Where is seinfeld apartment




















Don't worry, they only request that you have your order in mind and your cash handy; they're much nicer in real life than on the show! Mount Sinai Roosevelt. Hopefully you don't actually wind up here at Mount Sinai Roosevelt Hospital, but if you do, make like Kramer and do a little exploring. This is where he stumbles across an alleged Pigman. Oh, and be careful where you park your car here, too. This is the episode where George finds a prime parking spot right in front of the hospital Tim Whatley's Apartment - Seinfeld.

In the show, the gang is invited to the apartment of smarmy dentist Tim Whatley played by Breaking Bad's Bryan Cranston! In real life, the filming location used for Whatley's apartment does overlook Central Park.

Elaine's Apartment - Seinfeld. Elaine moves around a bit throughout the show, and even once almost moves into Jerry's apartment when he considers moving out, but for most of the earlier seasons, Elaine's Apartment Building is near Central Park. Not a bad location! George's Apartment - Seinfeld. When George isn't living with his parents, he lives in this apartment building on W. It's a great place to celebrate The Summer of George Yankee Stadium.

Stop by George's former place of employment, Yankee Stadium the one in the show has since been razed as of , but if you're lucky you might be able to see George driving around the parking lot with a World Series trophy dragging behind his car. Try and catch a game here, because baseball factors so heavily into the show, from the gang's short-lived friendship with star Keith Hernandez to Kramer promising a sick kid that Yankee Paul O'Neill would hit not one, but two home runs for him.

Some have noted that Jer seems to love horror films, including the gem Arachnophobia. How these particular titles made their way onto the show is, like other details, unknown. In Seinfeld 's first season, Jerry's apartment has a different look and feel, most notably in relation to his taste in bookcases, demonstrated by the picture of Elaine on the left.

In his main living area, he has a shiny white and metal bookcase that matches his s art deco dining table. In his hallway, where his bike would hang in subsequent seasons, sits a standard white bookshelf. The white hallway bookshelf's contents change. In certain episodes, it is filled with baseball hats along the top.

In other episodes, it contains fewer books and more sports memorabilia. Jerry's apartment is the most comfortable and consistent space in Seinfeld. While they do spend a lot of time sharing food and drinks at their beloved diner, everyone, eventually, reconvenes at Jerry's. Why is this? Maybe it's because he's the most stable character on the show. Between Elaine's job and apartment jumping, George's laziness, and Kramer's constant redecorating schemes, Jerry's apartment serves as the reliable landing spot for these nutty New Yorkers.

Megan is a public librarian by trade obsessed with the intersections between art, culture, and society. She's a nerd for horror, obscure memes, weird history, graphic novels, and binge-worthy science fiction series. Maybe it's the only place in "New York" some viewers have ever spent any quality time. The actual "apartment" is not in New York at all. It is a set built in Los Angeles.

But, dear reader, I have some distressing news. Jerry Seinfeld's apartment does not exist. And, because we live in hell, some monster on Reddit decided to point out that not only does the apartment not exist, but it couldn't physically exist by all known natural laws of science. Notice how the door is at an angle pointed at the kitchen. We know there is an apartment directly across from Jerry Kramer's.

And, by the logic of the show, when looking out of Jerry's front door, there is a wall to the left and the hallway extends to the right. There are a few exterior shots that show the length of the hallway, none of which I can locate right now.

But, given that the front door is at an angle, the hallway couldn't possibly extend to the right from his front door. The online reactions to the discovery of Seninfield's impossible hallway are a mix of refusal, quiet defeat, outright anger, and hindsight realizations. A different person couldn't hide their anger at the show's creators over the discovery. I hope somebody got fired for that blunder," they wrote.

An unrealistic television apartment is obviously not a phenomenon unique to "Seinfield. There's no doubt that a collection of true "Seinfeld" lovers will take the rendering of Jerry's impossible hallway as nothing more than yada, yada, yada. Gus Saltonstall , Patch Staff.



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