يحاول ذهب - حر

Why Do So Many Young People Want To Watch An Old Sitcom?

March 21-April 3, 2016

|

New York magazine

Why do so many 20-somethings want to stream a 20-year-old sitcom about a bunch of 20-somethings sitting around in a coffee shop?

- Adam Sternbergh

Why Do So Many Young People Want To Watch An Old Sitcom?

When the tv critic Andy Greenwald, who is 38, returned to his high school near Philadelphia last May to speak to students about his job, he wondered how it would go. After all, today’s students are a digital generation who have only a vague association with the concept of “TV.” Sure enough, when Greenwald mentioned his job to them, one student in the group asked, “So what does that mean? Do you, like, watch Netflix?” Greenwald said, sure, he watches Netflix, since watching original streaming programming—on Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, wherever—is all part of covering the complex new television landscape. Then he asked the teenagers if they watch Netflix. They said, enthusiastically, Yes. So he asked them what they like to watch on Netflix. They said, enthusiastically, Friends.

You remember Friends, right? Chandler, Monica, Joey, Phoebe, Rachel, Ross, and, fleetingly, that monkey? Central Perk? “We were on a break”? The show that feels, in its way, as iconic a relic of the 1990s as do Nirvana, Pulp Fiction, and a two-term Clinton presidency that the Onion later cheekily described as “our long national nightmare of peace and prosperity”?

Friends was not only born of that era but may, in hindsight, embody it more completely than any other TV show. Sexier than Cheers, less acerbic than Seinfeld, Friends existed at the sweet spot of populist mass entertainment and prescient pop escapism. If you were alive and sentient in the 1990s, you already understand this. In fact, if you were in, or near, your 20s back then and ever found yourself seated in a quirkily named coffee shop (e.g., Bean & Gone, Brewed Awakening, CU Latte) with a bunch of your own friends, you might have had the conversation: So, which Friend are you?

But while

المزيد من القصص من New York magazine

New York magazine

New York magazine

Chamber Pop

Rosalía's latest album is a stunning left turn.

time to read

4 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The Supermodel in the Walk-up

A parlor apartment on East 10th is a shrine to a bygone era of downtown glamour.

time to read

2 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Trust in Pluribus

Vince Gilligan's remarkable series is slow television in the truest and best sense.

time to read

3 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Her Life Is Material

On Rachel Sennott's I Love LA, True Whitaker plays the resident nepo baby. It's (mostly) true to her upbringing.

time to read

6 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The Big Fail

Student achievement has fallen off a cliff. And neither Trump nor the pandemic is to blame.

time to read

27 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

How BUNNY WILLIAMS Gifts

'With a Name Like Bunny, You Can Imagine the Gifts I Receive'

time to read

3 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

MAYOR FOR A NEW AGE

November 4 was a historic Election Day in New York—and a wild marathon for Zohran Mamdani.

time to read

2 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

GIFTS YOU CAN ONLY GET IN PERSON

Now that you've paged through nearly 400 items available to buy online, here's some counterprogramming.

time to read

3 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Life in Beige

Are GLP-1's worth a life devoid of pleasure?

time to read

6 mins

November 17–30, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The Best Food of 2025

AMID THE FLOOD of French throwbacks and semi-private clubs that have defined dining lately, we've been left craving places that offer real points of view. How lucky that a fresh crop of Chinatown wine bars, Pan-Caribbean tasting counters, and Cambodian canteens do just that. Read on for offal salads, masa cocktails, and more highlights from a year of wildly exciting eating.

time to read

6 mins

November 17–30, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size