Word: seinfeldisms
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Pity JERRY SEINFELD. Sure, he's got gobs of money and a beautiful new wife, fashion publicist JESSICA SKLAR, 28, who was married only once before, and that was briefly. But for the rest of his days he'll be trailed by tiresome Seinfeldisms. I DO YADA YADA YADA, blared the New York Post following Seinfeld's Christmas Day nuptials, while the Chicago Tribune proclaimed, SEINFELD ADDS NEW WIFE TO HIS DOMAIN. The simple, traditional affair--reportedly paid for by Sklar's parents--was held in a loft in New York City's East Village. Comedian George Wallace served...
...Jessica Sklar began dating now fiance Jerry Seinfeld shortly after returning from her honeymoon...
...class. When Stein received applause from the crew members, he figured it was for successfully explaining the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act, but they were just impressed that he could act so boring. Thus a career was made, leading to parts on The Wonder Years, Murphy Brown and Seinfeld...
Sklar seems sketchy on the rules of marriage: she began dating Seinfeld shortly after returning from her first honeymoon...
...know how geeks like to quote movies, thinking that cultural references make them cool? Well, who do you think makes e-mail viruses? This reference is to the Seinfeld episode where the gang meets a sick young man who has to live in a bubble. The corrupted e-mail registers the recipient in his or her Outlook Express program as "Bubbleboy" of "Vandelay Industries" (a reference to one of George Costanza's fictional workplaces). Melissa, an earlier e-mail virus, makes a similarly hip reference to the Simpsons when opened, but the name itself supposedly came from a stripper...