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In the original broadcast, the episode was viewed by 25.5 million viewers. [3] Sam Ashurst from Digital Spy ranked it #185 on their ranking of the 236 Friends episodes. [4] Telegraph & Argus also ranked it #185 on their ranking of all 236 Friends episodes. [5]
"The One with the Thumb" is the third episode of Friends ' first season. It first aired on the NBC network in the United States on October 6, 1994. [1] This episode sees Chandler (Matthew Perry) pick up his old smoking addiction, a habit that the rest of the group finds hard to get him to break.
The A.V. Club called the episode "a little bit bland, a little too distressingly cliché". [3] The British website Digital Spy put the episode on their list of "Friends: The 15 Best Episodes of All Time". [4] Rolling Stone ranked the episode as one of the top 25 episodes of Friends. [5]
"The One with George Stephanopoulos" is the fourth episode of the first season of the NBC television series Friends. The fourth episode of the show overall, it was first broadcast on October 13, 1994. The episode was directed by James Burrows and written by Alexa Junge. This episode is the first of many that splits the gang into two separate ...
When she receives the credit card statement she realises that the thief is doing all the things in life that she wishes she could do, including taking tap dancing lessons. She, Rachel and Phoebe decide to find the thief at the tap dance class and end up becoming her friends. In order to prevent suspicion, real Monica introduces herself as "Monana".
“Winter” (‘Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life’ episode 1) A decade after the series finale, Gilmore Girls returned via a four-episode Netflix revival.The first episode takes place in ...
Betty Gilpin’s Lina isn’t afraid to get creative in the bedroom — or in this case, the car. In Episode 7 of Three Women, Starz’s adaptation of Lisa Taddeo’s bestselling nonfiction book ...
The term "cat lady" has also been used as a pejorative term towards women without children, regardless of if they actually own cats. [2] [3] Depending on context, the ordinarily pejorative word "crazy" may be prepended to "cat lady" to indicate either a pejorative [1] or a humorous and affectionate label. [4]