翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Cheyenne Kid
・ The Cheyenne Social Club
・ The Chi-Lites
・ The Cheaters (TV series)
・ The Cheating Culture
・ The Chechahcos
・ The Chechako
・ The Checkered Coat
・ The Checkered Demon
・ The Checkered Flag (film)
・ The Checkers (American band)
・ The Checkers (Japanese band)
・ The Checklist Manifesto
・ The Checklist of Fantastic Literature
・ The Checkout
The Checks
・ The Checks (band)
・ The Chedi Muscat
・ The Cheebacabra
・ The Cheek
・ The Cheeky Devil
・ The Cheeky Girls
・ The Cheerful Cherub
・ The Cheerful Insanity of Giles, Giles and Fripp
・ The Cheerful Soul
・ The Cheerful Squadron
・ The Cheerleader
・ The Cheerleaders
・ The Cheers
・ The Cheese and the Worms


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Checks : ウィキペディア英語版
The Checks

"The Checks" is the 141st episode of the sitcom ''Seinfeld''. This was the seventh episode for the eighth season. It aired on NBC on November 7, 1996.
==Plot==
Elaine's new boyfriend, Brett (James Patrick Stuart), is obsessed with furniture designed by a (fictional) designer named Karl Farbman, and the song "Desperado" by the Eagles; he is so obsessed with the latter that he insists Elaine be silent whenever it plays. Jerry spots an umbrella salesman using the sales technique he invented which was named "The Twirl". However, the salesman explains that it was in fact invented by Teddy Padillac, a long-time umbrella salesman who Jerry once worked with.
Meanwhile, hundreds of twelve-cent royalty checks keep arriving from Jerry's brief appearance on a Japanese television show, the "Super Terrific Happy Hour". Kramer warns George that the carpet cleaners he hired are actually a front for a religious cult. Intrigued, George tries to be converted, but they're not interested in him.
Kramer meets some Japanese businessmen on vacation and he takes them on a tour around the city. Confused about the exchange rate of ¥30,000 (which is about $250 in American dollars), Kramer spends all of their money on expensive clothing and souvenirs. Brett delivers an over sized chest of drawers to Kramer and thinks that Jerry might be jealous. Kramer thinks the TV pilot that Jerry and George did would be perfect for Japanese television, hence his trying to impress the Japanese tourists. They pitch it to a couple of Japanese TV executives who are uninterested and tell Jerry and George to leave. Jerry, due to his writer's cramp from signing all the royalty checks, spills his coffee and leaves a stain on the carpet.
Elaine tries to find a song that she and Brett can share, including "Witchy Woman", also by the Eagles, but he rejects them out-of-hand; Elaine then suggests that they share "Desperado", but Brett says that it's "his" song. Having run out of money, Kramer puts his Japanese friends up at his place, sleeping in the chest of drawers (much like a capsule hotel) and has fun drinking with them in his hot tub. Jerry, caught in the rain and needing an umbrella, runs into former co-worker and umbrella salesman, Teddy Padillac. Padillac, incensed that Jerry is trying to take credit for "The Twirl", demands $200 for an umbrella. Jerry, unable to come up with the money, is left standing in the pouring rain. Brett happens to drive by and converses with Jerry for a moment. He is convinced that Jerry is down on his luck since he is unable to afford an umbrella and that he would offer him a ride, but he's with Karl Farbman in a two-seated car.
George gets the cleaners to do the offices at Yankee Stadium where they find a new recruit—George's boss, Mr. Wilhelm. He joins under the name of Tania, the name Patty Hearst took after she was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army; upset, George says to the head cult cleaner, "Him you brainwashed?? What's he got that I don't have?!" and the cleaner simply shrugs his shoulders. Because of the humidity from the hot tub, the wooden chest warps and Kramer's guests, who, just before the meeting, along with Kramer, convinces George to come in the tub, get stuck in the drawers, because of the sake they had. Jerry, still having writer's cramp from check signing, uses a fire ax from the hallway to smash open the chest, which scares the Japanese guests and injures Brett who is knocked unconscious when he attempts to stop Jerry from harming the chest. The scared Japanese tourists tell the Japanese TV executives about the incident, thus ruining the chances of selling the "Jerry" pilot to Japanese television. During the coda, it is strongly implied by the sound of a heart rate monitor flatlining that Brett dies from his earlier injury when the surgeon operating on him becomes distracted by the song "Witchy Woman" playing in the background in much the same way Brett would become distracted by "Desperado".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Checks」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.