David Schwimmer is to read a bedtime story on CBeebies.
03.02.2020 - 20:26 / deadline.com
By Denise Petski
Senior Managing Editor
Former Friends star David Schimmer has responded to Living Single alumna Erika Alexander over her reaction to Schwimmer’s comments in an interview with The Guardian late last month.
In that interview, Schimmer addressed criticism of the lack of diversity on Friends, which ran on NBC from 1994-2004. “I don’t care,” Schimmer said. “That show was groundbreaking in its time for the way in which it handled so casually sex, protected sex, gay
David Schwimmer is to read a bedtime story on CBeebies.
Which 90s phenomenon will get back together first?
David Schwimmer has poured cold water on the idea of a Friends revival – saying the show has already ended in “the perfect way”.
David Schwimmer expertly dodged questions about a potential “Friends” reunion when confronted with a mountain of evidence during a recent interview.
David Schwimmer expertly dodged questions about a potential “Friends” reunion when confronted with a mountain of evidence during a recent interview.
Just like a lot of other actors, Mark Ruffalo and David Schwimmer also started their careers with a low-key job that had nothing to do with their acting profession. During their recent appearance on The Graham Norton Show, Ruffalo and Schwimmer realised that they both worked at the exact same Restaurant and the experience was bizarre, to say the least.
Jessica Hecht gave her take on David Schwimmer’s comments about Friends’ diversity, giving high praise to the actor who played her onscreen wife’s ex-husband on the NBC hit.
In an ongoing series of fumbles with regard to the diversity (and other current criticisms) of Friends, David Schwimmer has now apologized to Living Single's Erika Alexander. On Twitter, the actor responded to her claim that he'd overlooked the fellow '90s sitcom, which featured a predominantly black cast, when discussing his own series' place in history.
David Schwimmer didn’t mean any offense. The Friends alum, 53, took to Twitter on Wednesday, January 29, to respond to the backlash that he received by pitching an “all-black Friends or an all-asian Friends,” instead of a revival.
David Schwimmer has issued a public apology to actress Erika Alexander after appearing to snub her series Living Single in a discussion about TV diversity during the height of Friends’ popularity.
Another Living Single star has hopped on Twitter to remind David Schwimmer of something important: they did it first. Kim Coles, who played Synclaire James-Jones on the hit 1990s sitcom, called the actor “naive” on Twitter for suggesting that an “all-black” or “all-Asian” reboot of Friends would make up for the show’s lack of diversity.
David Schwimmer says his words may have been taken “out of context” when he discussed diversity and Friends in a recent interview. After he talked about being “very aware of my privilege as a heterosexual white male,” the actor, 53, told The Guardian that he doesn’t believe any of the original Friends cast has the desire to reprise their old characters.
It may be more than a decade since the final episode aired, but Friends is still reaching new audiences thanks to reruns and streaming on Netflix.
You can always count on Black Twitter to get their point across when it comes to making a statement, and Tuesday was no different as they went in and stuck up for “Living Single.”
The iconic NBC sitcom Friends was about six 20-somethings living in New York, following their love lives, friendships and careers. But its taken heat over the years for its lack of diversity, with an all-white lead cast and precious few people of color in secondary roles.