegirl147 said:

We aren't jaded.  We are just over it all and always have been.  

Or because you learned to let yourself in the house on your own after finding your way home from school and knowing how to fix a snack for yourself and get your homework done before dinner, which you probably got most of the food out for so you could watch tv all night when you were 10. 

There's another meme about being able to work the VCR, card catalog but also smartphones and EVs. Or something like that. 

Edited by DoctorAtomic
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22 minutes ago, Bastet said:

That's what boggled my mind in watching/listening to the special features on the DVD set -- learning how many scripts came out of things that had actually happened to the writers or someone they knew.

The book seinfeldia mentioned that too. Seinfeld and Larry David about midway through the series basically brought in a new group of writers each year, churned through them for a season to use them for all their personal experiences and story ideas and then moved on to a new group the next season. 

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10 hours ago, DrSpaceman73 said:

The book seinfeldia mentioned that too. Seinfeld and Larry David about midway through the series basically brought in a new group of writers each year, churned through them for a season to use them for all their personal experiences and story ideas and then moved on to a new group the next season. 

Hmmm...I don't remember this (churning through new writers each season). I do remember how they were asking the writers (who were also asking/begging 😁 their relatives & friends) for unusual experiences in their lives. That's why the show was more realistic (until the last two seasons when LD was gone & a lot of the storylines became just silly). 

 

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12 minutes ago, annzeepark914 said:

Hmmm...I don't remember this (churning through new writers each season). I do remember how they were asking the writers (who were also asking/begging 😁 their relatives & friends) for unusual experiences in their lives. That's why the show was more realistic (until the last two seasons when LD was gone & a lot of the storylines became just silly). 

 

This is a quote about the book in question and the non seinfeld and Larry David writers

 

And the link to the story. :

https://www.laweekly.com/seinfeldia-shares-lesser-known-stories-from-the-seinfeld-writers-room/

 

 

Screenshot_20241013_094830_Chrome.jpg

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11 hours ago, DrSpaceman73 said:

The book seinfeldia mentioned that too. Seinfeld and Larry David about midway through the series basically brought in a new group of writers each year, churned through them for a season to use them for all their personal experiences and story ideas and then moved on to a new group the next season. 

 

 

1 hour ago, DrSpaceman73 said:

This is a quote about the book in question and the non seinfeld and Larry David writers

 

And the link to the story. :

https://www.laweekly.com/seinfeldia-shares-lesser-known-stories-from-the-seinfeld-writers-room/

 

 

Screenshot_20241013_094830_Chrome.jpg

I'll have to check this out in the book. Maybe the author didn't use words like churning, & dumping writers at the end of each season (I think I'd remember reading something as negative as this...but who knows?!?) It's interesting that the guy who wrote the Junior Mint episode left the business & went to medical school. I bet he had a lot of explainin' to do 😄

 

Seinfeld is my favourite tv show with King of Queens being a close second.  I am Gen X and both jaded and over it all.  I am also probably an asshole, so that tracks.  Not a day or two goes by without my husband or I quoting a line from Seinfeld in some random moment to each other.  To us, life really and truly is just one long Seinfeld episode. 

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(edited)

I hate Jerry and Louis-Dreyfuss as much as Michael. SNL should never have hired L-D. Jerry, and she are like Cleghorne and Hutsell from that worst period of 1990s SNL getting their own show only with one of them gender flipped *shudders*.

 

Jason i can get through only 'cause i grew up with "Duckman".

Edited by tearknee
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(edited)
1 hour ago, tearknee said:

I hate Jerry and Louis-Dreyfuss as much as Michael. SNL should never have hired L-D. Jerry, and she are like Cleghorne and Hutsell from that worst period of 1990s SNL getting their own show only with one of them gender flipped *shudders*.

 

Jason i can get through only 'cause i grew up with "Duckman".

I loved duckman. Great show

2 hours ago, ABay said:

I could never get into Seinfeld because if I wanted to hear asshole NYC people, I can just open a window.

This is the thing about the show.....yes the main 4 has their problems but ever other character they interacted with were pretty much a holes too. 

Edited by DrSpaceman73
Quote

I do remember how they were asking the writers (who were also asking/begging 😁 their relatives & friends) for unusual experiences in their lives.

Makes sense, I mean, lots of us have experienced the Chinese restaurant episode at some point in our lives, as an example.

It also does raise an eyebrow or 2 about other plot points as well ("You made out during Schindler's List???").

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4 hours ago, Palimelon said:

Makes sense, I mean, lots of us have experienced the Chinese restaurant episode at some point in our lives, as an example.

It also does raise an eyebrow or 2 about other plot points as well ("You made out during Schindler's List???").

Or like the clip I posted above. Anyone who has dated enough men for long enough has met that guy. And one of my other favorite Elaine moments is also pretty common experience--the "yada, yada, yada" scene where the lobster bisque was better than the sex.

To your second point, I wonder about the true story behind George having a mid-sex sandwich. (not really looking for any confirmation on this).

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1 hour ago, Ohiopirate02 said:

Or like the clip I posted above. Anyone who has dated enough men for long enough has met that guy. And one of my other favorite Elaine moments is also pretty common experience--the "yada, yada, yada" scene where the lobster bisque was better than the sex.

To your second point, I wonder about the true story behind George having a mid-sex sandwich. (not really looking for any confirmation on this).

I can certainly relate to the entire gang wandering through a parking garage for the whole episode after forgetting where they parked their car.  

Seinfeld was very good at mocking the stupid little things that are part of everyday life.

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