mcboogle t1_je64xhr wrote
Several generations of adults found it offensive when it aired.
herewego199209 t1_je66z7m wrote
Really they did? Why did the show be the biggest show ever then?
rolandjack77 t1_je6i5sn wrote
Because that post is full of crap. NOBODY found it offensive back then. The poster is probably a 20 year old Gen Z-er
SaluteYourChase t1_je7vrt4 wrote
The parent television council was huge in the 90s and early 2000s, and friends was among one of its favorites to hate
Skavau t1_je9bvau wrote
The Parents Television Council is a socially reactionary conservative group.
They are coming from an entirely different frame of reference to contemporary progressives who might object to Friends. Liberals and progressives in the 90s did not find it offensive.
SaluteYourChase t1_je9s6ap wrote
I'm sure some did hate the constant trans jokes at times, they just didn't have social media be as big of a platform to share.
But thats not the point. The person said nobody found it offensive back then. I provided people who found it offensive. They were wrong. We weren't talking what groups found it offensive
Skavau t1_jea62lv wrote
Well sure, a small amount of people did but not like now
SaluteYourChase t1_jea7201 wrote
Its still a small amount of people. We just hear it more because with social media you can hear the opinions of a random person you've never met and isn't famous in any way. A lot of these "people find it offensive now" is like 5 people on Twitter finding it offensive and 10,000 others dunking on them for it. Back in the day, 5 random people find it offensive, and the extent that their opinion travels is a hearty debate with friends at a dinner party. Now it travels the world
Skavau t1_jea7o5p wrote
I don't think he meant to imply that literally no-one took offence, but Friends is a product of its time and its expressed attitudes were going to be mainstream then.
SaluteYourChase t1_jea8llo wrote
I'm saying about the same number of people are taking offense today vs then, the only difference is social media. Some may discuss how opinions have changed and why things said then may not be popular opinions now, but thats not taking offense, that's just discussing friends from a modern lens.
Skavau t1_jea94in wrote
No reason to believe your claims
SaluteYourChase t1_jeabluj wrote
All I can say is look up some of your favorite "dumb" controversies over the past decade or so. Tan suit Obama? Said by Sean Hannity once. Starbucks coffee cups not having snowflakes? Said by literally 1 random person. Seeing Red shouldve focused on 9/11? 1 person on YouTube that didn't even really have many subscribers. We had an entire week it felt like during the pandemic discussing if Topanga's husband found shrimp tails in his cereal. That's the world we live in with social media, little things blow up.
And if you are going to ignore that social media blows up unpopular opinions, you can't honestly accept that there were less offended people back in the day. That claim should be equally dismissed
Skavau t1_jeabw0v wrote
Do you think social attitudes have remained stagnant in the last 20 years?
SaluteYourChase t1_jeacr2r wrote
Of course I don't. But "I'm offended friends is a product of its time" is not a commonly held opinion. You can acknowledge that social attitudes have changed without being upset that the show was made. Hell you can even enjoy the show but ultimately recognize that this isn't the current opinion.
I love boy meets world. There's a lot of fun stuff that holds up just as good as when it was made. Theres a lot of stuff that is a product of its time. I listen to the rewatch pod the cast does. They do a great job of breaking down the show, and they're not really ever offended by it. There's a very powerful scene in season 1 where a racial slur is used. Probably wouldn't be accepted today. They questioned why looking back that one was used when another one was cut earlier in the episode. But they weren't offended and they acknowledge it was a powerful scene. Just that it wouldn't be made today
mcboogle t1_je67obr wrote
Offensive with older folks. My parents told me I couldn't watch it growing up, they thought it was too sexual. I still watched it.
Kevbot1000 t1_je67tel wrote
You fucking rebel, you.
mcboogle t1_je68fsj wrote
You think that's something? I didn't always wash behind my ears as thoroughly as I was told to.
*edit* Seriously though, the comment about me watching it anyway was more to show that the controversy actual fed it's popularity, not stifled it.
[deleted] t1_je68s3v wrote
[removed]
bigblackkittie t1_je6cius wrote
oh snap, the elusive pre-hipster hipster. was offended before it was cool to be offended
TheShadyGuy t1_je6tn3x wrote
I was offended that I couldn't turn around without seeing something to do with the damn show, but to be fair I was kind of an edgelord that hated most of the mainstream stuff of the day. Have since watched the show and it is generally funny.
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