The Jerusalem Post

‘Get out!’: Jerry Seinfeld is a billionair­e

- • By ANNIE MASSA and VERNAL GALPOTTHAW­ELA

For a show famously about nothing, Seinfeld created a whole lot of something for its star. The enduring sitcom has helped propel comedian Jerry Seinfeld’s net worth to more than $1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, which is valuing his wealth for the first time.

His eponymous show, co-created with Larry David, has proved particular­ly durable since its debut in 1989, serving as a springboar­d for other kinds of income even as the landscape of American TV shifted.

A key portion of Seinfeld’s fortune comes from a series of syndicatio­n deals for the sitcom, which netted him about $465 million, according to Bloomberg estimates, while a Netflix deal for the streaming rights brought an additional $94m. He also earned more than $100m. since the 1980s from touring, according to the estimate.

The analysis assumes Seinfeld, 69, invested his earnings beginning in 1990. The cash is appreciate­d in line with the historic performanc­e of the MSCI World Index.

The estimate includes $40m. of real estate, including an apartment on New York’s Central Park West, a home in the Hamptons, and a warehouse in California. His vintage car collection – some of which were featured in his Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee series on Netflix – wasn’t included in the analysis.

Amy Jacobs, a representa­tive for Seinfeld, called the wealth calculatio­n “inaccurate” but declined to provide further details.

Everyday life

Born in Brooklyn and raised in the Long Island town of Massapequa, Seinfeld attended Queens College, where he practiced standup, honing a quintessen­tial brand of observatio­nal comedy.

Mining the humdrum details of everyday life for material, Seinfeld spun jokes from topics as simple as waiting on hold with the bank, being left-handed, or listening to an airplane pilot update passengers over a PA system. Appearance­s on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and Late Night with David Letterman vaulted him on to the national stage.

But Seinfeld took his celebrity to a new level.

With its distinctiv­e slap bass and riotous laugh track, Seinfeld both captures a singular moment in 1990s Manhattan and transcends its era.

“It addresses the absurdity of everyday, modern life, which allows for this frequent feeling that one is in Seinfeld,” said Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, author of the book Seinfeldia:

How a Show About Nothing Changed Everything.

“If you watch the show, you will inevitably find yourself frequently saying that something is ‘like a Seinfeld episode,’” she said.

Centered around a group of New Yorkers – picky Jerry, neurotic George, judgmental Elaine, and gonzo Kramer – who needle, scheme, gossip, and opine from an iconic coffee shop and Jerry’s apartment, Seinfeld inspired an entrenched fandom that remains potent more than two decades after its series finale.

Over years of syndicatio­n, Seinfeld scrupulous­ly codified pet peeves – the close talker, low talker, re-gifter, double dipper – that slipped easily into the vernacular. True Seinfeld lovers have a language all their own. A “sponge-worthy” paramour, “bizarro” doppelgang­er, or occasional conversati­onal gloss of “yada-yada” are references that demand no further explanatio­n among devotees.

“These four main characters capture very universal feelings and behaviors that many of us can relate to,” said Anthony Tobia, a professor of psychiatry at Rutgers University who uses Seinfeld as a tool to teach medical students about personalit­y disorders. “They behave in ways we all have the capacity for.”

When Netflix won the global streaming rights to all 180 episodes of Seinfeld in 2019, the Los Angeles Times reported that the company paid “far more” than the $500m. NBCUnivers­al shelled out for streaming rights to The Office, or the $425m. WarnerMedi­a paid for Friends, citing people familiar with the matter that it didn’t identify.

Even in 1998, the year the Seinfeld finale aired, TV executives seemed to recognize it could be the last of a dwindling species.

The show “may be the last big hit sitcom to come off the networks ever,” Bill Burke, the former president of TBS Superstati­on, said in a 1998 article in the New York Times. Turner Broadcasti­ng paid more than $1m. per episode for the cable rerun rights to Seinfeld, the newspaper reported.

During its run, Seinfeld sat at the top of the Nielsen ratings. Seasons 3 through 8 all ranked among Netflix’s 500 most-watched shows, according to data cataloging viewers from January through June 2023.

Lasting influence

Signs of its lasting influence are everywhere. Seinfeld merchandis­e is among the most sought-after for any TV show. Fans can purchase a 20-ounce ramen bowl and chopstick set printed with NO SOUP FOR YOU; an embossed phony license plate with the letters ASSMAN; a lavender scented soy candle emblazoned with George’s father’s famous entreaty for “Serenity Now!”

Devotees can commune at in-person events. The Brooklyn Cyclones minor league baseball team hosts a Seinfeld night where fans have competed in an “Elaine Dancing Contest,” mimicking the spasmodic kicks and ungainly thumb jerks that Julia Louis-Dreyfus’s character breaks out at a party, horrifying co-workers.

Seinfeld, whose methodical writing process is well documented, has new projects underway.

An upcoming film, Unfrosted: the Pop-Tart Story, which Seinfeld directed, is scheduled for release in May.

“I like money,” Seinfeld told the New York Times in 2012. “But it’s never been about the money.”

(Bloomberg/TNS)*

 ?? (Mat Hayward/Getty Images/TNS) ?? JERRY SEINFELD at January’s Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.
(Mat Hayward/Getty Images/TNS) JERRY SEINFELD at January’s Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

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