Jerry Seinfeld on post-pandemic comedy: ‘People are going to go back’

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Jerry Seinfeld is currently promoting his latest Netflix stand-up special, 23 Hours to Kill. It was obviously filmed several months ago, pre-pandemic, and the humor apparently “hits” differently in the middle of a global pandemic. To promote the special, Seinfeld chatted with the NY Times about life, quarantines, social distancing and the future of comedy. He chatted with the NYT via Zoom, by the way. You can read the full piece here. Some highlights:

When the pandemic felt serious to him: “I knew instantly. I called my tour producer and said, “Get ready to start canceling dates.” It was like running in front of a tsunami. Let’s head for the hills. But part of your makeup in this profession is adaptation. You just become highly adaptable to everything. So this is just another thing to adapt to.”

Whether he feels like being funny right now: “Not really, to tell you the truth. I don’t really feel that funny. It’s hurting so many people, so brutally. I’m not in the mood to be funny. It’s like you’re a bird and then suddenly they change your cage. You’re just not sure who you are now.

Whether the pandemic made him feel validated as a neat freak: “I’m not a germophobe. I’m more about organized behavior routines. Yes, I do put my toothpaste on the same spot all the time. I’m not O.C.D., but I love routine. I get less depressed with routine. You’re just a trained animal in a circus. I like that feeling: Now we’re going to do this trick, now we’re going to do that trick. That makes me feel better. I don’t want too much mental freedom. I have too much of that anyway.

Having his kids home all day, every day: “There’s some difficulty, but I really like all that extra time. My kids are teenagers and you would never see them, normally — no idea where they are or what they’re doing. Now I really feel like I’m getting to see who they are. Teenagers want to escape their parents so desperately, and they don’t want you to see who they’ve become. I remember that from my teenage years. You want to leave behind and adopt this new personality that you just thought of.

Whether stand-up at comedy clubs will end now: “No chance of that. People are going to go back, first of all, because laughter is the greatest feeling of release that there is. And No. 2, the comedians are going to adapt so much quicker than everyone else. The TV shows won’t quite know what to make. The movie people might not know what to make. The comedians, within three nights, will know what to be doing. Because you’ll get that feedback instantly of what works and what doesn’t.

The poignancy of loving New York right now: “No, if you love the city, you still love it. I was talking to somebody yesterday, and they just said the word “Williamsburg,” and I got such a pang of longing to be in Williamsburg. I miss the city a lot. The vibe of it — it’s postponed, let’s say.

Whether this will be his last Netflix special: “I don’t know. It feels like that to me. I like guys like Cary Grant that didn’t want to go past a certain point on film. Live is different — I’ll perform forever. But on film, there’s a point where — I don’t know. I’ll see when I get there.

[From The NY Times]

I enjoyed this piece more than I thought I would. I’ve never been a Seinfeld stan, but I find it interesting to hear what he’s got to say about the current energy of comedy, the future of comedy and all of that. There have absolutely been moments (in recent years) where he sounds like an out-of-touch douche, but… I don’t know, he was mostly fine here. I think people will want comfort in the brave new pandemic world, and that includes comfort-comedy, safe comedy, old-school comedy. I bet he’s right that comedians will have brand new sets about the pandemic too, while TV shows and movies will struggle with how to deal with the issue.

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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9 Responses to “Jerry Seinfeld on post-pandemic comedy: ‘People are going to go back’”

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  1. Ann says:

    I am a major Seinfeld stan and I love hearing Jerry pontificate on comedy. He’s like a stand-up elder at this point. I’ve had Seinfeld reruns playing in the other room all day while I work from home and its been very comforting. I’m really looking forward to the special.

    • Mellie says:

      Me too! I loved Seinfeld, that whole cast…I still love him and find him very funny. He had a cameo appearance in Michael Jordan’s documentary on Sunday and I was so excited. haha.

    • BeanieBean says:

      That promo made me smile. I look forward to it! Boy, do I look forward to some laughter & smiles!

  2. ME says:

    I just don’t find him funny anymore. He seems…out of touch.

  3. Mrs. Peel says:

    Love Jerry, always have, always will.

  4. (TheOG) jan90067 says:

    After that bit with him and his wife stealing that woman’s cookbook idea (“hiding” veggies in their food), and then trashing the woman on talk shows, I just can’t with him OR her.

    He also has an IMMENSE (and continually growing) fortune from Seinfeld (as exec prod/creator). I’d be interested to know just how he’s giving back. I know he’s certainly no Bill Gates, but are they giving if it doesn’t have a gala/benefit party attached to it? I mean, this is a man who bought an entire building in downtown Manhattan JUST to store his 30 Porsches and other cars in his collection. His wife is (was?) Goopy’s BFF.

    So lost my taste for him.

    • Granger says:

      I’m not a huge Seinfeld fan but I would encourage you to look up the charitable organization his wife started — it’s called Good+Foundation (it used to be called Baby Buggy), and it provides goods and services to low-income families to help break the cycle of multi-generational poverty. Both Jerry and Jessica are still heavily involved and are really great ambassadors for the foundation and I’m sure they’ve put a lot of their own money into it.

  5. NewKay says:

    He’s not perfect- but I appreciate that he never appeared to indulge the racism of Louis CK and seems to know is place common in on issues of race is limited as a comedian who is not racialized (and yes I know he’s Jewish).

  6. Mabs A'Mabbin says:

    I can see a resurgence of old school comedy. Harsh, modern comedy with bully slants isn’t funny right now. And it hasn’t been funny for a while.