

His character is genuinely funny and was the only thing that got me through the episode a second time. Hired to defend the four friends in court, Jackie was probably the only thing I really enjoyed about the whole episode.

Jackie Chiles basically carried the entire episode.Īmong the many side characters brought back in this episode was Jackie Chiles (Phil Morris), Kramer’s dedicated, determined and blunt lawyer. Branching off of that, why didn’t the cop intervene? He was within walking distance of the crime, so why wasn’t he arrested? There was no reasoning in this episode. On another note, why were they so focused on prosecuting the four friends instead of actually going after the person who robbed the “fat” man? I think that would’ve brought more justice to everyone knowing a thief is off their streets instead of four people who would be considered jerks. Why was he so dedicated to proving they were horrible people? Was he doing it to stand up for the little guy, or was he just bored? I know the whole point of the finale was to show that the four are horrible people, but why did the prosecutor have so much beef with them? I’m pretty sure he didn’t know any of them before the trial. Why did the prosecutor have so much beef with them? Why did I watch all nine seasons of the show for it to do a complete 180 on me? Why didn’t it just do that from the start? What was the point of it all? I feel as if I’ve wasted so much time.

I guess the creators of “Seinfeld” wanted to go out with a bang because what the heck was that? Seriously! You get to know these characters and get attached to them for nine seasons, and then the show throws everything you love about them down the drain.ĭon’t get me wrong, the main four characters in the show are selfish, I won’t deny that. It got to the point where all I would do is roll my eyes and want to scream. His character was a ray of sunshine for a total of five minutes of the entire episode. It’s a downward spiral from thereon after. Apparently, he couldn’t eat his burger without any ketchup. It begins with the ketchup incident at the beginning of the episode when George complains the waitress could check up on them. I knew this going into the finale, but it was just inherently worse in the finale. If you’re a regular viewer of “Seinfeld,” you know George complains a lot. George never stopped complaining the entire time.
SEINFELD FINALE TRIAL
Their neglect to help the man leads the four of them to arrest under Latham’s new law, “The Good Samaritan Law.” Following their arrest, a trial is held and every side character the show has ever introduced attends to testify against the four for not caring about anyone but themselves. Instead of calling for help, they watch and mock the man for his weight. While waiting for their plane to be repaired, the four witness the robbery of a “fat” man. However, their trip takes an unexpected turn when they make an emergency landing in Latham, Massachusetts. The four friends decide to take a trip to Paris as their final fling before Jerry and George move. Ecstatic that the show finally picked up, he and George make a 13 episode commitment with NBC and agree to move to California. In the final episode, Jerry gets a call saying the new head of NBC wants to air his show “Jerry,” an idea they scrapped five years ago.
SEINFELD FINALE SERIES
Eager to see how a series about nothing would end, the finale of “Seinfeld” was not the satisfying conclusion I had expected at all. I first began watching the series at the beginning of Fall 2021, and I just finished all nine seasons the week before Spring Break. The show follows four main characters, Jerry Seinfeld, George Costanza (Jason Alexander), Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards), as they navigate their day-to-day lives in New York City. There are some recurring characters and jokes, but the show does pretty much whatever it wants. The show stopped airing well over twenty years ago, but how did it end?įor those of you who are not familiar with “Seinfeld,” the show has little to no solid plotline. I’m sure everyone is familiar with the ‘90s sitcom “Seinfeld,” the famous show about nothing.
