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Jeffrey Dean Morgan Understands Why Patrick Dempsey Left 'Grey's Anatomy'

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Acting on "Grey's Anatomy" was pretty great for Jeffrey Dean Morgan. Not only is he forever cemented as one of the show's most memorable characters -- Denny Duquette, the dying patient who Dr. Izzie Stevens risks her job to save -- but he was also cast in the big-budget comic book film "Watchmen" after director Zack Snyder saw him on "Grey's," Morgan told HuffPost Live on Thursday. But despite all the positives, Morgan said he understands why Patrick Dempsey was ready to leave the show this season.

"I guess it's run its course for some of those people [who] have been there for 10 years, and at a certain point you don't want to do that character anymore and it's time for new challenges," Morgan said. "And I get it. I get [Dempsey] being ready to say goodbye and I get the show being ready to move forward and introduce some new storylines. Look, 10 years is a long time. I don't think I could last in anything for 10 years doing a character."

The actor added that he doesn't mind being constantly asked about Denny so many years after playing him because he owes his current success to the hospital drama.

"It will follow me forever, but I'm good with it because if it weren't for this show, I wouldn't have the career I have now," he said.

Even though "Grey's Anatomy" may be Morgan's most memorable project, he's been busy ever since. He'll appear next in the new History Channel miniseries "Texas Rising," as well as the Lifetime movie "The Secret Life Of Marilyn Monroe."

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Jeffrey Dean Morgan here.

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Jon Bon Jovi Serenades Rutgers Students With New Song At Most Jersey Graduation Ever

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Recent college grads might feel like they’re livin' on a prayer, but if they graduated from Rutgers University-Camden on Thursday, at least they got their own Jon Bon Jovi song.

Everyone’s favorite '80s rocker, there receiving an honorary doctorate in letters, serenaded the class of 2015, CNN reports. Rutgers was honoring the singer for his work in establishing The Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation, which seeks to fight hunger and homelessness.

I tried to buy you all a gift,” he told the students, according to MyFox8. “But I wasn’t sure of sizes or favorite colors.”

That’s when he whipped out a guitar and began his never-before-heard jam “Reunion,” which Bon Jovi said he wrote for the occasion.



OK, so it’s no “You Give Love A Bad Name,” but what is?


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TLC Pulls '19 Kids And Counting' From Lineup

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TMZ was the first to report on Friday that TLC has pulled all airings of "19 Kids and Counting" from its lineup after tabloid reports of child molestation allegations against Josh Duggar proved to be true.

In a statement to The Huffington Post, TLC confirmed they are pulling the series from their schedule:

Effective immediately, TLC has pulled all episodes of 19 Kids and Counting currently from the air. We are deeply saddened and troubled by this heartbreaking situation, and our thoughts and prayers are with the family and victims at this difficult time.


The move from the network appears to be temporary at this time, as TLC's website currently has the show listed as scheduled to air on June 1.

Sources told TMZ that the network has yet to make a long-term decision regarding the fate of the show, but the network has been relatively slow to act given that they were still airing a Duggar marathon hours after Josh issued an apology via Facebook: "I acted inexcusably for which I am extremely sorry and deeply regret," he wrote. "I hurt others, including my family and close friends."


This post has been updated throughout to include a statement from TLC.

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Amy Schumer And Paul Feig Teaming Up For New Film

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Life is good when all your favorite people team up to make something cool. Amy Schumer will co-write and star in a mother-daughter comedy, with Paul Feig ("Bridesmaids," "The Heat") producing, The Hollywood Reporter learned on Friday.

According to THR, Schumer and her sister Kim Caramele will rework a script that was already written by Katie Dippold, who has signed on to write the all-female "Ghostbusters" with Feig. Specifics, like a title and a plot, about the mother-daughter comedy are unknown, but THR reports that it's an "action-comedy" that focuses on a "vacation gone wrong."

Schumer collaborated with Judd Apatow on her latest film, "Trainwreck," which is due out later this summer. Yes please, to all of this.

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Disney's Futuristic 'Tomorrowland' Rejects Dystopian Tropes With An Optimistic Call To Action

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A few minutes into "Tomorrowland," it becomes clear that Disney's latest live-action adventure isn't going to brood over the apocalypse or depict a purely desolate future. Instead, the movie blends sci-fi and fantasy with realism to depict a world where hope is the only antidote to extinction.

In "Tomorrowland," directed by Brad Bird and co-written by Bird and Damon Lindelof (with Jeff Jensen earning a story credit), we first meet Frank Walker (George Clooney), a once bright-eyed young boy with innovative dreams, as a now-hardened cynic in the present day. We learn what shattered Frank's buoyancy when Casey Newton (Britt Robertson) backtracks to tell her story as a teen determined to save the future of a doomed NASA rocket launch site. After finding a mysterious pin secretly given to her by a young British girl, Athena (Raffey Cassidy), Casey is briefly transported to the futuristic world of Tomorrowland. But the real future turns out not to be as bright and shiny: A clock counts down to a predicted apocalypse, prompting Casey, Athena and Frank to try to save the fate of a crumbling planet Earth.

With the awe of "Alice in Wonderland" and a hint of the futurism of "WALL-E," Bird's "Tomorrowland" feels very much like a Disney-fueled vehicle, but one which heavily cashes in on the power of positive thought -- think of the best-seller The Secret, which Lindelof named-dropped while discussing "Tomorrowland." The movie packs on the cheesy believe-and-you-can-achieve Disney mantra quite heavily, but it's nevertheless refreshing to see a positive spin on the dreary future that fills the big screen today. "Tomorrowland" has already been labeled the anti-"Hunger Games," a departure from the typical nihilism.

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"The future we’re getting fed a steady diet of is sort of post-apocalyptic," Lindelof told The Huffington Post. "The idea that something kind of terrible happens and now the dregs of humanity are roving the desert in tricked-out cars or shooting arrows at each other, that’s kind of what the future is." While Lindelof -- who, let's not forget, is the co-creator of "Lost" and HBO's ultra-depressing "The Leftovers" -- admits he loves those types of stories, he wanted to discover what a different kind of future would look like, and whether or not audiences would even want to see it.

While this approach is hardly something we see in movies or on television today, it does reflect a mindset of an earlier generation, before hope was vanquished by pessimism. "When both Damon and I were young, the world was still a rough place," Bird told HuffPost. "There were wars and injustice and pollution, and all the things we have today, but the attitude towards the future was that we were going to solve all these problems and that the future was this bright thing just over the horizon."

It was this question of "What happened?" that fascinated Bird and Lindelof, leading them to use Disney's theme-park land as the inspiration for what the word "Tomorrowland" actually meant to society, then and now. "In a broad sense, it’s about Walt Disney’s view of the future, that it was an exciting thing, that it was a giant opportunity [rather] than this burden we come to think of it as, this coming disaster," Bird said.



But "Tomorrowland" doesn't paint a future that is bright and sunny where all of the world's problems can be solved by making a wish and dreaming big (despite the film's hefty serving of goofy sentimentalism). No fairy godmother flashes into existence and no magical wand flickers to save our world. The film asks more of its audience than simply sitting back and enjoying the movie, most directly in a monologue delivered by the villainous scientist Nix (Hugh Laurie), who blames the predicted demise of mankind on mankind itself. It's a moment where "Tomorrowland" breaks the fourth wall and holds the viewers responsible for the apocalypse that could come if we succumb to resignation.

"The big cosmic shrug, I don't get," Bird said. The director made a point to claim "Tomorrowland" isn't necessarily a political film, but he does hope that audiences walk away with some sense of desire to contribute to a better future. Robertson echoed that sentiment: "I think it’s important for audiences when they see a movie like this to take that into consideration and maybe work it into their own life in trying to put forth actions that contribute to a more optimistic future."

tomorrowland britt

But Bird knows that the Cinderella model -- "a dream is a wish your hearts makes" -- isn't all it takes. "Dreaming is great and crucial, but dreaming is step one," Bird said. "All the rest of the steps are putting the dream into motion and asking and deciding what future you want and making every decision drive towards that future."

Whether or not you walk away from "Tomorrowland" feeling inspired with a sense of hope and activism, or simply dazzled by the visuals, it's at least reassuring to see a major summer movie evading the usual dystopian cliches. "I don’t want to be holed in a house eating from a tin can of beans as zombies scrape at the door," Lindof said. "I want to watch it, I don’t want to live it. So why not make one that has a future that I would want to live in?"

"Tomorrowland" is now playing in theaters.



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Mad Men Understood Human Behavior Better Than Any Show on TV

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Mad Men closed with its hero, adman Don Draper (Jon Hamm), sitting lotus-style on a hilltop in 1970, experiencing bliss, or something like it. Don had proclaimed ten years earlier that love was a lie invented by guys like him to sell nylons and that we’re all born alone and die alone, and now here he was in California, shorn of his job, his home, his marriage, his apartment, his car, and even his suit, meditating on a hilltop overlooking the ocean.

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Former MTV VJ Jesse Camp Sets The Record Straight About His Drug Use

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After beating out 5,000 other contestants in 1998's "Wanna Be A VJ" competition, an 18-year-old Jesse Camp became a high-profile "video jockey" on MTV, which was still riding high during the peak of its cultural relevance. But his eccentric look, dry sense of humor and distinctively high-pitched voice made viewers wonder if he was under the influence as he introduced their favorite videos. During a Friday interview with HuffPost Live's Ricky Camilleri, Camp set the record straight about what substances he was using when and how he ultimately decided to end his "hardcore drug era."

Watch Camp discuss his drug use in the video above, and click here for the full HuffPost Live conversation.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before.

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'Mad Max' Tells Us Where We Think We'll Find Salvation

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Theatergoers will flock this weekend to an imagined story set in a steampunky dystopian hellscape. Or will they just be looking in a mirror?

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How Hollywood Taught Rebel Wilson To Lie About Her Age

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In the wake of "Pitch Perfect 2"'s record-breaking weekend, Rebel Wilson has been caught in a very old-fashioned sort of scandal: According to one of Wilson’s high school classmates, speaking anonymously to Australian tabloid Woman’s Day, Wilson has been lying about her age, her name, her upbringing, and her family’s class.

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Nicole Scherzinger Remembers Showing Off Vocal Chops, Putting Simon Cowell 'In His Place' On 'The X Factor'

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Nicole Scherzinger does not appreciate being stereotyped by anyone, especially Simon Cowell.

In an interview with HuffPost Live on Friday, the singer remembered one particular instance when her fellow "X Factor" judge compared a contestant's lackluster audition to Scherzinger's own vocal style -- a comment to which the former Pussycat Doll did not react well.

"[Simon] knew how to push my buttons, he always did, but it was kind of insulting what he was doing. He was categorizing me and stereotyping me. It really upset me and, I don't know, the beast came out of me," she said.

Scherzinger then set out to make Cowell eat his words, belting out a flawless rendition of Whitney Houston's "I Will Always Love You," the song she used for her first-ever TV audition when she was just 22 years old.

Looking back on that "X Factor" episode, Scherzinger said her standoff with Cowell was not an attempt to "prove" anything.

"He just pissed me off then, and I just had to put him in his place and teach him and educate him. You have to do that sometimes with people, educate people," she said.

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Nicole Scherzinger here

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

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Robert De Niro Tells Graduating Art Students: 'You're F***ed'

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"You made it," actor Robert De Niro told New York University's Tisch School of the Arts graduates on Friday. "And you're f***ed."

The reality check to aspiring actors, dancers and others with creative degrees in the opening lines of De Niro's commencement speech received an uproarious applause.

"The graduates in accounting? They all have jobs," the legendary actor continued. "Where does that leave you? Envious of those accountants? I doubt it. They had a choice. Maybe they were passionate about accounting but I think it's more likely that they used reason and logic and common sense to reach for a career that could give them the expectation of success and stability. Reason, logic, common sense at the Tisch School of Arts? Are you kidding me? But you didn't have that choice, did you? You discovered a talent, developed an ambition and recognized your passion."

That aversion to practical thinking, he told students, is what will make them successful.

"When it comes to the arts, passion should always trump common sense," De Niro told the new alums. "You aren't just following dreams, you're reaching for your destiny. You're a dancer, a singer, a choreographer, a musician, a filmmaker, a writer, a photographer, a director, a producer, an actor, an artist. Yeah, you're f***ed. The good news is that that's not a bad place to start."

De Niro, a two-time Oscar winner, warned students to expect rejection and to not take it personally, like when he jokingly found out he couldn't play Martin Luther King Jr. in "Selma."

In the end, he sounded confident that the Tisch graduates will get their big breaks.

"I'm here to hand out my pictures and resumes to the directing and producing graduates."

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Mary-Kate And Ashley Olsen Won't Be In 'Fuller House'

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We didn't expect Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen to appear in the new "Full House" reboot, and it turns out the 28-year-old fashion designers will not reprise their shared role as Michelle Tanner, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

“Although Ashley and Mary-Kate will not be a part of Fuller House, I know how much Full House has meant to them and they are still very much considered family," executive producer Robert L. Boyett said in a statement. "It has been exciting to see how they have built their professional careers, and I support their choice to focus on their fashion brands and various business endeavors. I appreciate their support and good wishes towards Fuller House."

The news comes weeks after John Stamos, who is both producing and slated to appear in the Netflix series, called "bullshit" on the sisters, after they told Women's Wear Daily they weren't in the loop regarding the new show. Stamos later tweeted that he and Mary-Kate has smoothed things out after having a "sweet talk," but he apparently wasn't able to sweet-talk the twins into appearing on the show.

In addition to Stamos, fans of the ABC original series can expect Andrea Barber, Jodie Sweetin, Candace Cameron Bure, and Dave Coulier to appear on the revival. which will follow Bure's D.J. Tanner as a widow with three kids.

Earlier this month, Bure spoke about "Fuller House" on the "Today" show, saying that the Netflix series won't be the same as the original. "It's definitely a fresh take," she said. "We're not doing the old show, it's not a reunion. It's a spinoff show."

UPDATE: On Friday night, John Stamos retweeted this very article and then wrote that he was "#heartbroken" over the news:






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B.B. King Viewing Draws More Than 1,000 In Las Vegas

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — A standing ovation for B.B. King and more cheers than tears marked a family-and-friends memorial of the late blues great's life and legacy Saturday in Las Vegas.

"B.B. was energetic, Amen?" Pastor Pamela Myrtis Mason said to open the service that drew more than 350 to the Palm Mortuary chapel. "Amen," they said.

King's closed casket lay framed by an array of floral arrangements, two of his guitars named Lucille and a tapestry showing him in eyes-clenched reverie picking a note from a section of the guitar frets dubbed by followers the "B.B. King Box."

"Why don't you put your hands together for the King of the Blues, B.B. King!" the pastor said.

As the applause ended, granddaughter Landra Williams dubbed him "the backbone of our family King."

More than 10 of King's 35 grandchildren and eight of the blues icon's 11 surviving adult children spoke during a two-hour service that was distinct for its intimacy and notable for its lack of acrimony.

Several sang a cappella versions of King classics. From daughter Claudette King Robinson, it was, "(Someone Really Loves You) Guess Who?"

Williams, who lives in Houston, remembered her grandfather calling every woman in the family "pretty girl," and spoiling them all, while making himself their confidante and protector.

"To everyone else, he was a legend," she said. "But for us, he was love."

King's generosity was recalled by grandson Leonard King Jr., who remembered being onstage when people praising the B.B. King show got a prideful earful from his grandfather about his kin.

"His humility was almost as legendary as his music," the grandson said.

Rock superstars Carlos Santana and Richie Sambora attended, although Santana left early.

"Buddy Guy and B.B. let me into the blues," said Sambora, longtime guitarist with of the band Bon Jovi. "That's why I'm here. He made me family."

Other music notables are expected to attend memorials in coming days in Memphis, Tennessee, and King's hometown of Indianola, Mississippi.

King's onstage drummer for 37 years, Tony Coleman, provided another upbeat note on a day full of them.

"He fired me five times," Coleman said, drawing laughter. "But he hired me six times. He said, 'Once you're with me, you're always with me.' "

Coleman promised to go on playing blues "with class, with dignity, with humanity" — just like B.B. King taught him to do.

King was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1990 and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. He won 15 Grammys and sold more than 40 million records worldwide.

A family feud wasn't directly addressed by the dozens of speakers.

Several of King's surviving children are fighting with LaVerne Toney, his longtime business agent and power-of-attorney, who is now executor of his estate. Toney watched Saturday from the back row of the chapel and didn't speak during the service.

Attorney Larissa Drohobyczer said Saturday that five adult King daughters — Patty King, Michelle King, Karen Williams, Barbara King Winfree and Robinson — will contest the blues legend's will and Toney's actions.

The lawyer issued a statement alleging that Toney has misappropriated millions of dollars, has been untruthful and is unqualified to serve as executor of the B.B. King estate.

Toney has said she was carrying out King's wishes as directed, and she told The Associated Press on Saturday that she would not immediately respond to the daughters' allegations.

Toney said she was happy the memorial remained calm, peaceful and respectful.

The spirit of B.B. King will be in the air again on Sunday at the previously scheduled 35th annual B.B. King Homecoming Festival in Indianola.

That will be followed by a procession on Wednesday on Beale Street in Memphis before the last leg of what Landra Williams, the granddaughter, has dubbed "The Road to Mississippi Tour" — the last leg of Riley B. King's trip to Indianola for burial May 30.

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Sting Sings With Jimmy Fallon's Ragtime Gals In Surprise Appearance

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The Ragtime Gals may look like big packs of Fruit Stripe gum, but you can't deny they have style.

Jimmy Fallon's barbershop quartet decided to break out a little "Roxanne" on "The Tonight Show" Friday, and what better way to do that than with a surprise appearance by Sting?

The English musician popped out from behind the group right at the beginning of the performance. He later admitted it was hard for him to switch up how he usually does the song, but he still pulled it off flawlessly.

Fallon's group has already performed with big names such as Steve Carell and Kevin Spacey. So this latest collaboration with Sting seems only fitting because every breath they take, every move they make has been awesome.

"The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on NBC.

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Goodbye Letterman, Hello Fallon: The Nicening of Late Night

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Behold the post-Dave hole in our culture: Late-night chat shows have become an oasis of niceness.

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Kardashian Throwback Photo Proves Kim Has Always Been Camera Ready

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Turns out Kim Kardashian loved the camera long before she became the internet's selfie queen.

In a throwback photo posted to Kris Jenner's Instagram on Friday, an adolescent Kim poses alongside Kourtney Kardashian and two friends in a very model-esque pose.





Work it, girl.

All these years later, Kim and Kourtney's younger sister Kendall Jenner actually is a veritable supermodel. Which makes us wonder: might there be some fun old footage still to be unearthed that hints at her future walking the runway? Aside from old episodes of "Keeping Up with the Kardashians," that is.

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Jason Derulo Says His Split With Jordin Sparks Is Behind Him

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Jason Derulo is back to ridin' solo. The "Wiggle" singer, 25, spoke about the single life and his messy 2014 breakup from Jordin Sparks in a new cover story interview with Billboard magazine, saying he doesn't expect to be coupled-up again anytime soon.

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Chris Pratt Apologizes In Advance For Messing Up 'Jurassic World' Press Tour

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Chris Pratt is preemptively putting his foot in his mouth.

Ahead of the star's press tour for the upcoming film "Jurassic World," Pratt took to Facebook to apologize in advance for distasteful comments he worries he'll say.

I want to make a heartfelt apology for whatever it is I end up accidentally saying during the forthcoming #JurassicWorld...

Posted by Chris Pratt on Friday, May 22, 2015


While it's always good to take responsibility for your mistakes, hopefully the actor's before-the-fact awareness will prevent him from making them in the first place.

When in doubt, we suggest staying on the subject of dinosaurs.

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Kim Kardashian Posts Touching Wedding Week Throwbacks Before Renewing Vows With Kanye West

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Ready to walk down the aisle -- again! In honor of her first wedding anniversary with Kanye West, Kim Kardashian shared several throwback photos from her 2014 Bachelorette party, rehearsal bash, and more via Instagram on Friday, May 22.

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Classic 'Seinfeld' Joke Is Revealed To Be A Huge Easter Egg

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Secret gags in "Seinfeld" are real, and they're spectacular.

There are Superman figures slyly appearing in episodes, writers dropping in the names of their friends and tons of hidden references the show creators even forgot were there. Well, now we know of at least one more.

When "The Chinese Restaurant" episode aired on May 23, 1991, NBC was not a fan. Larry David has said the network "hated" the episode and didn't think waiting around to get a seat in a restaurant would work as a storyline. Now, it's recognized as one of the most iconic episodes, and it turns out its most memorable joke has been an Easter egg this whole time, according to former "Seinfeld" writer Spike Feresten.

"Like Deep Throat ... This goes all the way to the top," said Feresten, who went on to reveal the famous line's hidden meaning to The Huffington Post.

The Joke: "Who's Cartwright?"

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Image: YouTube


In the episode, George is waiting for a woman to call him at the Chinese restaurant. When she does call, the host calls out "Cartwright" instead of George's name. It's super hilarious and prompts this discussion between Jerry and George:

JERRY
Who's Cartwright?

GEORGE
I'm Cartwright ...

JERRY
You're not Cartwright.

GEORGE
[EXPLODING] Of course I'm not
Cartwright ...


It has been a mystery for 24 years, but now, thanks to Feresten, we know who the real Cartwright is.

The Big Reveal: "Costanza (sounds like) 'Bonanza' = Cartwright"


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Image: Giphy


Yep. This whole time Cartwright has been a reference to the classic Western show "Bonanza," which followed the wild adventures of the Cartwright family.

Though the episode happened before he joined the show, Feresten says the info comes from "an unimpeachable source." The writer was mum on if it was in fact one of the show creators -- either David or Jerry Seinfeld -- but, as we mentioned, did say it went "all the way to the top."

Whoa.

So there you have it, kids. The mystery of why the host calls out "Cartwright" has finally been solved. Now if only Jerry could get a table ...

tv show gifs
Image: Crackle

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