The Yada Yada

[1] Peter Mehlman and Jill Franklyn were nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series in 1997.

Kramer and Mickey Abbott double date, but can't decide which woman, Karen or Julie, is right for which one of them.

Elaine lobbies on behalf of Beth and Arnie, and sexually propositions the adoption official as an inducement.

Jerry is comforted by Beth, who harbors the same anti-dentite feelings towards dentists as he does, but also reveals she is racist and antisemitic.

[3] In an illustration of how much higher Seinfeld's budget was in its later seasons, the set with the urinals was constructed solely for this episode's cold open.

[3] The scene where George consults his friends about the possibility of Marcy having sex with her ex-boyfriend took a number of takes, since Jerry Seinfeld kept breaking into laughter at Elaine actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus's delivery of the line "No, I mentioned the bisque.

"[2] The episode was allowed by NBC to run longer than the usual 23 minutes, and its slightly above-average length was even boasted about in promos.

[6] Before the episode aired, writer Peter Mehlman suspected that it would spawn a new Seinfeld catchphrase, but he thought it would be the phrase "anti-dentite" that would become popular.