Millennials Watching Friends On Netflix Are ‘Offended’

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Oh would you look at that, millennials have absolutely no banter.

I’m no Mystic Meg but when I heard Netflix was planning to roll out Friends to its users, I knew that a bunch of 12-year-olds would watch it and start beefing about the show’s ‘problematic’ tendencies.

Why? Because Ross was a very fragile male and enjoyed making gay jokes to make himself feel better, Monica was teased about being fat, Joey thought with his cock, and Chandler near-enough blacklisted his dad after he became a woman.

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That, and the fact the ‘friends’ isolated themselves from any other people (bizarre for twentysomethings living in New York) and barely know any POC.

Admittedly it’s not a ‘perfectly-woke’ show but what is? Pretty much any comedy, whether it’s Seinfeld or The Office or even something as twee as The Big Bang Theory has its awkward elements.

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This isn’t the first wave of post-Friends criticism. Back in 2015, Slate slated the homophobia of Chandler Bing, saying:

In retrospect, the entire show’s treatment of LGBTQ issues is awful, a fault pointedly illustrated by the exhaustive clip-compilation ‘Homophobic Friends.’ But Chandler’s treatment of his gay father, a Vegas drag queen played by Kathleen Turner, is especially appalling, and it’s not clear the show knows it.

It’s one thing for Chandler to recall being embarrassed as a kid, but he is actively resentful and mocking of his loving, involved father right up until his own wedding (to which his father is initially not invited!).

Even a line like ‘Hi, Dad’ is delivered with vicious sarcasm. Monica eventually cajoles him into a grudging reconciliation, which the show treats as an acceptably warm conclusion. But his continuing discomfort now reads as jarringly out-of-place for a supposedly hip New York thirtysomething—let alone a supposedly good person, period.

They added:

When it comes to women, Chandler turns out to be just as retrograde as Joey, but his lust comes with an undercurrent of the kind of bitter desperation that I now recognize as not only gross, but potentially menacing.

Chandler is painted as a self-loathing loser with women, until he finally snags Monica at the end of Season 4: He was 19 when he first touched a woman’s breasts, for example.

And so, it’s Chandler who suggests deciding ‘who has the nicest ass’ in the ski trip episode in Season 3. It’s Chandler who chooses a roommate because his sister is a porn star. And it’s Chandler who for years dates Janice, a woman he openly loathes. Janice is repellent, but well-adjusted people don’t have trouble staying out of relationships with repellent ones.

No one told you life was gonna be this way.