Nothing Has Never Been This Funny
Jerry Seinfeld is bringing his clean, razor-sharp wit to the Queen City, and the punchlines are coming in hot. On Saturday, December 6, 2025, the man who turned “nothing” into nine seasons of one of the most celebrated sitcoms in television history will take the stage at the Procter & Gamble Hall inside the Aronoff Center for the Arts. He’s offering not one but two chances to catch him live—at 5:00 PM for the early birds and 8:00 PM for the night owls.
Presented by JS Touring, this stop in Cincinnati is part of a career that’s been anything but ordinary. Seinfeld first stepped into the national spotlight back in 1981 with a now-legendary appearance on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. From there, he co-created Seinfeld with Larry David, a series that redefined television comedy. Nine seasons, Emmy wins, Golden Globes, People’s Choice Awards, and the rare feat of being crowned “Greatest TV Show of All Time” by TV Guide later, his legacy was cemented. A 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll even named it the top TV show of all time in 2012—long after the finale aired.
But Jerry didn’t park the mic when the show ended. His comedic footprint has continued to expand. From Emmy-nominated Netflix specials (Jerry Before Seinfeld and 23 Hours to Kill) to the hit web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, Seinfeld has kept his humor fresh without losing the tone that made him famous. He’s voiced animated bees (Bee Movie), written multiple books (SeinLanguage, Is This Anything?), directed for Broadway (Colin Quinn: Long Story Short), and even tackled the Pop-Tart in his film Unfrosted. The man can turn breakfast into a punchline—and make it work.
The Cincinnati shows will run about 90 minutes with no intermission, meaning you get a full, unbroken dose of the good stuff. Tickets started at around $70 when they went on sale August 1, but demand has nudged secondary market prices closer to $122 and climbing. If you’re a fan, the math is simple—grab your seats before the only thing left is the memory of when you “almost went.”
The venue is right in the heart of downtown, so plan for traffic and parking. The 5:00 PM show leaves room for a late dinner and rehashing your favorite bits over dessert, while the 8:00 PM crowd can roll right into the after-hours energy of the city.
Seinfeld’s observational humor has a way of making you feel like you’ve been in on the joke all along. Whether he’s breaking down the quirks of everyday life or reflecting on the absurdity of human behavior, the result is the same—an audience full of people laughing, nodding, and thinking, “He’s right.” And really, that’s what makes seeing him live a bucket-list moment.
On December 6, the master is in town. Don’t miss the chance to see what all the nothing is about.