Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Friends' Creator Donates Millions After Admitting She's 'Embarrassed' By Show's Lack Of Diversity

Friends' Creator Donates Millions After Admitting She's 'Embarrassed' By Show's Lack Of Diversity
Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

Friends is one of the most iconic sitcoms in television history, and its popularity has endured even among young people who weren't yet born when the show aired thanks to streaming.

But as beloved as the show has continued to be, one criticism has continued to plague it--the show's shocking lack of diversity, which is noticeably pronounced even by 1990s standards.


Despite taking place in New York City, one of the most diverse cities on Earth, people of color were nearly invisible, barely appearing at all during the show's 10-year run, even among its extras.

One of the show's co-creators, Marta Kauffman, is attempting to offset that legacy. Kauffman announced that she will be making a multi-million dollar donation to fund the African American Studies department at her alma mater, a move people are cheering.

Kauffman, who co-created and served as showrunner on the show along with her collaborator David Crane, has previously chalked the issue up to the fact that in the show's mid-90s and early-2000s tenure, diversity and inclusion just weren't really on most white people's radar.

In CNN's History of the Sitcom last year, of Friends' lack of diversity Kauffamn said:

"It was, to a certain extent, a product of the time period and of my own ignorance."
"There were Black shows and there were white shows. There weren't a lot of shows that were interracial."

While that's certainly true of 90s television, times have changed. And in a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times, Kauffman said the 2020 murder of George Floyd caused her to rethink things after it expanded her understanding of structural racism.

She told the Times:

"It was after what happened to George Floyd that I began to wrestle with my having bought into systemic racism in ways I was never aware of."
"That was really the moment that I began to examine the ways I had participated. I knew then I needed to course-correct."

That course correction comes in the form of a $4 million donation to the African American Studies program at her alma mater Brandeis University, one of the nation's oldest such departments in the country.

It's a step forward in off-setting the show's nearly total lack of non-white characters, a feature of the show Kauffman says she is now "embarrassed" by. She told the Times:

"I’ve learned a lot in the last 20 years... I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know better 25 years ago."

On Twitter, many applauded Kauffman's effort.






Others felt Kauffman's move was too little, too late.



Kauffman's donation will go towards expanding Brandeis' African-American studies department and will include a new professorship and a role for a distinguished scholar, moves university officials said will make Brandeis a national leader in the field.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Truth Social logo; Donald Trump
Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images; Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Trump's Truth Social Platform Has A New AI Tool—And Trump's Not Gonna Like What It Has To Say

President Donald Trump regularly uses his social media platform Truth Social to attack his opponents and lie profusely, but the site's new "Truth Search AI" tool is unlikely to win his favor because it actually—get this—tells the truth about him and his policies.

A test conducted by the center-right news and commentary site The Bulwark found that the tool, which Truth Social debuted shortly after Trump signed an executive order to counter the use of “Woke AI” in the federal government, actually tells the truth about everything from his widely unpopular tariffs to the 2020 election results.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Laura Ingraham in the Oval Office
Fox News

Trump Just Bragged That Everything In The Oval Office Is 'Real Gold'—And Even Laura Ingraham Isn't Buying It

President Donald Trump received a dubious reaction from Fox News personality Laura Ingraham after he touted the Oval Office's gold decor as "real gold" while giving her a tour.

The Oval Office has been significantly revamped since Trump took office in January—it features, among other things, fireplace adorned with gold cherubs and medallions, surrounded by portraits of American statesmen in ornate gold frames and shelves filled with gilded figurines, urns, and freshly installed Rococo mirrors.

Keep ReadingShow less
man giving two thumbs down gesture
Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

Questions That May Sound Innocent But Are Actually Offensive

Humans in general tend to be curious creatures. We seek information about the world around us.

But sometimes it's best to rein that desire in a bit.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elon Musk; Joyce Carol Oates
Tom Brenner For The Washington Post via Getty Images; Rosdiana Ciaravolo/Getty Images

Elon Musk Rages After Author Joyce Carol Oates Calls Him 'Uneducated' And 'Uncultured' In Epic Takedown

You'd have to be a "chronically online" user of X, aka Twitter, to know just how prolific a tweeter author Joyce Carol Oates is, but to those who are, her takedowns have become legendary.

And recently, the 87-year-old award-winning writer set her sights on the owner of X himself, Elon Musk. And the gazillionaire babyman is FURIOUS about it.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sydney Sweeney channels boxer Christy Martin
Black Bear Pictures

Sydney Sweeney Speaks Out After 'Christy' Biopic Has One Of Worst Box Office Openings Of All Time

Sydney Sweeney can land a punch, but maybe not at the box office. Her latest film, Christy, a biopic about trailblazing boxer Christy Martin, landed a hard blow but barely connected with the audience, opening to a paltry $1.3 million.

That’s not just a loss; it’s a technical knockout in the “worst wide release openings ever” category, according to Box Office Mojo. For films debuting in over 2,000 theaters, Christy ranks at No. 12 overall and No. 9 when excluding rereleases.

Keep ReadingShow less