NBC's Friends episode offensive to intersex youth
Intersex youth was the butt of a joke in the thanksgiving episode (Nov. 22, 2001) of NBC's popular sit-com, Friends, and intersex activists and allies are talking to NBC to address how hurtful and offensive it was to us.
The show consisted of Brad Pitt playing a character who went to high school with the characters Ross, Monica & Rachel. Supposedly Rachel made his life miserable, and so he and Ross made up a rumour about her. The rumour was that she was born "with both male and female reproductive parts" and that her parents "flipped a coin" to decide to raise her as a girl, but that she "still had the hint of a penis". The rest of the show consisted of everyone making fun of her, calling her "the hermaphrodite cheerleader from Long Island", staring at her crotch asking for "proof" that it wasn't true, and Rachel crying "you told people that I was half and half!" At the end, Monica resolves it by telling Rachel "even with that rumour, you were the most popular girl in school", as if that would be so suprising.
Intersex youth was the butt of a joke in the thanksgiving episode (Nov. 22, 2001) of NBC's popular sit-com, Friends, and intersex activists and allies are talking to NBC to address how hurtful and offensive it was to us.
The show consisted of Brad Pitt playing a character who went to high school with the characters Ross, Monica & Rachel. Supposedly Rachel made his life miserable, and so he and Ross made up a rumour about her. The rumour was that she was born "with both male and female reproductive parts" and that her parents "flipped a coin" to decide to raise her as a girl, but that she "still had the hint of a penis". The rest of the show consisted of everyone making fun of her, calling her "the hermaphrodite cheerleader from Long Island", staring at her crotch asking for "proof" that it wasn't true, and Rachel crying "you told people that I was half and half!" At the end, Monica resolves it by telling Rachel "even with that rumour, you were the most popular girl in school", as if that would be so suprising.
Intersex ally Devon King from Berkeley wrote a letter to NBC, and is encouraging others to do the same. You can write directly to NBC at friends@nbc.com. Below is the letter he wrote:
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