How is it possible this hasn't been mentioned yet?! ------ http://tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=2036 Seinfeld - Final Cover Art & More DVD Details! Posted by David Lambert 8/09/2004 Good morning! Have you had a nice weekend, dreaming of Seinfeld DVD sets after Friday's news reports and press release about the November 23rd release of 3 different offerings? Fulfilling the promise made last November (a year prior to its scheduled release!), Columbia has announced that there will be three releases on that date: * Seinfeld - Seasons 1 & 2 o $49.95 SRP o $39.95 M.A.P. (Minimum Advertised Price: lowest price allowed in any ad) o 4 DVDs, 437 minutes o 18 Episodes (Seinfeld Chronicles Pilot version, Seinfeld Pilot version, 4 episodes First Season , 12 episodes Second Season) o Around 12 Hours of Extras: + Inside Looks: Interviews with the cast and creators about what was happening behind the scenes as the episodes were created and filmed during Seasons 1 and 2. + Yada Yada Yada: Audio commentaries from the cast remembering the making of the Season 1 and 2 episodes. + In the Vault: Saved from the cutting room floor... deleted scenes from the first two seasons - never seen! + Not That There's Anything Wrong With That: Never-before-seen-outtakes and bloopers from the 1st and 2nd seasons. + Master of His Domain: See Jerry in exclusive stand-up comedy footage, shot for the show's 1st and 2nd seasons, but never used. + Sponsored by Vandelay Industries: Original NBC promotional ads and trailers during the first two years. + Notes About Nothing: Behind-the-scenes scoop and production notes from Season 1 and Season 2. + How It Began: An hour-long look at how Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David first came up with the idea for the show, how it almost didn't get made and how they emerged with the show that changed the face of television forever. + Tonight Show Footage * Seinfeld - Season 3 o $49.95 SRP o $39.95 M.A.P. (Minimum Advertised Price: lowest price allowed in any ad) o 4 DVDs, 505 minutes o 22 Episodes (from the Third Season, including the double-length episode "The Boyfriend", for 23 total half-hours) o Around 12 Hours of Extras: + Inside Looks: Interviews with the cast and creators about what was happening behind the scenes as the episodes were created and filmed during Season 3. + Yada Yada Yada: Audio commentaries from the cast remembering the making of the Season 3 episodes. + In the Vault: Saved from the cutting room floor... deleted scenes from the third season - never seen! + Not That There's Anything Wrong With That: Never-before-seen-outtakes and bloopers from the 3rd season. + Master of His Domain: See Jerry in exclusive stand-up comedy footage, shot for the show's 3rd season, but never used. + Sponsored by Vandelay Industries: Original NBC promotional ads and trailers during the third year. + Notes About Nothing: Behind-the-scenes scoop and production notes from Season 3. + Kramer vs. Kramer: Kenny to Cosmo: If you thought Cosmo Kramer was hilarious, wait until you meet the real Kramer, Kenny Kramer! * Seinfeld - Gift Set o Both the Seinfeld - Seasons 1 & 2 and the Seinfeld - Season 3 volumes together in one package o $119.95 SRP o $89.95 M.A.P. (Minimum Advertised Price: lowest price allowed in any ad) o 8 DVDs, 942 minutes o 40 Episodes (From the first three seasons) o Approximately 24 Hours of Extras, including everything listed above for the individual sets o Gift Items Available Exclusively With This Package: + Limited Edition Script with handwritten notes from Larry David + "Monk's Diner" Salt & Pepper Shakers (shaped like mustard and catsup bottles) + Collectible Seinfeld Playing Cards with character images on the face cards According to Columbia's press release, the people behind these releases "returned to the original film elements and spent many months digitally remastering every episode in high definition; the original analog audio tracks went through a similar process". Also, they "feature the original NBC network versions, 1-2 minutes longer than the syndicated versions and not seen since their original broadcast runs." Here is the cover art for all three releases, including the gift items for the Seinfeld - Gift Set:
I've seen some trailers of the DVD, in a couple of other DVDs (I think Starsky and Hutch had a trailer) Should be great
ok..i'm among the biggest seinfeld dorks in the world. and i can't imagine spending $50 on episodes of a show that is on at least 4 times a day. i know. i know. the extras. but seriously...watch that once...how many times are you gonna watch that? behind the scenes?? come on...it's a freaking sitcom, albeit the greatest sitcom EVER...EVER...EVER...EVER...EVER...EVER... still...i'm too cheap to drop $50 on this.
Its called Netflix. We hardly watch any TV anymore because we rent the TV shows off of Netflix. We just finished up the first two seasons of Six Feet Under. What an awesome show. I hope the third season comes out soon.
I concur. I don't buy DVD's any more either because of Netflix. I could only afford about twelve a year versus watching 100 + a year this way.
Yeah I wouldn't buy them either. Between TBS and WB39, you can catch 6 episodes a day. Thats enough for me.
ok..if you're not buying this...no one is. between the both of us...and neither is buying?? man...those things are gonna collect cobwebs!!!
Yeah, I saw the trailer on the Starsky & Hutch DVD. I hate to admit I rented Starsky & Hutch, though. ok..i'm among the biggest seinfeld dorks in the world. and i can't imagine spending $50 on episodes of a show that is on at least 4 times a day. There will come a day when it's not on that much anymore. Of course, the DVDs will probably still be available... and probably cheaper... at that point. Personally, I like having the option of watching the episode I want to watch (and without syndication cuts). That said, I'm probably not buying this one, either, just because while I enjoyed Seinfeld, I've not enjoyed the show nearly as much on repeat viewing. But I've purchased several other TV shows on DVD (and those of you who aren't buying this, go buy Green Acres: Season One to show there's a market for the show and entice them into putting out Season 2). By the by, what's the deal with MAP? I absolutely hate having to actually go by a place to find out the price if they're offering it for less than MAP.
If they were a lil cheaper, Id buy them, just for the novelty part of it I guess. Not for that price though. Especially for the first 3 seasons, which were nothing special IMO.
exactly. Three's Company...Brady Bunch... some shows will never leave you. I don't think Friends and Seinfeld are going anywhere very soon. They'll be in regular syndication for years....and frankly, I don't see a lot of new sitcoms ready to displace them.
How much cheaper? you're right. but it will be YEARS before it's off the air entirely. many YEARS. I'm sure, especially since there haven't been a whole lot of hit sitcoms since then that stations could replace it with. But I recall several shows where I thought "Why should I tape them, it's on every day?" only to find the show disappear from syndication not too long after. And with shows from the 1960s, I was amazed at how much was cut out of the episodes for syndication. There's a good four minutes or so removed from each episode. Even more modern shows have a couple of minutes cut for syndication (some great Simpsons jokes end up cut out for syndication, for example).
Whatever channel that's on, I don't get it because I've not seen Sanford and Son on the schedule in years. I miss several of the shows that were on TV when I was a kid. Dobie Gillis, The Life of Riley, I Married Joan, even Dick Van Dyke is on less than when I was a kid . And Green Acres and Petticoat Junction are far more difficult to find.
I'd give zero for the first few seaons, but as much as $50 for the later ones. Hey ...Cheers and Threes Company are still in syndication ......the classics will never die
My cable system doesn't carry TV Land. I noticed that TV Land has a few shows I liked that I don't see anymore, such as The Bob Newhart Show and Andy Griffith, etc.
But they will get less and less prominent and may end up only being on in the middle of the night on cable. And several classics aren't in regular syndication anymore, or are only on cable at odd times.
They given me free entertainment for years now, I'm gonna repay them a bit. You ungrateful bastards. *glaring at codell and MadMax*