He of course feeds her a bunch of lies about working in the stock market.Įlaine is on her train, and a woman strikes up a casual conversation, who is shocked when Elaine shares that she is on her way to a lesbian wedding. Back to George, the attractive lady starts talking to him what he does for a living as he’s reading the paper. The scene cuts back to Jerry, who falls asleep in his seat, just as he feared. Kramer has an epic physical scene where he attempts to find a seat on his train to no avail. George, on his train, is sitting across from a well dressed, attractive woman who catches his eye. Akiva pointed out that he is also the voice of Pumbaa from The Lion King. Carosi, the manager of the Malibu Sands Beach Club from Saved By the Bell. When everyone goes their separate ways, we see Jerry sitting alone, across from a large man reading the newspaper. Jerry meanwhile is trying to convince George to skip the job interview and accompany him to Coney Island. Akiva pointed out it’s another jab at George for being cheap. Before they separate, a blind man playing a violin comes by, and George explains to him that he doesn’t carry change in the pants he’s wearing, remarking to the gang that he thinks the man isn’t blind. Jerry is concerned that when they split off separately, he’ll fall asleep on the long train ride out to get his car. When they all get on the train together, Kramer shares that he is headed to city hall so he can pay his many parking tickets, including one for having no doors on his car. Rob confirmed that it was a politically incorrect thing to ask, adding that in 1992, attending a lesbian wedding would be an unheard of concept. George learns that Elaine is going to be the “best man” at a lesbian wedding, wondering which one will be the groom, and if that is politically incorrect to ask. George was heading off to a job interview, which Jerry took as an opportunity to rib George, comparing him to the hard on his luck character Biff Loman from Death of a Salesman. the episode starts off in the coffee shop, with Kramer giving Jerry extensive directions on how to get to Coney Island so he can retrieve his stolen car that was found, though it was for not because he can just take one train right there. Jerry’s opening standup ties into the episode well, with a bit about the bumper cars at the amusement park. Rob had a chance to watch it, and agreed with Akiva that it was great. With the quick turnaround between last week’s episode dropping and the taping of “The Subway”, no one had a chance to email him, so they decided to revisit the topic next week. Rob agreed that it was an interesting episode, but he didn’t find it as hilarious as some others they’ve covered so far.īefore delving into the episode, Rob checked in with Akiva about his offer to pay $1.29 to anyone who watched all nine episodes and hated his favorite show of 2014, Review. This week they talked about “The Subway” which first aired January 8, 1992.Īkiva thought this was a classic episode, and really enjoyed that each of the four characters got a substantial storyline. Rob Cesternino and Akiva Wienerkur didn’t need to be handcuffed to a bed to cover the next Seinfeld episode in Post Show Recap’s coverage of the entire series. Subscribe: Seinfeld Podcast in iTunes | Seinfeld Podcast RSS Feed Subscribe to the Seinfeld ONLY Podcast on iTunes
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