Daily Mail57%
Jerry Seinfeld spotted on rare outing with lookalike son Julian, 23, in the Hamptons 64%
By Sharon Mai40%
4/27/2026, 10:35:28 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 20 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Overconfidence Bias, and Halo Effect, with Ambiguity (Equivocation) as the most egregious example at 12.3% saturation with 60 hits. Analysis detected 442 faulty-reasoning hits from 487 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 59.1% and a BS Rank of 64% (6,053 of 16,813 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 64.00% of the article peer group.
Jerry Seinfeld was spotted stepping out with his son Julian Kal Seinfeld in the Hamptons over the weekend.
On Sunday, the 71-year-old comedian put on a casual display for the father-son outing, and the pair looked nearly identical as they both walked with their hands in their pockets.
They were later seen getting into Seinfeld's vintage white Porsche as the actor started driving his son around.
For their outing, the comedian — who faced backlash for his 'rude' red carpet behavior with a pop star earlier this year — put on a low-key profile, sporting a baseball cap and sunglasses.
He layered a dark, zip-up hoodie over a red T-shirt paired with distressed jeans and sneakers.
At his side, his 23-year-old son Julian also wore casual and comfortable clothes for their stroll.
Seinfeld shares a total of three children, including Julian, with his wife, author Jessica Seinfeld, 54.
The longtime couple, who have been married since 1999, are also parents to daughter Sascha Betty, 25, and son Shepherd Kellen, 20.
Their excursion comes just days after Seinfeld said one of his major passions, or as he called it, his 'addiction,' is collecting cars.
As an avid car lover, he admitted that he could not count how many vehicles are in his expansive Porsche collection despite having sold quite a few.
'How many do I have?
I don't know.
I always say it's an amount that if you looked at it, you would not say, "This makes sense,"' he told Air Mail in an article published on Saturday.
He also said that he is 'totally emotionally attached to' a number of cars in his collection.
'I've never had really any problems with addiction, except this,' he admitted before opening up about his other interests in the same conversation.
'I don't enjoy that many things,' Seinfeld shared.
'You know, I like watching baseball games, and I like driving cars and I like comedy, that’s about it,' he continued.
He candidly added: 'I think most of the rest of life has been a huge disappointment.'
When the interviewer, Jamie Kitman, responded with, 'I'm sure your wife and children will object,' Seinfeld said: 'That goes without saying.
But the restaurants and the traveling and everything else?
It's just OK.'
He also briefly mentioned his plans to give his collection to his children.
'I think you could consider yourself lucky if you like driving a car,' he said.
'It's such a simple, easy thing to do.'
In response to Kitman noting that 'disposing of carloads of cars won't be an easy thing for a non-enthusiast to do,' Seinfeld replied with a quote.
'Sure.
But I think I'd like to die with them anyway.
As we used to say in Vietnam, "Kill them all and let God sort them out."
My heirs will be fine.
They'll figure it out.'
Analysis
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