Carol Leifer and I started doing standup together at the Comic Strip in the 70s, and she’s become an incredibly talented comedy writer, winning Emmy, Globes, and WGA awards. She has a hilarious and practical book called “How to Write a Funny Speech..” which you should buy instead of prompting another lame output from ChatGPT.
amazon.com/How-Write-Funny-S…
Meghan Trainor, Jimmy Fallon, Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt have a treat for you: "Sweet Morning Heat", an original song for the upcoming film UNFROSTED. Out now! netflixmusic.ffm.to/sweetmor…
My friend, comedian @markschiff, has written a very funny book called ‘Why Not? Lessons on Comedy, Courage and Chutzpah.’ It's the closest thing you can get to hearing Mark tell hilarious stories, which is one of my favorite things to do. amazon.com/Why-Not-Lessons-C…
A web experiment that became a television show, and now it’s in print. The Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee Book is now available. bit.ly/ComediansInCarsBooks
The first episode of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee went online ten years ago -- on our own website, without any press or promotion. Just me and Larry David having a funny conversation. We called it a web series because nobody knew what streaming television was. (1/2)
Ten years later, we have produced 84 episodes and we’re on Netflix. It’s a crazy story, and this book seems like a good way to tell it, along with some of my favorite photos and dialogue. The Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee Book is out November 22. bit.ly/ComediansInCarsBooks
Liz was always the sweetest, nicest TV mom a son could wish for. Every time she came on our show it was the coziest feeling for me. So lucky to have known her.
I love these two guys.
They’re so busy and that they were able to grab a quick coffee with me is the biggest deal I could ever imagine.
Thanks to Paul Kaminski, Dan Mora and everyone at DC, the greatest comic book brand, for this incomparable experience. screenrant.com/jerry-seinfel…
“Seinfeld “ - Netflix Day!
All 180 episodes available everywhere.
For 32 years, me, Ted Sarandos and Reed Hastings envisioned this moment.
LEGO jumped in at the last second.
Let the Worlds Collide!
In 1988 at the Westway Diner on 9th Ave, Larry David and I hatched an idea for a show about a comedian but with no story.
Ted Sarandos was 24 years old working as a sales manager for a Blockbuster distributor in Phoenix.
In a month, all nine seasons and 180 episodes will be streaming on Netflix for its 200 million global subscribers.
It took a while, but this was our whole plan from the beginning.
@netflixisajoke