Society's Child
Millennials watching Friends on Netflix have expressed reservations about the popular sitcom's storylines, describing it as transphobic, homophobic and sexist.
While the show ran for more than 10 years until 2004, it arrived on Netflix at the end of last year in the UK.
The series, starring Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, Courtney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc and David Schwimmer, remains one of the most popular shows in the US.
However, some millennials found LGBT plot points left them feeling "uncomfortable" - for example when Chandler was paranoid about being perceived as a gay man or made mean-spirited jokes about his cross-dressing dad.
Comment: ...and the 'alt-center', and the 'alt-left'... pretty much most people online actually.
Ben de Pear, the editor of Channel 4 News, said Newman had been subjected to "vicious misogynistic abuse". Having to calling in security specialists was a "terrible indictment of the times we live in", he said.
Comment: Indeed, the degree of snowflakery it reveals in some is astronomical.
Newman interviewed the psychologist, Jordan Peterson, about gender on Tuesday. A video of the full 30-minute interview has been watched more than 1.6m times on the Channel 4 News YouTube page and has attracted more than 36,000 comments.
Comment: Such a pathetic 'final word' from Cathy Newman and Channel 4, to claim 'offense' and feign 'hurt'. Well, there aint no rest for the triggered...

Trump-supporting "Deplorable Vet" Ricky Taylor will attend the State of the Union address on Jan. 30 as a guest of Rep. Sean Duffy (R-Wis).
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) told MSNBC's Joy Reid on Friday that she had plans of protesting Trump's State of the Union speech, refusing to attend.
Comment: Very nice, Deplorable Vet! Stickin' it to Maxine Waters! She's the real deplorable and deserves every bit of her comeuppance!
See also:
- Mad Maxine Waters thinks she inspires people by calling for Trump's impeachment
- Maxine Waters at it again: 'Guarantees' Russian collusion, demands Trump impeachment
- Maxine Waters thinks the alt-right are terrorists who want to kill her
- Losing the plot: Nut case Maxine Waters says Putin, er, Pence needs to be impeached after Trump
- Mad Maxine Waters interrupts Treasury Secretary's single answer - 12 times!
- Maxine Waters panics as Tucker Carlson continues to reveal her wealthy LA lifestyle
- Crazy Maxine Waters short circuits on live TV
In an interview with ABC News, Cook discussed a number of recent announcements by Apple, including their plan to invest $350 billion in the U.S. economy over the next five years and how President Trump's tax plan will help the U.S. economy. Cook refused to "take a position" on how the new tax plan will affect individual Americans but commented on the corporate tax saying, "I do believe the corporate side will result in job creation and a faster growing economy." Cook added that under Obama's tax plan, the $38 billion tax payment the company plans to make as part of repatriating offshore cash would not have been paid.
"I hope - I have that faith - that it will be used for great purpose for the country," said Cook, "whether that's infrastructure or education, or what have you, that will further supply jobs in the U.S." Cook criticised the Obama-era tax plans saying that he "never thought" that the old tax system was "good for the United States." Cook stated that he believed the harsh tax restrictions forced "people to invest elsewhere instead of within the country." Cook also believes that a company like Apple could only have been founded in America and they have a responsibility to give back to the country, "one of the ways to do that is to create jobs," said Cook.
Comment: Seems that Walmart is saying the opposite, that the new tax plan means employees will get peanuts for pay raises - while 1,000s of workers lose jobs amid store closings. One wonders if corporations are using the polarizing tax plan as an excuse to do whatever they want to do.
See also:
- Trump's new tax bill in simple terms, without snarky comments
- Trump's last laugh: Sweeping benefits of GOP tax law confirmed by CBS News Report, Bernie Sanders
- Here's why Wall Street is furious at the Trump tax plan
- A gift to America's small businesses: GOP tax reform simplifies IRS returns
- GOP tax bill persuasion: AT&T, Boeing, Comcast reward employees with cash
The bus carrying students smashed into the trees on the roadside of the Eskisehir-Bursa highway for an unknown reason, the agency reported, citing Ozdemir Cakacak, the province's governor.
Cleophus Cooksey Jr. is accused of slaying at least nine Valley residents during a three-week period between Thanksgiving and Christmas. A felon-turned-aspiring-rapper who nicknamed himself "Playboy," Cooksey was arrested at the spot of the Dec. 17 double shooting minutes after police received the shots-fired call.
Two days later, Phoenix police discovered through the use of new technology that he was responsible for "several homicides" in the preceding three weeks, according to court records released Thursday.
But it wasn't until a month later that authorities publicly announced they had linked Cooksey to seven other unsolved homicides - possibly more - in metro Phoenix, including killings in a south Phoenix alley, at a Glendale apartment complex and in a grassy field.
Comment: For more on the mentality of criminals and killers see: The Myth of the Out of Character Crime and Inside the Criminal Mind by Stanton E. Samenow, Ph. D.
There can evidently be only one Hotel California: music legends the Eagles have settled a lawsuit to stop a Mexico hotel from using the name "Hotel California," arguably the rock band's most famous song, after the hotel's owners withdrew their application to trademark the name in the United States.
A joint dismissal of the band's lawsuit against Hotel California Baja LLC, which runs the Todos Santos hotel in Baja California Sur, was filed on Wednesday with the US District Court in Los Angeles, Reuters reports.
"This case has been settled by mutual agreement of the parties," Thomas Jirgal, a lawyer for the Eagles, said in an interview on Thursday.
The dismissal came on the same day the US Patent and Trademark Office accepted Hotel California Baja's request to permanently abandon its trademark application.
A law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation said that the team was filming for cable network CNBC, which is based in Englewood Cliffs. The TSA did not release the names of the people they said were arrested, and the Port Authority only said that it was investigating the incident.
The Transportation Security Administration provided this photo early Thursday showing the device that led to the arrests.
A second source said the fake explosive device was a length of PVC pipe with wires sticking out from it. A bomb tech with the TSA determined that the device posed no threat, and that eight people were taken into custody.
With the hustle and bustle of the season, many Americans missed the important new data. The new census estimates detail how states have grown since the last full census in 2010. The estimates provide some fascinating insight on what we can expect from the quickly approaching 2020 Census.
For those of us wonky enough to follow the annual trends in state-by-state migration, the numbers were an early Christmas gift.
A report I have authored with Arthur Laffer for the past decade, "Rich States, Poor States," has tracked this movement, as Americans "vote with their feet" across state lines. Our research provides policymakers timely data linking migration to state-level policy decisions and economic competitiveness.
"Analysts said they encountered 'high' out-of-stock issues last week in every department of one Midwest store across both private-label items and branded items," according to the report. One East Coast store had "extraordinary" inventory problems, according to the analyst.
"The store had no bananas and the supply of eggs and Tropicana products was very low," the analyst reported. "Entire displays, refrigerated cases, and end caps were completely empty. The prepared foods hot bar was entirely empty."
This follows a December story that found dozens of shoppers reporting "bruised, discolored, tasteless, and rotten produce in Whole Foods stores from California to New York over the past couple of months."














Comment: Yeah, it's 'problematic' in 2018 because a lot more people are crazy in 2018.