TV: Larry David Curb Your Enthusiasm Is Returning for Season 9 UPDATE: Season 12 COMING FINAL SEASON!

my BROTHER FROM ANOTHER!!!!!

empire-i-got-you.gif
Both of y'all negros :smh: :smh::lol:
 
something about this chick..

remember when the waiter was rubbing her breasts to get the stain out?
It wasn't the waiter , it was actually her actor friend she was having an affair with, although it was never actually confirmed, her actions in that episode make it clear he was fucking her. I'll correct myself, it wasn't clear that they were actually fucking but it was clear it was headed that way if they hadn't got there yet.
 
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I think this season is the weakest of the series but last week was the funniest of the season.
 

Curb Your Enthusiasm showrunner says they shot a Larry death scene in case season 11 was show's last

Sounds like L.D. came pretty, pretty, pretty close to kicking the bucket.
By Lauren HuffAugust 04, 2022 at 04:46 PM EDT

Larry David came this close to meeting a bitter — albeit hilariously fitting — end on the most recent season of Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Season 11 of the HBO comedy followed Larry (the character played by David as an exaggerated version of himself) trying to get out of building a fence for his pool after a burglar drowned in it, and it turns out he almost drowned as well.
In a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter, showrunner Jeff Schaffer revealed that because they treat every season as the potential finale, he "wanted to prepare as if it was the last one," so they filmed a scene in which Larry dies.

"So Larry kept falling into that pool without the fence and banging his head [for the scene]," Schaffer explained. "We actually have a shot after he'd fallen in, of the still pool with just the envelope floating in the middle, and maybe adding one bubble… We shot as if it was going to be the last one ever. I had to at least prepare for it."
Larry David on 'Curb Your Enthusiasm'

| CREDIT: JOHN P. JOHNSON/ HBO
According to Schaffer, season 11's storyline just "lent itself too perfectly" not to get the scene, which of course ultimately wasn't used. "We just got high and wide on the pool, with one light shining on it and the envelope floating in the middle," he recalled. "And we said, 'OK, if this is how we go, this is how we go!'"

As for how the show's star and creator felt about it all, Schaffer said David told him at the time that he was "not ready to die" on the show. And true to his word, David and Schaffer are now hard at work on season 12 of the beloved series, which has spanned two decades and more than 100 episodes.
So, given that every new batch of episodes is treated as a potential series ender, will they shoot a new death scene each season moving forward? "No," Schaffer said. "But always thinking, 'Hey, what if this is it?'"
 
snippet of how my life works:

so i was looking for the Seinfeld gif of where he throws in the towel at a play.

found out it was from an episode of Curb your enthusiasm.

found out which show, but accidentally typed in the wrong one.

watched this jackass Larry stumble his way into some "magical" coochie then stumble his way RIGHT out of it :lol:

mad as FUCK that this bullshit made me laugh so hard :lol:

ima gone watch the right show but i aint watchin no mo. :hmm:
 
I haven't seen it since season 9. I used to get the torrent off of rarbg.to or whatever it was. I don't know how to get tv show links now.
 

Why Curb Your Enthusiasm’s Susie Essman and Cheryl Hines didn’t address Richard Lewis’ death on Watch What Happens Live

The actor died at 76 on Tuesday after suffering a heart attack.
By
Emlyn Travis

Published on February 29, 2024


Bravo is clarifying why Curb Your Enthusiasm stars Susie Essman and Cheryl Hines did not address the passing of their castmate Richard Lewis during last night’s episode of Watch What Happens Live.

The series’ confirmed in a social media statement that the episode “was recorded earlier this week” prior to Lewis’ death at age 76 on Tuesday. It added, “We are deeply saddened by the loss of comedian Richard Lewis and send our heartfelt condolences to his friends, family and the cast of Curb Your Enthusiasm.”



While visiting the show, Essman and Hines were asked by host Andy Cohen about their favorite Curb episodes. “I have a lot of ‘em, but I’m gonna say ‘The Doll,'” Essman said, referring to the season 2 episode where Larry David’s character angers an ABC executive by cutting off the hair of her daughter’s antique doll and resorts to some very inventive measures in order to find her a new one.

“I would say the car wash,'” Hines added, a nod to the season 3 episode “The Grand Opening” in which her character, on a colon cleanse, ends up pooping herself after getting trapped in a car wash with Larry.

WATCH WHAT HAPPENS LIVE WITH ANDY COHEN -- Episode 21038 -- Pictured: (l-r) Susie Essman, Cheryl Hines, Richard Lewis attends the STARZ' Blunt Talk series premiere on August 10, 2015 in Los Angeles, California.

Susie Essman, Cheryl Hines, and Richard Lewis.
CHARLES SYKES/BRAVO; MICHAEL KOVAC/GETTY IMAGES
Lewis, who starred in a recurring role as a fictionalized version of himself on the HBO series, died of a heart attack on Tuesday, his publicist Jeff Abraham said. Last year, the comedian announced his retirement from stand-up and revealed that he had been living with Parkinson's disease, but noted that he would continue to write and act. He currently stars on the final season of Curb.

Hines, who played David's wife on the series, later paid tribute to him in a lengthy social media post on Wednesday. "When I was young I had the biggest crush on Richard Lewis," she wrote on Instagram. "He was the funniest person on stage and the most handsome comedian. Then when I was cast on Curb Your Enthusiasm, I got to work with him and it was a dream come true. Through the years I learned who Richard really was and the gifts he gave. Yes, he was the comedian I fell in love with, but he was also one of the most loving people I know. He would take time to tell the people he loved what they meant to him - especially in recent years."

"In between takes on Curb, he would tell me how special I was to him and how much he loved me," she concluded. "To be loved by Richard Lewis. A true gift. I love you Richard. You will be missed. Sending my love to Joyce and to all of Richard's family. Larry, Richard adored you. But you know that."
 
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