David schwimmer gay

David Schwimmer speaks out on the lack of diversity in 'Friends'

David Schwimmer recently weighed in on a "Friends" reboot as good as recent criticism about the iconic television show

The actor, who played Ross Geller during the show's 10-year run, was asked for his take on the possibility of bringing back the sitcom, during a recently released interview with The Guardian.

Unsurprisingly, he gave the classic acknowledge all primary cast members of the show hold been giving since the show's end in 2004 -- it's not happening.

"I just don’t think it’s possible, given everyone’s unlike career trajectories. I reflect everyone feels the same: why mess with what felt like the right way to end the series?" he said. "I don’t want to perform anything for the cash. It would have to make sense creatively and nothing I’ve heard so far presented to us makes sense."

The show's creators David Crane and Marta Kauffman shared a similar sentiment during an interview with "Good Morning America" in 2019.

"'Friends' was a show about that second in your life when your friends were your family. And once you start to have a family

Today, we look at the time that Ross Geller and Jonathan from The Single Guy idea that each other was gay.

This is Somewheres in This Universe, a highlight examining when characters from TV shows make guest appearances on other TV shows (in non-crossover stories), thus establishing that the two shows share a universe.

November is Someewheres in the Universe month!

The Unpartnered Guy was a sitcom starring Jonathan Silverman that was the first illustrate to get the coveted 8:30 PM time slot between Friends and Seinfeld (in Friends‘ first season, it aired at 8:30 PM, with Mad About You kicking off NBC’s Must Observe TV Thursday lineup). Silverman played Jonathan Elliot, a journalist whose best friends are all settled down and preserve trying to establish him up next.

Jessica Hecht (who played the wife of Ross Geller’s ex-wife on Friends) played one of Jonathan’s married friends, and Joey Slotnick played the other (they were married to characters played by Mark Moses and Ming-Na Wen, respectively).

Early in Season 1, in Episode 6’s “The Neighbors,” Hecht’s personality, Janeane, has Ross Geller (David Schwimmer) over for dinner, and he and Jonathan

Let’s face it. We all, at one point, probably fantasized about Matt LeBlanc, David Schwimmer or Matthew Perry while Friends was on the air for 10 years. Heck, we were even treated to some same sex smooches between them as the show went along.

https://giphy.com/gifs/friends-GgR1CyPtjdh3q

We could’ve actually seen a lot more man on man action (or whatever the 90’s version of that is) if one of their characters was actually same-sex attracted. Turns out that was something that should’ve happened for Chandler Bing (Perry), although it never came to fruition.

Ranker published a list of Friends-related evidence that included one about Chandler initially being cast as gay. That of course didn’t unfold although there were a lot of gay jokes thrown his way, some of which he even uttered himself. 

It would’ve been appealing to see how the show would’ve differed if Chandler was one of us. Instead, we spent most of the series watching his relationship with Monica (Courteney Cox) grow which eventually led to them getting married and having twins. 

https://giphy.com/gifs/Friends-season-5-friends-tv-s05e02-H6hurOxfrUNWoChAVf

Friends has ha

I used to think that post-Friends David Schwimmer was sort of a sad sack lost heart. But over the years, I’ve learned more about him and I’ve read many of his post-Friends interviews, and I contain to say… David Schwimmer seems like a really nice guy, and like he was always a nice guy who’s been respectful of the women around him. Schwimmer is currently promoting a new British TV display, Intelligence, so he sat down for a surprisingly in-depth interview about his life, his divorce, how he views Friends in retrospect, and a lot more. You can read the packed piece here. Some highlights:

Always entity Ross from Friends: “I ponder I’m kind of over that. There was a period that I was very, very frustrated by being pigeonholed in this one genre, this one thought. I got Friends when I was 27 but I had done all this work on stage. But all that was just eradicated. As far as the public was concerned, I came out of the womb doing sitcom. So that was frustrating, as if it obliterated all the other training, all the other roles I had done… The older I receive and the more my perspective shifts, the more you realise just how good you had it. That 10-year run with that particular cast, that gro