Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Legacy Archives

Seinfeld and Crackle team up for new ‘Single Shots’ video series, instant hilarity ensues

Add as a preferred source on Google

Comedian Jerry Seinfeld announced today that he has collaborated once again with Sony’s video-streaming service Crackle to create a series of brief vignettes dubbed Single Shots. The project is an offshoot of Seinfeld’s Emmy-nominated web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, according to Multichannel News.

Each Single Shot episode (like coffee, get it?) will offer about two-minutes runtime, and will apparently feature the same improvisational comedy that Seinfeld began exploring in his 15-20 minute …Coffee series, in a more clip friendly format. The new series’ first installment – Donuts – is available to watch both on Youtube and via Crackle’s official page, and features back-and-forth chats with Tina Fey, Sarah Silverman, and Brian Regan. Each episode will center around a single topic, with the fried hoops of dough clearly being the focal point of today’s premiere.

Recommended Videos

Crackle announced back in May that the fourth season of …Coffee would premiere on June 19th. The fifth and latest episode of the series guest-stars Jon Stewart, and previous episodes this season have featured quips and jabs from Aziz Ansari, Robert Klein, George Wallace, and Sarah Jessica Parker. The new Single Shots episodes include both previously aired material from …Coffee as well as never-before-seen footage, company officials said.

Alex Tretbar
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Alex Tretbar, audio/video intern, is a writer, editor, musician, gamer and sci-fi nerd raised on EverQuest and Magic: The…
Radiant Monitor 2 takes a sunlit approach to solve the glare and power problem
This sunlight-friendly monitor wants your laptop setup to leave the cave
Radiant Monitor 2

For most laptop displays, sunlight is the main antagonist. The brighter the day, the harder they work, and the more you start hunting for some shade. The Radiant Monitor 2 takes a different approach. Eazeye’s new portable monitor uses a 15.6-inch transflective LCD, which means it can use ambient light to improve visibility instead of fighting it entirely with a backlight.

In bright conditions, the backlight can be turned off, dropping power consumption to around 3W. Sunlight becomes part of the display system rather than the thing ruining your screen.

Read more
The Accentum Clip could make open-ear earbuds more appealing to music lovers
Sennheiser's new open-ear earbuds promise stronger bass without blocking the outside world
Adult, Female, Person

Open-ear earbuds have become one of the fastest-growing categories in personal audio. They offer a comfortable fit and let users stay aware of their surroundings, making them ideal for commuting, exercising, or working in shared spaces. The trade-off has usually been sound quality. Without creating a seal inside the ear, open-ear designs typically struggle to deliver the bass and immersion many listeners expect from traditional earbuds.

Sennheiser says the Accentum Clip is designed to address that challenge. These clip-style earbuds are advertised to deliver stronger bass, clear vocals, and balanced treble.

Read more
Google’s new $99 Home Speaker offers 360-degree audio and next-gen Gemini perks
However, its most advanced AI-based features are locked behind a monthly subscription.
Sphere, Electronics, Speaker

After six years of waiting, Google has finally released a new smart speaker. The $99 Google Home Speaker is available for pre-order starting today and hits shelves on June 25, 2026. At the core of the speaker is Google's conversational AI assistant: Gemini.

With Gemini, you can now hold natural, multi-step conversations with the speaker rather than issuing individual commands. It understands natural phrasing and logic, so you can speak more naturally without phrasing everything like a voice command.

Read more