Books
Joanna Hagan

Friends and the Golden Age of the Sitcom

“Entertaining… podcaster Hagan traces a brief history of the development of television’s situation comedies before homing in on the American shows of the ’90s, from Seinfeld to Frasier to Scrubs, with a focus on the decade-long run of Friends (1994–2004) and its influence on the entertainment landscape.” — Library Journal
Friends ran for ten years, beginning in 1994 and airing its final episode in 2005. The show is inarguably the peak sitcom of its era. It's the most remembered, most quoted and so essential that companies have spent hundreds of millions on the streaming rights to Friends in recent years. But why does Friends mean so much to so many? What did this sitcom have that the other giant shows of that era didn’t?
This is a deep dive into the history of Friends, but it’s also the history of ten years of network television. How did the world of sitcoms evolve through that decade? How much of a show’s success is down to small details like schedules and syndication, and how much of it is down to the content itself?
The landscape of television has changed drastically in the years since the end of Friends, but the biggest show of sitcom’s golden age has endured like no other. This look at the history of Friends, its legacy and the history of television in general will show you why. Both why the television industry has become what it is today, and why Friends has survived long beyond its decade. This is a celebration of Friends, an interrogation of its success, and a history of television that explains much of what’s on our screens today.
319 printed pages
Original publication
2024
Publication year
2024
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