Zoë Kravitz has expressed strong sentiments about Friends.
Friends, which was first aired in the 1990s, is still one of the most popular sitcoms today, and it was given a new lease of life when it was made available on Netflix in 2015.
By 2018, Friends was the second most-streamed show on the platform.
However, Netflix fans were heartbroken when the company quit the streaming service in 2020 when its license agreement with WarnerMedia expired. All 200+ episodes are now available on HBO Max.
While Friends remains extremely popular, some fans, like Kravitz, believe that some of the show’s allusions are out of date.

Since the release of their new film, Caught Stealing, in theaters, Kravitz and her co-star Austin Butler have been in the media spotlight.
The film is set in the 1990s, and the two recently addressed the good and terrible aspects of that era.
“I’m really nostalgic for that time,” Kravitz told PEOPLE of the 1990s. “Then also the clothes, all that stuff’s really great: “New York City and Grunge.”
Elvis actor Butler expressed similar thoughts, saying, “Even simply being in the flat [on set] and seeing the Nintendo 64 on top of the TV. We had the GoldenEye
, which I saw.”
He also acknowledged that he misses the days when everyone didn’t have their telephones with them at all times.
Kravitz went on to say that one of the worst aspects of the 1990s was the prevalence of homophobic jokes on mainstream television. If you watch Friends now, you’re going, ‘Whoa, that’s…’.”
Butler was astonished to see these types of gags in the renowned comedy, to which Kravitz responded, “Oh, so much in Friends.” For example, things that are not punchlines are punchlines. It is wild. So, maybe that? “We can keep it there.”

Butler then agreed that the world should ‘keep that in the 90s.’
Even the Friends creators confess that they wish they could have adjusted some of the gags in retrospect.
In 2019, Marta Kauffman told USA Today, “Every time I watch an episode, there’s something I wish I could have changed.”
She went on to say, “How did we leave that joke in there? Or, really, that storyline? Is that what we went with?”
Kauffman was also asked how Friends might look if it were created today.
“I suppose we didn’t have the understanding about transgender individuals back then, so I’m not sure whether we used the right phrases,” she added. “I don’t know if I would have understood such terms back then. I believe that is the most significant.”