🐱 ‘Friends: The Reunion’ fails to address the show’s history with racist, homophobic comments

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We all like to remember the best moments of our lives. We all like to come back to those moments years later to recall those events. It can become easy to remember all the good.

It’s also easy to forget all the bad memories. We try to forget all the negative experiences, but it’s a part of us — like it or not.

And that’s what “Friends: The Reunion” is all about: remembering the good, forgetting the bad. After postponing the release of “The Reunion” last year because of the Covid-19 pandemic, it made its long-awaited debut on HBO Max on Thursday.

The issue with the show, however, was that it glossed over some bad moments and only focused on what made the show so popular.

Sitting on a couch in Central Perk, the six main actors from the original “Friends” — Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer — went down memory lane to go through their rise to stardom. They were also joined by other stars like Justin Bieber and David Beckham, who are fans of the show.

Through all the stories shared and the nostalgia that it proved, “The Reunion” failed to address the ugly side of “Friends.”

It was disappointing to see that “The Reunion” glossed over the show’s lack of diversity and its history with homophobic, transphobic, racist and misogynistic comments. A true “reunion” doesn’t pick and choose what to remember and what to leave out.

Maybe it’s naive to expect these actors to address a difficult topic when, according to Business Insider, they were each paid $2.5 million to appear in this show. And before the pandemic hit last March, this reunion was supposed to help premiere HBO Max.

The show was hosted by James Corden, which made for an awkward dynamic between him and the other actors. Corden would often bring back talking points already addressed by the other actors; he would have been better suited setting up a topic and allowing the cast to do the rest.

There were moments when the six actors were given the space to talk freely and go over moments that were special to them. That would have been the perfect time to also discuss some of the troubling parts of the show.

For example, in 1999, Amaani Lyle was one of the few Black women employed on the show, becoming a writers’ assistant who was fired after four months. She then filed a lawsuit, which was later dismissed, alleging that her supervisors told racist and sexually graphic jokes, including of other female members of the cast.

These are issues that plagued the show for a long time but have largely gone untouched. Besides a couple of times where the writers of the show were asked to address these issues, it has mostly escaped any deep conversations.

Considering the issues that America has been trying to tackle in the last year with police brutality and racism, this would have been the perfect platform to speak openly about the ugly side of the show. Alas, we got none of that.

Instead, the show spent 105 minutes hearing from other celebrities who adored the show, which created some cringe-worthy moments, and occasional scenes where the cast got to speak to each other. In the scenes where the actors got the chance to open up — especially when Perry talked about the pressure to generate a laugh and the pressure of a joke landing — there were no extended conversations to explore further into these matters.

Maybe the cast isn’t as interesting when they are forced to be themselves rather than in character. Maybe that’s why Corden was there to keep everything moving along, even though it didn’t really work.

In certain moments, it felt like that cast felt scared to get too personal with the crowd. Then what’s the point of a reunion?

And that’s the issue with “The Reunion” — it didn’t involve much of the cast and it failed to engage in deep conversations. Given a year to produce this show, the production should have been better and the cast could have put in more effort to show they care about these issues.
 
Considering the issues that America has been trying to tackle in the last year with police brutality and racism, this would have been the perfect platform to speak openly about the ugly side of the show. Alas, we got none of that.
These people are smart enough to be aware of your Achilles' Heel: Ignore you and your demands and you go away.
 
A show whose plot and characters were built around the late 90's zeitgeist of rocketing economic prosperity and domestic peace that preached a morality of do whatever (and whoever) you like with no repercussions, because even the most menial of jobs would earn you enough for a NYC apartment and have tons of social clout is now horribly horribly out-of-touch and should be ignored not because it's 120% tone deaf to modern America's perils and problems and the actors were kinda prima-donnas or no-talent hacks, but because, they once told a dick joke.....


Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight......


No you dummy. A reunion is old cast members meeting up again.
The author clearly wanted a struggle session, not a reminiscing chit-chat. And by golly they'll GET it no matter how many people they have to kick over and shame!

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Couldn't these people just not watch? Its crazy how they expect everyone to destroy and forget their past and history because problematic but when it comes to consuming their digital soma they expect it to cater to their current sensibilities
Ideologues always think THEIR personal hobbies and tastes will survive, if not lead, the Great Purge (tm)

They still think it even as they're being marched into S21, sure they'll be one of the 5 known survivors.......
 
Seinfeld was better than Friends.
Neither of them was as good as this
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A true “reunion” doesn’t pick and choose what to remember and what to leave out.
Oh really? Is that why you let
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this man go around and molest pretty much everybody in Hollywood for years and didn't say a peep about it, and yet you dragged
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this man through the fucking mud for years, quite literally up until he died, despite the fact that they couldn't find any evidence of his supposed crime, to the point that there are people in Hollywood who still defend him to this fucking day?

"We don't pick and choose" my ass.....
 
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Here is a little bit of trivia. Wayne Brady noted how "white" Friends was during a musical number he performed at the Emmys twenty years ago. Did he harangue the audience about racism, etc.? No, he jokingly suggested that the producers should hire him as Rachael's "really, really dark cousin" and it was actually funny. People like the author of this article are miserable little cunts who watch to spread their misery because joy and humor are completely antithetical to their world view.

Amy Schumer couldn't stop talking about her vagina. Michelle Wolf is obsessed with abortion. Hell, many late night "comedians" still obsess over Trump though he's been out of office for nearly six months. It's almost as if the left is incapable of humor these days.
 
Yikes, Uncle ToPhil and Carlton were clearly trump supporters who've internalized the white-supremacy for so long it was no thing at all for them to externalize it, furthermore...
Carlton was the only moderate conservative in the family. The show would constantly reference his all-American attitude and that he was the leader of the young Republican high school group and mock him over it as one of many reasons he didn't pile up as many bodies as Will or Hillary.
Uncle Phil was an ex-radical turned moderate liberal who in his youth marched, protested and rioted against the man, but put those things away once he had a responsibility to his family.
Will was somewhat radical in his whole black power beliefs (see the episode where some old radical bat running from the feds feeds Will tripe about how oppressed Blacks are despite where Will lived and studied) but was at least aware he had an opportunity very few have. Rewatching the show, he's not that different from most champagne socialists on twitter. Certainly not as extreme, but does channel similar gripes.
 
Carlton was the only moderate conservative in the family. The show would constantly reference his all-American attitude and that he was the leader of the young Republican high school group and mock him over it as one of many reasons he didn't pile up as many bodies as Will or Hillary.
Uncle Phil was an ex-radical turned moderate liberal who in his youth marched, protested and rioted against the man, but put those things away once he had a responsibility to his family.
Will was somewhat radical in his whole black power beliefs (see the episode where some old radical bat running from the feds feeds Will tripe about how oppressed Blacks are despite where Will lived and studied) but was at least aware he had an opportunity very few have. Rewatching the show, he's not that different from most champagne socialists on twitter. Certainly not as extreme, but does channel similar gripes.

Thing is, back then it was considered funny/the joke that the privileged black man doesn't see his advantages..... and still thinks he's being oppressed even as he attends Ivy League schools and keeps elite social company.

Whereas today, the left will tell you with a straight face that no matter HOW rich a black man gets, he can't beat white privilege. The "joke" has become absolute truth to them, and it is NOT to be laughed at, racist.
 
People don't understand the concept of "You had to be there." Whether it's something you had to see in person, or something that happened a long time ago. Judging decades old shit with modern metrics is sophistry.
 
A reunion where all the aged cast members sit around and apologize for things? Sounds like a hoot! Never let it be said that the social justice crowd doesn't know how to put together one hell of a show. I hope KISS gets back together one more time so they can all get on stage in a packed arena and take turns apologizing.
 
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