![]() In Part Two of the episode, Keith is attracted to Elaine and breaks a date with Jerry to take her out, but eventually the two (Jerry and Keith, not Keith and Elaine) end up breaking up after Jerry thinks the relationship is moving too fast, after Keith asks for his help to move apartments. Meanwhile, Kramer and Newman hate Hernandez, believing he once spit on them after a Met's loss, re-inacting the spit "JFK" shooter style. Jerry discusses how men just do not make "new" friends and treats Keith like the two of them are dating. Located at 5 West 63rd St, this is where Jerry and George meet baseball player Keith Hernandez. That honor belonged to writer Larry David, who the character George Costanza is based off, who lived in an apartment building on 43rd St and 10th Ave. However, his neighbour was not the real-life Kramer, a.k.a Kenny (not Cosmo) Kramer. 81st St, is in fact the location where the real Jerry Seinfeld lived back in his New York stand-up comic days before becoming a big TV star. The official street address Jerry Seinfeld always used, 129 W. The diner was the "Central Perk" meeting spot for the gang to sit face-to-face and discuss mostly nothing, it also has the distinction of being the only place where Elaine can get her favorite "Big Salad". exterior shots where the only thing used on the show. But we can't seriously write about famous NYC outposts as featured in the show without mentioning the real life Tom's Restaurant. Yes it's been photographed in 1000's of tourist shots, with everyone looking for their piece of Seinfeld memorabilia. Without further adieu please see Guest of a Guest's Top 10 favorite Seinfeld NYC locations. One of the better, if not greatest Seinfeld episodes, Soup Nazi has got us wistfully reminiscing back on one of the great NYC shows - even if it was actually filmed on a sound stage in LA. ![]() Yeganeh - who calls himself "The Original SoupMan", detests the "Soup Nazi" character" - despite it no-doubt being good for business (after the original location closed in 2004, he opened another 22 shops and served up his soups online) and banned Jerry Seinfeld from his stall after the infamous episode aired in November 1995. But the original soup nazi, Al Yeganeh did not show up for the celebrations. New York City's most famous purveyor of soup, made famous after he inspired Jerry Seinfeld's "Soup Nazi" character on the popular TV show, reopened his original Manhattan stall yesterday on West 56th near 8th Ave.
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