JERRY SEINFELD: "One of the greatest moments in New York sports history just happened."
TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET: "I pray to the temple of OG Anunoby!"
Hear from Jerry, Timmy, Ben Stiller, A$AP Rocky and Spike Lee after they witnessed the largest comeback in NBA Finals history 😮💨
Jerry and Uncle Leo have lunch before the game. Leo saves one egg from earlier as a postgame snack. Leo goes to the arena on his own. Before he gets inside, Knicks fans jump him and steal his Spurs jersey.
Helen: “Jerry, are you alright? There’s terrible violence at the arena!”
Morty: “You didn’t wear that stupid hat Uncle Leo gave you?”
Jerry: “No, Dad. We had a big fight and I left. I don’t get it with this guy. He wouldn’t stop with the curse.”
Backstage, J. Peterman is explaining medieval curses to Danhausen.
Peterman: “You mean to tell me you can place an ancient Himalayan Egg Curse on Wembanyama?”
Danhausen: “Yup. With an 🥚.”
Matthew hears Jerry yelling at a Spurs fan and gets the wrong idea. After the game, he spots an egg that rolled away from Uncle Leo, picks it up, finds Victor Wembanyama leaving the arena, and hurls the egg at him.
loved seeing Jerry Seinfeld struck dumb by the sudden reversal of fortune. Jewish humor is the droll shoulder shrug --"well, could be worse"--& does not prepare for something going very wrong that suddenly changes course & goes very right as if in very mockery of pessimism as a useful bulwark against fate.
Elaine would be at home watching the game, completely uninterested, only because she was told they were going to lose and it was a 'safe time not to go.' When she sees the comeback, she starts obsessing that she is the reason the Knicks are winning because she didn't go. She refuses to move from the couch, not even to go to the bathroom, convinced it will break the spell. In the end, the game finishes, the Knicks win, and she demands public credit."
@PeteMundo@WBALPete Elaine, wearing a Spurs hat and getting heckled sitting courtside with publisher company tickets, gets run over by Victor Wembanyama as he crashes out of bounds. He becomes instantly smitten and misses two late free throws down the stretch because he keeps looking at her.
@PeteMundo Tell Brunson to hit the rim. I know. I know! But I'm telling ya. He's gotta hit the rim. And then, OG crashes the boards. They'll never see it coming. Think about it...*head nods and finger points* Crash The Boards.
@PeteMundo Throughout the episode George keeps complaining about the heat in the stadium because he brought a sweater vest, anticipating a cold environment, and refuses to take if off because "it's an ensemble look." Sweats through the ticket, which is why he isn't let in.
Seinfeld episode 2026: Jerry gets tickets courtside and brings George, who decides, with the Knicks down 20 with 10 minutes left, he will leave the game early to beat the rush out of MSG.
As the Knicks mount a comeback he tries to get back into the Garden. He waves his ticket, name drops James Dolan, but nothing works and he ends up getting arrested.
Meantime, Kramer sneaks into the Garden and helps Mike Brown draw up the game winning play.
A research into cat behavior shows that domestic cats regard humans as social peers rather than superiors, often perceiving their owners as large, awkward kittens.
Far from being aloof or defiant, a cat’s apparent indifference stems from a profound interspecies mismatch in social expectations.
As anthrozoologist John Bradshaw explains, cats—unlike dogs—never evolved to recognize humans as dominant leaders or authority figures. Instead, they filter all interactions through an exclusively feline framework. Behaviors like kneading on your lap or licking your hair are not mere displays of affection; they are the same grooming and bonding rituals cats reserve for close kin or pride members. In their eyes, we are simply enormous, somewhat clumsy fellow cats who require inclusion in the group.
This absence of hierarchical deference accounts for cats’ frequent disregard of commands or household rules. Treating us as equals, they follow cat-to-cat social protocols in every encounter. The “gifts” of dead prey on the doorstep or constant shadowing around the home are acts of care toward what they see as a big, furless, rather inept companion.
Recognizing this mindset transforms the human-cat relationship from one based on authority and obedience to one of mutual companionship. It turns out that while many owners believe they have domesticated their cats, the cats themselves are quietly convinced they are patiently tending to their oversized, adopted family members.
[Bradshaw, J. (2013). Cat Sense: How the New Feline Science Can Make You a Better Friend to Your Pet. Basic Books]