Believe it or not, and you should believe it because no one starts a sentence that way and then follows it up with a lie, this week marks the 15-year anniversary of the Seinfeld finale.
TV is full of legendary partnerships; from Mulder and Scully to Laverne and Shirley, so many of our favorite shows are synonymous with the on-screen c...
We love to look at good-looking people. Hardly an earth-shattering conclusion, I know. But it's a well-documented one: Attractive people grab our attention.
Far from a "show about nothing," Seinfeld was actually an analysis of the ins and outs of daily human interaction-of the mundane social experiences previously not deemed worthy of exploration in front of a mass audience.
Satisfaction doesn't come from autopilot; it comes from taking on things that make us stretch -- like doing the opposite of what we're supposed to, thanks to that singular sage, George Costanza.
Jerry Stiller took a journey to his "Seinfeld" roots when he recently visited the Queens' home used for the exterior shots of the Costanza house.
"It...
I was just seven years old when, in January 1973, George Steinbrenner led a group that purchased the Yankees; but, as it happens, it was the beginning of an epochal tenure in the history of sports ownership.
It's amazing what some editing and music from "Shawshank" can do. In this reimagining of "Seinfeld," George's brick-of-cheese eating bachelor paradise...
QUESTION
Dear Irene,
First of all, thank you for your blog and columns; I've gained much insight from you. I am a 42-year-old mother of two boys and...
Technology has made it easier to be idiots because it discourages thinking and deliberation, and promotes acting on our most base impulses, emotions, and needs, for example, anger, sadness, lust, or need for approval.
MIAMI --- George, er, Jason isn't joking around -- Jason Alexander, that is, the funny man who will forever be mostly known as George Costanza. Not th...