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This post originally appeared in the Insider Today newsletter. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . On the agenda:But first: Get in, we're going to the Met Gala. An aerial shot shows Jared Leto on the red carpet at the 2023 Met Gala.
Persons: , Jared Leto, Neilson Barnard, MG23, Anna Wintour, Bunny, Jennifer Lopez, Chris Hemsworth, Shou Zi Chew, I'm, Yulia Reznikov, everyone's, Morimoto, Chris Burnett, hasn't, they're, Tyler Le, Anne Hathaway's sizzling, Jerry Seinfeld Organizations: Business, Service, Disney, Victoria & Alberts, Metropolitan Museum, Art's Costume, Vogue, Costume Institute, Social, BI, HGTV, Netflix Locations: Epcot, Victoria, Scottsdale , Arizona, Scottsdale Scottsdale , Arizona, Scottsdale, Michigan
Lauren Sánchez may make her Met Gala debut on Monday, according to reports. AdvertisementLauren Sánchez is poised to walk the Met Gala red carpet for the first time on Monday, if media reports are to be believed. Page Six also previously reported that Met Gala host and Condé Nast chief content officer Anna Wintour was wooing Sánchez to attend. AdvertisementThe theme of this year's Met Gala is "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion," according to Vogue, and the dress code has been dubbed "The Garden of Time." Sánchez is a rising fashion star, Business Insider's Amanda Krause previously reported, with her style evolving in recent years.
Persons: Lauren Sánchez, Jeff Bezos, , Amy Odell, Page, Condé, Anna Wintour, Sánchez, she'd, Bezos, Amanda Krause, Keith McNally, Chrissy Teigen, Jessica Seinfeld, Stephanie Ruhle Organizations: Service, Condé Nast, Vogue, House, NYC Locations: Sánchez, Instagram
Jerry Seinfeld Can No Longer Be About Nothing
  + stars: | 2024-05-04 | by ( Matt Flegenheimer | Marc Tracy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Jerry Seinfeld became a mic-cradling, cereal-eating, “did-you-ever-notice”-ing avatar of American Jewish life with a brazenly shrugging persona: a merry indifference to weighty material as a comedian and in his megahit TV show about nothing, as petty and apolitical as he seemed to be. Now — off-camera, at least — Mr. Seinfeld appears to have reached his post-nothing period. Since the attacks of Oct. 7 in Israel, and through their bloody and volatile aftermath in Gaza, Mr. Seinfeld, 70, has emerged as a strikingly public voice against antisemitism and in support of Jews in Israel and the United States, edging warily toward a more forward-facing advocacy role than he ever seemed to seek across his decades of fame. He has shared reflections about life on a kibbutz in his teens, and in December traveled to Tel Aviv to meet with hostages’ families, soberly recounting afterward the missile attack that greeted him during the trip. He has participated, to a point, in the kind of celebrity activism with which few associate him — letter-signing campaigns, earnest messages on social media — answering simply recently when asked about the motivation for his visit to Israel: “I’m Jewish.”
Persons: Jerry Seinfeld, , Seinfeld, Locations: Israel, Gaza, United States, Tel Aviv
One critic described it as "one of the worst films of the decade ." Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian film critic, said the film was "amiable and funny." Richard Roeper, the Chicago Sun Times entertainment columnist, wrote that the film was "one of the worst films of the decade so far." William Bibbiani, a critic for The Wrap, began his review with: "Jerry Seinfeld's new comedy 'Unfrosted' is an impressive film. Tim Robey, The Telegraph film critic, described his viewing experience as "trapped in a writers' room full of stale air."
Persons: Drew Tarver, Mikey Day, Kyle Mooney, Andy Daly, Isaiah Lamb, John P, Johnson, Peter Bradshaw, Richard Roeper, William Bibbiani, Jerry Seinfeld's, It's, it's, Tim Robey Organizations: Netflix, Guardian, Chicago Sun Times, The Telegraph
Check out new shows like "A Man in Full" and "The Veil" this weekend. Anne Hathaway's new movie and Jerry Seinfeld's "Unfrosted" are streaming now too. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementWhether you're looking for something sexy, goofy, or serious, there are plenty of options for what to watch this weekend.
Persons: Anne Hathaway's, Jerry Seinfeld's, There's, Organizations: Service, Business
The comedian and his wife, Jessica Seinfeld, have spoken about their children many times over the years. Most recently, the whole family attended the Los Angeles premiere of "Unfrosted," Seinfeld's feature film directorial debut. Sascha Betty Seinfeld, 23, is the eldest childSascha Seinfeld and Jerry Seinfeld attend the "Daughters" premiere during the 2024 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Julian Kal Seinfeld, 21, is the middle siblingFrom left: Julian Seinfeld, Jessica Seinfeld, Shephed Seinfeld, Jerry Seinfeld, and Sascha Seinfeld at the "Unfrosted" premiere at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles on April 30, 2024. Shepherd Kellen Seinfeld, 18, is the couple's youngest childFrom left: Julian Seinfeld, Jessica Seinfeld, Shephed Seinfeld, Jerry Seinfeld, and Sascha Seinfeld at the "Unfrosted" premiere at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles on April 30, 2024.
Persons: , Jerry Seinfeld, he's, Seinfeld, Jessica Seinfeld, Sascha Betty Seinfeld, Sascha Seinfeld, Mat Hayward, Sascha, Jessica, Amy Schumer's, Amy Schumer, Jerry, she's, Julian Kal Seinfeld, Julian Seinfeld, Shephed Seinfeld, FREDERIC J . BROWN, Julian, Kevin Durant, Shepherd Kellen Seinfeld, Shepherd, Jimmy Fallon Organizations: Service, New Yorker, Business, Los Angeles, Getty, Duke University, CBS, Egyptian Theatre, Culture Fieldston School, NBA Locations: Park City , Utah, New York, Los Angeles, AFP
Seinfeld remains a comedy legend. Amy Sussman/Getty ImageSeinfeld returned to New York and his stand-up comedy roots when the show ended in 1998. He chronicled his post-"Seinfeld" tour in the Emmy-nominated 1998 HBO comedy special "I'm Telling You for the Last Time." The streamer also struck a deal with Seinfeld for two stand-up specials and the development of scripted and unscripted comedy programming. "Jerry Before Seinfeld" was released on September 19, 2017, and "23 Hours to Kill" — his first original stand-up special in 22 years — premiered on May 5, 2020.
Persons: Seinfeld, Jerry Seinfeld, Amy Sussman, Getty, Dave Chappelle, Ellen DeGeneres, Jimmy Fallon, David Letterman, Barack Obama, Jerry, Organizations: HBO, Netflix Locations: New York
CNN —Jay Leno and his wife Mavis were full of smiles Tuesday as they supported some of Leno’s comedic colleagues. The couple attended the Los Angeles red carpet premiere for “Unfrosted,” a comedy about the origin of Pop-Tarts, which is the directorial debut of comedian Jerry Seinfeld. Leno, who recently celebrated his 74th birthday, has been granted conservertorship over his wife’s estate as she lives with advanced dementia. “I am so sick of these hard hitting controversial documentaries,” Leno joked to Seinfeld as his wife Mavis Leno laughed. “Can’t somebody just make a comedy anymore?”Seinfeld noted that he and Leno have been friends since 1978 and Leno said he was “very proud” of Seinfeld.
Persons: CNN — Jay Leno, Mavis, , , Jerry Seinfeld, Amy Schumer, Melissa McCarthy, Jim Gaffigan, Leno, conservertorship, Mavis Leno, Seinfeld’s, ” Leno, Seinfeld, ” Seinfeld, CNN’s Alli Rosenbloom Organizations: CNN, Los, Hollywood Locations: Los Angeles
Reid Hoffman sat down for an interview with a deepfake of himself. The bot discussed AI regulation and spoke in Klingon during the conversation. Reid AI and Hoffman asked each other questions throughout the interview posted Wednesday. AdvertisementIn their conversation, the two Reids discussed AI regulation, its capabilities, and ways Hoffman can improve his LinkedIn profile. Advertisement"There's a need for a framework that not only fuels innovation but also ensures AI benefits are fairly distributed, all while focusing on enhancing public good," Reid AI said.
Persons: Reid Hoffman, , Reid Hoffman's, Jerry Seinfeld, Reid, Hoffman, I've, deepfakes Organizations: Service
NYC restaurateur Keith McNally insulted Lauren Sánchez in an apparently unprompted Instagram post. And his latest target is Lauren Sánchez, the fiancée of one of the most powerful people in the world, Jeff Bezos. McNally, who owns more than a dozen restaurants including NYC's famed Balthazar, wrote a seemingly out-of-the-blue Instagram post attacking Sánchez and Bezos on Monday. Chrissy Teigen commented on McNally's post, writing, "She's actually incredibly dynamic, accomplished and kind, and everyone who knows her would say the same." If his edited-down post is any indication, McNally sure learned the hard way not to mess with Sánchez, or her famous friends.
Persons: Keith McNally, Lauren Sánchez, Jeff Bezos, He's, James Corden, Adele, Instagram, , who's, Sánchez, McNally, Balthazar, Bezos, — Lauren Sanchez —, Sanchez, MacKenzie Scott, Chrissy Teigen, She's, Jessica Seinfeld, Jerry Seinfeld, Lauren, Stephanie Ruhle, Rachel Zoe, Corden, Corden's, Megastar Adele Organizations: Service, MSNBC, Independent, Representatives, New York Times
CNN —Netflix, the dominant player in streaming, is expected to announce its first-quarter results on Thursday after enjoying months as a Wall Street darling. But much of the company’s past growth and success, analysts say, has come from its old, well-established business model. In recent months, Netflix has made moves to expand and even radically reinvent that business. Last year, Netflix made a particularly risky bet by pushing users who share passwords to create their own accounts — but that paid off. Netflix’s reinventionFor Netflix, last month’s Oscars were a disappointment: Though the streaming service led its rivals in nominations, it took home just one award, for best live-action short film.
Persons: Peacock, , Ross Benes, ” Alicia Reese, , Greg Peters, ” Reese, Reese, Robert Falconer, Amy Reinhard, “ I’m, Peters, We’ve Organizations: CNN, Netflix, Disney, Max, Warner Bros, City, Wedbush Securities, WWE, USA, Rockstar Locations: Hulu, eMarketer, United States
CNN —Netflix, the dominant player in streaming, says it grew sales, profits and added more than 9 million subscribers as it revealed first-quarter results on Thursday. In total, Netflix now has 269.6 million subscribers, a record high. In recent months, Netflix has made moves to expand and even radically reinvent its business in an effort to juice profit. In January, Netflix announced it had acquired the exclusive rights to "WWE Raw" live, currently seen on Comcast's USA cable network. In January, Netflix’s president of advertising, Amy Reinhard, shared that Netflix’s ad-tier had more than 23 million users.
Persons: , eMarketer, Ross Benes, Wall, Peacock, ” Alicia Reese, , Greg Peters, ” Reese, Reese, Robert Falconer, Amy Reinhard, Peters, We’ve Organizations: CNN, Netflix, Disney, Max, Warner Bros, City, Wedbush Securities, WWE, USA, Rockstar Locations: Hulu, United States
Right now, I feel closer to Donald J. Trump than I ever have before. That's because Trump looks like he's having trouble staying awake at his first-ever criminal trial. I don't know how long I was out for — probably just a few seconds — but definitely long enough for them to notice, and for me to notice that they noticed. I don't know when Donald Trump goes to sleep, but I do know that during his Twitter era, he tended to do a lot of late-night scrolling — also relatable — and posting. So don't worry about the nap-shaming, Mr. Trump — many of us do the same thing.
Persons: , Donald J, Trump, Romeo, Juliet, George Costanza's, I'm, Donald Trump, I've Organizations: Service, Business, Seinfeld, Pixar, Gallup Locations: U.S
After 12 seasons, spread across 25 years, the HBO comedy staple “Curb Your Enthusiasm” ends with an episode that sees Larry David put on trial. Witness after witness testifies to Larry’s lifetime of selfish and antisocial behavior. Then he gets out of jail on a technicality and goes home. Because that’s the only kind of ending that makes sense in “Curb”-world. In fact, even former “Curb Your Enthusiasm” fans who hadn’t watched the show in years — but dropped back in for the finale — probably could have predicted how it was going to end.
Persons: Larry David, hadn’t, David, , Larry, Auntie Rae Black Organizations: HBO Locations: Atlanta, Georgia
The long-running show referenced the polarizing "Seinfeld" series finale in its ending. How did the 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' series finale end? This mirrors the structure of the "Seinfeld" series finale. Related storiesLarry tells Seinfeld that "this is how we should've ended the finale," referencing the widely hated "Seinfeld" finale. Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David in the series finale of "Curb Your Enthusiasm."
Persons: Larry David's, , David, Larry, Earl Mack, Greg Kinnear, They're, Joe, Saverio Guerra, Irma, Tracey Ullman, Bruce Springsteen, Jerry, Jerry Seinfeld, George, Jason Alexander, Elaine, Julia Louis, Dreyfus, Kramer, Michael Richards, Seinfeld, Larry David, John Johnson, It's, Ken Tucker, who'd, Samuel Beckett, Tucker, Grantland Organizations: Service, HBO, New Yorker Locations: Atlanta, Massachusetts,
With a parade of callbacks and a twist a quarter-century in the making, “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” the HBO series starring Larry David as a heightened version of himself, ended its 20-plus-year run on Sunday. The final episode, which referenced the polarizing 1998 finale of “Seinfeld,” David’s previous show, was replete with the usual out-of-bounds commentary and cranky fixation on minutiae; David and his co-stars — Jeff Garlin, Susie Essman, J.B. Smoove, Richard Lewis — do not, by creative mandate, change. (“I’m 76 years old, and I have never learned a lesson in my entire life,” David tells a child in the episode, in the opposite of a teachable moment.) In real life, though, the cast are longtime friends, and have weathered much together, including the death of Lewis, who played himself, in February. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Persons: , Larry David, “ Seinfeld, , David, — Jeff Garlin, Susie Essman, Smoove, Richard Lewis —, ” David, Lewis, Jeff Schaffer, Essman —, Susie Greene, , Essman, Schaffer, askew, Latte Larry’s Organizations: HBO Locations: New York, Los Angeles
Larry David has long defended the “Seinfeld” finale. He’s often been its lone champion as critics, fans and the cast, including Jerry Seinfeld, have continued to lament the conclusion of one of television’s most successful, enduring sitcoms. And, if the signs are to be believed, the final episode may pay homage to the much-maligned “Seinfeld” send-off. A trial included a parade of character witnesses, many of them wronged by the defendants over nine seasons, attesting to their unethical behavior. Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer were found guilty of, as the prosecutor put it, “selfishness, self-absorption, immaturity and greed.”
Persons: Larry David, He’s, Jerry Seinfeld, David —, Seinfeld ”, Seinfeld, Jerry, George, Elaine, Kramer Organizations: HBO, Samaritan Locations: New York City, Massachusetts
Larry David is just fine with how “Seinfeld” ended. OK, I can’t read his mind — but “Larry David,” the version of himself he plays on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” is cool with that much-maligned finale. But the rest of the viewership is more likely to look at the final episode the way we have become conditioned to view a series finale: as a high-stakes, legacy-defining challenge. There are plenty of clichés in TV criticism, and I am not immune to using them. But “stick the landing” is one that awakens my cantankerous inner Larry David — not just because it is an overused phrase, but because of what it says about art and endings and what matters in both.
Persons: Larry David, “ Seinfeld ”, , Jerry Seinfeld, , Seinfeld, Larry, Larry David —
It evokes, in the most rudimentary sense, beer fridges and car parts, Super Bowl ads and maybe even Jerry Seinfeld’s bachelor pad, where he displayed his 17 favorite cereal boxes on a shelf. It’s the man cave: punchline, poker hub and perennial source of masculine escape. To Tristan Bridges, a sociologist who is studying the phenomenon, the man cave is also a window into the dynamics of a home, into friendship and loneliness, hobbies and pastimes — and what our physical spaces can tell us about ourselves. For the past few years, he has been interviewing people about their caves, and now Opinion is, too. Do you live in the United States and have a space (a room, a basement, even just a corner) that could be described, cheekily or not, as a man cave?
Persons: Jerry Seinfeld’s, Tristan Bridges, Organizations: Super Bowl Locations: United States
CNN —Just like the version of himself that he plays on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” there are some things in life that Larry David can’t be bothered with. Wallace recalled a time he sent David a “thank you” text the day after they dined out together, because David had picked up the check. “Everybody’s sending all these next day ‘thank you’ texts. That’s enough.”And, while he’s at it, don’t even think about texting David “Happy New Year.” He probably won’t respond. Another occasion when it’s probably best to leave David alone is on his birthday, because responding to “happy birthday” messages, to the “Seinfeld” co-creator, feels more like “a job.”“I would rather not get the Happy Birthday text because I have to return it.
Persons: Larry David can’t, ” –, It’s, David, Chris Wallace, , Wallace, ” David, curt, , David “ Happy, it’s, Seinfeld ”, ” “, I’d, Larry David unloads, Trump, CNN David, what’s, David isn’t Organizations: CNN, HBO, Max, Warner Bros . Locations: he’s
Jerry Seinfeld is now worth over $1 billion, Bloomberg estimated. His portfolio's unconventional, with roughly half coming from TV syndication deals. Seinfeld has a $40 million real estate portfolio, Bloomberg reported, and has netted $100 million on tour. AdvertisementJerry Seinfeld has amassed an impressive fortune, but very little in his portfolio resembles that of the super-wealthy. Bloomberg pegs Seinfeld's net worth at upwards of $1 billion — with roughly half that sum, $465 million, coming from syndication deals for his eponymous sitcom.
Persons: Jerry Seinfeld, Seinfeld, Organizations: Bloomberg, Service, Business
He acted out, showing up to the "Drake & Josh" set late and hungover. "If I'm going to tell my story, this is how it was supposed to be told," Drake Bell, pictured here at his studio in Mexico City, recently told BI. In the second season, Brian Peck (who is unrelated to Bell's "Drake & Josh" costar Josh Peck) joined as a dialogue coach. Bell told BI that Nickelodeon "was a factory," treating child actors like kings one day only to throw them to the curb the next. Bell told BI that, in some ways, his music and the docuseries serve the same purpose.
Persons: Drake Bell, Drake, Josh, tweens, Dan Schneider, Bell, Brian Peck, Peck, Schneider, he's, he'd, Robin Dodson, Joe Bell, bro Totally Kyle, Tony, Ana Topoleanu, Amanda, Josh Peck, Kenan, Kel, Leonardo DiCaprio, Bryan Singer, James Marsden's, Tom DeSanto, Dan, Bell's, worrisome, Joe, hadn't, Gary Livingston, I'd, Dodson, I'm, heartthrob, James Marsden, Alan Thicke, Strong, Lynne Murphy, Penn Badgley, Forrest Gump, Will Friedle, Brian, Friedle, I've, don't, spiraled, He'd, Janet Von Schmeling, Von Schmeling, Jennette McCurdy, Amanda Bynes, Aaron Carter, Emma Schwartz, Jaime Nogales, Singer, Pan, Mary Robertson, Kate Taylor Organizations: Nickelodeon, Business, Kids, Maxine Productions, Sony Pictures, Bell, Daytona Beach Police Department, Getty, Los Angeles Police Department, Ford, Hollywood, BI, Disney, Netflix, US, Cleveland, The New York Times, Times, Daily Mail, Orlando, Pan Am, & $ Locations: Mexico City, Newport Beach , California, Bell, Hollywood, Orange, Los Angeles, Valley Glen, Angeles, Los Feliz, San Diego, Feliz, Glendale , California, Mexico, California, Ohio, Florida, pompadour
With Richard Lewis, Kvetching Was Charismatic
  + stars: | 2024-02-29 | by ( Jason Zinoman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
There were broadcasters (Howard Cosell) and the occasional talk show host (Joan Rivers), but no Jews leading a cast on prime time. Then in the final year of the decade, that changed, and a glut of anxious men arrived, kvetching, quipping and dating shiksas. For those who know him as the cranky friend of Larry David on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” it may be a surprise that Richard Lewis, who died at 76 this week, cut a seductive figure: clever, cool, darkly morose. (Second place: “Family Ties.”) But Lewis brought a nervy energy that pushed against the saccharine instincts of network sitcoms. He once told David Letterman, “The woman I’m with now insisted on having intercourse only with a raven on her shoulder.”
Persons: Howard Cosell, Joan Rivers, Jackie Mason, Jerry Seinfeld, Rob Morrow, Richard Lewis, , Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Myers, Lewis bellyached, Larry David, Seinfeld, Lewis, David Letterman, Locations: Alaska, Chicago
FOURTEEN DAYS, edited by Margaret Atwood and Douglas PrestonNew Yorkers generally don’t talk to their neighbors. This is to preserve psychological boundaries while living stacked on top of one another like ice cubes in trays. A new novellus about Lower East Side neighbors called “Fourteen Days” seeps creepy, in this fine tradition, through most of its 350-plus pages. “Novellus” is Latin for new, but the “us” sounds extra-right here because this is collaborative fiction, by 36 authors of various ages, ethnicities, genres and degrees of fame (John Grisham and Scott Turow are among the higher-flying contributors). Why would anyone organize such an experiment, with its air of an overbooked open-mic night with a few surprise guest stars and peanuts scattered on the sticky floors?
Persons: Margaret Atwood, Douglas Preston, , Seinfeld, Ira Levin, , John Grisham, Scott Turow Locations: Lower East
William Post, Who Helped Create Pop-Tarts, Dies at 96
  + stars: | 2024-02-14 | by ( John Yoon | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
William Post, a businessman who was credited with a significant role in inventing Pop-Tarts, a classic American snack and cultural touchstone with an enticing sweetness and simplicity, died on Feb. 10 in Grand Rapids, Mich. His death was confirmed by his son, Dan Post, who said his father had died of heart failure in a senior living community. Mr. Post led the bakery plant that developed the first Pop-Tarts for Kellogg’s in 1964, his son said. The snack quickly became a popular treat for many people in the United States, including Mr. Post’s children, who were among the first taste testers. Today, billions of Pop-Tarts are sold each year, according to Kellogg’s.
Persons: William Post, Dan Post, , , Jerry Seinfeld Organizations: Post Locations: Grand Rapids, Mich, Kellogg’s, United States,
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