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The one who has all the thanksgivings

Season 5, Episode 8

Hey, hey, who is a vivid example of lukism and Fat-Shaming from your favorite TV series? For 1999, this was the norm, but now jokes about fat Monica or nosy Rachel are somewhat strange and insulted. It is immediately clear that the screenwriters focused on the thin and beautiful. That's right, and there is also racism in Chandler's flashback! Despite the significant differences from today, the episode creatively approaches flashbacks - especially the images of Ross and Chandler in the 80s. In addition, the show will successfully play with the audience, slipping him a few jokes tied to the previous events of the series. And let's not forget that Monica's dancing with a turkey on her head and Chandler's declaration of love end the episode perfectly.

The one with the Chandler in the box

Season 4, Episode 8

Do you remember those times when a duck and a chicken lived in Joey's apartment, and Chandler was not only thin, but also managed to take the girl away from his best friend? Thanksgiving of that season just happened to be the culmination of a conflict between friends, which ended with the fact that Matthew Perry's character spent the whole holiday in a box thinking about his behavior. At the same time, Monica almost had an affair with Richard's son after breaking up with the latter - a rather strange, but perfectly played out storyline.

The one with Rachel's other sister

Season 9, Episode 8

Unlike the series in the tenth season, this episode shows how all the characters have matured over time. Probably this is all because the daughter of Ross and Rachel Emma is at the center of events, whose right to education (after the possible death of her parents) Monica and Chandler and the younger sister of Jennifer Aniston's heroine, Aimee, who was beautifully played by Christina Applegate, cannot share with each other. Still Reese Witherspoon, she perfectly demonstrates Rachel's evolution from a narcissistic egoist to a successful and independent woman (which cannot be said about the sisters).

The one with football

Season 3, Episode 8

After a pause in the second season, "Friends" celebrated Thanksgiving again and did it on an unexpected scale - they went outside! I think all fans of the series remember this incredibly dramatic game of American football (I still don't understand how in our latitudes the audience understood what was happening) with a slight note of objectification around the Dutchwoman for whom Joey and Chandler are "competing". However, I don't really understand how in subsequent years Monica didn't understand at all what was going on during NFL games despite their excellent knowledge of the rules.

The one where Ross is high

Season 6, Episode 8

Probably one of the best episodes of the whole show. The plot easily and naturally twists around a huge number of parallel stories: Chandler is trying to impress Monica's parents, Ross is afraid to admit to his parents that he smoked marijuana in college, Rachel is preparing a "traditional English trifle", Phoebe has problems because of an erotic dream with Mr. Heller, and Joey is trying to get to a friend's party and save Rachel from the failure with dessert. However, the star of the episode is Christina Pickles, who masterfully manages events in the image of Judy Gellar. True, at one point objectification breaks into the series especially sharply - Joey and Ross dream about a party with drunk dancers all evening, but in the end both generally agree straightforwardly that girls should not be perceived as objects. Not cool, dudes. erotic massage new york city

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