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The show comes full circle here in a nice way, with Larry changing his mind about a "Seinfeld" reunion thanks to hints from now ex-wife Cheryl (Cheryl Hines), who has now become an actress. Previous seasons of "Curb" were reportedly the last (as was this season, although just recently the series was renewed again for another season), but if the series were to have ended, this season would have been a reasonably good point to do that. The seventh season of "Curb" is a significant improvement for the series, which had started to become a little repetitive (or, better yet, the awkward situations Larry found himself in started to feel a tad forced - Larry's gotten himself into yet another fine mess.) by the time the fifth season had rolled around.
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Combined with the often-handheld camerawork, the improvised dialogue feels even more realistic. The show's dialogue is largely ad-libbed, with the actors getting a general outline of the plot and scenes, then going from there. In the show, David is joined by a series of characters, including his wife (Cheryl Hines, excellent), manager (Jeff Garlin, very funny) and occasional stars playing themselves, including Wanda Sykes, Ted Danson and others. A minor mistake, a little moment blown out of proportion, can suddenly snowball into something much more devastasting for David down the road. Born after a documentary/stand-up performance showcase on HBO, "Curb Your Enthusiasm" stars David as himself, a socially awkward, paranoid, hilariously self-obsessed person who manages to say the wrong thing at the wrong time, then sink ever deeper into his own mistake until the result is almost difficult to watch - yet still claiming himself to be the victim the entire time. Although he's been largely known as the co-creator of "Seinfeld", former stand-up comic Larry David has sort of turned the George Constanza character (apparently based upon himself) into a show that David stars in.