Pular para o conteúdo principal

Get Jerry Seinfeld a surfboard

Jerry Seinfeld: obsessed with surfing since its early stand-up comedy years | Photo: Creative Commons

For reasons I cannot explain, I only became aware of Jerry Seinfeld's work in my mid-40s. I guess it's just what it meant to be.

I grew up watching and laughing at British comedy TV shows and getting used to the dryness and fine irony of Monthy Python and their disciples.

As a Generation X guy born in 1977 and growing up in Europe, America inspired and entertained me in other ways, but humor was not on top of the list.

I remember watching a few seconds of "Seinfeld" on national television, here and there, but I never quite got hooked enough to follow it.

Interestingly, it coincided with my early surfing years.

Like many young people of my generation, I learned to ride a wave by myself around 1991. My first surfboard - the only one I regrettably sold - was a Mike Davis.

While I was living the best days of my life with my heavy 6'2, Jerry Seinfeld was rising to stardom from NBC to the world.

Time goes by at the speed of light.

Suddenly, it's the Netflix era, and I'm a middle-aged man interested in keeping up with award-winning movies and past TV series that I never had time to watch.

"Seinfeld" popped up in the algorithm cauldron.

"Why not?" I thought to myself. "I never quite got why everyone says this guy is so funny, but let's give it a try."

After a couple of episodes, I was already a fan.

You can immediately tell an intelligent, talented person - comedian, actor, actress, performing artist, etc - after a few minutes.

So, as I binge-watched the series, I remember imagining myself as a spectator in those underground stand-up comedy clubs of the 1970s, surrounded by smoke, trying to relax after a hard day of work and laughing at Jerry's early career bits.

What really impressed me about his material is that he doesn't need to rely on the classic comedy clichés - sex, swearing, disabilities, etc - to be funny.

He does precisely the opposite. He picks the simplest, most mundane moments of our daily lives and transforms them into a joke or pun.

And that's the hardest thing in comedy, I think.

At some point, I didn't want "Seinfeld" to end. I was saving episodes and cherishing them one by one until the end.

Once I finally got to know Jerry Seinfeld, I immediately started digging for more shows and never-seen-before material.

Soon, I had become a relatively advanced connoisseur of the New Yorker's work. I've read interviews, watched specials, and even found shows on which he was a guest.

Seinfeld: probably the most popular comedy TV series of all time

Seinfeld, The Surfer

At some point in my exploration of Jerry Seinfeld's vast career, I noticed recurring references to something very dear to me: surfing.

But how could a global New York comedian star be so healthily obsessed with the magical act of riding waves, especially when he didn't seem to have a surfing past?

It was not a loose reference or mention here and there - it was a pattern, and it was everywhere.

The truth is that Seinfeld has been talking about his admiration of surfers and surfing for a long time.

Here's one of his best descriptions of what surfing is:

"The ocean doesn't really want us in it. Surfing is actually the act of the ocean throwing us out."

"The ocean is like a nightclub, and the waves are bouncers throwing us out, and the undertow is like the mean bouncer that takes you the back and roughs you up a little bit."

The Seinfeld-surfing connection is worth exploring.

In the late 2000s, the comedian even agreed to shoot a very unusual and kitsch commercial for Greater Building Society, now Greater Bank, where he rides a virtual wave alongside a customer surfer.

Seinfeld revealed he once tried surfing for about a week in the early 2000s.

In 2020, he told Stephen Colbert that he believed he lacked what it took to become a surfer.

"You need a certain kind of knees, you know, you need good quads."

Petition: Let's Get Jerry in a Wave Pool

Well, Jerry, you sure don't have any physical limitation preventing you from quickly standing up on a surfboard, riding a wave, and experiencing the fascinating sensation of walking on water.

I am sure your first time in the water was not in ideal conditions. Have you ever tried a wave pool with a seasoned instructor?

I am sure Kelly Slater would be honored to welcome you at the Surf Ranch, and Raimana Van Bastolaer would quickly get you to surf a wave.

This whole thing reached a point where you really need to do it, sir.

Jerry Seinfeld's analogies between stand-up comedy and surfing are endless.

In 2020, when Stephen Colbert asked Jerry Seinfeld, "So, Jerry, do you still enjoy doing stand-up?"

"Well, I do. I really do," noted the comedian.

"I think I'm one of those surfers, you know, those old guys that just still paddle out every day, and nobody even knows they're doing it, but it's like they have to do it."

"It's just part of the day and part of the deal. That's why I do it. I really live off it. It's a beautiful, natural, energetic thing that's so natural and real."

"I can be accused of using too many surfing analogies, but that's the thing I wanted to do in my life that I didn't do. I really wanted to do it, and I never did it."

Then, at the end of the year, the "Seinfeld" star returned with more surprising metaphors.

"So, a TV series is like a pretty big boat that you can run with a couple of people. A movie is a yacht. There's so many people, it's a beautiful thing, there's a lot of money involved. Everybody wants it. Everybody thinks it's the ultimate way to go across the water."

"Stand-up for me is a surfboard. It's just you - you paddle out, and you try and catch the energy, and you're all on your own."

"You can do it and go home, and nobody but you really even knows what happened."

Is This Anything?: the book that features Jerry Seinfeld's best work across five decades in comedy

"Surfing Would Be My Dream Life"

In 2024, in two separate interviews with People and GQ, the 70-year-old continued to elaborate on his attraction to the act of gliding across waves.

"The thing I would like to do more than anything is get up on a surfboard and ride a wave. That would be the dream of my life," Seinfeld told People.

"I think if I could have spent my entire life just living broke and being a surf bum and every day paddle out and spend a few hours a day surfing, that's as good a life as any life you could have."

"I follow every surfer on Instagram. Every day, I stare at them like a cat looking at a bird through the window."

For GQ, he revealed there's only one thing he is addicted to other than stand-up comedy.

"The only other thing in life that I truly idolize is surfing," underlined Jerry.

"I watch a lot of Instagram surfing videos, and when somebody catches a great wave, and they're just sliding down it, it just hypnotizes me."

"That's how it feels when you're having a good set - like you've caught this gigantic energy and are just sliding down it."

"There's nothing pure in making a movie. There's no flow. It's highly complex and messy."

"I think if I get a chance to be human again, I would do just that. You wake up in the morning, and you paddle out."

"You make whatever little money you need to survive. That seems like the greatest life to me."

Can someone get Seinfeld a surfboard and some nice, gentle, small-rolling waves? And can you please, Jerry, accept the fact that you can easily do it and embrace the challenge?

The world wants to see you become a surfer, Jerome - just do it.


Words by Luís MP | Founder of SurferToday.com



por Surf News | Headlines and Top Stories https://ift.tt/bhzeVur

Postagens mais visitadas deste blog

Duke Kahanamoku reflects on surfing, Olympics, and old Hawaii in 1966 interview

Duke Kahanamoku is the most influential surfer of all time and is often hailed as the father of modern surfing. There is nearly no one questioning these titles. Recently, Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) Hawaii unveiled a never-before-seen interview with the legendary surfer and Olympic swimmer. In the 1966 episode of Pau Hana Years, a seminal Hawaii television program that aired on KHET-TV (now PBS Hawaii) for 16 years, running from 1966 until 1982, Bob Barker chats with Duke Kahanamoku, then 76. The conversation drifts from royal ancestry to Olympic lanes, from Hollywood sets to a surfboard shaped by hand, tracing the outline of a life that helped define modern surfing and Hawaii's public image in the 20th century. And if you know little about the man who dreamed of getting surfing into the Olympic Games, this is a precious piece of history. A name with history, worn casually The interview starts with Kahanamoku explaining that "Duke" is not a title but his giv...

The hydrodynamics of surfboard fins

Have you ever wondered why a surfboard fin looks like that? It is a single or a set of fixed blades or keels located under a board, near the tail, often no bigger than a hand. Yet that small surface is where much of the surfboard's behavior takes place. Speed, hold, looseness, and the feeling of control all trace back to how water moves around fins. The physics of surfboard fins falls under hydrodynamics, the study of how fluids behave in motion. So, according to science, they feature a shape designed to turn flowing water into several forces. Let's take a look at what's at stake when fins and water interact. Lift and the feeling of control One of the key variables in hydrodynamic terms involving surfboard fins is lift. When a surfer leans into a turn, the board tilts and the fins meet the water at an angle. The angle is enough to create a pressure difference between the two sides of the fin. Water speeds up on one side and slows on the other. The result is a sidewa...

How paddleboarding transforms your body and mind

Adventure is on our doorstep. With so many different bodies of water available to paddleboarders, from city canals to coastal routes, we can find adventure in places much closer to home than people might initially expect. According to the Canal and River Trust, 50 percent of people in England and Wales live within just eight kilometers of a canal or river, and eight million people live less than one kilometer away. I had lived within just a few kilometers of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal for years and never really explored it before stand-up paddleboarding (SUP) came into my life . The challenge created both a new perspective and a deeper love for where I lived and the areas which I passed through. On my coast-to-coast journey, I slept in my own bed for two nights as the route passed through my then hometown of Skipton, yet I felt I was on a grand journey of discovery. We are braver, stronger, and more resilient than we think. SUP not only helps us feel more connected to our va...