Jerry Seinfeld Compares #FreePalestine Movement to the KKK

The God Poster

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Seeing as Israel is comprised of many different beliefs. Tying any criticism to them meaning you hate Jewish people is disgusting, We see when & why the agenda happened in real time. They could no longer get their way in the public perception due to social media
 

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You are wrong. Did you know some of the classic episodes were conversations where the writers were telling stories from their lives and not intending as a pitch, but LD saw the story and told the writers to write the idea.

I guarantee you none of the writers would say anything close to what you are saying. The tone of that show as all Larry.​

Stories were overheard, found funny and then written into the show and character lore. I never said that they came in and pitched episodes to Larry like Kramer writing for Peterman, in the hopes that they'd get picked up and receive writer credits.
Him telling them to "write" the stories is basically part of the curation process in which he cultivated a culture in which the writers started to put personal instances of situations they witnessed or were apart of, rather than create straight up fictional ones.​
 

mbewane

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Ah yes, wanting the freedom of an oppressed people is exactly like lynching hanging and castrating ANOTHER oppressed people.

NaZionists really are the worst people around.
 

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Stories were overheard, found funny and then written into the show and character lore. I never said that they came in and pitched episodes to Larry like Kramer writing for Peterman, in the hopes that they'd get picked up and receive writer credits.
Him telling them to "write" the stories is basically part of the curation process in which he cultivated a culture in which the writers started to put personal instances of situations they witnessed or were apart of, rather than create straight up fictional ones.​

I got better things to do than argue with you about the contributions of Larry David to Seinfeld. Good day to you.

And oh yeah, fukk Jerry Seinfeld while I’m at it.
 

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Seinfeld was Larry's baby. A lot of the stuff that happened on the show was based off his actual experiences. George was literally Larry in a different skin, and the show was written primarily by him and Jerry for the first seven seasons. It was one of the few sitcoms written like that. It wasn't until Larry left that the show was written by the entire staff.​

Larry directed and was part of the writing process, often being the executor of ideas and notions that passed or failed, but to say written primarily by him sort of devalues the stories/experiences and input from the staff which were often the basis of entire episodes, not just added snippets on an already given idea or episode written directly by either Larry or Jerry.
There's a give and take. Like for instance, The Big Salad premise was indirectly inspired by David's constant grumbling about who should take ownership of a compliment given towards a parcel of food, and while Larry didn't write or include that, he was the inspiration for it solely and it was written for George. Festivus, which has nothing to do with Larry, but the premise was absurd enough that it would fit with George's character, of which Larry approved.​
 

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I got better things to do than argue with you about the contributions of Larry David to Seinfeld. Good day to you.

And oh yeah, fukk Jerry Seinfeld while I’m at it.​

I wasn't arguing, but you do. Blessed Friday.
 
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peice of shyt.
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Mike the Executioner

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Larry directed and was part of the writing process, often being the executor of ideas and notions that passed or failed, but to say written primarily by him sort of devalues the stories/experiences and input from the staff which were often the basis of entire episodes, not just added snippets on an already given idea or episode written directly by either Larry or Jerry.
There's a give and take. Like for instance, The Big Salad premise was indirectly inspired by David's constant grumbling about who should take ownership of a compliment given towards a parcel of food, and while Larry didn't write or include that, he was the inspiration for it solely and it was written for George. Festivus, which has nothing to do with Larry, but the premise was absurd enough that it would fit with George's character, of which Larry approved.

Larry did write "The Big Salad," and the idea came from him buying the show's editor a salad that she asked him to get. She ended up thanking Jerry's assistant Carol because Carol was the one that gave it to her. And Larry had already left the show when the Festivus episode came out. By then, the writing style had changed and it was more like other sitcoms.
 
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