Update (June 24th, 2015):

For the first time, all of Seinfeld is available via a streaming service today, as the entire series comes to Hulu. With that in mind, check out our Top 10 list for the series we did last year, for our picks for the very best episodes of a beloved show "about nothing."

The problem with doing a Top 10 Seinfeld Episodes list is that just about every episode is a classic. Honestly, our own list could probably be rearranged about a thousand times. Even if we made it a Top 25, a Top 50 or -- especially in this case -- a Top 75 Episodes list, the very bottom episode would still be excellent and hilarious.

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Having said that, there are a few episodes that immediately come to mind when looking back at the iconic series. Some of them are even among the best episodes of TV, period, let alone in a sitcom. Indeed, for a show about nothing, Seinfeld certainly did a lot in its nine-season run, thanks in part to stars Jerry Seinfeld, Jason Alexander, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Michael Richards. That's not to mention the show's legendary writing team, led by Seinfeld and Larry David.To celebrate Seinfeld's 25th anniversary -- the show debuted as a standalone pilot episode on July 5th, 1989, when it was still called The Seinfeld Chronicles -- we've compiled our own Top 10 Episodes list. Be sure to give us your favorites in the comments below, as there are plenty more to choose from!

HM The Marine Biologist

On its own, "The Marine Biologist" has a lot going for it -- including a bit where Jerry convinces Elaine that the original title for War and Peace was actually "War: What is it Good For." But most fans will remember George's epic closing monologue recounting his unlikely rescue of a beached whale. However, it isn't until the end of his story that we learn the truth about how the great fish ("Mammal." "Whatever.") got there. In the words of Cosmo Kramer, the final twist is "a hole in one":

10 The Junior Mint

9 The Boyfriend

Aside from maybe cereal and the contraceptive sponge, Seinfeld's most referenced consumer product had to be candy. PEZ, Twix, Jujyfruits, Snickers, Three Musketeers -- all of them had a part to play in Seinfeld's oddly specific universe. But none of them compared to the awesome power of the Junior Mint, which had an episode all to itself.Here, Elaine's ex-boyfriend undergoes a splenectomy, and Jerry and Kramer decide to sit in and watch. But when Kramer sneaks in candy and forces it on Jerry, Jerry sets off a chain reaction that causes a Junior Mint to land inside the patient's abdominal cavity. As expected, hilarity ensues.In "The Boyfriend," Jerry and Elaine compete for the attention of former baseball star Keith Hernandez. While Elaine is technically dating Keith, it becomes apparent that Jerry is jealous of their romantic coupling. Meanwhile, Kramer and Newman recall an incident in which Keith spit on them after a really bad Mets game, the details of which uncannily mirrored those of JFK's assassination. ("The sad thing is, we may never know the real truth.")

8 The Pilot

Not only did this episode include one of Seinfeld's most memorable parody sequences, but it also had the distinguished honor of being the show's very first two-parter.To this day, "The Pilot" (not to be confused with Seinfeld's actual pilot, "The Seinfeld Chronicles") may be the most meta episode of TV ever (at least since all of Community).

7 The Limo

6 The Parking Garage

Taking Seinfeld's premise to the next level, this storyline features Jerry and George -- here as stand-ins of real-life co-creators Seinfeld and David -- pitching what was essentially Jerry's life to NBC, and casting "actor" versions of themselves (one of them being a young Jeremy Piven as "George"). Suffice to say, episode callbacks were plentiful in this one.In a "sustained misunderstanding" that puts any Three's Company episode to shame, "The Limo" finds Jerry and George lying their way into a limo heading for Madison Square Garden to a Knicks/Bulls game (or so they think). However, they later discover the person George is impersonating, O'Brien, is in fact a prominent Neo-Nazi figurehead. Worse, O'Brien is the key speaker at a Nazi rally happening that night, just across the street from MSG.As far as Seinfeld hijinks go, "The Limo" is an underrated classic that puts Jerry and George (and later Elaine and Kramer) in one of their most outrageous and hysterical situations on the show."The Parking Garage" is a classic example of Seinfeld's ability to tell a half-hour story based around one simple conceit -- in this case, the mundane task of finding your car in a parking garage. But the events that transpire over the course of the episode are anything but mundane, as the four go from musing about where they parked to getting separated to wandering aimlessly and, finally, to losing all hope.Really, it's a testament to the four main characters that such a straightforward premise was able fuel an entire episode, but that's part of what makes "The Parking Garage" a classic.