Larry heads to Georgia to appear at the birthday party of a prominent businessman.
Still in Atlanta, Larry finds himself stuck at a rental home with a questionable lawn ornament.
Larry's improved golf game causes trouble with an acclaimed actor; Freddy helps his neighbors through a delicate issue.
A message in the men's locker room at Larry's golf club causes a heated argument; Larry and Irma's couple's counsellor crosses a professional line.
After an incident at the temple, Larry asks his friends to vouch for his character while also trying to help name a baby and care for a fish.
An acquaintance from the club asks too much of Larry; Jeff and Freddy both use Larry's tactics to get out of unwanted obligations of their own.
Richard enlists Larry's help to buy a vintage car, but his careless behavior leads to an unwanted outcome.
A misunderstanding with Cheryl's masseuse threatens Larry and his public image sinks lower when he gives the wrong person COVID.
Larry finds himself back in Atlanta, where he meddles in Richard's love life and reveals a big secret about Cheryl.
While his latest creative venture is threatened, Larry attends an unprecedented event at Albert Brooks' house.
In a last-ditch effort, Larry enlists Cheryl's help with a project before concocting a plan that could finally save his newest creative venture.
Larry hangs out with Woody Harrelson and cashes in on Susie's favor.
After enlisting both Jeff and Freddy's help for the occasion, Larry's hot date quickly goes south.
Larry feels uncomfortable with his chauffeur, his roofer and his chiropractor.
Ahead of Election Day, Larry gets involved in local politics while mediating a conflict on his set.
Larry scrambles to remain in Irma's good graces while encouraging Leon's latest business venture.
Larry seizes an opportunity to avoid Irma as he's roped into Jeff's latest apology tour.
Larry gives out some unsolicited marriage advice; Larry hosts an event for an American hero.
Larry kicks off the new year with new rival Mocha Joe; at a cocktail party hosted by Jeff and Susie, Larry gets roped into lunch plans and has a misunderstanding with a caterer.
Larry's lawyer tries to resolve the situation with his assistant, Alice; Larry surprises Susie with an impressive birthday gift and comes one step closer to exacting revenge on Mocha Joe.
Larry drops the ball when he gets the chance to make amends with his assistant, Alice; Larry and Richard go to extreme lengths for their upcoming lunch date.
Travel plans go awry when Larry brings an impromptu date to a destination wedding; at the hotel, Larry finds himself in a sticky situation when he goes searching for a toothbrush.
Larry receives a problematic gift and causes trouble with Richard's new girlfriend.
When Susie plans a surprise party for Jeff, Larry suspects she has ulterior motives and enlists the help of his new friend, Wally, to ensure things don't go awry; Larry connects with a problematic inventor to develop an innovative new product.
Larry attempts to capitalize on a friend's unexpected death and takes issue with a pattern of discrimination at a trendy restaurant; Larry offers his dermatologist's son a job; Richard has a suspiciously good day on the golf course.
Mocha Joe hatches a plan to sabotage his adversary; Larry develops a debilitating habit and takes pity on a waitress; Richard prepares for a career-defining role.
Larry runs into an unwelcome familiar face, seeks a second opinion on his knee injury and causes a rift between expectant parents.
Larry tries to rid himself of an inept assistant, offends Jeff's barber and gets into hot water over a new project.
Larry reaches out to a familiar face, gives a hotel guest sartorial advice and looks to create a diversion to help a friend's nephew.
Larry turns to a writer for advice; while searching for Susie's "little sister," Larry gets ticketed by an overzealous cop.
Larry's therapist accuses him of overstepping; Susie grows suspicious of Jeff; Larry bribes an usher at a funeral.
Larry commits a faux pas with Sammi's fiancé; Larry tries to start over with his mail carrier and a golf club security guard.
Larry invents an ingenious ploy for getting friends out of relationship jams; Larry upsets Funkhouser's new girlfriend.
Larry angers a hot yoga teacher, has an auspicious first date and seethes over a run-in with an unfair Uber driver.
Bridget asks Larry for a favor on behalf of her son; Larry earns unexpected gratitude in a buffet line, and realizes that tips are better than favors.
Larry has a scheduling conflict, takes issue with work associates and hosts a pair of ungrateful house guests.
Larry learns that his divorce lawyer is not kosher; Larry cancels a Girl Scout cookie order.
Larry becomes a role model for battered women; Richard Lewis' relationship is tested; Leon survives a case of mistaken identity.
Larry plays social assassin at a dinner party, on the golf course and at a restaurant.
Larry vows to invalidate a dating taboo; Larry regrets making concessions to his neighbor; Jeff's alibi backfires.
A failed alibi has consequences; a family dog is denied a last meal; Larry has a confrontation in a buffet line.
Larry competes with Rosie O'Donnell for the same woman; Larry refuses to have lunch with an acquaintance.
Larry and Jeff weigh an investment opportunity; Larry's training schedule is preempted.
An ice cream truck triggers a painful childhood memory for Larry; Larry meets former professional baseball player Bill Buckner at a trade show.
Larry accuses his neighbor of harassment; Jeff takes a bullet for Susie; Larry gives an inappropriate gift to Elizabeth's son.
Larry attempts a pre-emptive breakup with ailing Loretta; Larry and Jeff learn not to make an empty gesture to a Funkhouser.
Larry deliberately tries to annoy Loretta; Larry profits from Leon's indiscretion with the wife of a depressed friend.
Larry resists Jeff's suggestion to do a "Seinfeld" reunion special.
Larry exposes Christian Slater at Ted and Mary's anniversary party; Larry's doctor regrets giving Larry his personal phone number.
Larry learns to embrace the upside of disability; Larry tries to dispel a rumor.
Larry and Jerry Seinfeld consider incorporating Larry's latest real-life experience into the reunion show.
Larry is annoyed when he has bad luck on the same golf hole twice.
Larry is forced to embrace his feminine side; Cheryl competes for a "Seinfeld" role; a law officer has an unusual name.
Larry is frustrated by a 9-year-old's text messages; Leon poses as a dead man; Jerry befriends Marty Funkhauser.
Cheryl talks Larry into adopting a family displaced by a hurricane; Larry invents the perfect excuse for missing parties.
The Davids and the Blacks move into a new house; Larry rewrites a dry-cleaning rule; Jeff finds his reputation stained.
Larry argues with Richard Lewis and Susie over condolences; Larry confronts a pair of sample-abusers.
Larry regrets getting Richard Lewis' girlfriend a job; a doggie-bag dispute dooms a waiter.
An incompetent chauffeur and a book about freaks provoke Larry.
A slow toaster burns Loretta's and Leon's job prospects; Larry befriends an exterminator.
Larry offends Auntie Rae; Jeff's hospital stay opens up a new opportunity for Larry.
Larry tries to curry favor with Cheryl by influencing her therapist.
An upcoming bat mitzvah provides Larry with an opportunity to clear up some nasty rumors.
A near-death experience changes Larry, and it brings a revelation about his father and a sandwich named after him.
Larry hires a private investigator to uncover some information about his past.
Larry get himself in trouble when he buys his housekeeper a bra.
Larry offends a Japanese restaurant owner and accuses his dad's retirement home of fixing their bingo game.
Larry and Jeff debate their willingness to give Lewis their kidney.
Larry makes two wishes come true and swaps smoking jackets with an icon.
Larry becomes friends with a sex offender that moves into the neighborhood.
Larry tries to befriend the head of a liver transplant consortium.
Larry travels to Arizona to meet his real parents after he discovers who they are. After a life changing experience, Larry decides to give Richard Lewis his kidney.
As their 10th anniversary approaches, Larry reminds Cheryl of a present she promised him when they were engaged.
Larry reconnects with his blind tormentor; Richard Lewis asks Larry for an unusual favor; Larry's poor etiquette embarrasses Cheryl.
Larry sets Michael up on a blind date; Jeff admits to a sexual fantasy that peeves Larry; Ben Stiller delivers an ultimatum.
Larry traumatizes the Greenes' daughter at a dinner party; Larry accuses a weatherman of misrepresenting the weather for personal gain.
A bag of raisins and cashews threatens Larry's working relationship with David Schwimmer; Larry's golf club membership is threatened by a dirty locker.
Larry finds a way to use the HOV lane to get to a Dodgers game; Larry gets his father some medical marijuana.
Larry's decision to buy a baby shower gift backfires; Larry tries to pass a routine physical.
A video purchase endangers Larry's relationship with his assistant; Cheryl gets medical treatment from an unorthodox source.
Larry and David put aside their differences and blow the audience away when Larry opens on Broadway.
Larry and Jeff invest in a restaurant with Ted Danson, who guest stars along with Michael York.
Larry's first cell phone call leads to a major mix-up with the chef at his restaurant. Joan Rivers, Richard Lewis, Robin McDonald, Wanda Sykes and Susie Essman guest star.
Larry, Cheryl, Jeff and Susie encounter a bad nanny; Larry commits a faux pas after a pool party; Richard Lewis seeks immortality.
A terrorist threat undermines a benefit performance by Alanis Morissette; Larry snubs Paul Reiser's wife.
Larry gets bad news while shooting a film in New York, then exploits the situation to get out of some unappealing invitations.
Larry ponders an etiquette question; Jeff's allergies force him to ask his daughter to choose between him and their dog.
Larry is accused of betraying the confidence of Wanda's rapper boyfriend.
Larry proves to be an incompetent Christmas tipper; Larry tries to make amends for ruining the manger scene set up by Cheryl's family.
Larry fires a chef and alienates a restaurant critic right before his restaurant is about to open.
Larry and Cheryl make a successful bid on a seaside chateau; Larry takes a job as a car salesman.
Jeff leaves his wife, Susie; Cheryl thinks Larry has a peculiar fetish; Larry seeks revenge on a pro wrestler.
"Larry offends a Jewish neighbor at a movie premiere. Later, he's the victim of a Halloween ""trick."" Danny Breen, Zane Lasky, Antoinette Spolar, Christopher Thornton, Kimi Reichenberg, Holly Wortell."
Larry suspects that HBO executive Allan Wasserman has stolen some shrimp out of his Chinese food.
An acupuncturist agrees to waive the fee if he cannot cure Larry's back; a writer asks for a loan.
Larry's attendance at a screening results in chaos; an unlockable bathroom door causes trouble. Guest starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Rita Wilson and Susie Essman.
When Larry accidentally trips Shaquille O'Neal at a Lakers game, the incident brings him good luck. Guest starring Shaquille O'Neal and Richard Lewis.
The Jewish fiance of Cheryl's sister converts to Christianity; Richard Lewis accuses Larry of stealing the outgoing message on his answering machine.
Cheryl's psychic busts Larry for a naughty massage; a restaurant owner catches Larry stealing forks.
Larry has some problems with his pants, leading to a series of misunderstandings. With Larry David, Cheryl Hines and Jeff Garlin. Guest starring Richard Lewis, Kathy Griffin, Robin Ruzan, Susie Essman and Louis Nye.
Larry and Cheryl's bowling date with Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen ends with Larry's shoes missing. Meanwhile, Larry retrieves his shoes from the schmuck who pinched them, but gets into a fight with the shoe salesman who ordered him a new pair.
After Larry fails to pick up a golf ball, it sets off a serious of weird events which leads to a visit to a porn party.
Larry goes shopping to buy a bracelet for Cheryl and gets sidetracked with Richard Lewis and a blind man.
Larry gets into a fight with an interior decorator at Diane Keaton's house.
Larry takes Jeff's vintage 1957 Chevy convertible for a test drive and ends up getting the car rammed.
Larry offers to use his connections to place an obituary for Cheryl's newly deceased aunt in a newspaper. However, the gesture backfires when a misprint is published.
Richard Lewis sidetracks Larry's trip to the drug store for Cheryl's prescription.
Larry's fictitious story about childhood incest with an uncle haunts him when the uncle arrives for a visit.