Episode
94 - The Mom & Pop Store
pc:
608, season 6, episode 8
Broadcast
date: November 17, 1994
Written
by Tom Gammill & Max Pross
Directed
by Andy
Ackerman
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Cast
Regulars:
Jerry
Seinfeld ....................... Jerry Seinfeld
Jason
Alexander .................. George Costanza
Julia
Louis-Dreyfus ............. Elaine Benes
Michael
Richards ................. Kramer
Guest
Stars:
Jon
Voight .......................... Himself
Elsa
Raven .......................... Mom
Michael
Robello ................... Pop
Bryan
Cranston .................. Dr. Tim Whatley
Tom
Wright ........................ Mr. Morgan
Ken
Thorley ...................... Car Salesman
Dan
Frischman ................... Guy on Phone
Rick
Fitts ............................. Dentist
Nancy
Balbirer .................. Woman at Party
Pat
Asanti .......................... Electrician
Steve
Brady ........................ Man at Party
Matt
Gallini ......................... Tough Guy
rc:
Ian Abercrombie ........... Mr.
Pitt
==================================================================
[Opening
monologue
I
like the names they have for cars. Like,
no baron has ever owned a LeBaron. Or the Ford LTD. "LTD."
Limited. It's a "limited" edition...what did they make,
fifty million of those? "Yes, it's 'limited' to the number we
can sell." Or when they try and mangle a positive word into a
car name, you know how they'll do that? The "Integra." Oh,
integrity? No, Integra. The "Supra." Or the "Impreza."
Yeah? Well, I hope it's not a "lemona"...or you'll be
hearing from my "lawya."
[Opening
scene - George looking at cars at a used car lot, checking out an '89
Volvo.]
CAR
SALESMAN: George, are you sure I can't show you any other
cars?
GEORGE:
I don't think so, Vic. I've done my homework. '89 Volvo, that's the
car for me, it's the one I want.
SALESMAN:
I got a LeBaron convertible right here.
GEORGE
(chuckles): N.I. Not interested.
SALESMAN:
It's got a few more miles on it, but the previous owner was John
Voight.
GEORGE
(suddenly interested): Jon Voight?
[New
scene - Jerry and Elaine in Jerry's apartment. Jerry is on the phone
with Tim Whatley.]
JERRY:
Okay, Tim. You're welcome. (Hangs up.)
ELAINE:
Was that Tim Whatley?
JERRY:
Yes, it was. He wanted your address - you, my friend, are going to be
invited to his night-before-Thanksgiving party. (Elaine raises her
hands triumphantly, then gleefully struts her way to the kitchen.)
You know, he's got that great apartment on 77th street, and they
overlook where they inflate all those huge balloons for the Macy's
Thankgiving Day Parade?
ELAINE:
I have always had a big crush on Tim Whatley. Why can't he ask me
out? (Punctuates this by shoving Jerry.)
JERRY:
Oh, he's a dentist. You don't want to go out with a dentist.
ELAINE:
Why?
JERRY:
He'll always be criticizing your brushing technique, it'll drive you
crazy. (Mimics brushing his teeth) Away from the gums... (The door
opens a little, George jangles the keys to his new car at Jerry and
Elaine, then enters.)
JERRY:
Uh - new car!
ELAINE:
Ohhh!
JERRY:
Hey! Did you get the Volvo?
GEORGE:
No, I decided to go with an '89 LeBaron.
ELAINE:
A LeBaron?
JERRY:
I thought Consumer said Volvo was the car.
GEORGE:
What Consumer? I'm the consumer.
JERRY:
Alright. Seems like...a strange choice.
GEORGE:
Well, maybe so...but it was good enough for Mr. Jon Voight.
ELAINE:
Jon Voight? The actor?
GEORGE
(boasting): That's right. He just happened to be the previous owner
of the vehicle.
JERRY:
You bought a car because it belonged to Jon Voight?
GEORGE
(defensive): No, no...
JERRY:
I think yes, yes. You like the idea of telling people you're driving
Jon Voight's car.
GEORGE:
Alright, maybe I do. So what.
ELAINE:
I've never even seen him in a car. I mean, look at his movies. No
cars. Deliverance - canoe. Midnight Cowboy - boots. Runaway
Train...runaway train. (Kramer enters.)
KRAMER:
Hey.
JERRY:
Hey.
KRAMER:
Jerry, you know that shoe repair place at the end of the block? Well,
if they don't get some business, they're gonna have to shut down and
make way for one of those gourmet coffee or cookie stores.
ELAINE:
I like coffee.
GEORGE:
I like (imitates Kramer) "cookies."
KRAMER:
Yeah, of course you do. And do you know why? Because you're a bunch
of yuppies. It's your go-go corporate takeover lifestyles that are
driving out these Mom and Pop stores and destroying the fabric of
this neighborhood.
GEORGE:
Well, what's so great about a Mom and Pop store? Let me tell you
something. If my Mom and Pop ran a store, I wouldn't shop
there.
KRAMER:
Hey, Bogambo - they've been in the neighborhood for 48 years. Now,
come on, Jerry. You've gotta have a pair of shoes in need of a
cobblin.'
JERRY:
I really don't wear the kind of shoes that have to be
cobbled.
KRAMER:
Well, what about sneakers? You know, they'll clean 'em. They do
complete detailing.
JERRY:
Alright, take 'em.
KRAMER
(happily): Yeah-yah.
[New
scene - Kramer dropping off a box full of Jerry's sneakers at Mom and
Pop's shoe repair shop.]
POP:
Kramer, without you, we'd be out of business.
KRAMER:
Well you know, these sneakers, they belong to my neighbor, Jerry
Seinfeld? The comedian.
MOM:
So many sneakers!
KRAMER:
Well, he's got a Peter Pan complex.
POP:
They'll be ready a week from Thursday.
KRAMER:
Oh, well, no rush. (wipes his nose) Uh oh.
MOM:
What's the matter?
KRAMER:
Oh, I keep getting these nosebleeds.
MOM:
Oh, lie down, and put your head back.
KRAMER:
Yeah. (Lies on the couch and cracks the back of his head against the
armrest.) Hey, what's with your ceiling? (Mom and Pop look up.)
POP:
What?
KRAMER
(stuffing tissue up his nose): Well, you got wires sticking out every
which way. That looks dangerous, you should call the
electrician.
POP:
You know, in the 48 years we've been here, I don't think we've ever
called an electrician.
KRAMER:
Yeah well, you should. This place could blow any minute.
[New
scene - Elaine at Mr. Pitt's, listening to big band music on the
radio. Mr. Pitt enters.]
MR.
PITT: Elaine?
ELAINE:
Yes, Mr. Pitt?
MR.
PITT: Have you gotten all the salt off those pretzels yet?
ELAINE:
No, I'm still working on it.
MR.
PITT: What in blazes are you listening to?
ELAINE:
Artie Shaw. "Honeysuckle Jump." (The song ends.)
DJ
ON RADIO: That was Artie Shaw, "Honeysuckle Jump."
MR.
PITT: Elaine! How did you know that?
ELAINE:
Oh, my father used have a huge collection of big band records.
DJ
ON RADIO: Congratulations to our listener Wayne Hopper for
identifying it. And by doing so, he becomes our seventh person to
land the WFBB-sponsored Woody Woodpecker balloon in the Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade. (Mr. Pitt hears this and is intrigued;
mouths the words "Woody Woodpecker.") There are only three
spots left. We're going to take a little break now; when we come
back, you'll have three more chances to win a spot holding a rope
under Woody Woodpecker.
MR.
PITT (to Elaine, excited): Could you identify the next song? Could
you? Could you?
ELAINE:
Mr. Pitt, why would you want to hold onto the ropes on the Woody
Woodpecker balloon?
MR.
PITT: My father was a stern man. He forbad us to participate in any
activities that he thought were associated with the common man. The
Thanksgiving Day Parade was first on the list.
ELAINE:
Oh. Alright, I'll do the best I can. (Turns up the radio.)
DJ
ON RADIO: Alright, here we go for the next spot under the balloon. If
you know the name of this song, call 555-BAND. (The music starts.
Elaine listens intently.)
MR.
PITT (impatiently): Well, Elaine? Do you know it? What song is
it?
ELAINE:
Will you shut up? I can't hear!
MR.
PITT: I'm sorry!
ELAINE:
Oh! I've got it! It's "Next Stop Pottersville"! (Grabs the
phone to call it in.)
MR.
PITT (overjoyed): Goody! Yes! Yes! Yes! (Dances back and forth,
elated) Next Stop Pottersville, Next Stop Pottersville! You are a
genius!
[New
scene - Jerry and George walking down the street toward George's new
car.]
GEORGE:
You are gonna love this car. Even if you don't like Jon
Voight.
JERRY:
I like Jon Voight. Just seems like kind've a strange reason to buy a
car, because he might have driven it.
GEORGE:
What do you mean "might"? You don't think he really owned
this car?
JERRY:
I don't know.
GEORGE:
Well, why would the guy make up something like that? Of all the names
he could pick, why settle on Jon Voight?
JERRY:
Don't you see, that's the genius of it. If he had said Liam Neeson,
you'd know he's making it up.
GEORGE:
Neeson? How are you comparing Liam Neeson with Jon Voight? Jerry,
we're talking about Joe Buck. If you can play Joe Buck, Oskar
Schindler's a cake walk. (Opens the car door for Jerry, Jerry's about
to get in.)
JERRY:
Oh, look at this, I stepped in gum.
GEORGE:
Whoa, whoa, you're not getting in my car with gummy shoes.
JERRY
(shuts the car door): Alright, I'll change my shoes. (Heads back to
his apartment. George follows.)
GEORGE
(unimpressed): Liam Neeson. You know, he's not American.
(Cut
to Jerry and George coming back to Jerry's apartment. Jerry tosses
his gummy sneakers on the floor.)
JERRY:
Let me get a clean pair. (Goes into his room. George strides over to
the window.)
GEORGE
(singing): Everybody's talkin' at me...I can't hear a word they're
sayin'...just drivin' around in Jon Voight's car...
JERRY
(yelling from his room): Kramer! (We hear Kramer's door slam open and
shut. Kramer enters. Jerry comes out of his room.) Hey! Where's all
my sneakers?
KRAMER:
You said take 'em.
JERRY:
Not all of 'em!
KRAMER:
Well, obviously there was a miscommunication.
JERRY:
Obviously. So what am I supposed to wear?
KRAMER:
Jerry, I left you a pair right here...(goes into Jerry's room and
comes out with a pair of cowboy boots.) C'mon. There, put on those
boots.
JERRY:
I can't wear these!
KRAMER:
Well, why not?
JERRY:
They're uncomfortable.
KRAMER:
C'mon here, try 'em on. (Jerry sits down and puts the boots
on.)
GEORGE:
Where did you get those?
JERRY:
I worked a club in Dallas one time and they couldn't afford to pay me
so they gave me these. Oh, I can't wear these! (Stands up.) They look
ridiculous!
KRAMER:
Ah, you look like a cowboy! Huh?
JERRY:
But I don't wanna be a cowboy!
KRAMER:
Oh, stop it. You know that friend of yours, Tim the dentist? I got an
invitation to his Thanksgiving Eve party.
GEORGE:
Yeah, I got one too.
KRAMER:
Yeah?
JERRY:
Oh yeah? Huh.
GEORGE:
What?
JERRY:
No, nothing.
GEORGE:
No, what is it?
JERRY:
No, it's just that I, uh...didn't get one.
GEORGE:
You didn't get one?
JERRY:
Ah, but he called me up and he asked for yours and Elaine's
addresses, I'm sure that means I'm invited.
KRAMER:
Not necessarily.
JERRY:
Hey, why would you call someone up and ask them for two addresses if
you're not invited to the party?
GEORGE
(mocking Jerry): That's the genius of it.
JERRY
(picks up the phone): I'm callin' Elaine. See if she can find out
anything from Tim Whatley.
GEORGE
(to Kramer): Hey. I got Jon Voight's LeBaron. (Jingles the
keys.)
KRAMER
(impressed): Boss!
[New
scene - Mom and Pop talking to the electrician about the faulty
wiring in the ceiling of the shop.]
POP:
Four thousand dollars? We can't afford that!
ELECTRICIAN:
Well I'm afraid you're gonna have to do something about it, because
it's in violation of the building code. Otherwise, they're gonna
close you up.
POP:
But what if we can't pay for it?
ELECTRICIAN:
Then I have to report you. Otherwise, I lose my license. Sorry.
(Exits.)
POP:
48 years, Mom! And now we have to close! All because of that idiot
and his bloody nose! (Kramer enters.)
KRAMER:
Afternoon, Mom! Afternoon, Pop. You know you got a crack in the
sidewalk out there? Now, you oughta get that fixed.
(Pop
glares at Kramer angrily.)
[New
scene - George and Jerry driving along in John Voight's car. George
is humming the tune to "Everybody's Talkin.'"]
GEORGE:
So?
JERRY:
C'mon, put the top up, it's November!
GEORGE:
I feel alive, Jerry.
JERRY:
Let's check out the glove box. (Opens the glove compartment, takes
out a pencil.) Ah. Pencil.
GEORGE:
Hey...you don't think...sure, that's Jon Voight's pencil!
JERRY:
With Jon Voight's teeth marks. (Looks at the owner's manual.) Owner's
manual...you know what? This car was owned by Jon Voight.
GEORGE:
Ah! See? I told ya.
JERRY:
Except Jon is spelled with an H. J-O-H-N.
GEORGE:
So?
JERRY:
Doesn't Jon Voight spell his name J-O-N?
GEORGE
(pulls over): So, what are you saying?
JERRY:
Nothing. I'm sure "Jon" probably mispelled his own name. I
know sometimes I spell Jerry with a G...and an I! (Laughs
uproariously.)
GEORGE
(angrily): Get out of the car!
JERRY:
What?
GEORGE:
That's right, you heard me. Get out! You are ruining this whole
experience for me!
JERRY
(sarcastically): Oh, look! There's Gregory Peck's bicycle!
GEORGE:
Get out!
JERRY:
And Barbara Mandrell's skateboard!
GEORGE:
Get out!! (Jerry gets out and George drives away. A couple of guys
notice Jerry in his cowboy boots.)
TOUGH
GUY (threatingly): Hey, cowboy. Where's your horse? (Jerry slips and
slides in his cowboy boots and runs away.) Yeah, you better
run!
[New
scene - Jerry, George and Elaine at Jerry's apartment.]
GEORGE:
Did they take anything?
JERRY:
No, they didn't even touch me. I tripped because of these stupid
cowboy boots.
GEORGE:
Anyway, again, I'm sorry about throwing you out of the car.
JERRY:
You really seemed to enjoy it.
GEORGE:
It was kinda fun. (Elaine gives Jerry a cold cloth for his jaw.) You
know, maybe his name really is J-O-H-N, but he changed it to J-O-N
for show business. Well, you know, J-O-N is a lot zippier.
JERRY
(sarcastic): Yeah, that's possible.
GEORGE:
How would you find out something like that...wait a minute, what am I
thinking? I've got the entire Yankee organization at my
disposal.
JERRY
(to Elaine): He'll dispose of it.
GEORGE:
Heh, that's right. See ya later. (Exits.)
ELAINE:
So Jerome, I did a little snooping around for you.
JERRY:
Ah! What'd you find out, Lois?
ELAINE:
Well, I talked to Tim Whatley...
JERRY:
Yeah...
ELAINE:
And I asked him, "Should Jerry bring anything?"
JERRY:
So...?
ELAINE:
Mmmm...and he said, "Why would Jerry bring anything?"
JERRY:
Alright, but let me ask you this question.
ELAINE:
What?
JERRY:
Which word did he emphasize? Did he say, "Why would Jerry bring
anything?" or, "Why would Jerry bring anything?" You
emphasize "Jerry" or "bring."
ELAINE:
I think he emphasized "would."
JERRY:
You know what? The hell with this party, I don't even want to go to
begin with. (Kramer enters.)
KRAMER:
Hey.
JERRY:
Hey, so where's my sneakers?
KRAMER:
That's what I wanna know.
JERRY:
What do you mean?
KRAMER:
Well, I saw Mom and Pop this morning, but when I went by the store on
my way home? The place was empty. Everything is gone. Mom and Pop -
vrooop - vanished.
JERRY:
So all my sneakers are gone?
KRAMER:
I'm afraid so. And that's just the tip of the iceberg. I've been
asking around - they didn't even have any kids.
JERRY:
Mom and Pop aren't even a Mom and Pop?!
KRAMER:
It was all an act, Jerry. They conned us, and they scored, big
time.
ELAINE
(amused): So. Mom and Pop's plan was to move into the
neighborhood...establish trust...for 48 years. And then, run off with
Jerry's sneakers.
KRAMER:
Apparently.
ELAINE:
Alright, that's enough of this.
JERRY:
Where ya goin'?
ELAINE:
I gotta go to the Dixieland Deli to pick up Mr. Pitt's security pass
for the parade.
JERRY:
Why does he want to hold a rope underneath Woody Woodpecker in the
Thanksgiving Day Parade?
ELAINE:
He finds his laugh "intoxicating." (Laughs like Woody
Woodpecker, and exits.)
[New
scene - George in a meeting at Yankee stadium.]
MR.
MORGAN: So George, what kind of promotional events are we talking
about?
GEORGE:
Well, I think we need more special days at the stadium, you know?
Like, uh...Joe Pepitone Day. Or, uh...Jon Voight Day.
MR.
MORGAN: Jon Voight? The actor? (Rubs his eyes wearily.) Uh, I make a
motion that we have no more of these meetings that have been
initiated by George Costanza.
GEORGE:
I suppose if I had suggested Liam Neeson Day, you'd all be patting me
on the back.
[New
scene - Elaine at the Dixieland Deli, seated at a table with the
other contest winners.]
CONTEST
WINNER (to Elaine): I guessed Stan Herman's "Boomtown Blues."
What'd you guess?
ELAINE:
Um, it was, uh..."Next Stop Pottersville." (The group is
unimpressed.) Uh, do you know when they're giving out the
passes?
CONTEST
WINNER: After the music. (The band starts playing directly behind
Elaine. She is deafened by the loudness of the horns.)
[New
scene - Kramer walking down the street. His nose starts to
bleed.]
KRAMER:
Oh. Oh man. (Takes out a Kleenex and puts his head back. Jon Voight
comes out of a doorway and hails a cab.)
VOIGHT:
Taxi! (Walks right by Kramer.) Taxi.
KRAMER:
Hey! Jon Voight! Jon Voight! (Voight waves at Kramer and hurriedly
gets in the cab. Kramer runs over to the car.) Hey, listen, can I ask
you something? Listen, listen...(Leans in the the open back window of
the cab. Defensively, Voight grabs Kramer's arm and bites it. Kramer
screams. The cab speeds off leaving Kramer in the street,
stunned.)
[New
scene - Jerry and George in Jerry's apartment.]
JERRY:
No Jon Voight Day, huh?
GEORGE:
No. Now I'll always have this doubt about the car. What, your jaw
still hurts?
JERRY:
Yeah, it's all swollen. I think I may have chipped a tooth when I
fell yesterday.
GEORGE:
You should have somebody take a look at that.
JERRY:
I'm calling dentists all day here, there's nobody working the day
before Thanksgiving.
GEORGE:
You going to the party?
JERRY:
No, I don't know if I'm invited.
GEORGE:
Well, there's going to be a lot of dentists there.
JERRY:
Yeah, you're right.
GEORGE:
You don't want to suffer with this all weekend.
JERRY:
Yeah, I gotta see a dentist, this is killin' me. Well, I'll take a
chance. We'll go together.
GEORGE:
Maybe I'll just meet you there.
JERRY:
You don't want to go with me?
GEORGE:
Jerry, for all I know this guy went out of his way to not invite you.
How am I gonna feel if I show up with an uninvited, unwelcome
intruder?
JERRY:
The way I feel when I go places with you? (Kramer enters.) Hey, so'd
you find my sneakers yet?
KRAMER:
No. (To George) But I did run into somebody you might be interested
in, a Mr. Jon Voight, the actor?
GEORGE:
Jon Voight! Are you kiddin' me? Did you talk to him?
KRAMER:
Well, he was a little standoffish.
GEORGE:
What, you didn't ask him about the car?
KRAMER:
No, I couldn't, his cab pulled away. But he did, however, make an
impression on me. (Pulls up his sleeve and shows George his arm.)
Look.
JERRY:
What?
KRAMER:
His tooth marks. He bit me.
GEORGE:
Jon Voight bit you?
JERRY:
Well, what is he, a vampire?
KRAMER:
No, it's justifiable. He thought I was going for his wallet.
GEORGE
(looking at Kramer's arm): He left perfect imprints.
KRAMER:
That he did. Now, you got that pencil with the bite marks on it? We
get a trained eye to match 'em up, and we'll see whether or not
you're driving Jon Voight's car!
JERRY:
Oh, please.
GEORGE:
Wait a minute, wait, it's not that stupid.
JERRY:
No, it's stupid.
GEORGE:
Why? Why isn't it possible? I mean, they're both bite marks.
JERRY:
So you're gonna show up at that party with a chewed-up pencil and
Kramer's gnarled arm.
GEORGE:
It's worth a shot. (Goes to the door.)
JERRY:
So, Kramer, you wanna go to the party together?
KRAMER:
Jerry, look, come on, I'm an invited guest. I can't be aiding and
abetting some...party-crasher.
[New
scene - Tim Whatley's party. Jerry peeks his head around the corner,
then slowly moves through the crowd, covering his face to keep a low
profile.]
JERRY
(under his breath, to a man at the party): Excuse me, uh...dentist?
You a dentist? (The guy shakes his head. Jerry moves on to another
guy.) Dentist? Are you a dentist?
Cut
to George and Kramer looking at the parade out the window.
GEORGE:
These are the balloons? Big deal, all I see is Woody
Woodpecker.
KRAMER:
You got a problem with Woody Woodpecker?
GEORGE:
Yeah, what is he? Some sort of an instigator?
KRAMER:
That's right. He's a troublemaker.
(Elaine
enters the party with a trophy under her arm, and runs into
Jerry.)
JERRY:
Hey, Elaine. Did you get my message?
ELAINE:
What? I can't hear a word you're saying. I was stuck at the Dixieland
Deli all day. My head is still ringing. Where's Tim?
JERRY
(pointing at the trophy): What is that, the Empire State
Building?
ELAINE:
What? I can't hear you.
JERRY:
Elaine, would you marry me?
ELAINE:
I told you, I can't hear a word.
JERRY:
Alright. Forget it.
(Tim
gets up from the couch and meets George and Kramer.)
GEORGE:
Hey, Tim.
TIM:
Hey, George. Kramer, how ya doin.' (They shake hands.)
GEORGE:
Watch the arm! Tim, listen, we don't want to bother you, we know
you're busy here.
TIM:
No, it's no problem, what is it?
GEORGE:
Let me show you something, take a look at this... (Another guy at the
party interrupts.)
GUY:
Alright Tim, I'm gonna get goin.'
TIM:
Alright, let me take down your number. (Grabs George's pencil, then
notices Jerry sitting on the couch.) Is that Jerry Seinfeld?
KRAMER:
He didn't come with us. (Tim walks over to Jerry.)
GEORGE:
Uh, Tim, the pencil...
TIM:
Jerry.
JERRY:
Hey, Tim.
TIM:
Jerry. I didn't think you'd show.
JERRY:
Did you say, "Jerry, I didn't think you'd show" or, "Jerry,
I didn't think you'd show"? (Elaine comes over.)
TIM:
Elaine! Hi!
ELAINE:
Tim.
TIM:
Well. I'm really glad you came.
ELAINE:
What?
TIM:
Really glad you came.
ELAINE
(deaf): Uh huh.
TIM
(picks up a bowl of nuts): Listen, Elaine, I've been wanting to ask
you...would you like to go out with me New Years Eve? (Elaine thinks
Tim is offering her a nut, and shakes her head no. Tim, rejected,
walks away.) Thanks.
ELAINE
(puzzled): What? What?
(Cut
to George and Kramer talking to another dentist at the
party.)
GEORGE:
Let me ask you something. Could you tell if teeth marks on someone's
arm matched teeth marks on a pencil?
DENTIST:
It's possible.
GEORGE
(to Kramer): Roll up your sleeve.
DENTIST:
Somebody bit you?
KRAMER:
Not just someone. Jon Voight.
DENTIST:
Jon Voight bit you? (George notices Tim across the room with the
pencil in his mouth.) The pencil! Hey, hey! Get the pencil out of
your mouth, you're destroying Jon Voight's teeth marks!
TIM:
That's John Voight's pencil?
GEORGE:
That's right. I got his whole car downstairs.
TIM:
Are you the one who bought his LeBaron convertible?
GEORGE
(overjoyed to find out): Yes! Yes, I'm the one! Hey! So, you know Jon
Voight!
TIM:
Yes! Yes, I went to dental school with him.
GEORGE:
Jon Voight, the actor?
TIM:
No. The periodontist. (George snaps the pencil in two.)
(Cut
to Jerry by the window, getting one of the dentists at the party to
look at his chipped tooth.)
DENTIST:
Can't this wait until Monday? Come by my office.
JERRY:
Just a quick peek. I'm in agony.
DENTIST:
Alright. Sit down.
JERRY
(sits down): It's this one here in the back. (Tilts his head back,
and knocks Elaine's trophy out the window. A loud hissing sound and
commotion is heard from the street below. Everyone runs to the
windows to look.)
KRAMER:
Oh! You popped Woody Woodpecker!
TIM
(to Jerry): Hey, who invited you, anyway? You're a troublemaker!
(Jerry nervously laughs like Woody Woodpecker as the breeze from the
popped balloon blows in the window.)
[New
scene - Jerry and Kramer in Jerry's apartment, watching the Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade on TV.]
ANNOUNCER
ON TV: Hey, it looks like Woody Woodpecker is running out of air. In
fact, he's collapsing.
KRAMER:
Those kids look pretty disappointed.
JERRY:
Especially that big kid up in the front. (Mr. Pitt is shown on the
television, trying to hold up the deflating Woody balloon.) How old
is he? (The phone rings.) Hello?
GUY
ON PHONE: Hello, is this Jerry Seinfeld?
JERRY:
Yes it is.
GUY
ON PHONE: You don't know me, but a really strange thing happened. I
was at a garage sale, and this old couple sold me a used pair of
sneakers they claimed belonged to Jerry Seinfeld, the
comedian.
JERRY:
Can I have the address of that garage sale? Okay, thank you very
much. (To Kramer) I found Mom and Pop, they're sellin' my
sneakers!
KRAMER:
Where are they?
JERRY:
Parsippany, New Jersey.
KRAMER:
Let's go!
JERRY:
My car's in the shop.
KRAMER:
Well, how are we getting to Parsippany?
(Cut
to Jerry and Kramer sitting in the back of a Trailways bus, en route
to Parsippany. Kramer's nose starts to bleed again.)
KRAMER:
Uh. Jerry. These nosebleeds are starting again.
JERRY
(wipes Kramer's brow): Maybe we should get you to a hospital.
KRAMER
(a la Ratso Rizzo in Midnight Cowboy): Hey, I ain't goin' to no
Bellevue! Look at me, I'm fallin' apart here.
(Nilsson's
"Everybody's Talkin'" begins to play as they continue on to
Jersey, in a send-up of Midnight Cowboy that has to be seen to be
appreciated.)
The
end