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Jennifer Aniston recently talked about the state of comedy and what’s funny — and what isn’t — on the occasion of her new comedy debut on Netflix. murder mystery 2 With Adam Sandler.
“Comedies have evolved and movies have evolved,” I friends Star of the Agence France-Presse.
“Now it’s a little difficult because you have to be very careful, which makes it really difficult for comedians, because the beauty of comedy is that we make fun of ourselves, we make fun of life,” she said, before becoming specific.
In years past, “You could joke about the bigot and laugh — it was hysterical. It was about educating people about how silly people can be,” Aniston said. “Now we are not allowed to do that.”
In fact, it’s not even funny anymore for a lot of people, she says.
“There’s a whole generation of people, kids, who are now going back to loops friends And you find them offensive.
friends It has long been muddled by its all-white cast and fictional scenario of six twenty-somethings able to afford apartments in Manhattan.
Last year’s show co-creator Marta Kauffman spoke about the lack of diversity in front of and behind the camera and her role in it.
“After what happened to George Floyd, I began to grapple with my own purchase of systemic racism in ways I wasn’t aware of before,” Kaufman said. “That was the moment when I started examining the ways in which I was involved. I knew then that I needed a course correction.”
As a result, she vowed, “I want to make sure from now on in every production I do that I’m conscious of hiring people of color and actively pursuing young writers of color. I want to know that I’m going to act differently from now on.”
On the 25th anniversary of the exhibition, Outside She looked to her enduring appeal and reminded readers that “friends It’s still really homophobic.”
some examples:
According to her, the male characters “displayed a marked unease and disdain towards LGBT people.” Outside. Specifically, the post cited Chandler Aversion to his transgender parents (played by Kathleen Turner) and an episode featuring Ross’He insists on his male nanny He should be gay. “
Outside He notes that “almost any time LGBTQ+ people are brought up by the show, it’s played for laughs” — be it Running joke people think Chandler is gay or a little where joe Persuade the student by proxy With whom he competes for a role that the character must play as a “gay”.
The post also calls for direction on friends to trade on “gay scares for cheap laughs”. One example is cited: Joey and Ross freak out after accidentally sleeping on the couch together. “What happened?” Ross exclaims, before insisting, “We fell asleep—that’s it.”
Of the show’s blind spots, Aniston said, “There were things that were never intended and others…well, we should have thought about it in its entirety—but I don’t think there’s a sensitivity like there is now.”
The actress then made a plea for more comedies, even with new sensibilities.
“Everyone needs funny! The world needs humor! We can’t take ourselves too seriously,” she said.
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