“Friends” is the gift that keeps on giving.
HBO Max, the streaming service of HBO, has ponied up at least $20 million film a “Friends” reunion show. This will be like a talk show with clips, it’s a reunion episode that updates the characters. It will be the six main actors– Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, David Schwimmer, Matthew Perry, and Matt LeBlanc– reminiscing about their years making the hit series.
HBO Max will use this to launch their streaming reruns of “Friends,” all ten seasons, for which they paid gazillions of dollars and ruined Netflix’s day. The reruns launch on May 1st, which means this reunion show will be taped soon, produced and directed by Ben Winston, James Corden’s producer and now the hot guy in Hollywood. (He’s also taken over the Grammy Awards.)
The special will be taped at Warner Bros, at the same location the show filmed at for all those years.
What can I say? I am probably the wrong generation for “Friends.” “Seinfeld” was my show. “Friends” seem like a pale imitation. It wasn’t particularly good as a comedy. It was almost like a soap opera, I thought. The two main stories were Ross and Rachel, and whether Matthew Perry would make it through another season. The latter’s weight changed so dramatically from season to season, you wondered why none of his so-called friends never did anything about it.
Now that the show is in reruns around the clock on many platforms, I’ve watched it again, sort of passive aggressively. I always thought Lisa Kudrow was the underrated star. But because Phoebe wasn’t in a romantic pairing, you could feel the writers straining find places to put her. Courteney Cox– always had a crush on her. Her Monica is the most interesting because she’s got the past of being overweight and now is OCD. David Schwimmer also seems underrated, in hindsight. He was like Dustin Hoffman’s Benjamin from “The Graduate.”
With paychecks for the special of between $2 million and $4 million per person, this cast really lucked into the deal of a lifetime 25 years ago. And the money for the special doesn’t include what they get with each new deal. There used to be a monkey in the first couple of seasons. I doubt he’s getting a cut.



I wouldn’t have realized that Caroline Flack was in Michael Winterbottom’s “Greed” but her name is first in the credits on the end crawl. (That’s her in the photo, on the left.)
Where was former Hollywood wife Diandra Douglas on the night her ex-father-in-law, Kirk Douglas, was buried in Los Angeles? Why, dancing at the 65th Viennese Ball in New York, of course. So were plenty of other fabulous New Yorkers including Star Jones, Denise Rich, and actress Samantha Mathis. After all, the writer Anne Lamott once said of grief: “It’s like having a broken leg that never heals perfectly—that still hurts when the weather gets cold, but you learn to dance with the limp.”
The event simulates the Viennese Ball begun in 1814 during the time when the crowned heads of Europe and the aristocracy searched for entertainment after the Napoleonic wars, with some accommodations: the European ball begins at 10; the night started at Cipriani’s with a long cocktail hour, red carpet, and display of items for auction. By 9pm, guests entered the dining room, heralded by trumpets. The Austrian national anthem was played followed by the “Star Spangled Banner.” The highlight of the opening ceremony was the induction of the debutante couples, carefully selected young women and men who have successfully completed an application program and strict classical dance choreography. The Debutantes wore shimmering tiaras donated by Austrian jewelry company Ciro and white gowns, dancing the Polonaise and Alles Walzer with their partners in white tie.