Episode
155 - The Muffin Tops
pc:
821 season 8, episode 21
Broadcast
date: May 8, 1997
Written
by Spike Feresten
Directed
by Andy
Ackerman
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
Cast
Regulars:
Jerry
Seinfeld ...................... Jerry Seinfeld
Jason
Alexander .................. George Costanza
Julia
Louis-Dreyfus .............. Elaine Benes
Michael
Richards .................. Cosmo Kramer
Guest
Stars:
Rena
Sofer ........................... Mary Anne
Melinda
Clarke..................... Alex
Chaim
Jeraffi ........................ Jiffy Dump Guy
Sonya
Eddy ......................... Rebecca
Barry
Kramer ...................... Bag Guy
Elayn
Taylor ........................ Book Fan
Paige
Moss ........................... Girl
Viola
Kates Simpson ............. Old Woman
Jack
Riley ............................. Rider
Bunny
Summers ................... Rider
Earl
Carroll .......................... Rider
Norman
Brenner .................. Rider
Reuven
Bar .......................... Foreign Guy
Vince
Donvito ...................... Passerby
Chris
Burmester ................... Passerby
Deck
McKenzie .................... Man
Victoria
Fischer .................... Bartender
Keith
Sellon-Wright .............. Guy
rc:
Wayne Knight ................. Newman
rc:
John O'Hurley ................. J. Peterman
rc:
Richard Fancy .................. Mr.
Lippman
==================================================================
[Jerry
and George walking down the street.]
JERRY:
Hang on just let me pick up a paper.
MAN:
Excuse me. Would you mind watching my bag for a minute?
GEORGE:
Yeah. No problem.
JERRY:
Let's go.
GEORGE:
Woah, I gotta watch this guy's bag.
JERRY:
For how long?
GEORGE:
I'm sure he'll be back in a second.
JERRY:
Come on.
GEORGE:
Excuse me sir. Would you mind watching my bag for a minute?
MAN
2: Why? So I can stand here like an idiot not knowing if you'll ever
come back?
(Jerry
starts to leave.)
GEORGE:
Where are you going?
JERRY:
I'm going to be this guy's friend.
[Jerry
and George at Monk's]
JERRY:
New clothes?
GEORGE:
Yeah. I did some shopping. Some new clothes shopping. (turns to a
man) Can I borrow your menu?
JERRY:
Strange. For new pants, there's noticable wear on the buttocks of
those chinos. Wait those are the clothes from the bag!
GEORGE:
The guy never came back.
JERRY:
He asked you to watch them not wear them.
GEORGE:
I'm still watching them.
JERRY:
You look like a tourist.
GEORGE:
All right, let me ask you something: When do you start to worry about
ear hair?
JERRY:
When you hear like a soft russeling.
GEORGE:
It's like puberty that never stops. Ear puberty, nose puberty,
knuckle puberty, you gotta be vigilent. Let me ask you this: Do you
know where Walker Street is downtown? I've got a league meeting
there.
JERRY:
Oh right, the new job, how is it?
GEORGE:
I love it. New office, new salary. I'm the new Wilhelm.
JERRY:
So who's the new you?
GEORGE:
They got a new intern from Francis Louis High. His name is Keith. He
comes in Mondays after school.
JERRY:
Oh hi Alex.
ALEX:
I'm sorry I'm late. Have you ordered yet?
JERRY:
No.
ALEX:
I'll be right back.
GEORGE:
Where are you meeting these women? When they get off the bus at the
port authority?
JERRY:
Right here, George. In here. (pointing to his chest) Try opening this
up. You'll find the biggest dating scene in the world.
GEORGE:
Thanks. Thanks a lot.
[Kramer
in Jerry's apartment. Kramer searches in Jerry's couch for something
and picks it up. Elaine enters. Kramer hurriedly puts the cushions
back on the couch.]
KRAMER:
Hey.
ELAINE:
Hey.
KRAMER:
Hi.
ELAINE:
Where's Jerry?
KRAMER:
Well he's in the shower. You want me to get him?
ELAINE:
No. No no. Actually I kind of need to speak to you.
KRAMER:
Well let's sit down.
ELAINE:
Kramer, ahem, remember that whole deal with you selling Peterman your
stories for his book and then he gave them back to you?
KRAMER:
Vaguely.
ELAINE:
Well I was kind of, hehehe, short on material and I, um, I put them
in the book anyway.
KRAMER:
You put my life's stories in his autobiography?
ELAINE:
Kramer listen, it is such a stupid book. It doesn't matter.
KRAMER:
Oh no. Sure. It matters. Wow. I've broken through, huh. I'm part of
popular culture now. Listen I've got to thank Mr. Peterman.
ELAINE:
He's doing a book signing at Waldenbooks this afternoon.
KRAMER:
Waldenbooks? That's a major chain huh.
(Kramer
enters the bathroom.)
KRAMER:
He Jerry, I'm going to waldenbooks.
JERRY:
(yelling) Get out! Get out! I don't want to live like this.
KRAMER:
All right, let's go.
[At
Waldenbooks.]
ELAINE:
Mr. Lippman, how are you?
MR.
LIPPMAN: Well I'm not bad. Not bad.
ELAINE:
What are you doing here?
MR.
LIPPMAN: I work for Pundant Publishishing. This is our book.
ELAINE:
Oh.
MR.
LIPPMAN: If you can call it that. Why is it every half-wit and sitcom
star has his own book out now?
KRAMER:
Hey buddy. Remember me?
MR.
PETERMAN: You're that gangly fellow we bought the stories
from.
KRAMER:
Yeah, I'm just here to do my part. What's your name darling?
WOMAN::
Who are you?
KRAMER:
I'm the real Peterman.
MR.
PETERMAN: All right playtime's over.
KRAMER:
Relax man. There's enough juice here to keep us all fat and
giggley.
WOMAN:
I can't believe somebody pulled the top off of this muffin.
ELAINE:
That was me. I'm sorry. I don't like the stumps.
MR.
LIPPMAN: So you just eat the tops.
ELAINE:
Oh yeah. It's the best part. It's crunchy, it's explosive, it's where
the muffin breaks free of the pan and sort of (makes hand motions)
does it's own thing. I'll tell you. That's a million dollor idea
right there. Just sell the tops.
(Two
men forcefully pick Kramer up and push him out of the
store.)
KRAMER:
I have a right to be here. These are my fans. Hey you're hurting my
elbow.
(George
is walking down the street looking down at his map. He is bumping
into people.)
MAN
1: Try looking up hayseed.
MAN
2: You wanna sightsee? Get on a bus.
MARY
ANNE: Please don't think all New Yorkers are so rude.
GEORGE:
Well actually I'm...
MARY
ANNE: I'm Mary Anne. I work for the New York Visitor's Center. Where
are you visiting from?
GEORGE:
Little Rock, Arkensas.
MARY
ANNE: Ooh.
[Jerry
is in his bathroom shaving. He thinks. He tilts the mirror
down.]
JERRY:
Hmm. That looks new.
(He
thinks some more. He picks up his razor.)
KRAMER:
So get this. Peterman has his henchmen forcefully eject me from the
book signing like I'm some kind of a maniac.
JERRY:
(uncomfortably) Yeah that's too bad.
KRAMER:
What's the matter with you?
JERRY:
(uncomfortably) Nothing.
KRAMER:
No, no, no. Don't give me that. I know you. Something's wrong. What
is it.
JERRY:
I did something stupid.
KRAMER:
What did you do?
JERRY:
Well I was shaving. And I noticed an asymmetry in my chest hair and I
was trying to even it out. Next thing I knew, (high pitched voice)
Gone.
KRAMER:
Don't you know you're not supposed to poke around down there.
JERRY:
Well women do it.
KRAMER:
(high pitched voice) "Well women do it." I'll tell you
what. I'll pick you up a sundress and a parasol and you can just
(high pitched voice) sashey your pretty little self around the town
square.
JERRY:
Well what am I going to tell Alex?
KRAMER:
Listen to me. You don't tell anybody about this. No one. You hear
me?
JERRY:
Um hum.
(George
enters)
KRAMER:
Hey, Jerry shaved his chest.
JERRY:
Hey!
KRAMER:
I forgot. Wait. Never mind.
(Jerry
and Alex walking.)
ALEX:
How about the beach this weekend?
JERRY:
You couldn't pay me enough to go to the beach on a weekend. I mean
it's hard enough...
ALEX:
All right. All right. Wow is that a Mexican Hairless? Oh, I love
those. Ooh, Hairless. This is where it's at. It's so much smoother
and cleaner.
JERRY:
Really?
[Elaine
walks into a muffin shop]
ELAINE:
"Top of the Muffin to you!"?
MR.
LIPPMAN: Top of the muffin to you. Elaine!
ELAINE:
Mr Lippman?
[George
and Jerry at Jerry's apartment.]
JERRY:
So you're pretending to be a tourist?
GEORGE:
It's beautiful. She makes all the plans. I'm not from around here so
it's okay if I'm stupid, and she knows I'm only in town visiting so
there's no messy breakup
JERRY:
How do you explain your apartment?
GEORGE:
I got a hotel room.
JERRY:
you moved into a hotel?
GEORGE:
Well I don't know anyone here Jerry. Where else am I going to
stay?
JERRY:
So get this: we're in the park today Alex goes wild for this hairless
dog.
GEORGE:
So?
JERRY:
So. I figure since she likes one hairless animal why not
another.
GEORGE:
Oh really. You tell her you shaved it?
JERRY:
Are you nuts? I don't want her to think I'm one of those low-rise
briefs guys who shaves his chest.
(Kramer
is in a school bus. He honks his horn. Camera shot down on the
bus.)
KRAMER:
(yelling up at Jerry) Hey Jerry.
(Jerry
pulls up the blinds on his upstairs window and looks down.)
KRAMER:
(yelling) I'm starting a Peterman Reality Bus Tour. Check it out.
Hahaha.
GEORGE:
Reality tour?
JERRY:
The last thing this guy's qualified to give a tour of is
reality.
[Elaine
at the muffin shop]
ELAINE:
This was my idea you stole my idea.
MR.
LIPPMAN: Elaine these ideas are all in the air. They're in the
air.
ELAINE:
Well if that air is comming out of this face then it is my air and my
idea.
MR.
LIPPMAN: You want a muffin or not?
ELAINE:
Peach.
[Gerge
and Mary Anne at Monks]
MARY
ANNE: So I notice you don't have much of an accent.
GEORGE:
Yeah my parents have it. Sometimes it skips a generation.
MARY
ANNE: Look george, I'm really enjoying spending time with you but I'm
not sure this is going to work out. At some point you're going back
to your job at Tyler Chicken and your three-legged dog
Willie.
GEORGE:
Willie. Yeah.
MARY
ANNE: And I'm still going to be here.
GEORGE:
Well what if I told you I'm thinking of moving here?
MARY
ANNE: (laughs) George, no offense. But this city would eat you
alive.
JERRY:
You're moving to New York? That's fantastic. I can see you all the
time now.
GEORGE:
Eat me alive, huh? We'll see who can make it in *this* town.
JERRY:
What is it she think you can't do?
GEORGE:
Find a job. Get an apartment.
JERRY:
How did you do those things?
GEORGE:
Never mind. The're done. All I have to do now is redo them. You know
if you take everything I've ever done in my entire life and condense
it down into one day, it looks decent.
JERRY:
Hey, what were you doing with that bus yesterday?
KRAMER:
Here you go, here you go, check it out.
JERRY:
"The Real Peterman Reality Bus Tour". I'm
confused.
KRAMER:
Peterman's book is big business. People want to know the stories
behind the stories.
JERRY:
Nobody wants to go on a three hour bus tour of a totally unknown
person's life.
KRAMER:
I'm only charging $37.50, plus you get a pizza bagel and
desert.
GEORGE:
What's desert?
KRAMER:
Bite-size Three Musketeers. Just like the real Peterman
eats.
GEORGE:
He eats those?
KRAMER:
No. I eat those. I'm the real Peterman.
GEORGE:
I think I understand this. Jay Peterman is real. His biography is
not. Now, you Kramer are real.
KRAMER:
Talk to me.
GEORGE:
But your life is Peterman's. Now the bus tour, which is real, takes
to places that, while they are real, they are not real in sense that
they did not *really* happen to the *real* Peterman which is
you.
KRAMER:
Understand?
JERRY:
Yeah. $37.50 for a Three Musketeers.
[Elaine
and Mr. Lippman at Monk's]
MR.
LIPPMAN: Elaine. I'm in over my head. Nobody likes my muffin
tops.
ELAINE:
So? What do you want me to do about it?
MR.
LIPPMAN: You're the muffin top expert, tell me what I'm doing
wrong.
ELAINE:
Mr. Lippman, when I worked for you at Pendent Publishing, I believed
in you, you know as a man of integrity. But, I saw you in that paper
hat and that aprin...
MR.
LIPPMAN: What if I cut you in for 30% of the profits?
ELAINE:
Deal. Here's your problem. You're making just the muffin tops. You've
gotta make the *whole* muffin. Then you... Pop the top, toss the
stump. Taste.
MR.
LIPPMAN: Ah. (takes a bite of the top.) Mmmmm. Ah hah?
ELAINE:
Yeah.
MR.
LIPPMAN: So what do we with the bottoms?
ELAINE:
I don't know, give em to a soup kitchen.
MR.
LIPPMAN: That's a good idea.
ELAINE:
And one more thing, you really think we need the exclamation point?
Because, it's not "Top of the Muffin *TO YOU!!!*"
MR.
LIPPMAN: No. No. It is.
[At
Jerry's apartment]
KRAMER:
Hey Jerry. What is this? Lady Gillette? What's going on?
JERRY:
What? Can't I get a moment's peace?
KRAMER:
What are you doing to yourself?
(Jerry
walks into camera view with his chest covered with shaving
cream.)
JERRY:
I can't stop. Alex thinks I'm naturally hairless.
KRAMER:
You can't keep this up. Don't you know what's going to happen?
Everytime you shave it, it's going to come in thicker and fuller and
darker.
JERRY:
Oh that's an old wives tale.
KRAMER:
Is it? Look at this.
(Kramer
walks off-screen and opens his shirt. On-screen, Jerry reels from the
sight.)
KRAMER:
(high pitched voice) Look at it! Look at it! And it's all me. I
shaved there when I was a lifeguard.
JERRY:
Oh come on. That's genetics. That's not going to happen to
me.
KRAMER:
Won't it? Or is it already starting to happen?
[Elaine
at the muffin shop]
ELAINE:
Wow. Look at this. We're cleaning up.
LIPPMAN:
Oh, Rubin, get me another tray of lowfat cranberry.
REBECCA:
Excuse me, I'm Rebecca Demore from the homeless shelter.
ELAINE:
Oh, hi.
REBECCA:
Are you the ones leaveing the muffing pieces behind our
shelter?
ELAINE:
You been enjoying them?
REBECCA:
They're just stumps.
ELAINE:
Well they're perfectly edible.
REBECCA:
Oh, so you just assume that the homeless will eat them, they'll eat
anything?
MR.
LIPPMAN: No no, we just thought...
REBECCA:
I know what you thought. They don't have homes, they don't have jobs,
what do they need the top of a muffin for? They're lucky to get the
stumps.
ELAINE:
If the homeless don't like them the homeless don't have to eat
them.
REBECCA:
The homeless don't like them.
ELAINE:
Fine.
REBECCA:
We've never gotten so many complaints. Every two minutes, "Where
is the top of this muffin? Who ate the rest of this?"
ELAINE:
We were just trying to help.
REBECCA:
Why don't you just drop off some chicken skins and lobster
shells.
ELAINE:
I think I might.
[Mary
Anne and George at George's "new" apartment.]
MARY
ANNE: I can't believe you found something so quickly. How much you
pay?
GEORGE:
$2300.
MARY
ANNE: Ouch. A month?
GEORGE:
Yeah.
MARY
ANNE: Well, guess that's all right for now, but if you say here for
more than a few months, you're a real sucker.
GEORGE:
Yeah, well I uh got lots of other stuff to show you too. Wait till
you see the plum job that I landed.
MARY
ANNE: Yeah. We should let this place air out anyway. It smells like
the last tenant had monkeys or something.
(Mary
Anne exits. George sniffs his armpit.)
[On
Kramer's bus.]
KRAMER:
Comming up on the right, if you glance up you can just make out my
bedroom window. It's the one that's covered in chicken wire.
WOMAN:
Hey if you're the real Peterman, who come you're wearing those ratty
clothes? The're not very romantic.
KRAMER:
(over the speaker) Well that's your opinion.
MAN
1: Can I have another Three Musketeers? They're rather
small.
KRAMER:
Forget it. Okay Newman's postal route is around here somewhere.
MAN
2: Who's Newman?
MAN
3: Who cares.
MAN
4: Hey fake Peterman, let me off. I'm nautious.
MAN
1: Can I have his candy bar?
KRAMER:
Ahh. Everyone just settle down. We have three hours left on this
thing, and I can't drive and argue with you rubes all at the same
time. Okay. Lomez's place of worship is right on the right
here.
[At
Jerry's apartment.]
JERRY:
Why do I have to go on the tour?
KRAMER:
Jerry you're a minor celebrity. If you go on this thing, it could
create a minor stir. Bring that girlfriend of your and I'll only
charge to 60 bucks.
(Elaine
enters)
JERRY:
Hey, how's business?
ELAINE:
Ooh, I've got stump troubles. The Sanitation Department won't get rid
of them all, I can't get a truck to haul this stuff until next week.
Meanwhile, I'm sitting on a mountain of stumps.
KRAMER:
All right, I've got to hose the puke off the floor of the
bus.
ELAINE:
Bus? Wait a minute, wait a minute, bus? You've got a bus?
KRAMER:
Yeah.
ELAINE:
You got any room on that thing?
KRAMER:
Yeah there are a few seats still available.
ELAINE:
Do you think you could transport some stumps for me? I'll make it
worth your while.
KRAMER:
Well, if they don't mind sitting in the back.
ELAINE:
No they don't.
KRAMER:
Are they war veterans?
(Elaine
looks at him confused.)
[In
George's office.]
MARY
ANNE: Wow this is your office.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: Woah. Hello. Sorry George, didn't know you got a girl
in here. Give me a signal on the doornob like a necktie or a sock or
something. Come on George, help me out.
MARY
ANNE: Mr. Steinbrenner, I would like to thank you for taking a chance
on a hen supervisor at Tyler Chicken like our boy George here.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: Hen supervisor from Tyler Chicken?
GEORGE:
Yes. Very nice to have had her to mention... (starting to leave)
MR.
STEINBRENNER: Wait a minute George.
GEORGE:
Be right with you. Look Mr. Steinbrenner.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: Moonlighting for Tyler Chicken. Pretty impressive
George. Days with the New York Yankees and nights in Arkensas with a
top flight bird outlet. And a hen supervisor to boot. I am blown.
Bloooown away. Blown George. (vibration in the "o"'s)
Bloooooooooooooooooooown.
[On
Kramer's bus.]
ALEX:
You know when you make a pizza bagel, you really shouldn't use
cinnimon rasin.
JERRY:
You also shouldn't use a donut.
(Kramer
gets on the bus. He starts the tape player playing banjo
music.)
KRAMER:
All right ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Peterman Reality
Tour...
TAPE
PLAYER: Turn music off.
JERRY:
Can we just go?
KRAMER:
And go we will.
MAN:
What is this? A piece of pound cake?
KRAMER:
We have a bonus reality stop today. We will be hauling muffin stumps
to the local repository.
MAN
2: We're going to a garbage dump?
KRAMER:
And we're off.
JERRY:
You know I never though he would be able to recreate the experience
of actually knowing him, but this is pretty close.
[Mr.
Steinbrenner is sitting at his desk on the phone with the manager at
Tyler chicken who is also sitting at his desk.]
MR.
STEINBRENNER: (the back of his head to the camera) John Tyler? George
Steinbreener here. I want to talk about George Castanza. I understand
he's been dividing his time between us and you. I cannot have
that.
JOHN
TYLER: (the back of his head also to the camera) Well I don't know
who he is but if you want him that bad I'm not giving him up that
easily.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: Oh is that so. Playing a little hardball huh
Jonnyboy?
JOHN
TYLER: How about this. You give me Castanza, I convert your
concessions to all chicken no charge. Instead of hot dogs, chicken
dogs. Instead of pretzels, chicken twists. Instead of beer, alcoholic
chicken.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: How do you make that alcoholic chicken?
JOHN
TYLER: Let if ferment, just like everything else.
MR.
STEINBRENNER: That stuff sounds great. All right. I'll have Costanza
on the next bus.
[Kramer
at a garbage dump carrying a garbage bag.]
MAN:
Hey hey hey hey hey. Where do you think you're going?
KRAMER:
I was going to dump this.
MAN:
It doesn't look like garbage.
KRAMER:
Well it's muffin stumps
MAN:
Where are the muffin tops?
KRAMER:
This is a garbage dump. Just let me dump it.
MAN:
Can't do it.
KRAMER:
Is this a joke?
MAN:
That's what I'd like to know about it.
ALEX:
You have a pretty heavy beard, don't you?
JERRY:
What's that?
ALEX:
Well look it's almost time for you to shave again.
JERRY:
Oh. Yeah.
KRAMER:
(gets back on the bus, yelling) Well maybe I will take it up with
Consumer Affairs. Ladies and Gentlemen you're in for an additional
treat. We're going to extend the tour at no extra charge.
MAN:
Where are we going?
KRAMER:
(looking at a map) I don't know. (over the speaker) Uh, no more
questions.
(Banjo
music plays as they look for garbage dumps.)
[Next
scene. Kramer argues with someone at a dump.]
[Next
scene. A man vomits on the floor.]
[Next
scene. Kramer is driving. He is sleepy. His head nods down onto the
horn. The horn blows. Startled, Kramer sits back up. Banjo music
finishes.]
WAITRESS:
So, the New York Yankees traded you for a bunch of Tyler
chicken.
GEORGE:
Dogs, twists, a kind of fermented chicken drink.
MAN:
Hey, aren't you the guy I asked to watch my clothes?
GEORGE:
What clothes?
MAN:
These clothes. The ones you're wearing.
[On
Kramer's bus]
JERRY:
(in low voice to next to Kramer) Kramer how much longer? My chest
hair is comming back and it's itching me like crazy. I can't let her
see me scratch it.
KRAMER:
Don't worry. I've got a good feeling about this dump.
JERRY:
I'm telling you man, I'm losing it.
(Kramer
gets off the bus, carrying a garbage bag.)
(Eerie
music is playing. Jerry looks out the bus window at a full moon. A
dog starts barking.)
JERRY:
I can't sit on this bus anymore. I think I'll go play with that
dog.
KRAMER:
I don't know where the tops are.
(Jerry
runs past Kramer and another person. Eerie music still
playing.)
KRAMER:
Jerry what's the matter?
(In
slow motion Jerry runs into the woods. At normal speed he runs behind
a tree. Camera shot down on him as he starts scratching his
chest.)
JERRY:
(for the first half of the howl, a dog howls along with him.)
Awoooooo-oooooooo, that feels good.
BARTENDER:
Hey, you looking for George?
MARY
ANNE: Yeah.
BARTENDER:
He's been in the bathroom awhile. You might want to check on
him.
GEORGE:
(talking on the phone) Jerry you gotta bring me some clothes down
here. I lost my job with the Yankees. I'm standing in the men's room
on 43rd street in my underpants.
MARY
ANNE: I told you this city would eat you alive.
[At
the muffin shop.]
MR.
LIPPMAN: What is this guy again?
ELAINE:
They call him a Cleaner. He makes problems go away.
(Newman
enters. )
NEWMAN:
Hello Elaine. Where are they?
ELAINE:
In the back.
NEWMAN:
All right, I'm going to need a clean 8 ounce glass.
MR.
LIPPMAN: What is going on here?
NEWMAN:
If I'm curt, then I appologize. But as I understand it, we have a
situation here and time is of the essence.
(Newman
goes to the back room with the muffin stumps and sets down a cooler
and an empty glass. From the cooler he takes out 4 bottles of milk
and sets them down. He bites into a stump, then takes a drink of milk
from the glass. (continuity error: he never actually poured the glass
of milk.) He swishes the muffin and the milk together and swollows.
He takes another stump.)
The
End