The Puerto Rican Day
http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Puerto_Rican_Day an entity of type: Thing
"The Puerto Rican Day" is the 176th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld. It aired on May 7, 1998, and was the 20th episode of the ninth and final season. It was the show's second-highest-rated episode of all time, with 38.8 million viewers, only behind the series finale. The episode aired one week before the two-part clip show and the two-part series finale aired. It was a rare late-series return to a "plot about nothing" style and filmed in real-time, a format more often seen in early seasons. The episode follows the cast's misadventures as they try to escape from the traffic surrounding the Puerto Rican Day Parade.
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The Puerto Rican Day
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5088486
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1121503091
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1998-05-07
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20
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List of Seinfeld episodes
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* Mario Joyner as Lamar
* Dayton Callie as Cabbie
* James Karen as Mr. Canterman
* Helen Carey as Mrs. Christine Nyhart
* Yul Vazquez as Bob
* John Paragon as Cedric
* Jenica Bergere as Leslie
* Monica Allison as Gail
* Marcelo Tubert as Father
* Armando Molina as Amigo
* Tom Agna as Gary
* Tom Dahlgren as Priest
* Bert Rosario as Man
* Raoul N. Rizik as Parade Goer
* Scott Conte as Sketch Guy
* Mimi Cozzens as Mrs. Canterman
* Alison Martin as Lucy
* Marc Hirschfeld as Ellis
* Chip Heller as Policeman
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920
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9
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Seinfeld
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Alec Berg, Jennifer Crittenden, Spike Feresten, Bruce Eric Kaplan, Gregg Kavet, Steve Koren, David Mandel, Dan O'Keefe, Andy Robin, Jeff Schaffer
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"The Puerto Rican Day" is the 176th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld. It aired on May 7, 1998, and was the 20th episode of the ninth and final season. It was the show's second-highest-rated episode of all time, with 38.8 million viewers, only behind the series finale. The episode aired one week before the two-part clip show and the two-part series finale aired. It was a rare late-series return to a "plot about nothing" style and filmed in real-time, a format more often seen in early seasons. The episode follows the cast's misadventures as they try to escape from the traffic surrounding the Puerto Rican Day Parade. This episode of Seinfeld has more writer credits (ten) than any other episode. As co-creator Larry David was returning to write the finale, this was the final episode for the active "after Larry David" writing staff and thus was a group effort. Because of controversy surrounding a scene in which Cosmo Kramer accidentally burns and then stomps on the Puerto Rican flag, NBC apologized and had it banned from airing on the network again. Also, it was not initially part of the syndicated package. In the summer of 2002, the episode started to appear with the flag-burning sequence intact.
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12149