Which 70s Sitcom Inspired Friends’ Ending?(Photo Credit –Facebook)

Advertisement

Do you know that ending of FRIENDS, the keys on the counter, one last sarcastic Chandler zinger, and the gang heading out for coffee like it’s just another day? Yeah, total emotional chaos in the best way. It wrapped up ten years of laughs, love triangles, and way too many turkey moments with the kind of bittersweet perfection that made us all feel personally attacked.

But get this: that tearjerker of a finale wasn’t just something the writers cooked up over lattes and nostalgia. Nope. It turns out that they had a little help from the ’70s. Specifically, The Mary Tyler Moore Show. That classic sitcom didn’t just rock bell bottoms and laugh tracks. It also mastered the art of the emotional finale. The FRIENDS creators loved it so much that they used it as a guidebook on saying goodbye. So, while we were bawling our eyes out in 2004, we were also getting hit with a dose of vintage TV brilliance.

How Did The Mary Tyler Moore Show Inspire Friends?

The Mary Tyler Moore Show was a game-changer in TV history. It introduced Mary Richards, played by Mary Tyler Moore, a career-driven, smart, and single woman, way ahead of her time. The show’s seven-year run ended in 1977 with a finale, The Last Show, that made us all reach for the tissues. After everyone at the newsroom got fired (except for Ted, of course), the gang shared a long, emotional group hug. And guess what? FRIENDS was paying attention.

Advertisement