Why One of the Highest-Rated ‘Friends’ Episodes Made NBC Nervous

When it comes to sitcoms, there’s nothing quite as iconic and timeless as Friends. Whether it’s the will-they-won’t-they romance between Ross (David Schwimmer) and Rachel (Jennifer Aniston), the quirkiness of Joey (Matt Le Blanc) and Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow), or the growth between Monica (Courteney Cox) and Chandler (Matthew Perry), Friends kept viewers glued to the TV for 10 years and 236 total episodes, winning several awards and gaining incredible ratings. It’s no wonder the show is a classic. With how popular Friends is, and how highly it’s regarded now as a fundamental sitcom in the history of the genre, it’s strange to realize that during the time of airing, NBC faced some controversy regarding one of its highly-rated episodes. Here’s what happened and why.

What Is “The One With the Lesbian Wedding” About?
Just two years after the pilot aired, NBC aired Season 2, Episode 11 in 1996, “The One With the Lesbian Wedding.” In the opening scene, Ross meets with his ex-wife Carol (Jane Sibbett) and her girlfriend Susan (Jessica Hecht). Ross has had an awkward relationship with Carol ever since she came out as gay and their marriage ended in divorce, and Ross and Susan have had an especially strained relationship as well. As a romantic, Ross’s failed marriage is something he struggles with throughout the first portion of the series, so he becomes distressed when Carol announces her and Susan’s engagement.

Ross and Carol’s divorce, however painful at the moment, was mostly amicable, and they have kept their friendship ever since. So, Carol invites Ross to the wedding (her hesitations just before telling him of her and Susan’s engagement imply that she’s not sure how Ross will take the news, and it takes Susan nudging her to actually tell him). Ross tries to play it off, but it’s obvious that he still has feelings for Carol and remains bitter that their relationship ended while Susan gets to live his dream.

Back at Monica’s apartment, Ross makes it clear that his problem with the wedding, and the reason he refuses to attend, has nothing to do with Carol and Susan being gay and everything to do with Carol being his ex-wife. Even though he and Carol have remained friends, attending the wedding would be painful and awkward for him. But the wedding is impossible to escape: when the caterer for the wedding is injured, Carol hires Monica as a replacement, and Ross is roped into helping out with the food for his own ex-wife’s wedding.

Carol and Susan’s Wedding Is a Major Turning Point for Ross on ‘Friends’

Ross reaches a turning point, though, when Carol visits the apartment,t saying that she might have to call the wedding off. Her parents don’t approve of her relationship with Susan, and they have refused to attend. Her insecurities from this rejection started a fight between Carol and Susan, leaving Carol to second-guess herself. Refusing to be another person in Carol’s life who doesn’t support her, Ross swallows his pride and sets aside his pain for a moment to have an actual conversation with her. He agrees with Susan (a rare moment in and of itself) that the wedding is for Carol and Susan, not for anyone else, and that if they truly love each other, then the wedding should continue as planned. Carol responds positively to the pep talk, and Ross ends up going to the wedding out of support for Carol, even walking her down the aisle in place of her parents — which adds a new layer of meaning to the tradition of giving the bride away.

During the reception, Susan responds to Ross’s support of Carol by extending an olive branch herself. She thanks him for helping to calm Carol’s nerves and to be her support system during the wedding, then goes one step further by offering Ross a dance. Ross agrees. This episode represents a big turning point for Ross concerning one of his biggest conflicts in the Friends’ early days. Giving Carol away helped him to move on from this stage of his life and ultimately embrace a new relationship, much farther down the line.

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