The Pez Dispenser
"The Pez Dispenser" | |||
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Seinfeld episode | |||
Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 14 | ||
Directed by | Tom Cherones | ||
Written by | Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David | ||
Production code | 314 | ||
Original air date | January 15, 1992 (1992-01-15) | ||
Guest appearances | |||
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Episode chronology | |||
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Seinfeld season 3 | |||
List of episodes |
"The Pez Dispenser" is the 31st episode of the sitcom Seinfeld. The episode was the fourteenth episode of the show's third season.[1] It aired on January 15, 1992.[1] The episode was written by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David and was directed by Tom Cherones.
Plot
At a piano recital given by George's girlfriend Noel, Jerry teases Elaine by balancing his Tweety Bird Pez dispenser upright on her leg, causing uncontrollable laughter from Elaine. Unnerved by the laughter, Noel makes an embarrassing flub, and afterwards tells George and his friends that the laughter has made her lose confidence in herself as a pianist. Elaine wants to apologize and explain, but George insists she remain silent for fear that Noel will break up with him if she learns that his friend was the one who laughed.
Kramer creates a cologne that "smells like the beach," but when he tries to sell the idea to Calvin Klein, the representative says that the beach is an offensive smell, pointing out that people shower after going to the beach to rid themselves of its odor. Jerry hosts an intervention for an old friend, Richie Appel. Richie developed a drug addiction because he believed himself to be the cause of Marty Benson's death from pneumonia after Kramer told him to pour Gatorade on his head after winning a softball game.
George is frustrated that he does not have any leverage in his relationship with Noel, stating that "I need hand. I have no hand," and that he fears Noel will break up with him. Acting on advice from Kramer, George preemptively breaks up with her, but she gives into his demands to persuade him to stay, thereby giving him "hand." Later at the intervention, Noel hears Elaine laugh, realizes George lied, breaks up with him, takes the "hand," and implies that George will need his "hand" to masturbate. Richie agrees to enter rehab after seeing the Pez dispenser, which brings up a childhood memory and causes him to admit his drug problem. Richie does well in rehab, but is now addicted to Pez.
Cultural references
George raves about Noel playing the Waldstein. Ludwig van Beethoven composed his "Waldstein Sonata" in 1803 and dedicated it to Count Ferdinand Ernst Gabriel von Waldstein.
Noel plays Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 8 at the concert when Elaine leaves laughing. The same piece is played in a very similar scene in George Cukor's Gaslight.
Marty Benson's death from pneumonia after having a bucket of Gatorade dumped on him is a reference to the death of Hall of Fame football coach George Allen in 1990, 44 days after being doused by a celebratory Gatorade shower.
References
- ^ a b "Seinfeld Season 3 Episodes". TV Guide. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
External links
- "The Pez Dispenser" at IMDb
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- "The Seinfeld Chronicles"
- "The Stake Out"
- "The Robbery"
- "Male Unbonding"
- "The Stock Tip"
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- "The Pony Remark"
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- "The Cafe"
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- "The Stranded"
- "The Alternate Side"
- "The Red Dot"
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- "The Pez Dispenser"
- "The Suicide"
- "The Fix-Up"
- "The Boyfriend"†
- "The Limo"
- "The Good Samaritan"
- "The Letter"
- "The Parking Space"
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- "The Wife"
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- "The Highlights of 100"†
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- "The Doorman"
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- "The Soul Mate"
- "The Bizarro Jerry"
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- "The Susie"
- "The Pothole"
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- "The Nap"
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- "The Summer of George"
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- "The Voice"
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- "The Slicer"
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- "The Dealership"
- "The Reverse Peephole"
- "The Cartoon"
- "The Strongbox"
- "The Wizard"
- "The Burning"
- "The Bookstore"
- "The Frogger"
- "The Maid"
- "The Puerto Rican Day"
- "The Chronicle"†
- "The Finale"†