Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

Ben, why didn't you tell me? -- Luke Skywalker


arts / rec.arts.tv / Apolitical Jerry Seinfeld Is Comedy’s Undisputed Elder Statesmen

SubjectAuthor
o Apolitical Jerry Seinfeld Is Comedy’s Undisputed Elder StatesmenUbiquitous

1
Apolitical Jerry Seinfeld Is Comedy’s Undisputed Elder Statesmen

<tbm0dv$16evo$9@dont-email.me>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/arts/article-flat.php?id=148679&group=rec.arts.tv#148679

  copy link   Newsgroups: rec.arts.tv alt.tv.seinfeld
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!eternal-september.org!reader01.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: web...@polaris.net (Ubiquitous)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.tv,alt.tv.seinfeld
Subject: Apolitical Jerry Seinfeld Is Comedy’s Undisputed Elder Statesmen
Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 04:30:51 -0400
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 112
Message-ID: <tbm0dv$16evo$9@dont-email.me>
Injection-Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 8:30:51 -0000
Injection-Info: reader01.eternal-september.org; posting-host="ad2fbeda0eca4189f1a902bf1af5ac5d";
logging-data="1260536"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1/Qw+X8doEphooeBiAG7Vn3Vkv7DQlF7fA="
Summary: https://www.dailywire.com/news/apolitical-jerry-seinfeld-is-comedys-undisputed-elder-statesmen
Keywords: https://www.dailywire.com/news/apolitical-jerry-seinfeld-is-comedys-undisputed-elder-statesmen
Cancel-Lock: sha1:md8dUXwV0aFQ47+z9xFNVxoFVfo=
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.12N (x86 32bit)
 by: Ubiquitous - Mon, 25 Jul 2022 08:30 UTC

Jerry Seinfeld is a very wealthy man, and he can thank a show about �nothing�
for his millions.

The New York native�s rise to superstardom isn�t unique, but his current
status as comedy�s beloved elder statesman is. And that deserves attention.

The now-68-year-old did it the old-fashioned way, without family ties,
gimmicks or scandals. He might be the most universally adored comic at a time
when everyone has a scalding hot take against the Hollywood elite.

Seinfeld�s story began, where else, in the greater New York area. The young
Seinfeld honed his craft in clubs like Catch a Rising Star, although the raw
comic needed a nip of liquid courage before his very first gig back in 1976.

He kept working, deepening his observations to the tiniest details,
hearkening back to the comedy morsels he devoured as a child to guide his
path. Think classic comedy albums from Alan King and Robert Klein, spiced by
watching the pros crack wise on �The Ed Sullivan Show.�

The comedian picked the right time to embrace stand-up. Comedy clubs flowered
in the 1980s, and as the decade wore on network executives plucked the best
of the best and gave them sitcoms all their own.

Right as that trend was taking root, Seinfeld landed a coveted spot on Johnny
Carson�s �The Tonight Show� circa 1981, and his comedy career began to bloom.
He spent the better part of the Reagan decade defining a style that differed
from his stand-up peers.

Seinfeld didn�t get his hands dirty with political yuks like George Carlin or
Bill Hicks. Nor did he ape the bawdy tactics of Sam Kinison or Andrew �Dice�
Clay, the decade�s comedy giants. He kept his commentary clean, leaning on
the signature crack in his voice for grand comic effect.

No props. No wacky voices or impressions. Just � funny observations everyone
could understand.

By the late 1980s he was at the top of his craft, which explains why NBC
began courting him for a sitcom all his own.

The show�s pilot, dubbed �The Seinfeld Chronicles,� didn�t become an instant
smash. Far from it. Still, something clicked within the NBC inner chambers
and the Peacock Network dubbed the show �Seinfeld� and gave it a four-episode
commitment, giving him and co-creator Larry David the second chance they
deserved.

That�s all the show needed. That, of course, and adding a fourth member of
the troupe established in the pilot � Elaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus).

The rest is TV history. The show ran for nine seasons, ending not due to any
creative or ratings decline but because Seinfeld felt it was time to move on.
That, plus the show�s ability to eschew pop culture touchstones that might
date the storylines, give the series a timeless quality.

We still use the show�s catch phrases, from �yada yada yada� to �not that
there�s anything wrong with that��

Who knew a show about nothing could become arguably TV�s best sitcom?

Seinfeld didn�t hang up his mic once the series ended, even though it made
him fabulously wealthy. Celebrity Net Worth says he�s worth a cool $950
million.

He took his sweet time between projects, from the animated �Bee Movie� (2007)
to multiple Netflix stand-up specials. His folksy �Comedians in Cars Getting
Coffee� found him lounging with fellow comics for hilarious chats that didn�t
follow any set formula. We were all flies on the wall, catching every last
drop (and quip).

Seinfeld�s aggressively apolitical bent has served him well through the
years. He avoids culture war battles and finds passionate fans across the
ideological spectrum. That�s true both on, and off, the stage.

A wise movie character once said, �A man�s gotta know his limitations.� And
for Seinfeld it�s political yuks. �I�m not good at it. And I don�t like �we
agree� applause. As a comedian, I don�t think that�s fun to get. I like it
when people just laugh.�

The only time he generated headlines for something that didn�t involve his
comedy? An off-handed comment in 2015 about his decision to stop playing
college campuses.

�I don�t play colleges, but I hear a lot of people tell me, �Don�t go near
colleges. They�re so PC. � They just want to use these words: �That�s
racist;� �That�s sexist;� �That�s prejudice. They don�t know what the hell
they�re talking about.�

Even more refreshing? Seinfeld isn�t apologizing for �Seinfeld� at a time
when artists are being attacked for their past work. �Friends� is the perfect
example. Woke critics have slammed the NBC sensation for not being diverse
enough and dabbling in problematic comedy (like Fat Monica jokes).

�Friends� co-creator Marta Kauffman cut a $4 million check to fund the Marta
F. Kauffman �78 Professorship in African and African American Studies at
Brandeis University to assuage her guilt.

�Admitting and accepting guilt is not easy. It�s painful looking at yourself
in the mirror. I�m embarrassed that I didn�t know better 25 years ago.�

Seinfeld doesn�t engage with such trifles. He understands the joy �Seinfeld�
has given millions of fans, witnessing Netflix�s triumphant move to debut the
show in 2021.

A less confident artist might beg for the culture�s forgiveness. Not
Seinfeld.

The usual suspects have tried to gin up a Cancel Culture attack on the series
and, by extension, Seinfeld. He ignores each and every one. And, as a result,
his fans applaud him even louder.

--
Let's go Brandon!

1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor