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CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM: About & Episode Guides

CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM: About & Episode Guides

Deep inside you know you're him.

Curb Your Enthusiasm is a comedy currently airing on HBO about Larry David's life. Every minute detail counts and is crucial to the plot line for that episode. Oh and by the way, the whole show is improvised.


the plot:
Curb Your Enthusiasm featuresverité-style footage of David (playing himself) at home, at work and around town, as he gets into predicaments with fictional and real-life personalities. With cast regulars Jeff Garlin (as manager Jeff Greene) and Cheryl Hines (as wife Cheryl), the series features appearances by guest celebrities playing themselves or character roles. Candid, unsparing and self-deprecating, Curb Your Enthusiasm brings the off-kilter comic vision of Larry David--co-creator and co-executive producer of one of the most lauded comedy series in TV history, Seinfeld--to HBO. The series blurs the lines between reality and fiction, as David and a cast of real and fictional characters are followed around Los Angeles by a ubiquitous camera that chronicles the private, often banal world of a (relatively) public man. Having evolved from the 1999 HBO special Larry David: Curb Your Enthusiasm, this series proves how seemingly trivial details of one's day-to-day life--a trip to the movies, a phone call, a visit from some trick-or-treaters--can precipitate a "Murphy's Law" chain of misfortune to hilarious effect. Like George Costanza in Seinfeld, the protagonist of Curb Your Enthusiasm has a knack for getting himself into uncomfortable situations that end up alienating him from peers and acquaintances. To keep the narrative fresh and spontaneous, Curb Your Enthusiasm is shot without a script; the cast is given scene outlines and often improvise lines as they go. The result is an unpredictable format that's unlike anything else on TV.

the main cast:
Larry David
Himself
Cheryl Hines
Cheryl David
Jeff Garlin
Jeff Greene
Susie Essman
Susie Greene
Richard Lewis
Himself

why should I even bother thinking about this show?
Curb Your Enthusiasm has been nominated for and won awards many times. In fact, up to 2008, Curb Your Enthusiasm has had 26 Emmy nominations. Some of the awards won include a Golden Globe for Best Television Series - Musical or Comedy in 2003. If nothing so far has gotten you hooked, just face the fact that the star is one of the Seinfeld creators! The unique and hilarious improvisation technique is also a big plus for this show.


Photo Source Adapted From: tv.com
Info Sources: tv.com
, IMDb and wikipedia

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contributed by: redsoxpatriot30 [ Last edited by waterlilybarb at 12-3-2010 19:20 ]

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Season 1



Episode 1. The Pants Tent
Larry notices a lift in the middle of his jeans, that everyone believes it an erection, though it's not.

Episode 2. Ted and Mary
Larry and Cheryl's fun-filled double date with Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen ends badly at the bowling alley, when Larry discovers that someone has taken off with his shoes. The next day Mary calls, and a smitten Larry agrees to go shopping with the actress and her mom at Barney's, and even buys the same jacket that Mary is wearing. Neither Ted nor Cheryl seem amused. Believing that Ted and Mary have invited them to see a Paul Simon concert Saturday night, Larry and Cheryl are chagrined when their new friends never call, ruining their night. Larry thinks it's because he gagged after drinking Mary's mother's water by mistake. Meanwhile, Larry retrieves his shoes from the schmuck who pinched them, but gets into a fight with the shoe salesman who ordered him a new pair.

Episode 3. Porno Gil
By not picking up a golf ball that drops out of a bucket carried by a man in a tacky western hat, Larry sets off a bizarre chain of events in which he's forced to attend a party at the home of a porno businessman named Gil (Odenkirk), getting lost with Cheryl along the way. The party ends up being a disaster, as Larry refuses to take off his shoes, breaks a lamp, loses his watch, is forced to do a dreaded "double goodbye." Meanwhile, Jeff is hospitalized for emergency bypass surgery and asks Larry to remove the secret porno stash at his home so his wife doesn't find it. While carrying out the favor, Larry discovers a familiar face on one of the video boxes.

Episode 4. The Bracelet
Cheryl and Larry get into a fight after she returns from a trip and he's too distracted by a game on TV to greet her properly. To make peace, Larry decides to buy her a bracelet at a jewelry store, but isn't allowed in because of his shabby clothes. After bribing a guy to use his cell phone, Larry calls pal Richard Lewis, who arrives to help--except that the store is now closed for lunch. The pair end up helping a blind man move into his apartment, the jewelry store closes for the night, and Richard ends up coveting the same bracelet that Larry wants to buy.

Episode 5. Interior Decorator
By politely holding the elevator door for a woman in an office building, Larry ends up losing his place before her at the doctor's office, and is delayed 40 minutes. As a result, Larry ends up missing an important meeting with Diane Keaton. At home, Larry and Cheryl are visited by their interior decorator, who has Keaton's phone number but won't give it to Larry even though the actress called and left her number, which Larry couldn't decipher because of static. Thanks to Jeff, however, Larry is able to go to Keaton's house, where he runs into his decorator, gets into a fight, and breaks Diane's lamp -- the same type that was in Porno Gil's pad.

Episode 6. The Wire
Hoping to bury an unsightly telephone wire dangling over their yard, Larry and Cheryl befriend a pair of bizarre neighbors who must approve the burial. The husband is an incompetent lawyer but a big Seinfeld fan, so to appease him Larry arranges to have Julia Louis-Dreyfuss come for a visit. But when the actress arrives, the lawyer is missing; he's been hired to defend Jeff in a case involving a destructive kid Jeff sponsored for a Fresh Air Fund camp. At Larry's house, Julia ends up buying a bracelet from the lawyer's wife -- the same kind Larry wanted in episode 4 -- only to later accuse Larry of stealing it after he buys a similar one for Cheryl.

Episode 7. AAMCO
During a test-drive of Jeff's new "toy", a vintage '57 Chevy convertible, Larry mistakes the horn in an Aamco radio spot for that of an actual car idling behind him at a red light -- and ends up getting the car rammed. Later, hosting a dinner party catered by an unscrupulous woman who ends up stealing the leftovers, Larry meets Mike Duffy, an actual Aamco repairman, who agrees to fix Jeff's car. But Larry's good fortune is short-lived as he ends up alienating Mike by refusing to invite him to his house on Martha's Vineyard.

Episode 8. Beloved Aunt
At the funeral for Cheryl's aunt, Larry offers to use his connections (Jeff) to place an obituary in the newspaper. But when the paper comes out, the "a" in "aunt" has been inadvertently replaced with a "c", and Cheryl's family is convinced that Larry did it on purpose. Further incensed that Larry counseled Cheryl's sister's boyfriend to break off their relationship during the funeral, Cheryl throws Larry out of the house. Larry ends up staying for part of the night at Jeff's, but is thrown out after Jeff's mother accuses him of trying to cop a feel. He ends up begging for a room at the hotel where his sister-in-law's now-ex-boyfriend is staying, but ends up getting thrown out of the hotel as well. It's a good thing his car has reclining seats.

Episode 9. Affirmative Action
On his way to the drug store to fill a prescription for his wife's itchy skin condition, Larry meets with Richard Lewis, who insists that he and Cheryl come by for coffee after dinner so Larry can make up with Richard's girlfriend. The two then run into a black dermatologist friend of Richard's, whom Larry promptly offends with a tasteless affirmative-action joke. Shocked, Larry forgets to go to the drug store. Later, he loses Cheryl's prescription by giving it to a restaurant maitre 'd instead of a twenty-dollar bill. Now he's forced to try to get a new one from the dermatologist he insulted earlier.

Episode 10. The Group
Jeff knows the director of The Vagina Monologues, and suggests that Cheryl (a former actress) should replace an actress who's quitting the cast. Leaving his office, a grateful Cheryl and Larry run into one of Larry's old flames: Lucy Montone, a buxom actress who inspires Cheryl's jealousy.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 2



Episode 1. The Car Salesman
Living out of a hotel (they were fed up with "the wire" at their old home), Larry and Cheryl make a successful bid on a seaside chateau owned by Jason Alexander's new agent, Jay Schneider. Moving in, however, they learn their new dream home has a disturbing "house sound" of unknown origin. Meanwhile, Larry shocks his wife and friends by deciding to take a job as a car salesman, but is foiled by when "high maintenance" friend Richard Lewis shows up at the dealership. And in (yet) another case of art imitating life, Larry and Jason Alexander contemplate making a new TV series about an actor who can't find work because he's typecast as a "jackass" character from a hit series.  

Episode 2. Thor
Jeff leaves his wife Susie, and his concerns about his dirty laundry being aired in court filter down to Larry, who becomes obsessed with showing Cheryl how un-kinky he is. Instead, after one of their neighbors takes his casual greeting the wrong way, Cheryl mistakenly concludes that Larry has an ass fetish. Meanwhile, Larry seeks revenge on pro wrestler Thor Olson, who he's convinced slashed his tire following an argument on the road, and recruits Jeff to redress the wrong in return for Larry's delivering Jeff's clothes to the hotel. Larry decides to meet with Jason Alexander about their new show, but the two end up getting into an argument about where to hold their meetings.

Episode 3. Trick or Treat
Larry and Cheryl attend the premiere of a movie written by his handicapped friend Cliff Cobb, during which Larry manages to offend a Jewish neighbor, alienate Cliff (as well as the memory of his salad-inventing grandfather), and send out misguided romantic overtures to Cliff's wife Shelly. Later, the Davids experience the "trick" side of Halloween when Larry refuses to give candy to two uncostumed teenagers. Having failed to secure a bracelet for his wife on her birthday, Larry makes amends with the perfect gift on a romantic morning -- until Jeff arrives to pick him up for a round of golf.

Episode 4. The Shrimp Incident
Larry suspects that HBO exec Allan Wasserman has lifted some shrimp out of his Chinese food following a take-out mix-up. Later, when he and Julia Louis-Dreyfus are pitching their new show to HBO, Larry just can't leave the subject of the shrimp alone. The situation isn't helped when Larry's labeled a misogynist after uttering the "c" word at a poker game. As if that's not enough, Wasserman learns from certain "eyewitnesses" that Larry beats his wife.

Episode 5. The Thong
Larry decides he can't continue seeing his shrink after seeing him wearing a thong bathing suit on the beach. Fellow patient Richard Lewis agrees, and the two plot ways to end their doctor/patient relationship. Meanwhile, Rob Reiner convinces Larry to participate in a celebrity auction to benefit Groat's Syndrome, but Larry ends up turning off the winning "lunch with Larry" bidder.

Episode 6. The Acupuncturist
An acupuncturist agrees to waive his $5,000 fee if he can't cure Larry's back. Coincidentally, a down-on-his-luck writer asks Larry for a $5,000 loan, claiming he'll soon pay the loan off since his wealthy father is close to death. Later, at a not-so-surprise birthday party for the writer's wife, Larry manages to convince the father to cut his son out of his will, but the old man dies before the change is made. That doesn't mean Larry will get his $5,000 back, although he is forced to pay off his acupuncturist, even though his back isn't cured.

Episode 7. The Doll
Having successfully pitched his Julia Louis-Dreyfus project to ABC, Larry agrees to attend a pair of mini-series screenings at the network starting that night. The young daughter of ABC prexy Lane Michaelson is there, and promptly gets Larry to cut the hair off her beloved rare doll, throwing a fit when she learns that the hair won't grow back. To save face, Jeff and Larry steal the head off Jeff's daughter's doll, incurring the wrath of Jeff's estranged wife Susie. As the ordeal plays out, Larry must also contend with an unlockable bathroom and the call of nature.

Episode 8. Shaq
Larry is villainized for accidentally tripping Shaquille O'Neal at a Lakers game, but the incident ironically ends up bringing him good luck.

Episode 9. The Baptism
Larry can't believe that the Jewish man who is marrying Cheryl's sister is converting to Christianity. Richard Lewis accuses Larry of stealing the outgoing message of his answering machine, and Larry accuses several passengers of stealing his airline tickets.

Episode 10. The Massage
Cheryl's psychic busts Larry for a naughty massage, and a restaurant owner busts Larry for stealing forks.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 3



Episode 1. Chet's Shirt
Larry and Jeff invest in a restaurant with Ted Danson. In lieu of attending his dentist's dinner party, Larry decides to shop for waiters' uniforms, and in the process buys spiffy matching shirts for Ted and himself. But after Danson realizes his shirt has a small rip in it, he demotes Larry in The Wizard of Oz scene they're re-enacting for his daughter's birthday party (Larry refuses to switch from the Lion to the Tin Man). At the party, little Jill Danson misses the piñata and hits Larry in the mouth with her bat. Following an emergency visit to his dentist (who learned why Larry had skipped the dinner party), Larry is left with two abnormally large front teeth and one clean shirt that both he and Ted covet.

Episode 2. The Benadryl Brownie
About five years after the rest of the world, Larry enters the world of cell phones. Using his new toy, he calls Cheryl and asks her to tell Randy, the chef at his new restaurant, to omit peanuts from the dinner that night because Richard Lewis' new girlfriend, Deborah, is allergic to them. But bad phone reception prevents Cheryl from hearing the message, and Deborah gets sick. A practicing Christian Scientist, she refuses to take medicine to clear up the hives on her face. Richard will not be seen with her at the Emmys that night looking like this, so he and Larry concoct a plan to bake a batch of Benadryl brownies for her to eat. The ruse fails, and that night on TV, the Davids (along with millions of others) see Joan Rivers lambasting Richard and his none-too-attractive date on the red carpet.

Episode 3. Club Soda and Salt
Dismayed in part over the peanut incident, Randy quits the restaurant and Larry, Jeff and Ted must hustle to find a new chef. Ted suggests they audition his personal chef at home, but at dinner, Larry feels the food just wasn't that good and rejects the candidate. Meanwhile, Larry accuses Cheryl of having a crush on a tennis-playing cast member of Tony & Tina's Wedding; a couple rejects Larry's wedding gift because it's more than a year late; and a saleswoman becomes convinced that Larry is stalking her as payback for her being too aggressive in a store.

Episode 4. The Nanny from Hell
Larry, Cheryl, Jeff and Susie encounter a "nanny from hell" whose reign of terror is thwarted by twelve sponge cakes. Larry commits a "penis faux pas" after a pool party, and Richard Lewis seeks immortality from Bartlett's Quotations.

Episode 5. The Terrorist Attack
A rumored threat of a terrorist attack undermines a benefit performance by Alanis Morissette. Meanwhile, Larry can't help snubbing Paul Reiser's wife Mindy during a series of encounters at a restaurant and the perfume shop where she works.

Episode 6. The Special Section
Larry's mother dies while he's shooting a film in NYC, but he doesn't find out until he returns to LA two days after the funeral. Getting over the initial shock, Larry uses his loss as an excuse to get out a number of unsavory invitations. Meanwhile, Richard Lewis accuses Larry of Indian-giving his meditation mantra and Larry plots to relocate his mother's body at the cemetery.

Episode 7. The Corpse-Sniffing Dog
Over a makeup dinner with the Braudys, Larry openly ponders the question, "When a husband pays the check, do you have to also thank the wife?" with predictable results. Jeff's return home is being ruined by his allergies to the family's corpse-sniffing German Shepherd; but his daughter Sammy won't give him up. Concerned about his agent's welfare, Larry figures out an ingenious way to give the pooch to the Braudys, who are looking for just such a dog.

Episode 8. Krazee-Eyez Killa
Larry is accused of betraying the confidences of Wanda's boyfriend, a rapper he met at a party. Later, Larry alienates Jeff's wife Susie by passing on her house-tour offer, then runs into problems trying to replace a sports jacket Cheryl threw out.  

Episode 9. Mary, Joseph and Larry
Larry proves himself an incompetent Christmas tipper, while both Larry and Jeff prove themselves incompetent at creating believable alibis for the messes they get in. After offending his housekeeper, Larry makes up with her at the expense of his wife. Later, Larry attempts to make up with Cheryl's family for ruining their nativity scene.

Episode 10. The Grand Opening
Larry figures out a way to fire a chef, and alienate an important restaurant critic, in the days before his new restaurant is scheduled to open. As Susie stews over a misunderstanding with Larry and Cheryl, the Davids spend some quality time at the car wash. With its grand opening at hand, the restaurant owners hire a new chef with a penchant for speaking his mind.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 4



Episode 1. Mel's Offer
With their tenth wedding anniversary approaching, Larry reminds Cheryl of a "present" she promised him back when they got engaged. Later that night, a karaoke performance ends up landing Larry an unlikely plum role.

Episode 2. Ben's Birthday Party
Larry reconnects with Michael, his blind tormenter, to bad results. Meanwhile, Richard Lewis asks Larry for an unusual favor, and Larry's poor party etiquette embarrasses Cheryl.

Episode 3. The Blind Date
Larry mends fences with Michael by setting him up on a blind date. Jeff admits to a sexual fantasy that peeves Larry; Ben Stiller delivers an ultimatum; and Larry levies a steep accusation against a group of mentally challenged workers.

Episode 4. The Weatherman
Larry inadvertently traumatizes the Greenes' daughter at their dinner party. Later, Larry accuses a local weatherman of misrepresenting the forecast for personal gain..

Episode 5. The 5 Wood
A bag of raisins & cashews threatens Larry's working relationship with David Schwimmer, while a dirty locker threatens his golf-club membership.  

Episode 6. The Car Pool Lane
Larry finds an innovative way to use the HOV lane to get to a Dodgers game, and pays a price for getting his dad some medicinal marijuana.

Episode 7. The Surrogate
Larry's decision to buy a surrogate mother a baby-shower gift backfires, as do his efforts to pass a routine physical.

Episode 8. Wandering Bear
A surreptitious video purchase endangers Larry's relationship with his assistant, Antoinette, and nearly costs Jeff and Susie their best friend. Meanwhile, Cheryl gets medical treatment from an unorthodox source.

Episode 9. Mary, The Survivor
Larry contemplates a tempting offer from his Hasidic dry cleaner.

Episode 10. Opening Night
In the season finale, Larry opens in "The Producers" on Broadway.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 5



Episode 1. The Larry David Sandwich
In the Season premiere, Larry is changed by a near-death experience, a revelation about his father, and a sandwich named after him.

Episode 2. The Bowtie
Larry hires a private investigator to uncover a personal secret, adopts a "racist" dog, and falls off his pedestal as a lesbian advocate, temporarily.

Episode 3. The Christ Nail
Larry buys his housekeeper a bra, and is saved from the wrath of her vengeful husband by orthodics and a special nail.

Episode 4. Kamikaze Bingo
Larry dishonors an art dealer at a Japanese restaurant, and accuses a nursing-home resident of a Bingo fix.

Episode 5. Lewis Needs A Kidney
Larry and Jeff debate how far they're willing to go to help out a friend in need.

Episode 6. The Smoking Jacket
Larry makes two wishes come true, and swaps smoking jackets with an icon.

Episode 7. The Seder
Larry ruffles feathers by inviting a sex offender to seder.

Episode 8. The Ski Lift
Larry tries to befriend the head of a kidney-transplant consortium.

Episode 9. The Korean Bookie
Larry suspects his Korean bookie of kidnapping Jeff's dog.

Episode 10. The End
In the fifth-season finale, Larry is a changed man after a trip to Sonoma, which comes as a relief to Richard Lewis.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 6



Episode 1. Meet The Blacks
Cheryl convinces Larry that they should take in a family who lost their home in a hurricane, and Larry tries to avoid two parties.  

Episode 2. The Anonymous Donor
A new home for the Davids comes with another houseguest; Larry complains about a dry-cleaning mishap to Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Cal.) after his prized Yankees jersey is lost; Ted Danson's anonymity irks Larry at a philanthropic gala.

Episode 3. The Ida Funkhouser Roadside Memorial
Larry takes offense at other people's shopping methods; Marty Funkhouser mourns the loss of his mother, but is angered by the lack of flowers at her memorial.

Episode 4. The Lefty Call
Larry comes to regret his decision to get Richard Lewis's girlfriend a job next to the office's bathroom; Larry's political acumen needs sharpening.

Episode 5. The Freak Book
A limo driver's faux pas at Ted Danson's birthday party results in Larry driving John McEnroe to a Paul McCartney concert; Larry reconsiders his position in a cemetery plot with his wife and friends.

Episode 6. The Rat Dog
Loretta and Leon have job interviews; Jeff's exterminator bugs Larry to take him to a middle-school production of “Grease”; Larry inadvertently insults a hearing-impaired woman's dog.

Episode 7. The TiVo Guy
Cheryl is on a flight back home from Florida, and during the trip, the flight encounters horrific weather. Fearing for her life, she calls Larry, who has the Tivo guy over at his house and as Cheryl proclaims her love for him, he tells her to call back because the Tivo guy is there. For the rest of the week Cheryl holds a grudge against Larry.

Episode 8. The N Word
Larry's attempt to do something nice for Auntie Rae backfires; an opportunity arises for Larry when Jeff's treated for a sleeping disorder.

Episode 9. The Therapist
Larry works hard to show Cheryl that "New Larry" is the perfect man for her. When some questionable advice from his therapist goes horribly wrong during a date, Cheryl tells him that she has to consult with her therapist before making any decisions about their future.

Episode 10. The Bat Mitzvah
With his recent failed attempt to rekindle Cheryl's affections weighing heavily upon him, Larry is in a deep funk. But Jeff's daughter's Bat Mitzvah is coming up, and Cheryl will be attending with her new romantic interest. Larry needs to find a date.

He also needs to find what's irritating his anus, and makes an appointment with a gastroenterologist. A disagreement with the office receptionist starts a rumor about Larry and sexual deviance with furry rodents. But while in the waiting room, he meets Paula, an attractive and charming woman who agrees to go on a date with him. But in traditional Larry fashion, he screws up the date and she goes home early.

At the last moment, Larry invites Loretta Black to the Bat Mitzvah. While at the event, he takes the opportunity to publicly address the sexual deviance/rodent issue.

Source: tvrage
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 7



Episode 1. Funkhouser's Crazy Sister
Marty Funkhouser cashing in on Larry's empty gesture regarding his mentally ill sister and Susie's dinner party invitation protocols land Jeff in a sticky situation. Fearing the results of Loretta's biopsy, Larry wants to quickly break up with her to avoid having to care for her should it come back positive.

Episode 2. Vehicular Fellatio
At a dinner, Larry offends yet another of Richard Lewis' girlfriends, this time after finding out she blew Richard in the car on the ride over. Larry hopes to get a doctor to recommend to Loretta that she break up with him.

Episode 3. The Reunion
Larry at long last relents and agrees to a Seinfeld reunion when he realizes it could help him win back Cheryl. Larry's miffed when Jason Alexander refuses to coordinate tips on their separate, but equal, checks and when Lakers tickets given by NBC turn out to be terrible.

Episode 4. The Hot Towel
Larry makes an enemy of Christian Slater at Ted and Mary's anniversary party and runs into an ex-girlfriend who shows renewed interest in him. Meanwhile, Larry's doctor gives him his personal number and soon regrets it.

Episode 5. Denise Handicapped
Larry, dating a wheelchair-bound woman mostly out of guilt, realizes he gets to take advantage of the perks society affords her as well. Meanwhile, following an argument over picking up a lunch check, he hopes to end a rumor that Rosie O'Donnell can beat him up.

Episode 6. The Bare Midriff
Jerry Seinfeld and Larry are put off by a flabby assistant wearing a shirt that exposes her midriff, and some errant urine from Larry leads her to think a picture of Jesus is crying.

Episode 7. The Black Swan
Larry runs 'afowl' of the members and policies at a country club and discovers his mother's headstone was purposefully misspelled by his father to save a hundred dollars.

Episode 8. Officer Krupke
Larry meets a police officer with the same name as the one from West Side Story and goes to extreme lengths to cover for his friend after Susie finds panties in the glove compartment of Jeff's car. Meanwhile, a friend of Cheryl's competes against her for the role of George's ex-wife in the Seinfeld reunion.

Episode 9. The Table Read
Larry is miffed at both Marty Funkhouser's sudden presence on set during the Seinfeld reunion's table read and text messages from the nine-year-old daughter of a co-worker. Leon poses as a dead doctor to alleviate Michael Richards' concerns over his Groat's Disease diagnosis.

Episode 10. Seinfeld
Not tipping for a favor gets Larry into bad graces with the studio lot's coffee guy, while Julia Louis-Dreyfus accuses him of leaving a ring on an antique table in her house. Meanwhile, he deals with the suspicion that their closeness during production of the Seinfeld reunion has led to Cheryl sleeping with Jason Alexander.

Source: tv.com
contributed by codebreaker

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Season 8



Episode 1: The Divorce
Larry finds reason to be dissatisfied with his divorce lawyer, angers Marty Funkhouser, and runs afoul of the owner of the Dodgers after helping his daughter attend to an emergency hygiene issue.

Episode 2: The Safe House
Larry suspects a resident at a neighborhood safe house for battered women is just there for the nicer home. Meanwhile, Marty gets Larry and Jeff to join him at the burlesque show of Richard Lewis' girlfriend.

Episode 3: Palestinian Chicken
A Palestinian chicken restaurant is incredibly popular with Larry and his friends despite its open hostility towards Jews and Israel. Meanwhile, Larry's approached to inform people that their habits are agitating by family members too scared to do so.

Episode 4: The Smiley Face
While in personal disarry due to Antoinette's extended absence, Larry dates the hostess of one of his favorite restaurants and squares off over kitchen cabinet space with the head of a production company in his office building.

Episode 5: Vow of Silence
Larry and friends are flummoxed by a friend who's taken a vow of silence. Meanwhile, Larry goes to great lengths to avoid helping at a field day for retarded children, and Susie trusts Larry and Jeff to get some Pinkberry for Oscar's last meal.

Episode 6: The Hero
Larry inadvertantly becomes a minor hero and causes a stir at Susie's dinner party. Meanwhile, Jeff hopes to land Ricky Gervais as a client, but Larry and a restaurant waiter are roadblocks.

Episode 7: The Bi-Sexual
Larry competes with Rosie O'Donnell for the affection of the same woman and discovers not all bows from the Japanese are equal.

Episode 8: Car Periscope
Larry's training routine is interrupted while he and Jeff look at a new investment opportunity.

Episode 9: Mister Softee
Seeing the iconic Mister Softee truck causes Larry to remember a childhood trauma.

Episode 10: Larry vs. Michael J. Fox
Larry accuses his neighbor, Michael J. Fox, of harassment, while Jeff makes a large sacrifice for Susie.

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