Peter Mehlman started his career as a sportswriter for the
Washington Post. He slid from print journalism to television when,
from 1982 to 1984, he wrote for and produced the television series,
"SportsBeat" with Howard Cosell. For the next five years he returned
to writing full sentences and worked as a freelance magazine writer in
New York. His byline appeared in numerous national publications
including the New York Times magazine, GQ, Esquire and every women's magazine imaginable.


In 1989 he needed "a change of scenery," and moved to Los Angeles
where he bumped into Larry David, whom he'd met a few times in New
York. David, was developing "a little show with Jerry Seinfeld", and
invited Mehlman to send over a sample script. Having never written a
script, Mehlman sent a humor piece he had written for the New York
Times Magazine. Jerry Seinfeld loved it and gave Mehlman a writing
assignment, out of which came the series' first freelance episode,
"The Apartment." Mehlman was hired for the first full season of
"Seinfeld as a program consultant (1991-92) and, over the next six
years, worked his way up to co-executive producer.


Mehlman is most famous for his "Yada Yada" episode, and his
episodes also such now classic Seinfeld-isms as "spongeworthy" and
"shrinkage" and "double-dipping."


In 1997, Mehlman joined DreamWorks and created "It's like, you
know...," a scathing look at Los Angeles. In recent years, he has
continued creating TV shows while writing on the upcoming DreamWorks
animated feature "Madagascar." He has also returned to full sentences,
writing humor pieces for Esquire, The New York Times and LA Times.

Blog Entries by Peter Mehlman

Let Us Drive in Peace

Posted September 17, 2009 | 02:53 PM (EST)


First, drinking. Then talking on the phone. Then text messaging. You'd think the government would cut back on its probes into highway accident-causing activities, but ... no dice.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Board is now set to release a study claiming that undergoing reconstructive knee...

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Numerology: A New York Memory

5 Comments | Posted June 23, 2009 | 07:30 AM (EST)


In 1967, football jerseys were a teen fad in New York City High Schools. The world was decades away from maniacal sports marketing so the jerseys were bloodless: no team logo, no team colors, no superstar stranger's name along the upper back. Just white jerseys with striped shoulders and a...

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Cheating

Posted February 12, 2009 | 01:41 PM (EST)


Between elections, bailouts and octuplets, short shrift has been paid to another highly deserving national travesty: A recent survey found that ninety percent of our high schoolers confessed to cheating on exams. This data can only make adults shake their heads and wonder: What kind of kid talks to...

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Apres le Qvelling

Posted December 17, 2008 | 03:17 PM (EST)


As their euphoria over the November election levels off, American Jews -- nearly 90 percent of whom voted Barack Obama -- are slowly coming around to one major question: "How did a black guy get in the White House before a Jew?"

Many leaders of the Jewish...

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In No Particular Order....

Posted November 1, 2008 | 02:10 AM (EST)


A few notes:

Note 1: On Thursday's Larry King episode, Ben Stein took a stab at graciousness but -- damn it -- came up just shy. He started out okay, complimenting the efficiency of the Obama campaign. But sadly, that wee moment of sanity goosed his fight-or-flight adrenals, kayoed...

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A Deadline for David Brooks

Posted October 4, 2008 | 09:36 AM (EST)


In his New York Times column today, David Brooks raved about the performance of Sarah Palin in last night's debate. Curious thing: Mr. Brooks was a talking head on PBS before and after the debate. Assume his head talked in a New York studio since his column had no dateline....

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We Rock

Posted October 2, 2008 | 03:38 PM (EST)


It's impossible to prioritize the disasters of an average American's life right now but one thing we have going for us is self-esteem. Oh, we are flush with us. We've become our own role models. We emulate ourselves. We look up to ourselves. We are so taken by us,...

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Another Convention Diary

Posted September 6, 2008 | 04:03 AM (EST)


MONDAY

TV coverage of that evening's convention coverage begins at 4 AM. Sleep til 7:30, take Izzy to dog park in Pacific Palisades. Wear Ipod to avoid hearing any conversation about convention. Stop at Starbuck's, forget Ipod. Hear woman wonder why Bristol has to have baby and marry Levi....

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Someone Cut In Line

Posted August 28, 2008 | 04:52 PM (EST)


The Democratic Convention has been thrilling and inspiring. Michelle, Caroline, Hillary, Teddy, Bill, Kerry, Joe... all sublime. And yet, it's been so galling to be constantly reminded that Nancy Pelosi is higher in the line of succession for the presidency than I am.

No, no, no, I'm not kidding...

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Wide World of Congress

Posted February 27, 2008 | 01:24 AM (EST)


Almost two weeks passed with no federal probes into sports. What, we asked, was Congress up to? After all, it was that sharp left turn into sports that made the hill a hotspot again:

ESPN cameras elbowing C-SPAN as congressional aides learned the split-finger fastball; Henry Waxman...

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Gone Daddy, Gone

Posted December 18, 2007 | 11:59 PM (EST)


At this very moment, Iowa's full of candidates talking about overhauling the health care mess while I want to haul off on an entire hospital. I don't know about you, but that's seriously ironic in my head. But then, according to the literature, after the death of a parent, it's...

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Just Give Me Some Truth

Posted October 10, 2007 | 04:34 PM (EST)


In the '60s, the media pushed the country against the Vietnam War. The Tet Offensive bled onto living room TV sets, Walter Cronkite came out against the war, citizens were outraged and convinced.

The same with Watergate: Central and somewhat trusted media outlets pushed and probed and...

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Dodging Potholes Along Memory Lane

Posted September 4, 2007 | 03:21 PM (EST)


On trips back to New York, I visit a street sign outside my old apartment on East 63rd Street near First Avenue. "Unnecessary Noise Prohibited." It's my sign, my permanent (whatever that means) contribution (whatever that means) to the city.

Ex-New Yorkers invest lots of emotion in inanimate objects, so...

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Questions on a Scandal

Posted July 18, 2007 | 02:13 PM (EST)


Editor's note: This post is a satire.

Roughly a third of the $660 million dollar sexual abuse settlement being paid out the L.A. Archdiocese is being picked up by insurance. Not being that up on this segment of the economy, the whole concept of being insured for a civil action...

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At Least They Didn't Mean Well....

Posted June 20, 2007 | 08:25 PM (EST)


Boy, America has had a lot of shitty presidents. Just take a stroll down repressed memory land and look at that police line-up from November 22, 1963 through January 1992. Ford may come out looking the best of the bunch and he was widely acknowledged to be unable to...

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Cold Case -- OJ Simpson

Posted November 20, 2006 | 03:11 PM (EST)


November comes toward the end of the year in Brentwood and yet another fog of the OJ Simpson case loomed over the affluent town like a Portobelo mushroom cloud. Trying to keep focused, Litton Wynn, Jr., LA P.D. Cold Case Detective/ Music Consultant, puzzled over a six-year old littering case....

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An Inconvenient Emmis

Posted October 12, 2006 | 03:07 PM (EST)


When Senator George Allen (R-Va) recently learned that his mother was Jewish, he calmed his supporters by claiming "I still had a ham sandwich for lunch."

It remains to be seen whether Mr. Allen retains his seat but "The Ham Sandwich Gambit" is the latest method public...

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Dinner

Posted August 1, 2006 | 03:22 AM (EST)


Jesus Christ was saddened but not shocked upon hearing the news that his producing partner, Mel Gibson, was arrested on a DUI the night before. After all, the two just finished dining together moments before the incident.

In the ebb and flow of Hollywood collaborations, things usually...

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Jingo

Posted July 4, 2006 | 01:39 AM (EST)


A friend with an office near Ground Zero called. He knows nothing about construction but he sees a lot of people who look like construction workers milling around. That's the thing about New York; everyday you pass big people in hard hats doing nothing but eating lunch on vacant...

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Second Chair

Posted June 23, 2006 | 01:48 AM (EST)


"Third Lawyer in Hussein Trial Is Killed" -- New York Times, June 21, 2006

Leland Shiraz, attorney-at-law, allowed himself a moment of pompous, self-congratulation. His path to the top of his profession -- a B.A. from Sunni Binghamton and a 58th percentile graduation from of Basra School of Law and...

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