Friends & The Art Of Being Irreverently Iconic (Photo Credit: IMDb)

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You would find plenty of warts about Friends, even at a casual glance. It’s about guys and girls in a couple of New York City apartments they’d probably be hard-pressed to afford, given their economic conditions over most of the show’s 10-year run. Their sole problem in life seems to be falling in and out of love. The storyline you got over a decade could well be capsuled into a two-hour Hollywood rom-com.

The show has been accused of body shaming, gay jokes and, lately, non-inclusivity, and its lead players of being sociopaths, unrealistic, philanderers and, at least one of them, selfish indecisive b***h.

Life’s like that, isn’t it — full of warts and often politically incorrect. Friends chose to show it all with abundant humour that never failed to be funny, serving the silly with a twist of the irreverent. It’s the reason the show survived all of the above.

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