Seinfeld was a landmark, genre-defining sitcom with infinite rewatchability. Created by Larry David and the titular Jerry Seinfeld, the show is best known for its ensemble cast of deeply self-involved, neurotic New Yorkers who obsess over life's most banal annoyances and treat them with the urgency of life-or-death crises. It's famously "a show about nothing," and it intentionally avoids the tropes of a traditional sitcom—no heartfelt lessons, no character development, and very little conventional plot.