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* [[Throw It In]]: The ending of the episode "The Parking Garage". Originally, the four of them were supposed to get in the car and drive off. But the car they had was such a piece of junk that it wouldn't start. After all the frustration of shooting the episode, they realized that the car being dead was just so much more perfect than anything they could have come up with.
* [[Throw It In]]: The ending of the episode "The Parking Garage". Originally, the four of them were supposed to get in the car and drive off. But the car they had was such a piece of junk that it wouldn't start. After all the frustration of shooting the episode, they realized that the car being dead was just so much more perfect than anything they could have come up with.
** Jerry's line in "The Junior Mint", "Let's watch them go slice this fat bastard up." His quickly taking a sip of coffee afterwards was to keep from laughing.
** Jerry's line in "The Junior Mint", "Let's watch them go slice this fat bastard up." His quickly taking a sip of coffee afterwards was to keep from laughing.
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]:
** Averted with Puddy's Martin Brodeur jersey in "The Face Painter". Brodeur went on to play for the New Jersey Devils for two more decades after the episode aired.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: Larry Miller was originally cast as George, but it was decided that, just to make George a little bit more pathetic, he needed to be short. Miller eventually appeared as a [[Diabolical Mastermind|doorman]] that could give [[Scrubs|The Janitor]] a run for his money.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: Larry Miller was originally cast as George, but it was decided that, just to make George a little bit more pathetic, he needed to be short. Miller eventually appeared as a [[Diabolical Mastermind|doorman]] that could give [[Scrubs|The Janitor]] a run for his money.
** The project began as just a 90 minute special about a day in Jerry's life, and how it inspires his stand-up material that night. Jerry and Larry David couldn't quite stretch the script to fill the 90 minutes, so they reduced in down to half an hour as a series pilot. As Jerry would later say, "We couldn't make 90 minutes, so we made 90 hours."
** The project began as just a 90 minute special about a day in Jerry's life, and how it inspires his stand-up material that night. Jerry and Larry David couldn't quite stretch the script to fill the 90 minutes, so they reduced in down to half an hour as a series pilot. As Jerry would later say, "We couldn't make 90 minutes, so we made 90 hours."