The Bizarro Jerry

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The Bizarro Jerry
Seinfeld episode

Jerry shakes hands with Jillian's "man hands".
Episode no. Season 8
Episode 137
Written by David Mandel
Directed by Andy Ackerman
Original airdate October 3, 1996
Season 8 episodes
Seinfeld - Season 8
September 1996 - May 1997
  1. "The Foundation"
  2. "The Soul Mate"
  3. "The Bizarro Jerry"
  4. "The Little Kicks"
  5. "The Package"
  6. "The Fatigues"
  7. "The Checks"
  8. "The Chicken Roaster"
  9. "The Abstinence"
  10. "The Andrea Doria"
  11. "The Little Jerry"
  12. "The Money"
  13. "The Comeback"
  14. "The Van Buren Boys"
  15. "The Susie"
  16. "The Pothole"
  17. "The English Patient"
  18. "The Nap"
  19. "The Yada Yada"
  20. "The Millennium"
  21. "The Muffin Tops"
  22. "The Summer of George"
List of Seinfeld episodes

"The Bizarro Jerry" is the 137th episode of the American television sitcom Seinfeld. This was the third episode for the eighth season. It was originally broadcast on the NBC network on October 3, 1996. The title and plot extensively reference the Bizarro (the polar opposite of Superman) and Bizarro-Earth concepts that originally appeared in various comic books published by DC.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Elaine breaks up with her boyfriend Kevin (from "The Soul Mate"), but they decide to "just be friends." Much to Elaine's surprise, Kevin is thrilled at the idea, and starts becoming a much more reliable friend than Jerry. Meanwhile, Kramer accidentally gets a job at a company called Brandt/Leland when he aids an employee in the hall and starts going to meetings. He soon finds out he fits right in and starts working there for no pay, stating his reason as doing it "just for me."

Jerry starts dating Jillian, an attractive woman whose only flaw is that she has "man hands." George uses a picture of Jillian to get into the "forbidden city", a club of attractive women and models, by saying that Jillian is his late fiancee Susan. Unfortunately, his luck ends when he accidentally burns the picture with a hair dryer. Jerry becomes bored at home, now that Kramer is "working", Elaine is always hanging out with Kevin and his friends (Gene and Feldman, who are complete opposites, but physical look-alikes of George and Kramer, respectively), and George only comes to him when he wants something.

By the end of the episode, Kramer gets fired by Leland because of his shoddy work (due to his "lack of business training"). Jerry wants to be "just friends" with Jillian, who doesn't take too well to the idea. While trying to get another picture of her from her purse for George, she grabs Jerry's wrist (which Jerry later describes as almost ripping his arm right out of the socket). George tries to use a picture of a model from a magazine to get back into the club, but his plan is foiled when he accidentally confronts the exact same model from the magazine picture and gets kicked out. Elaine decides to stay with her "Bizarro friends", but is explicitly asked to leave by them when they don't take to some of the normal things she usually does with Jerry like eating from the fridge and pushing someone with her outbursts of "get out!"

Later, George takes Jerry to the location of the club, but all they find is a meat packing plant. George is shocked while Jerry doesn't believe there ever was a club there. As they leave, they miss seeing the photo George had taken from a magazine, lying amidst the sawdust on the ground.

[edit] Bizarro Counterparts

  • Elaine describes Kevin as Jerry's opposite since Kevin is reliable and kind, contrasted to Jerry's forgetfulness and indifference.
  • Gene is shown to be quiet and courteous, as to George being loud and obnoxious.
  • Feldman acts generously to his friends, regularly buying them lunch and bringing Kevin groceries. He also always knocks on Kevin's door and waits for him to unlock it. This is opposite to Kramer, who constantly takes Jerry's groceries and bursts through his door without warning.
  • Vargas, a Fed-Ex worker, is good friends with Kevin, opposed to Newman, a postal worker, and Jerry being sworn enemies.
  • Elaine hangs out with this counterpart friends at Reggie's, which Jerry describes as the Bizarro Monk's.
  • Kevin's apartment, where he and his friends spend time reading, is a mirror image to Jerry's. Also seen in the background of Kevin's apartment is a unicycle, which also is a reflection on Jerry's bicycle hanging in his apartment. Kevin also uses a PC while Jerry always has a Mac in his apartment. It also has a statue of Bizarro as a counter part to Jerry's statue of Superman.
  • In the episode's last line, Kevin says "Me so happy. Me want to cry." as an allusion to the way the character Bizarro speaks.

[edit] Trivia

  • The signature Seinfeld theme song is played backwards in the tag scene of the episode - another reference to the "Bizarro" theme.
  • When George is combing his hair at home, he uses a poster of Dennis Franz as his guide. Though something of a non-sequitur in the final episode, deleted material reveals that George considers Franz to be the ideal celebrity model for baldness.
  • When Elaine visits Kevin's apartment, in the background is a Bizarro action figure, mirroring the Superman figures and pictures that appear in Jerry's apartment throughout the series.
  • This episode is famous for introducing the phrase "man hands".
  • The actor who played Bizarro Kramer was Pat Kilbane, who was later a cast member of MADtv, on which he often impersonated Michael Richards' Cosmo Kramer.
  • Jerry's Superman sticker on the fridge is removed.
  • Jerry references George Steele when referring to the man hands.
  • During the scene in which Kramer is cooking breakfast in Jerry's apartment, a microphone can be seen in the upper-left corner as Jerry first witnesses Kramer. A microphone is also briefly visible at the top of the screen when Jerry, George and Kramer meet their "Bizarro" counterparts.
  • Although efforts were made to hide Jillian's hands in wide shots throughout the episode, there is a continuity error later in the show. In a scene where she gets up off of Jerry's couch and hands are exposed, her fingers are noticeably slimmer than the "man hands" in close-up shots, and she has long fingernails.
  • When watching the episode on a monitor that doesn't have the TV safe zone (like a computer monitor) in the scene in which the photo is burned by the hair dryer you can see a blue flame at the bottom of the screen. Presumably this is from a blowtorch or other lighter that was used to set the picture on fire.
  • The song that plays as Kramer travels to work on the subway is Sheena Easton's Morning Train (9 to 5), which is also featured during the handicapped-George montage in the 9th season episode The Butter Shave.

[edit] Quotes

  • Jerry: She had man hands.
  • Jerry: So what do you do down there?
  • Kramer: You know, TCB- taking care of business.
  • Jerry: What's in the briefcase?
  • Kramer: Crackers.
  • Kevin (Bizarro Jerry): Me so happy. Me want to cry.

[edit] Superman reference

The concept of a Bizarro universe is directly taken from the Superman universe, in addition to verbal references to Superman:

  • Jerry: Yeah. Like Bizarro Superman. Superman's exact opposite, who lives in the backwards bizarro world. Up is down, down is up. He says "Hello" when he leaves, "Good bye" when he arrives.
  • Elaine: Shouldn't he say "bad bye"?
  • Jerry: No, it's still goodbye.
  • Elaine: Does he live underwater?
  • Jerry: No.
  • Elaine: Is he black?
  • Jerry: Look, just forget the whole thing, all right.

At the very end of the show, a scene takes place in Kevin's apartment in which Kevin, Gene, and Feldman all join in a group hug, and the following line is spoken in the same way that the Bizarro from the Superman Universe speaks:

  • Kevin: Oh. Me so happy. Me want to cry.