It invokes the Zucker Brothers and Jim Abrahams’ joke-a-minute pacing from Airplane! to and applies them to the stoic achievements of The Right Stuff.
Jerry Seinfeld brings you the origin of everyone's favorite breakfast treat with Netflix's Unfrosted: The Pop-Tart Story.
The previous trailer for Jerry Seinfeld’s new hour-long Netflix special, Jerry Seinfeld: 23 Hours to Kill, came with a weird framing device that saw the sitcom star befriending a would-be supervillain for some reason. Sure, there were a few jokes in there, but just what kind of balance the on-stage performance and the scripted off-stage antics strike remains to be seen. The new trailer, released just today, is squarely focused on the jokes, and it's clear that Seinfeld hasn't strayed from his brand of comedy at all except to remind us that he'…
Netflix has released the first trailer for Jerry Seinfeld’s upcoming comedy special, 23 Hours to Kill, which marks his first new comedy special since 1998. Indeed, the Seinfeld star has spent his time basically doing whatever the hell he wants, given that Seinfeld made him rich beyond belief. He made an animated movie and then returned to regular content with the 2012 launch of his web talk show Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (which is excellent, by the way), and while he’s continued to tour over the years, he hasn’t released a recorded comedy special in two …
What's the deal with Netflix? Every time I look up, the streaming service is announcing a new special from a name-brand comic. February saw the premiere of Pete Davidson's Alive from New York, March brought End Times Fun from Marc Maron, while Comedy Store bad boy Chris D'Elia's No Pain will debut on the streaming service next week. But just wait 'til you get a load of May's headliners! The master himself, Jerry Seinfeld, has filmed a brand new hour-long comedy special titled 23 Hours to Kill that will hit the streaming service …
Jerry Seinfeld jokes about rebooting Seinfeld just to continue The Boyfriend episode, with Mets player Pete Alonso replacing Keith Hernandez.
When Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David initially conceived their show Seinfeld, they wanted to make a sitcom that showed how a standup comedian wrote his material based on events in his personal life. It was a simple premise that set up nine years of analyzing the minutiae of daily life.