Friends is an American
sitcom created by
David Crane and
Marta Kauffman, which premiered on
NBC on September 22, 1994. The series revolves around a group of friends in the area of
Manhattan,
New York City, who occasionally live together and share living expenses. The series was produced by
Bright/Kauffman/Crane Productions, in association with
Warner Bros. Television. The original executive producers were Crane, Kauffman and
Kevin Bright, with numerous others being promoted in later seasons.
Kauffman and Crane began developing
Friends under the title
Insomnia Cafe in November 1993. They presented the idea to Bright, with whom they had previously worked, and together they pitched a seven-page treatment of the series to NBC. After several script rewrites and changes, the series was finally named
Friends and premiered on NBC's coveted
Thursday 8:30 pm timeslot. Filming for the series took place at
Warner Bros. Studios in
Burbank, California in front of a live audience. After ten seasons on the network, the series finale was promoted by NBC, and viewing parties were organized around the US. The finale, which first aired on May 6, 2004, was watched by 52.5 million American viewers, making it the fourth most-watched series finale in television history.
Friends received positive reviews throughout its run, and became one of the most popular sitcoms of all time. The series won many awards and was nominated for 63
Primetime Emmy Awards. The series was also very successful in the ratings, consistently ranking in the top ten in the final primetime ratings.
Friends has made a large cultural impact. The Central Perk coffee house that had featured prominently in the series has inspired various imitations throughout the world. Repeats of the series continue to air worldwide, and all seasons have been released on DVD. Following the series finale, the spin-off series
Joey was created.
Cast and characters
The series featurejd 6 main cast members throughout its run,with numerous characters recurring throughout the ten seasons. The main cast members were familiar to television viewers before their roles on
Friends, but were not considered to be stars.
During the series' ten season run, the actors all achieved household name celebrity status.
- Jennifer Aniston portrays Rachel Green, a fashion enthusiast and Monica Geller's best friend from high school. Rachel and Ross Geller aire involved in an on again off again relationship throughout the series. Rachel's first job is as a waitress at the coffee house Central Perk, but she later becomes an assistant buyer at Bloomingdale's and a buyer at Ralph Lauren in season five. Aniston had already appeared in several unsuccessful sitcom pilots before being cast in Friends.
- Courteney Cox Arquette poretrays Monica Geller, the mother hen of the group,
known for her obsessive-compulsive and competitive nature. Monica is often jokingly teased for having been an extremely overweight child by the others, especially her brother Ross. Monica is a chef who changes jobs often throughout the show, and marries longtime friend Chandler Bing in season seven. Cox had the highest profile career of the main actors when she was initially cast, having appeared in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and Family Ties.
[
season one cast.jpg|thumb|250px|Friends' cast in the first season, from left to right, [[Matt LeBlanc] as
Joey Tribbiani,
Lisa Kudrow as
Phoebe Buffay,
Courteney Cox Arquette as
Monica Geller,
Jennifer Aniston as
Rachel Green,
David Schwimmer as
Ross Geller and
Matthew Perry as
Chandler Bing]].
- Lisa Kudrow portrays Phoebe Buffay, an eccentric masseuse and musician.
Phoebe is known for her self-written guitar songs and for being ditzy yet street-smart. In the last season, she marries a character named Mike Hannigan, played by Paul Rudd. Kudrow previously played Ursula Buffay on Mad About You, and reprised the dual role of twin sister Ursula as a recurring character during several episodes of Friends. Before her role on Friends, Kudrow was an office manager and researcher for her father, a headache specialist.
- Matt LeBlanc portrays Joey Tribbiani, a struggling actor and food lover who becomes famous for his role on Days of our Lives as Dr. Drake Ramoray. Joey is a womanizer with many girlfriends throughout the series, and develops a crush on his friend Rachel in season eight. Before his role on Friends, LeBlanc appeared as a minor character in the sitcom Married... with Children, and as a main character in its spin-offs, Top of the Heap and Vinnie & Bobby.
- Matthew Perry portrays Chandler Bing, an executive in statistical analysis and data reconfiguration for a large multi-national corporation. Chandler quits his job and becomes a junior copywriter at an advertising agency during season nine. Chandler is known for his sarcastic sense of humor,
and marries longtime friend Monica. Like Aniston, Perry had already appeared in several unsuccessful sitcom pilots before being cast.
y
- David Schwimmer portrays Ross Geller, a paleontologist working at a museum of Prehistoric History, and later a professor of paleontology at New York University. Ross is involved in an on-off relationship with Rachel throughout the series. Ross also has three failed marriages during the series, which include Rachel, Emily, and his lesbian ex-wife Carol, who is also the mother of his son, Ben. Before being cast in Friends, Schwimmer played minor characters in The Wonder Years and NYPD Blue.
Series creator David Crane wanted all six characters to be equally prominent,
and the series was lauded as being "the first true 'ensemble' show".
The cast members made efforts to keep the ensemble format and not allow one member to dominate;
they entered themselves in the same acting categories for awards,
opted for collective instead of individual salary negotiations,
and asked to appear together on magazine cover photos in the first season.
The cast members became best friends off screen,
and one guest star,
Tom Selleck, reported sometimes feeling left out.
The cast remained good friends after the series' run, most notably Cox and Aniston, with Aniston being godmother to Cox and
David Arquette's daughter, Coco.
In the official farewell commemorative book
Friends 'Til The End, each separately acknowledged in their interviews that the cast had become their family.
In their original contracts for the first season, each cast member was paid $22,500 per episode.
The cast members received different salaries in the second season, beginning from the $20,000 range to $40,000 per episode.
Prior to their salary negotiations for the third season, the cast decided to enter collective negotiations, despite Warner Bros. preference for individual deals.
The actors were given the salary of the least paid cast member, meaning Aniston and Schwimmer had their salaries reduced. The stars were paid, per episode, $75,000 in the third season, $85,000 in the fourth, $100,000 in the fifth, and $125,000 in the sixth season.
The cast members received salaries of $750,000 per episode in the seventh and eight seasons, and $1 million per episode in the ninth and tenth.
The cast also received syndication royalties beginning with the fifth season.
Season synopses
The
first season introduces the six main characters: Rachel, Monica, Phoebe, Joey, Chandler, and Ross. Rachel arrives at Central Perk, after leaving her fiancé at the altar, and moves into Monica's apartment with her. Ross constantly tries to tell Rachel that he loves her, while his lesbian ex-wife, Carol, is expecting his baby. Joey is shown to be a struggling actor, while Phoebe works as a masseuse. Chandler breaks up with girlfriend
Janice (
Maggie Wheeler), who frequently returns in later seasons. At the end of the season, Chandler accidentally reveals that Ross loves Rachel, who realizes that she feels the same way.
[
Selleck 1988.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Tom Selleck] garnered a 2000
Primetime Emmy Award nomination for "Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series" for his role as
publisher=Seattle Times}}
The
second season begins with Rachel discovering that Ross is dating Julie (
Lauren Tom), someone he knew from
grad school. Rachel's attempts to tell Ross she likes him mirror his failed attempts in the first season, although the characters eventually begin a relationship. Joey gets a part in a fictional version of the soap opera
Days of our Lives, but his character is killed off after he claims that he writes many of his own lines. Monica begins dating
Richard (
Tom Selleck), recently divorced and 21 years her senior. In the season finale, they end their relationship when they realize that unlike Monica, Richard does not want children.
Season three takes on a significantly greater
serialized format.
Rachel begins working at
Bloomingdale's, an upscale
department store chain, and Ross becomes jealous of her colleague, Mark. Ross and Rachel decide to take a break; however, Ross is confused by this arrangement and sleeps with someone else, causing Rachel to break up with him. After believing she has no family except her twin sister
Ursula (Lisa Kudrow), Phoebe becomes acquainted with
her half-brother (
Giovani Ribisi) and
birth mother (
Teri Garr). Joey develops a relationship with his acting partner Kate (
Dina Meyer), and Monica begins a relationship with millionaire
Pete Becker (
Jon Favreau).
In the
fourth season premiere, Ross and Rachel reconcile but soon break up again. Phoebe becomes a surrogate mother for her brother and his wife Alice (
Debra Jo Rupp). Monica and Rachel are forced to switch apartments with Joey and Chandler after losing a bet, but manage to switch back by bribing them with Knicks season tickets and a one-minute kiss between themselves. Ross begins dating an English woman named
Emily (
Helen Baxendale), and the season finale features their wedding in London. Chandler and Monica sleep together, and Rachel decides to attend Ross and Emily's wedding. While saying his vows, Ross uses the wrong name at the altar, to the shock of his bride and the guests.
Season five features Monica and Chandler trying to keep their new relationship a secret from their friends. Phoebe gives birth to triplets in the show's one hundredth episode. She gives birth to a boy, Frank Jr. Jr., and two girls: Leslie, and Chandler. They decided to keep the name Chandler, despite thinking the baby was a boy. Ross and Emily's marriage is called off as Emily is intimidated by Rachel, and Ross refuses to stay away from her, as Emily demands. Phoebe starts a relationship with police officer Gary (
Michael Rapaport). Monica and Chandler go public with their relationship, to the surprise of their friends. They decide to get married on a trip to Las Vegas, but change their plans after witnessing Ross and Rachel drunkenly stumble out of the wedding chapel.
[
Rudd LF.JPG|thumb|upright|[[Paul Rudd], who portrayed Phoebe's husband
Mike, was originally asked to appear in several episodes and was surprised that his role became recurring.
[
]" class="internal" title="/AllStars/The_Topeka_Capital-Journal]]
">The Topeka Capital-Journal]]
In the
sixth season premiere, Ross and Rachel's marriage is established to be a drunken mistake, and they divorce several episodes later. Monica and Chandler decide to move into her apartment together, and Rachel moves in with Phoebe. Joey lands a role on a
cable television series called
Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E, where he stars alongside a
robot. Ross gets a job lecturing at
New York University, and starts dating one of his students, Elizabeth (
Alexandra Holden). Phoebe and Rachel's apartment catches fire, and Rachel moves in with Joey while Phoebe moves in with Chandler and Monica. Chandler decides to propose to Monica, who considers reconciling with Richard. Although Richard confesses that he still loves her, Monica accepts Chandler's proposal.
The
seventh season mainly follows various antics by Monica and Chandler, who are preparing for their wedding. Joey's television series
Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E is canceled, but he is offered his job back on
Days of our Lives. Phoebe's apartment is fixed, but due to the way it is built, Rachel decides to stay with Joey. The season finale features Monica and Chandler's wedding, and Rachel is revealed to be pregnant after Phoebe discovers a positive pregnancy test in Monica's bathroom.
The
eighth season's first three episodes revolve around the identity of Rachel's baby's father, who is revealed to be Ross. Rachel and Ross decide to have the baby, but do not resume their romantic relationship. Joey develops romantic feelings for Rachel, but she does not feel the same. Rachel gives birth to baby
Emma in the season finale, and Ross's mother wants him to propose. Joey finds Ross's ring on the floor, and Rachel accepts what she thinks is his proposal.
Season nine begins with Ross and Rachel living together as roommates with baby Emma. Monica and Chandler decide to have a child themselves but discover that they are unlikely to conceive. Phoebe begins dating
Mike Hannigan (
Paul Rudd), and chooses to be with him over her friend
David (
Hank Azaria). Rachel and Emma move in with Joey in the middle of the season, and Rachel develops romantic feelings for him. The group travels to Barbados in the finale to hear Ross give a keynote speech at a Paleontologist conference. Joey and his girlfriend
Charlie (
Aisha Tyler) break up, and she begins a relationship with Ross. Joey and Rachel's feelings for each other return, and the finale ends with them kissing.
The
tenth season closes several long running storylines. Joey and Rachel try to contend with Ross's feelings about them being together, and decide to remain friends. Phoebe and Mike get married, while Charlie breaks up with Ross. Monica and Chandler apply to adopt a child, and are chosen by
Erica (
Anna Faris). In the series finale, Chandler and Monica fulfil their dream of having children, as Erica gives birth to twins - a boy and a girl. Monica and Chandler move to the suburbs, and Joey becomes upset with the changes happening in his life. Rachel takes a job in Paris, but decides not to go and resumes her relationship with Ross.
Production
Conception
| "It's about sex, love, relationships, careers, a time in your life when everything's possible. And it's about friendship because when you're single and in the city, your friends are your family."
|
—The original treatment used by Crane, Kauffman and Bright to pitch the series to NBC.
|
David Crane and
Marta Kauffman began developing three new television pilots, which would premiere in the Fall 1994 season, following the cancellation of their sitcom,
Family Album, by CBS in November 1993.
[Wild, p. 206] Kauffman and Crane decided to pitch the series about "six people in their 20s making their way in Manhattan" to NBC, which they felt best suited the network's style.
[Kolbert, Elizabeth (March 8, 1994). "Birth of a TV Show: A Drama All Its Own", The New York Times. Retrieved on January 19, 2008.] Crane and Kauffman presented the idea to their production partner
Kevin Bright, who had served as executive producer on their
HBO series
Dream On.
The idea for the series was conceived when Crane and Kauffman began thinking about the time when they had finished college and started living by themselves in New York; Kauffman believed they were looking at a time when the future was "more of a question mark."
They found the concept to be interesting, as they believed "everybody knows that feeling,"
and because it was also how they felt about their own lives at the time.
The team titled the series
Insomnia Cafe, and pitched the idea as a seven-page treatment to NBC in December 1993.
At the same time,
Warren Littlefield, the then-president of NBC Entertainment, was seeking a comedy involving young people living together and sharing expenses. Littlefield wanted the group to share memorable periods of their lives with friends, who had become "new, surrogate family members".
However, Littlefield found difficulty in bringing the concept to life, and found the scripts developed by NBC to be terrible. When Kauffman, Crane and Bright pitched
Insomnia Cafe, Littlefield was impressed that they knew who their characters were.
NBC bought the idea as a
put pilot, meaning they risked financial penalties if the pilot was not filmed.
Kauffman and Crane began writing a pilot script for a show now titled
Friends Like Us,
which took three days to write.
[Wild, p. 215] Littlefield wanted the series to represent
Generation X and explore a new kind of tribal bonding, but the trio did not share his vision. Crane argued that it was not a series for one generation, and wanted to produce a series that everyone would enjoy watching.
NBC liked the pilot script and ordered the series under another title,
Six of One, mainly due to the similar title it shared with the ABC sitcom
These Friends of Mine.
Casting
[
Cox 1995.jpg|thumb|upright|The producers wanted [[Courteney Cox] to portray Rachel; however, Cox refused and requested to play Monica.]]
Once it became apparent that the series was a favored project at NBC, Littlefield reported that he was getting calls from every agent in town, wanting their client to be a part of the series.
Auditions for the lead roles took place in New York and Los Angeles.
The casting director shortlisted 1,000 actors who had applied for each role down to 75. Those who received a callback read again in front of Crane, Kauffman and Bright. At the end of March, the number of potential actors had been reduced to three or four for each part, and were asked to read for
Les Moonves, then-president of Warner Bros. Television.
[Kolbert, Elizabeth (April 6, 1994). "Finding the Absolutely Perfect Actor: The High-Stress Business of Casting", The New York Times. Retrieved on January 19, 2008.]
Having worked with David Schwimmer in the past,
the series creators wrote the character of Ross with him in mind, and he was the first actor cast.
The producers wanted Courteney Cox to portray Rachel; however, Cox refused and asked to play Monica. Kauffman said that Cox had "this cheery, upbeat energy", which was not how they envisioned Monica.
When Cox auditioned for the role, the producers were surprised by her direction of the character and she was cast. When Matt LeBlanc auditioned for Joey, he put a "different spin" on the character.
The writers did not originally intend for Joey to be dim, but found it to be a major source of comedy. LeBlanc also gave the character heart, which the writers did not realize Joey had. Although Crane and Kauffman did not want LeBlanc for the role at the time, they were forced by the network to cast him.
Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, and Lisa Kudrow were cast based on their auditions.
More changes occurred to the series' storylines during the casting process. The writers found that they had to adjust the characters they had written to suit the actors, and the discovery process of the characters occurred throughout the first season. Kauffman acknowledged that Joey's character became "this whole new being", and that "it wasn't until we did the first Thanksgiving episode that we realized how much fun Monica's neuroses are."
Writing
In the weeks after NBC's pick up of
Friends, Crane, Kauffman and Bright reviewed sent-in scripts that writers had originally prepared for other series, mainly unproduced
Seinfeld episodes.
Kauffman and Crane hired a team of seven young writers because "When you're 40, you can't do it anymore. The networks and studios are looking for young people coming in out of college."
The creators felt that utilizing six equal characters, rather than emphasizing one or two, would allow for "myriad story lines and give the show legs".
The majority of the storyline ideas came from the writers, although the actors added ideas.
The writers originally planned a big love story between Joey and Monica, as they intended them to be the most sexual of the characters in the series pitch. The idea of a romantic interest between Ross and Rachel emerged during the period when Kauffman and Crane wrote the pilot script.
During the production of the pilot, NBC requested that the script be changed to feature one dominant storyline and several minor ones, but the writers refused, wanting to keep three story lines of equal weight.
NBC thought the cast was too young, and pushed for an older character who could give the young adults advice. Crane and Kauffman were forced to comply, and wrote a draft of an early episode which featured "Pat the cop". Crane found the storyline to be terrible, and Kauffman joked, "You know the kids book,
Pat the Bunny? We had Pat the Cop." NBC eventually relented and dropped the idea.
Each summer, the producers would outline the storylines for the subsequent season.
Before an episode went into production, Kauffman and Crane would revise the script written by another writer, mainly if something concerning either the series or a character felt foreign.
Unlike other storylines, the idea for a relationship between Joey and Rachel was decided on halfway through the eighth season. The creators did not want Ross and Rachel to get back together so soon, and while looking for a romantic impediment, a writer suggested Joey's romantic interest in Rachel. The storyline was incorporated into the season; however, when the actors feared that the storyline would make their characters unlikable, the storyline was wrapped up, until it again resurfaced in the season's finale. For the ninth season, the writers were unsure about the amount of storyline to give to Rachel's baby, as they wanted the show neither to revolve around a baby nor pretend there to be none.
Crane said that it took them a while to accept the idea of a tenth season, which they decided to do because they had enough stories left to tell to justify the season. Kauffman and Crane would not have signed on for an eleventh season, even if all the cast members had wanted to continue.
The episode title format—"The One..."
—was created when the producers realized that the episode titles would not be featured in the opening credits, and therefore would be unknown to most of the audience. They believed that sitcom audiences generally refer to specific episodes of a show by the most memorable event of the episode, and decided to name their episodes in that format.
Filming
[
building.jpg|thumb|upright|The [[Greenwich Village] building used as the friends' apartment block in
establishing shot]]s
The first season was shot on Stage 5 at Warner Bros. Studios in
Burbank, California.
The NBC executives had worried that the coffee house setting was too hip and asked for the series to be set in a diner, but eventually consented to the coffee house concept.
The opening title sequence was filmed in a fountain at the Warner Bros. Ranch at 4:00 am, while it was particularly cold for a Burbank morning.
At the beginning of the second season, production moved to the larger Stage 24, which was renamed "The Friends Stage" after the series finale.
Filming for the series began in the summer of 1994 in front of a live audience, who were given a summary of the series to familiarize themselves with the six main characters;
a hired comedian entertained the studio audience between takes.
Each 22-minute episode took six hours to film—twice the length of most sitcom tapings—mainly due to the several retakes and rewrites of the script.
Although the producers always wanted to find the right stories to take advantage of being on location,
Friends was never shot in New York. Bright felt that filming outside the studio made episodes less funny, even when shooting on the lot outside, and that the live audience was an integral part of the series.
When the series was criticized for incorrectly depicting New York, with the financially struggling group of friends being able to afford huge apartments, Bright noted that the set had to be big enough for the cameras, lighting, and "for the audience to be able to see what's going on";
the apartments also needed to provide a place for the actors to execute the funny scripts.
The fourth season finale was shot on location in London because the producers were aware of the series' large following in the UK.
The scenes were shot in a studio with three audiences of 500 each, the show's largest audiences throughout its run. The fifth season finale, set in Las Vegas, was filmed at Warner Bros. Studios, although Bright encountered people who thought it was filmed on location.
Series finale
[] explained, "We're like very delicate china right now, and we're speeding toward a brick wall."
]]
The series' creators completed the first draft of the hour-long finale in January 2004, four months before its original airing. Crane, Kauffman and Bright watched the finales of other sitcoms to prepare the episode's outline, paying attention to what worked and what did not. They liked the ones which stayed true to the series, citing the finale of
The Mary Tyler Moore Show as the gold standard. Crane, Kauffman, and Bright had difficulty writing the finale, and spent several days thinking about the finale scene without being able to write a word. They did not want to do "something high concept, or take the show out of the show".
The most critical parts of the finale were shot without an audience, and with a minimum amount of crew members. The main cast enjoyed the finale and were confident that the fans would react similarly:
NBC heavily promoted the series finale, which was preceded by weeks of media hype.
Local NBC affiliates organized viewing parties around the US, including an event at
Universal CityWalk featuring a special broadcast of the finale on an outdoor
Astrovision screen.
The finale was the subject of two episodes of
Dateline NBC, a weekly television
newsmagazine, one of which ran for two hours. A one-hour retrospective of clips from previous episodes was shown before to the airing of the episode. Following the finale,
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno was filmed on the set of the
Friends' Central Perk coffee house, which featured the series' cast as guests.
The advertising rates for the finale averaged $2 million for 30 seconds of commercial time, breaking the record held by the
Seinfeld finale at $1.7 million.
In the US, 52.5 million viewers watched the finale on May 6, 2004, making it the most-watched entertainment telecast in six years, which was the Seinfeld finale in 1998.
Although it was not the series' most-watched episode,
the finale was the fourth most-watched series finale in television history, only behind the finales of
M*A*S*H,
Cheers and
Seinfeld, which were respectively watched by 105, 80.4 and 76.2 million viewers. The retrospective episode was watched by fewer than 36 million viewers, and the finale was the second most-watched television episode of the year, only behind the Super Bowl.
Following the finales of
Friends and
Frasier, media critics speculated about the fate of the sitcom genre. Expressed opinions varied between a signaling of the end of the sitcom genre, a small decline in the large history of the genre,
and a general reduction of scripted television in favor of reality shows.
Impact
Critical reception
[
Schwimmer.jpg|thumb|left|[[David Schwimmer] received considerable praise for his role as Ross]]
Early reviews of the series were mixed. Tom Feran of
The Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote that the series traded "vaguely and less successfully on the hanging-out style of
Seinfeld",
[Feran, Tom (September 22, 1994). "New Series Softens Dabney Coleman—A Little", The Plain Dealer, Newhouse Newspapers. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.] while Ann Hodges of the
Houston Chronicle called it "the new
Seinfeld wannabe, but it will never be as funny as
Seinfeld."
[Hodges, Ann (September 22, 1994). "NBC sitcoms make Thursday less funny", Houston Chronicle, Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.] In the
Los Angeles Daily News,
Ray Richmond named the series as "one of the brighter comedies of the new season",
[Richmond, Ray (September 22, 1994). "Season Premiere of Friends Leaves Room to Grow", (Registration required). Los Angeles Daily News, Los Angeles Newspaper Group. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.] and
The Los Angeles Times called it "flat-out the best comedy series of the new season".
[Rosenberg, Howard (September 22, 1994). "NBC's Strongest Evening of the Week Has Its Weak Spot", (Registration required). The Los Angeles Times, Tribune Company. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.]
Chicago Sun-Times' Ginny Holbert found Joey and Rachel's characteristics to be underdeveloped,
[Holbert, Ginny (September 22, 1994). "X Marks Spot For Friends On Thursday". (Registration required). Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.] while Richmond commended the cast as a "likeable, youth ensemble" with "good chemistry"
Robert Bianco of
USA Today was complimentary of Schwimmer, calling him "terrific". He also praised the female leads, but was concerned that Perry's role as Chandler was "undefined" and that LeBlanc was "relying too much on the same brain-dead stud routine that was already tired the last two times he tried it".
[Bianco, Robert (September 22, 1994). "Six Friends Sittin' Around, Talking", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.] The authors of
Friends Like Us: The Unofficial Guide to Friends thought that the cast was "trying just a little too hard", in particular Perry and Schwimmer.
[Sangster, p. 14]
As the series progressed, reviews became more positive, and
Friends became one of the most popular sitcoms of its time. Critics commended the series for its consistently sharp writing and the chemistry between the main actors.
Noel Holston of
Newsday, who had dismissed the pilot as a "so-so
Seinfeld wannabe" in 1994, reneged his review after rewatching the episode, and felt like writing an apology to the writers.
Heather Havrilesky of
Salon.com thought that the series "hit its stride" in the second season. Havrilesky found the character-specific jokes and situations "could reliably make you laugh out loud a few times each episode", and the quality of writing allowed the stories to be "original and innovative".
Bill Carter of
The New York Times called the eighth season a "truly stunning comeback". Carter found that by "generating new hot story lines and high-decibel laughs", the series made its way "back into the hearts of its fans".
However, Liane Bonin of
Entertainment Weekly felt that the direction of the ninth season was a "disappointing buzzkill", criticizing it for the non-stop celebrity guest spots and going into
jump the shark territory. Although disappointed with the season, Bonin noted that "the writing
[1] still sharp".
Havrilesky thought that the tenth season was "alarmingly awful, far worse than you would ever imagine a show that was once so good could be."
Friends was featured on
Time's list of "The 100 Best TV Shows of All-Time", saying, "the well-hidden secret of this show was that it called itself
Friends, and was really about family.
| "It may have been impossible for any one episode to live up to the hype and expectations built up around the Friends finale, but this hour probably came as close as fans could have reasonably hoped. Ultimately, the two-hour package did exactly what it was supposed to do. It wrapped up the story while reminding us why we liked the show and will miss it."
|
— Robert Bianco of USA Today on the series finale.
|
Reviews of the
series finale were mixed to positive.
USA Today's Robert Bianco described the finale as entertaining and satisfying, and praised it for deftly mixing emotion and humor while showcasing each of the stars.
Sarah Rodman of the
Boston Herald praised Aniston and Schwimmer for their acting, but felt that their characters' reunion was "a bit too neat, even if it was what most of the show's legions of fans wanted."
Roger Catlin of
The Hartford Courant felt that newcomers to the series would be "surprised at how laughless the affair could be, and how nearly every strained gag depends on the sheer stupidity of its characters."
Ken Parish Perkins, writing for
Fort Worth Star-Telegram, pointed out that the finale was "more touching than comical, more satisfying in terms of closure than knee-slappingly funny."
Awards
To maintain the series' ensemble format, the main cast members decided to enter themselves in the same acting categories for awards.
Beginning with the series' eighth season, the actors decided to submit themselves in the lead actor balloting, rather than in the supporting actor fields.
The series was nominated for 63
Primetime Emmy Awards, winning six. Aniston and Kudrow are the only main cast members to win an Emmy, while Cox is the only actor not to be nominated. The series won the 2002 Emmy Award for
Outstanding Comedy Series, with nominations in 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000 and 2003.
[ Type "Friends" in the "Program" field, select "1993" and "2008" in "Year range" field, and select "NBC" in "Network" field.] The series also won an
American Comedy Award,
one
GLAAD Media Award,
one
Golden Globe Award,
three
Logie Awards,
six
People's Choice Awards,
one
Satellite Award,
[ Select the "Television" field.] and two
Screen Actors Guild Awards.
Ratings
The table below indicates the ratings of
Friends in the US, where it consistently ranked within the top ten of the final television ratings.
"Rank" refers to how well
Friends rated compared to other television series which aired during primetime hours of the corresponding
television season. The television season tends to begin in September, and ends during the May of the following year, which coincides with the completion of
May sweeps. "Viewers" refers to the average number of viewers for all original episodes, broadcast during the television season in the series' regular timeslot. "Rank" is shown in relation to the total number of series airing on the then-six major English-language networks in a given season. The "season premiere" is the date that the first episode of the season aired, and the "season finale" is the date that the final episode of the season aired.
| Season
| Timeslot (EDT)
| Season Premiere
| Season Finale
| TV Season
| Rank
| Viewers (in millions)
|
| 1
| Thursday 8:30 P.M. (September 22, 1994 - February 23, 1995) Thursday 9:30 P.M.(February 23, 1995 - May 18, 1995)
| September 22, 1994
| May 18, 1995
| 1994-1995
| #8
| 17.9
|
| 2
| Thursday 8:00 P.M. (September 21, 1995 - January 18, 1996) Sunday 10:13 P.M. (January 28, 1996) Thursday 8:00 P.M. (February 1, 1996 - May 16, 1996)
| September 21, 1995
| May 16, 1996
| 1995-1996
| #3
| 18.7
|
| 3
| Thursday 8:00 P.M. (September 19, 1996 - May 17, 2001)
| September 19, 1996
| May 15, 1997
| 1996-1997
| #4
| 15.7
|
| 4
| September 25, 1997
| May 7, 1998
| 1997-1998
| #4
| 16.4
|
| 5
| September 24, 1998
| May 20, 1999
| 1998-1999
| #2
| 23.5
|
| 6
| September 23, 1999
| May 18, 2000
| 1999-2000
| #3
| 21.0
|
| 7
| October 12, 2000
| May 17, 2001
| 2000-2001
| #4
| 19.7
|
| 8
| Thursday 8:00 P.M. (September 27, 2001 - October 4, 2001) Thursday 8:50 P.M. (October 11, 2001) Thursday 8:00 P.M. (October 18, 2001 - May 16, 2002)
| September 27, 2001
| May 16, 2002
| 2001-2002
| #1
| 24.5
|
| 9
| Thursday 8:00 P.M. (September 26, 2002 - May 15, 2003)
| September 26, 2002
| May 15, 2003
| 2002-2003
| #4
| 21.8
|
| 10
| Thursday 8:00 P.M. (September 25, 2003 - April 29, 2004) Thursday 9:00 P.M. (May 6, 2004)
| September 25, 2003
| May 6, 2004
| 2003-2004
| #5
| 21.4
|
Cultural impact
Although the producers thought of
Friends as "only a TV show",
numerous psychologists investigated the cultural impact of
Friends during the series' run.
Aniston's hairstyle was nicknamed "
The Rachel", and copied around the world.
Joey's catchphrase, "How
you doin'?", became a popular part of Western English slang, often used as a pick-up line or when greeting friends.
The series also impacted the English language, according to a study by a linguistics professor at the
University of Toronto. The professor found that the characters used the word "so" to modify adjectives more often than other intensifiers, such as "very" and "really". Although the preference had already made its way into the American vernacular, usage on the series may have accelerated the change.
Following the
September 11 attacks, ratings increased 17% over the previous season as viewers tuned in for comfort.
Friends is parodied in the twelfth season
Murder, She Wrote episode "Murder Among Friends". In the episode, amateur sleuth
Jessica Fletcher (
Angela Lansbury) investigates the murder of a cast member in
Buds, a fictional television series about the daily lives of a group of city friends. The episode was devised after
CBS moved
Murder, She Wrote from its regular Sunday night timeslot to a Thursday night timeslot directly opposite
Friends on NBC; Angela Lansbury was quoted by Bruce Lansbury, her brother and
Murder, She Wrote's supervising producer, as having "a bit of an attitude" about the move to Thursday, but he saw the plot as "a friendly setup, no mean-spiritedness".
Jerry Ludwig, the writer of the episode, researched the "flavor" of
Buds by watching episodes of
Friends.
The Central Perk coffee house, one of the principal settings of the series, has inspired various imitations worldwide. In 2006,
Iranian businessman Mojtaba Asadian started a Central Perk
franchise, registering the name in 32 countries. The decor of the coffee houses is inspired by
Friends, featuring replica couches, counters, neon signage and bricks. The coffee houses also contain paintings of the various characters from the series, and televisions playing
Friends' episodes.
James Michael Tyler, who plays the Central Perk manager in the series, Gunther, attended the grand opening of the
Dubai cafe, where he worked as a waiter.
Central Perk was rebuilt as part of a museum exhibit at Warner Bros. Studios, and was shown on
The Ellen DeGeneres Show in October 2008.
Jennifer Aniston revisited the set for the first time since the series finale in 2004.
From September 24 to October 7, 2009, a Central Perk replica was based at Broadwick Street,
Soho, London. The coffee house sold real coffee to customers and featured a display of
Friends memorabillia and props, such as the Geller Cup from the season three episode "The One with the Football".
In 2009, a dance remix of the song "
Smelly Cat" became a popular
internet meme.
Distribution
Broadcast
After the produced pilot lived up to NBC's hopes, the series premiered with the name
Friends on September 22, 1994 on the coveted Thursday 8:30 pm timeslot. The pilot aired between
Mad About You and
Seinfeld,
and was watched by almost 22 million American viewers.
The series was a huge success throughout its run, and was a staple of NBC's Thursday night line-up, dubbed by the network as
Must See TV.
When Crane told reporters in 2001 that the ninth season was a possibility, critics believed that he was posturing, and that at least two of the cast members would not sign on for another season.
When it was confirmed that
Friends would return for a ninth season, the news was mainly about the amount of money—$7 million per episode—that it took to bring the series back for another season.
After year-long expectations that the ninth season would be the series' last, NBC signed a deal in late December 2002 to bring the series back for a final tenth season. The series' creative team did not want to extend negotiations into the next year, and wanted to start writing the rest of the ninth season episodes and a potential series finale.
NBC agreed to pay $10 million to Warner Bros. for the production of each tenth season episode, the highest price in television history for a 30-minute series.
Although NBC was unable to bring in enough advertising revenue from commercials to cover the costs, the series was integral to the Thursday night schedule, which brought high ratings and profits to the other television series.
The cast demanded that the tenth season be reduced from the usual 24 episodes to 18 episodes to allow them to work on outside projects.
In the fall of 2001,
Warner Bros. Domestic Cable made a deal with sister network
TBS to air the series in rerun syndication. Warner Bros. made similar deals with various TV stations around the country. In July 2005, it was announced that Warner Bros. Domestic Cable has sold
Friends to
Nick at Nite to begin airing in the fall of 2011. Warner Bros. is expected to make $200 million in license fees and advertising from the deal. Nick at Nite paid $500,000 per episode to air the episodes after 6 p.m. for six years, through the fall of 2017. TBS also renewed its contract for the same six year period as Nick at Nite, but only paid $275,000 per episode because airing was restricted to before 6 p.m., except for the first year. In syndication until 2005,
Friends had earned $4 million per episode in cash license fees, for a total of $944 million.
International
Friends began airing in the UK in 1994 on the terrestrial
Channel 4; however, in 1996,
Sky1 bought the rights to the series. Although Channel 4 continued to air episodes several weeks after their original airing on Sky1, the series was one of the network's most popular series,
averaging 2.6 million viewers per episode. In 1999, Channel 4 signed a £100 million deal to regain the rights to
Friends and
ER from Sky1. The three year deal allowed Channel 4 to air new episodes of the series in the UK first, and to negotiate pay-TV airings with other UK broadcasters.
The final episode averaged 8.6 million viewers in overnight figures—more than a third of the UK's television audience at the time—and saw a peak of 8.9 million viewers. This was the highest amount of viewers for any episode of
Friends, beating the June 2002 episode, which drew 6.5 million viewers. Repeats of the series are shown in the UK on Channel 4 and
E4.
The
Irish channel
RTÉ Two was the first channel in Europe to air the finale on May 24, 2004.
Friends debuted on Australian television in 1996 on the
Seven Network.
The
Nine Network began airing the second season in 1997, and continued to show the series until its finale in 2004.
The
Ten Network announced in November 2007 that it had bought the rights to the show in Australia.
TV2 began broadcast in New Zealand in 1995 and aired all ten seasons, and continues to air repeats.
Merchandise
All ten seasons have been released on DVD individually and as a box set. Warner Bros. has also talked about plans of a future Blu-ray release.
Each region 1 season release contains special features and footage originally cut from the series, although Region 2 releases are as originally aired. For the first season, each episode is updated with color correction and sound enhancement.
A wide range of
Friends merchandise has been produced by various companies. In late September 1995,
WEA Records released the first album of
music from Friends, the
Friends Original TV Soundtrack, containing music featured in previous and future episodes. The soundtrack debuted on the
Billboard 200 at number 46,
and sold 500,000 copies in November 1995.
In 1999, a second soundtrack album entitled
Friends Again was released.
Other merchandise include a
Friends version of the DVD game "
Scene It?",
and a quiz video game for
PlayStation 2 and PC entitled
Friends: The One with All the Trivia.
| DVD name | Ep # | Box set release dates
|
| Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4
|
| The Complete First Season | 24 | April 30, 2002 | May 29, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Second Season | 24 | September 3, 2002 | May 29, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Third Season | 25 | April 1, 2003 | May 29, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Fourth Season | 24 | July 15, 2003 | May 29, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Fifth Season | 24 | November 4, 2003 | May 29, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Sixth Season | 25 | January 27, 2004 | July 17, 2000 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Seventh Season | 24 | April 6, 2004 | October 25, 2004 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Eighth Season | 24 | November 9, 2004 | October 25, 2004 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Ninth Season | 24 | March 8, 2005 | October 25, 2004 | October 4, 2006
|
| The Complete Tenth Season | 18 | November 15, 2005 | October 25, 2004 | October 4, 2006
|
Future
[
Le Blanc.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Matt LeBlanc] hoped that by having his own show, Joey—whom he believed was "probably the least evolved character" on
Friends—would become more developed.
Joey
After the series finale in 2004, LeBlanc signed on for the spin-off series,
Joey, following Joey's move to Los Angeles to pursue his acting career. Kauffman and Crane were not interested in the spin-off, although Bright agreed to executive produce the series with Scott Silveri and Shana Goldberg-Meehan.
NBC heavily promoted
Joey and gave it
Friends' Thursday 8:00 pm timeslot.
The pilot was watched by 18.60 million American viewers,
but ratings continually decreased throughout the series' two seasons, averaging 10.20 million viewers in the first season and 7.10 million in the second.
The final broadcast episode on March 7, 2006 was watched by 7.09 million viewers;
NBC canceled the series on May 15, 2006 after two seasons.
Bright blamed the collaboration between NBC executives, the studio and other producers for quickly ruining the series:
Film
Following the series finale, rumors began to emerge of a
Friends film, although all were proven to be untrue.
Rumors of a film reemerged after the release of the
Sex and the City film in 2008, which proved to be a success at the
box office.
The Daily Telegraph reported in July 2008 that the main cast members had agreed to star in the project, and that filming was going to start within the next 18 months. A source commented that "Jennifer, Courteney and the rest of the cast are
[2] to reprise their roles, under the right circumstances [...] Jennifer says she and Courteney have already talked this summer about what they want out of a
Friends movie."
When asked about the film, Kudrow said that she was unaware of the talks, but expressed interest in the idea.
However, the director of publicity for Warner Bros. said there was "no truth in the story",
and Perry's spokeswoman added that "nothing is happening in this regard, so the rumor is false."
On September 27, 2009,
James Michael Tyler, who played
Gunther, was quoted by the tabloid
News of the World as saying that a
Friends film is "definitely on" for a 2011 release.
Representatives for Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, and Lisa Kudrow dismissed the claims as "speculation."