Curb Your Enthusiasm - Season 9 • Trending & Ultimate

Larry has no idea who. Flashback: 1997. Larry accidentally cut in line at a deli. The woman called him a “schmohawk.” He called her “two-faced.” He doesn’t remember. But Madame Pirouzi says if he doesn’t find her and apologize, Jeff’s marriage is over—and Larry will never find a decent parking spot again.

Larry finally agrees to the YouTube apology, but only if Marsha apologizes first for calling him a “schmohawk.” She refuses. The video shoot becomes a standoff. Larry suggests a compromise: a joint apology, “like a celebrity divorce announcement.” Marsha walks off. Curb Your Enthusiasm - Season 9

Later, Larry gets stuck in an elevator with a man wearing a “Make America Grate Again” cheese-themed hat. The man’s phone plays “Who Let the Dogs Out” on loop. Larry presses the emergency stop button. The man sues for “emotional restraint.” Larry has no idea who

Larry reluctantly searches for the 1997 deli woman. Clues lead to a woman named Marsha (played by Debra Messing). She now runs a gluten-free bakery. Larry visits. He tries to apologize, but she demands a public apology—on YouTube. Larry refuses. “I’m not begging for forgiveness over a pastrami on rye.” The woman called him a “schmohawk

Moe cries—professionally. Ted Danson laughs. The dog pees on the cake. Larry walks out, alone, muttering: “Pretty, pretty, pretty… ridiculous.”

Jeff and Susie reconcile temporarily—because Susie’s blind dog, Whiskers, takes a liking to Larry. Larry hates the dog. But the dog saves Larry from stepping into a pothole. Now Larry feels indebted. He has to walk the dog. While walking, the dog leads him directly to Marsha’s bakery. Marsha sees Larry with a blind dog and melts. “You have a heart,” she says. Larry: “It’s not mine. It’s the dog’s. I’m just holding it.”

A mutual friend dies. At the funeral, Larry is asked to give a toast. He prepares a heartfelt speech. But Moe is also there—hired by the widow to cry loudly. Larry can’t concentrate. He shouts, “Can the professional mourner take five? Some of us are trying to grieve authentically.”