Episode
163 - The Slicer
pc:
907 season 9, episode 7
Broadcast
date: November 13, 1997
Written
by Gregg Kavet & Andy Robin
Story
by Gregg Kavet & Andy Robin & Darin Henry
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:
Marcia
Cross ....................... Sara
Daniel
Von Bargen .............. Kruger
Larry
B. Scott ..................... Arthur Milano
David
Moreland ................. Mr.
Parry
==================================================================
[Elaine
wakes up in bed with Jerry.]
ELAINE:
Hey.
JERRY:
Morning.
ELAINE:
Look, this is crazy, I can't go on like this.
JERRY:
But why?
ELAINE:
I need some space.
(Elaine
turns to the other side and there's George.)
GEORGE:
Does that mean I have to go too?
JERRY:
You don't think she's just talking to me?
GEORGE:
Hey, shut up.
JERRY:
You shut up.
ELAINE:
I hate this.
(Kramer
pops out the covers.)
KRAMER:
You'll get used to it. It's like a grubby scrub.
ELAINE:
No, I don't want this anymore.
JERRY:
We'll come to work with you.
GEORGE:
And on your dates.
JERRY:
And shopping.
KRAMER:
And to the bathroom.
JERRY,
GEORGE & KRAMER: Elaine, Elaine, Elaine, Elaine...(distant alarm
sound which is getting louder.)
ELAINE:
I can't breath...I'm sorry...(Elaine wakes up) You're killing
me!
(Elaine
tries to push her alarm clock showing 3:30. She realizes, that alarm
comes from next door.)
ELAINE:
(Banging the wall) Turn your alarm off!! (Screams)
[Mr.
Kruger's office. Kruger is reading George's CV.]
KRUGER:
Your background is impressive George, but how does it apply to what
we do here, at Kruger Industrial Smoothing?
GEORGE:
Well, at the Yankees it was all about smoothing things over, you
know, chiseling away, grinding down. In fact we used to call it 'the
grind'.
KRUGER:
It says here that you worked at Play Now for four days?
GEORGE:
That should be 14, let me just...(corrects it with a pen.)
KRUGER:
George, I have to honest; I could go either way with you...but what
the hell, we need someone, huh.
GEORGE:
You won't regret this, sir.
KRUGER:
I don't care. Let's find you an office.
(Kruger
leaves and George notices a photograph on the table: Kruger's family
and George on the background.)
[Monk's
cafe. Jerry, George and Kramer.]
GEORGE:...and
then when I saw the photo I remembered where I'd seen him; the boom
box incident.
JERRY:
The boom box incident?
GEORGE:
Summer of '89 I'm at the beach. This family sits up next to me. I go
in to the surfs and when I come from out, my clothes, my towel, my
umbrella, they're all gone. I am furious, I start screaming to these
kids demanding my stuff back and finally I lose it; I grab their boom
box and I chuck it in to the ocean.
JERRY:
Seems reasonable.
GEORGE:
Then I see my clothes floating out there. The tied took them out, not
the kids.
JERRY:
Even more reasonable.
GEORGE:
So now, the father is screaming at me, he's demanding that I pay for
the boom box. Finally, I gave them a fake address and got the hell
out of there.
JERRY:
And that guy is your new boss?
GEORGE:
Until that stupid photo jogs his memory.
KRAMER:
Kruger? That's not Kruger Industrial Smoothing, is it?
GEORGE:
Yeah.
KRAMER:
Grinders, sanders, wet stones. They are the ones who botched the
Statue of Liberty job.
JERRY:
Right, they couldn't get the green stuff off.
GEORGE:
It is a horrible company. There's no management what so ever. I could
go hog wild in there.
KRAMER:
You now what you do? You sneak that photo out of there for couple of
days and get it air brushed.
GEORGE:
Like retouched.
KRAMER:
You remember that photo of me and Gerald Ford and I took it in. Got
that Ford right out of there.
GEORGE:
Oh, this is good. This Kruger guy is clueless. I can't wait to work
for him.
(George
leaves. Kramer tries to eat a sandwich and it brakes in to his
hands.)
KRAMER:
Look at this. This sandwich is terrible. Everywhere you go, they give
you this misshaped shardy meat. Look at this...
(Kramer
tosses Jerry's sandwich around.)
KRAMER:
I haven't had a decent sandwich in 13 years.
JERRY:
Neither have I.
[5A.
Kramer is slicing meat with a meat slicer. Jerry comes in.]
KRAMER:
Hey, our meat problems are solved.
JERRY:
Where did you get this thing?
KRAMER:
I traded it to my sausage press. Look how thin that is, see that's
all surface area. The taste has nowhere to hide.
(Elaine
comes in.)
ELAINE:
Hey.
KRAMER:
Hey, spice. (gives Elaine a piece of meat.) Welcome to flavor
country.
ELAINE:
Yeah, that's pretty good.
JERRY:
Hey, I got a date with that doctor you met.
ELAINE:
Sara Sitarides?
JERRY:
Mmhu.
ELAINE:
Oh...(falls in to the sofa.)
JERRY:
What's with you?
ELAINE:
You remember that next door neighbor of mine, the apartment that
always smells like potatoes?
JERRY:
Your whole building smells like potatoes.
ELAINE:
This jackass goes to Paris, leaves the alarm on. It's been beeping
since 3:30 this morning.
KRAMER:
You know, that happened to Lomez, so he blew his neighbor's
circuit.
ELAINE:
How do you do that?
KRAMER:
Yeah well, that's easy. Just let me finish this mile high and I'll be
right with you. Oh, and Jerry, we are gonna need a case of Kaiser
rolls.
JERRY:
I think we might have one left in the stock room.
(Kramer
looks lost.)
[Elaine's
building. Elaine and Kramer.]
KRAMER:
This hallway smells like potatoes.
ELAINE:
I know, I know, this is it. (points to a door.)
KRAMER:
Ok, oh, you see this socket it's probably connected to her apartment.
So what we'll do, we'll take this paper clip and bend it so it'll
short out the entire circuit. Here you go...
ELAINE:
I think I'll let you do it.
KRAMER:
No no no. It's easy, you just...do it quickly.
ELAINE:
No, I really don't want to.
KRAMER:
Well, I don't want to either.
ELAINE:
I thought you had done this before.
KRAMER:
It's just...it's no picnic.
ELAINE:
Well, how are we gonna do it?
KRAMER:
Alright, fine fine, I'll do it.
(Kramer
moisturizes the paper clip in his mouth and sticks it to the power
socket. Electric buzz and Kramer twitches on the floor. The lights go
off.)
KRAMER:
Oh mama.
ELAINE:
Are you okay?
KRAMER:
I will lose that nail.
[Monk's
cafe. Jerry and Dr. Sara Sitarides.]
SARA:
I enjoy the challenge of medicine. Naturally you have no idea what
it's like to have someone's life depending on you.
JERRY:
Well, I have this neighbor...
SARA:
A joke. Do you have any idea how it feels like to save someone's
life?
JERRY:
Is it anything like hitting a home run in softball?
SARA:
No.
JERRY:
Cause I hit a whopper last week!
[Flash
Foto. George is picking up the photo.]
CLERK:
Here you go, airbrushed in to sand and sky.
(George
looks at the picture and he is still there, but Kruger
isn't.)
GEORGE:
What did you do here? You took out the wrong guy.
CLERK:
I thought you said you wanted to be out?
GEORGE:
Well, I'm still here. You took out the other guy!
CLERK:
You've really lost a lot of hair.
GEORGE:
I am aware!
[Elaine's
apartment. She is reading a catalog on her bed.]
Elaine
thinking: Hmm, the world's best pizza cutter. 76 bucks, how often do
I make...oh, I've gotta buy a book.
(She
hears a loud cat meowing next door.)
ELAINE:
The cat.
[5A,
Jerry, George and Kramer.]
JERRY:
He took out Kruger?
GEORGE:
I just pray Kruger doesn't realize that it's gone until this guy can
fix it up.
(Kramer
cuts meat wearing a white coat.)
KRAMER:
This slicer is indomitable.
JERRY:
Where did you get that butcher's coat?
KRAMER:
You buy enough meat, they'll give you anything.
(Elaine
comes in.)
ELAINE:
Kramer, my neighbor has a cat. When you blew the power, we must've
shut off the automatic feeder.
KRAMER:
See, that's the same thing that happened to Lomez.
ELAINE:
What did he do about it?
KRAMER:
Well, he moved to a hotel and the cat eventually died.
ELAINE:
Well, this meowing is absolutely worst than the alarm.
KRAMER:
Oh, that's a prickly one.
ELAINE:
Yeah, how's the doctor date?
JERRY:
Eh, died on the table. Just spent hour and a half making me feel, if
I don't save lives, I'm worthless.
ELAINE:
Well, she's very focused. Dermatology is her life.
JERRY:
Dermatology?
ELAINE:
Yes, she's a dermatologist.
JERRY:
Saving lives? The whole profession is; eh, just put some aloe on
it.
KRAMER:
The slicer! Elaine, let's go.
ELAINE:
Where are we going?
KRAMER:
The cat. Just grab that meat and let's ride.
(Elaine
and Kramer leave.)
GEORGE:
When are you going on your next date with her?
JERRY:
Oh, what's the point?
GEORGE:
What, you're gonna pass up a wonderful opportunity to put that aloe
pusher in her place?
JERRY:
Revenge date? That sound like you more than me.
GEORGE:
This good be so sweet, Jerry. Saving lives? She's one step away
working at the clinique counter!
JERRY:
Dermatologist? Skin doesn't need a doctor!
GEORGE:
Of course not! Wash it, dry it, move on!
JERRY:
You're right. I'm gonna call her right now and tell her off.
GEORGE:
No no no no no, this has to be carefully orchestrated. You go to a
fancy dinner, flowers...
JERRY:
Flowers?
GEORGE:
Yeah, you gotta do it classy (wipes his mouth to his
sweater.)
JERRY:
So, you've done this?
GEORGE:
Almost. Couldn't get the girl go out with me the second
time.
[Elaine's
hallway. Kramer and Elaine are sizing the space under the
door.]
KRAMER:
I think we are looking half a millimeter.
ELAINE:
Can it cut that thin?
KRAMER:
Oh, I've cut slices so thin, I couldn't even see them.
ELAINE:
How did you know you cut it?
KRAMER:
Well, I guess I just assumed.
ELAINE:
Hold on kitty, dinner's coming.
KRAMER:
Yeah, that's a hall of famer.
ELAINE:
Alright, let's do it.
KRAMER:
Alright, here we go. Yeah, watch that baby slide...(Puts a slice of
meat under the door.)
ELAINE:
Come on, come on kitty...(slice disappears) ooh...how about that; it
worked! Wow, can I borrow that thing for a while?
KRAMER:
Oh no, I don't think so.
ELAINE:
Why not?
KRAMER:
Well, you're not checked at on it.
ELAINE:
What do I have to know?
KRAMER:
Well, where the meat goes?
ELAINE:
Right there.
KRAMER:
Where do you turn it on?
ELAINE:
Right there.
KRAMER:
But where does the meat go?
[Jerry
is on the revenge date with Sara.]
SARA:
Restaurant, flowers...this is so nice.
JERRY:
Well, I'm a classy guy. How's the life saving business?
SARA:
It's fine.
JERRY:
It must take a really really big zit, to kill a man!
SARA:
What is with you?
JERRY:
You call yourself a lifesaver. I call you pimple popper MD!
(A
man comes to the table.)
PARRY:
Dr. Sitarides?
SARA:
Mr. Parry, how are you?
PARRY:
I just wanted to thank you again for saving my life.
JERRY:
She saved your life?
PARRY:
I had skin cancer.
JERRY:
Skin cancer! Damn.
[Elaine's
apartment. She is opening letters with the slicer and talking on the
phone.]
ELAINE:
You were right Kramer, this slicer is absolutely amazing...yeah,
yeah...no no no I'll bring it by tonight...ok bye.
(Walks
off the couch.)
ELAINE:
These heals are so uneven. (Watches the slicer.)
[Flash
foto. George is picking up the photo.]
CLERK:
Here you Mr. Costanza.
(George
looks at the photo. Mr. Kruger has been drawn in to the
picture.)
GEORGE:
What is this? This is a drawing.
CLERK:
Looks real, doesn't it?
GEORGE:
This is a cartoon!
CLERK:
Hey, I had to draw that guy from memory. Considering, I think that's
damn good.
GEORGE:
But it's not a photograph, I need a photograph!
CLERK:
Then you better get a camera.
[5A,
George is showing Jerry the picture.]
JERRY:
He looks like a Peanuts character.
GEORGE:
I know. The only way to fix it now, is to get a whole new photo of
Kruger.
JERRY:
You can do that.
GEORGE:
Without his shirt on.
JERRY:
You can't do that. Well, maybe Kruger wasn't the place for
you.
GEORGE:
It seemed so disorganized.
JERRY:
I understand.
GEORGE:
What about the Coast Guard? Seems like a lot of pride there, a lot of
tradition.
JERRY:
True. You mean, for you?
GEORGE:
I think.
JERRY:
What about your sea sickness?
GEORGE:
Maybe I could be a land guy.
JERRY:
I don't know if they have land guys.
GEORGE:
Someone's have to unhook the boat before it leaves...the
place!
(Elaine
comes in.)
ELAINE:
Pliers?
JERRY:
Drawer.
ELAINE:
Got it.
JERRY:
What are they for?
ELAINE:
I...eh...I got a piece a my heal stuck in a slicer.
JERRY:
Come again?
ELAINE:
Okay, I got a little slicer happy, but listen; don't tell Kramer,
okay? He has very strong feelings for it.
GEORGE:
I forgot to ask you; how did the revenge date go?
JERRY:
Eh, it went okay.
GEORGE:
Did you dressed nice, did you do it classy?
JERRY:
Yeah, I started out real classy...
GEORGE:
Yeah you did, you classed it up!
JERRY:
But then I found out about the skin cancer.
GEORGE:
Oh, so it backfired?
JERRY:
Yeah.
GEORGE:
So, I guess I was lucky that I never tried that myself.
ELAINE:
Of course she treats skin cancer. That's how I met her, she was doing
a skin cancer screening at Peterman. That's what dermatologists
do.
JERRY:
Sadly, that knowledge could've help me.
GEORGE:
Wait a minute, she did a skin cancer screening at Peterman?
ELAINE:
Aha.
GEORGE:
Could she do that at Kruger?
ELAINE:
I don't know, I guess.
GEORGE:
So I set up a screening, everyone takes their shirt off and click, I
snap me a shot of a bear-chested Kruger.
ELAINE:
You have a little thing for this fella'?
GEORGE:
Jerry, you gotta talk to Sitarides.
JERRY:
Yesterday you said I had to get my revenge on her!
GEORGE:
And that was wrong, Jerry! You simple must to apologize..
JERRY:
Must I?
GEORGE:
Yes! Because it is the mature, adult thing to do.
JERRY:
How does that reflect me?
(Kramer
comes in.)
KRAMER:
Elaine, alright where's the SP2000? Cause I gotta slice.
ELAINE:
Aah, I forgot it. I gotta get home.
KRAMER:
Ok, I'll go with you.
ELAINE:
Umm, I'm not actually going straight to home, I have to first stop at
the eh...circus, you know with all the...clowns.
KRAMER:
Oh, well you have fun...(Elaine leaves) oh no clowns...hate
clowns...the clowns.
[Jerry
and Sara at Sara's office.]
JERRY:
So again, I'm sorry. I had no right to yell at you, you're a life
saving doctor and I'm just a comedian...
SARA:
Jerry, enough. I'll do your friend's cancer screening, because I
believe in that, but as far as you and I are concerned; it's
off.
JERRY:
Was it pimple popper MD?
SARA:
That's the one. (Taps Jerry on the cheek and leaves.)
JERRY:
Still got it.
[Elaine
is trying to get the shoe heal off the slicer.]
ELAINE:
Out, damn heal!
(Knock
on the door.)
KRAMER:
Elaine?
ELAINE:
Kramer?
KRAMER:
Yeah listen, I need my slicer back.
ELAINE:
Just hold on!
(Elaine
bangs the slicer to the door.)
KRAMER:
Hey, what's going on?
ELAINE:
Nothing...(heal comes loose and Elaine opens the door.) Here, ok I'm
on the phone alright? I'm on the phone with someone...
(Elaine
closes the door and Kramer checks the slices.)
KRAMER:
My blade is all dinged up. Oh, come on! Elaine!
ELAINE:
Phone call! I'm in a big phone call!
KRAMER:
Come on, this is important! (Shakes the door handle and it comes
loose. Kramer falls backwards to the next door.)
NEIGHBOR:
Hey, get the hell out of here!
KRAMER:
Wow, that's a lot of potatoes.
[5A.
Jerry and Kramer.]
KRAMER:
So, George took my slicer down to Kruger and they're smoothing it out
for me.
(Jerry
comes and shows Kramer his neck, which has red spots all over
it.)
JERRY:
What the hell is this?
KRAMER:
Boy, that looks like an allergic reaction. Have you been wearing a
fake beard?
JERRY:
No.
KRAMER:
Well, what have you been doing?
JERRY:
Nothing, I got up, run some errands, I went down to Sara's office and
apologized...
KRAMER:
Whoa whoa, backup, Dr. Sitarides, what happened there?
JERRY:
Well, I tried to apologise, it didn't go over that well...
KRAMER:
There, there's your hives.
JERRY:
What, she gave me hives?
KRAMER:
Jerry, as the Bible says; Thou who cureth, can maketh ill.
JERRY:
She did kind of touch my face.
KRAMER:
Now you listen to me, you've got to find this woman and tell her that
you're not a test tube pin cushion.
JERRY:
It does itch. Maybe I will go down at Kruger and talk to
her.
KRAMER:
Alright, great, because I got to get down there and pick up my blade.
Hey, and I couldn't find that stock room.
[Elaine
tries to go to feed the cat, but door knob comes loose to her
hand.]
ELAINE:
Oh, that's fantastic.
[Kruger's.
George and Sara.]
GEORGE:
I just talked to Mr. Kruger, he'll be down in a minute. He wanted me
to take a photograph for the record.
SARA:
What record?
GEORGE:
His personal file, I, I don't ask...
(Jerry
and Kramer walk in.)
SARA:
Jerry? What brings you here?
JERRY:
I don't know, this? (Shows his neck to Sara.)
SARA:
Looks like hives.
JERRY:
Where do you suppose that could've come from?
GEORGE:
Jerry, what are you doing...
KRAMER:
He is just setting the record straight.
JERRY:
Come on Sitarides, cop to it. What brand of perverted science do you
practice?
SARA:
Are you suggesting I somehow I infected you on purpose?
JERRY:
I want the antidote, pimple popper!
SARA:
That's it, I'm out of here! You're insane.
JERRY:
Am I? You touched my face. I didn't imagine that!
(Sara
leaves and Jerry goes after her.)
GEORGE:
Dr. Sitarides don't go! Oh, thanks Jerry!
(Kruger
comes to George and Kramer. Kramer is wearing the white butcher's
coat.)
KRUGER:
Hey George, hey Doc. We doing the screening here?
GEORGE:
Aah, yeah, yeah. Won't you head on in, we'll be in in a second. Be
right with you.
KRAMER:
Doc, huh?
GEORGE:
Kramer, this is perfect. I need you to go in there, pretend you're a
doctor and check this guy for moles.
KRAMER:
Moles, yes. Freckle's ugly cousin.
GEORGE:
And get a picture of him, with his shirt off.
KRAMER:
You really are cooking up a little scheme here, aren't you?
GEORGE:
Alright, lets get in there. Quick, quick, quick...
[Elaine's
bedroom. Cat is meowing next door.]
ELAINE:
This is it. I can take this anymore.
(She
turns the radio on loud (Foghat: Slow Ride) and "dances"
few little kicks.)
[Kruger's.
Kramer is examining Mr. Kruger.]
KRAMER:
Male mammal. Approximately 30 to 60 years of age. Weight...uh
indeterminate. Ok, Mr. Kruger, we are gonna take a photo now for the
records. So if you'll stand up please and give me a big smile, oh no
no no, not that big. Yeah, that's nice, yes okay. Yes, let's have a
looksee...ok, so eh, fiber from shirt on the left shoulder. I'm gonna
have to keep my on that.
KRUGER:
How long have you been doing this Dr. Van Nostrand?
KRAMER:
Uuh, long long time. Yes, I've seen moles so big they have their own
moles. Freckles that cover two men.
KRUGER:
So, how am I looking?
KRAMER:
Oh, so far, so good...(looks at Mr. Kruger's shoulder)
yeuye...
(Kramer
comes out to talk to George.)
GEORGE:
Kramer, I really owe you one.
KRAMER:
George, we got a problem.
GEORGE:
What?
KRAMER:
Well, he's got a mole on his shoulder. Very suspicious.
GEORGE:
So, tell him you're concerned about it and he should see someone
else.
KRAMER:
George, why would I, a Juilliard trained dermatologist, send him to
another doctor?
GEORGE:
Because, you're not a dermatologist.
KRAMER:
He thinks I am. I'm not gonna betray that trust. Here's what I wanna
do; I think I can get a section...
GEORGE:
Whoa, whoa, a section?!
KRAMER:
Yeah, if I could crab my slicer and he'd hold still...
GEORGE:
No, you're not taking a deli slicer to my boss...
KRAMER:
It'll be operative thing, he would barely feel it.
GEORGE:
No! Absolutely Not!
KRAMER:
Well, it's my medical opinion, that you're making a big mistake. And
it's going in my chart.
[Elaine
is on the phone and the radio plays music very loud (Iron Butterfly:
In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida)]
ELAINE:
Yeah, hello is this Allied Lock Smith?! Oh, finally, listen I need
someone to come over here right away!
NEIGHBOR:
Turn it off! Turn it off!
ELAINE:
I am getting a lock smith, alright?! Relax!
NEIGHBOR:
Alright, that's it!
ELAINE:
Yeah, the address is 78th West...
(Electric
buzz and lights go off and music stops.)
NEIGHBOR:
Oh, oh mama...
[5A.
Jerry and George]
JERRY:
So, Kramer pulled it off?
GEORGE:
Yep, and the photo was all fixed and back on his desk, no thanks to
you.
JERRY:
Well, that woman had it coming to her. Look at my neck, it looks like
I had a beard of bees!
GEORGE:
Why don't you see someone about it?
JERRY:
I've called everyone. You know how hard it is to get a dermatologist
in this town? (Kramer comes in) A real dermatologist.
KRAMER:
(Points to a page on the book) Squamous cell carcinoma.
GEORGE:
You're not a doctor. You shouldn't even have books like
this.
KRAMER:
George, that's what he has and I have to give him a call. Now we
gotta came clean.
GEORGE:
You can't tell him the truth, you're gonna blow the whole
thing.
KRAMER:
I don't want this on my conscience.
GEORGE:
I'll get him to see a real doctor. You just stay away from
this.
KRAMER:
Yeah, alright...
JERRY:
Hey, I wonder if they have a picture of my rash in here.
KRAMER:
They've got everything there, Jerry. I underlined the best
parts.
JERRY:
Hey, this looks like the thing I have. Caused by exposure to benzene,
a common ingredient in metal cleaners.
(Kramer
cleans the blade with some liquid and a towel.)
KRAMER:
Well, that's weird.
JERRY:
What are you doing?
KRAMER:
Well, I'm cleaning my slicer.
JERRY:
That's my hand towel! I use that on my face, hands and chest! That's
where the hives are coming from! It's not from Dr. Sitarides, it's
from Dr. Van Nostrand!
KRAMER:
So, somehow the Bronzo (?) is reacting to the poison she's giving
you.
JERRY:
Alright, get out. And take your Bronzo with you (throws the bottle to
Kramer.)
KRAMER:
Ohh, that's toxic. (Jerry throws the towel over Kramer's head.)
Ououou....
[Kruger's
office]
KRUGER:
George, come in. I'm just going over our annual report...boy did we
take it on the chin last year.
GEORGE:
Eh, listen Mr. Kruger, I got a message from Dr. Van Nostrand and he
says it might be wise to you to see another doctor about that
mole.
KRUGER:
I'm not too worried about it.
GEORGE:
Well, he said it could be cancer, maybe you should get it checked
out.
KRUGER:
George, take a look at this photo. This is taken 10 years ago. That
mole looks exactly as it does today. So, there's no cause for
concern, eh?
GEORGE:
Whatever.
KRUGER:
Actually, funny thing about this photo. We were at the beach and
there was this dumb looking guy near by. When he went in for a swim,
my sons and I took all his stuff and threw it in the ocean! What a
pear shaped loser.
GEORGE:
Well, that pear shaped loser was me! And I was in that photo, until I
broke in here, stole the photograph and airbrushed myself out of
there!
KRUGER:
Well, I'll be...you have lost a lot of hair.
GEORGE:
That's what they tell me!
[Jerry,
George and Kramer are waiting for the lock smith at the hallway of
Elaine's apartment. Kramer is feeding Elaine under the
door.[
KRAMER:
Do you want more pastrami?
ELAINE:
Um, what was that last thing you gave me? That was pretty
good.
KRAMER:
Yeah, it was olive loaf. You want that?
JERRY:
I can't believe Kruger didn't fire you after all you did.
GEORGE:
He said he didn't care. Oh, God I love that place. Hey, have you seen
other dermatologist?
JERRY:
Yeah, I finally got to see Dr. Kazarian. He said it was really
bad.
GEORGE:
What did he give you for it.
JERRY:
Aloe. So where's that lock smith?
GEORGE:
Have to give him time on this hour.
ELAINE:
Can I have a zip? (Sticks a straw out from keyhole.)
KRAMER:
Oh yeah, coming up...
The
End