The Wait Out

The Wait Out

Infobox Television episode
Title = The Wait Out
Series = Seinfeld


Caption = Jerry trying to pull the tight dungarees off Kramer.
Season = 7
Episode = 133
Airdate = May 9, 1996
Production =
Writer = Matt Selman & Peter Mehlman
Director = Andy Ackerman
Guests = Cary Elwes & Debra Messing
Episode list = List of "Seinfeld" episodes
Season list = Infobox Seinfeld season 7 episode list
Prev =
Next =

"The Wait Out" is the 133rd episode of the NBC sitcom "Seinfeld". This was the 23rd episode for the seventh season. It aired in the U.S. on May 9, 1996.

Plot

George makes an off-hand joking remark to a married couple with a rocky relationship, leading to their breakup; Elaine and Jerry make plans to move in on the separated couple, but George, unexpectedly troubled by the results of his comment, tries to get them back together. The man (Elwes) from the couple makes the same remark to George and Susan, and Susan acts in somewhat the same way the couple did when George made the remark. Eventually, the couple gets back together again.

Elaine starts driving again and almost makes Jerry sick while a passenger. Kramer starts wearing Lee Dungaree jeans that are so tight that he cannot get them off. Another resident asks Kramer to babysit their kid, but the child mistakes Kramer's strange walking due to the jeans as that of Frankenstein's Monster. Kramer runs after the kid, but is arrested by a cop who thinks Kramer is trying to kidnap the kid.

Trivia

*Michael Richards hurt his back during the scene in which Jerry attempts to pull Kramer's jeans off. However, he was still able to finish filming for the episode.
*Debra Messing and Danny Wouldburn would reprise this role in "The Yada Yada."
*Elaine mentions having driven in the episode "The Busboy."

Quotes

*Jerry: That 'there for you' crap was a stroke of genius!
*("Woman screams in the hallway; Jerry turns to George on the couch")
*Jerry: It's got to have something to do with Kramer.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • wait out — ˌwait ˈout [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they wait out he/she/it waits out present participle waiting out past tense …   Useful english dictionary

  • wait out — wait (someone) out to allow time to go past until someone does something. I have time and he doesn t, so I ll wait him out until he agrees to sell the business to me. She hoped to wait out her opponent, but that has not worked …   New idioms dictionary

  • wait out something — wait out (something) to allow time to go past until something happens or ends. Should we leave now or wait out the storm? …   New idioms dictionary

  • wait out — (something) to allow time to go past until something happens or ends. Should we leave now or wait out the storm? …   New idioms dictionary

  • wait out — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms wait out : present tense I/you/we/they wait out he/she/it waits out present participle waiting out past tense waited out past participle waited out to stay where you are until something ends, usually something …   English dictionary

  • wait out — transitive verb Date: 1849 to await an end to < wait the storm out > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • wait out — phr verb Wait out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑storm …   Collocations dictionary

  • Interstellar travel and the Wait Calculation — The Wait Calculation was introduced by Andrew Kennedy in his paper, Interstellar Travel: The Wait Calculation and the Incentive Trap of Progress, published in the British Interplanetary Society s technical journal JBIS [Interstellar Travel: The… …   Wikipedia

  • Sorry for the Wait — (aussi typographié Sorry 4 The Wait) est la dixième mixtape du rappeur américain Lil Wayne. Par ce titre (en français Désolé pour l attente), Wayne s excuse auprès de ses fans qui attendent la sortie de son prochain album Tha Carter IV et tente… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • The Soup Nazi — Seinfeld episode Episode no. Season 7 Episode 6 Directed by Andy Ackerman Written by …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”