- Sally Weaver makes fun of Jerry. George's new girlfriend looks just like Jerry. Kramer takes a vow of silence. Elaine gets a job drawing cartoons for the New Yorker.
- Elaine accidentally steals a "Ziggy" cartoon and sends it to the New Yorker as one of her own. Jerry confides in Kramer that a fellow comedian, Sally Weaver, should quit stand up. Kramer tells her this and she then targets Jerry as the devil in her act. She gains popularity and gets her own cable special. George is dating a woman who looks like Jerry.—Jim
- Jerry digs himself into of an embarrassing hole when he tells Kramer that an acquaintance, Sally Weaver, has a terrible stand up comedy routine and should just give up trying to get into show business. Kramer instantly blurts out the comment in front of her leading Sally to develop a new and very popular routine around the devil - otherwise known as Jerry Seinfeld. George meanwhile has a new girlfriend, Janet, who has a resemblance to Jerry which slowly begins to drive George crazy. Elaine for her part is frustrated by a New Yorker magazine cartoon and decides to submit one of her own. Only it isn't quite her own.—garykmcd
- Kramer again gets Jerry into trouble, by revealing what he truly thinks of Susan Ross's old college roommate Sally Weaver (Kathy Griffin). Jerry had confessed to Kramer that he thought Sally was untalented as a comedian. Jerry was distraught that Sally was trying to invite him to her show in some dinghy theatre. Kramer tells Sally to just give up and says that Jerry thinks the same way.
Elaine obsesses over the meaning of a cartoon that appears in The New Yorker. Elaine cannot figure out the meaning of the cartoon. Elaine and later Kramer comment that George's new girlfriend Janet (Tracy Nelson) looks a lot like Jerry. In fact, Kramer tells George, "Just because they look alike, that doesn't mean you're secretly in love with Jerry." Jerry confronts Kramer's frankness when Sally calls and says that she is quitting the business. Sally claims that Jerry has ruined her life. Jerry can't have that on his conscience; he talks her back into the business. Jerry says that Sally should quit, but via the traditional route consisting of years of rejection and failure until she is spit out at the bottom of the porn industry.
Kramer's constant references to the looks of George's girlfriend drive George out of Jerry's apartment. Jerry again confronts Kramer about his comments on Janet. No woman wants to hear that she looks like a man. And George doesn't want to hear that Janet looks like Jerry. Kramer makes an important life decision: the only way to keep his mouth shut is to stop talking. Kramer claims that 95% of all communication is non-verbal.
Elaine goes to The New Yorker offices to seek an explanation for the cartoon. She discovers that the editor Mr. Elinoff (Paul Benedict) didn't understand the cartoon either - he simply "liked the kitty". Sally opens her new one-woman show about "Jerry Seinfeld, the Devil".
Elaine's complaint gets her the opportunity to do her own cartoon for the magazine. Elaine's first comic appears in The New Yorker. J. Peterman (John O'Hurley) thinks it is a great cartoon until he realizes it is a Ziggy.
Jerry confronts Sally about the content of her show. Newman (Wayne Knight) is her biggest fan; finally, he can see a "show that is about something". Kramer discovers the disadvantages of not talking. He cannot tell the cab driver about where he is going.
George worries about why he really likes his girlfriend. A clip of Sally's show appears on Channel 9 news; it features Jerry's latest confrontation with her. Jerry calls Sally and the message he leaves on her answering machine appears in her show as well. Later the lawsuit he filed appears in her cable special. Jerry decides to cut off all communication with Sally.
George and his girlfriend discuss their relationship, until she gets chewing gum in her hair. To remove the gum from her hair, George's girlfriend cuts her hair; her new hairstyle looks exactly like Jerry's. George decides to take a few days off from his "relationship" with Jerry.
Sally starts talking to the silent Kramer, until he can't take it anymore. He tells her to shut up, and then he apologizes and says that he hasn't spoken for days. Sally tells him to lay it on her. Sally's new cable show is about to come on and Jerry is convinced she'll have nothing to talk about and is proven wrong because Kramer talked with Sally at Monk's Coffee Shop.
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