Friends
Plot
Few ensemble sitcoms of the 1990s and early 2000s commanded as much love and devotion from their fans as the immensely popular NBC series Friends -- and few such sitcoms generated as many "water-cooler conversations" as the characters' lives and loves evolved over the series' ten-year run. Set in New York City, the action largely took place in two neighboring loft apartments. One of these was the home of Monica Geller (Courteney Cox), who can be described as the series' "rock" -- or better yet, "den mother." An assistant chef who later ran her own restaurant, Monica lived with her best friend, Rachel Green (Jennifer Aniston), who had come to New York after running out on her wedding; employed as a waitress in the earlier episodes, Rachel later became a buyer for a retail fashion chain, and finally an assistant to a high-profile designer. Occasionally dropping into Monica's apartment was her brother, Ross (David Schwimmer), a paleontologist who spent most of the first season coming to grips with the fact that his wife, Carol (Jane Sibbett), had declared herself a lesbian and divorced him (Carol would later give birth to Ross' son Ben, whom she and her partner insisted upon raising themselves). Across the hall from Monica's flat lived Joey Tribbiani (Matt LeBlanc), an aspiring actor whose professional luck was generally bad until he landed a continuing role on the daytime drama Days of Our Lives -- as a man with a woman's brain! Joey lived with "corporate guy" Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry), who was regarded as the class clown of the bunch. A frequent guest at both apartments was Phoebe Buffay (Lisa Kudrow), an airheaded will-o'-the-wisp who never quite got it all together at any one time.When the "friends" weren't at home or at work, they could be found hanging out at Central Perk, a Greenwich Village coffeehouse manned by Gunther (played by real-life "coffee guy" James Michael Tyler, who did not receive screen credit until well into the series' run), where Phoebe occasionally performed as a folksinger. Gradually and inevitably, many of the friends became lovers. First it was Ross and Rachel, a relationship that came to a screeching halt in season three when Ross slept with another woman when the couple was "on a break." Ross then ended up marrying the prickly Emily Waltham (Helen Baxendale) during a jaunt to England in season four. That this alliance was doomed from the start was demonstrated when, during the ceremony, Ross said Rachel's name instead of Emily's. After the dissolution of the marriage, a drunken Ross and Rachel impulsively got hitched in Las Vegas at the end of season five, but they soon realized that they'd acted too hastily, and were themselves divorced. In season eight, Rachel gave birth to Ross' baby, a girl named Emma. Meanwhile, Chandler and Monica, who after "getting it on" at Ross' wedding ceremony tried to keep their relationship a secret from everyone, were married at the close of season seven. They would later discover that they could not have children, whereupon they adopted a baby from a woman named Erica (Anna Faris). In a similar vein, the whimsical Phoebe had earlier agreed to be artificially inseminated so that she could bear a child for her half-brother, Frank (Giovanni Ribisi), and his wife (and former teacher), Alice (Debra Jo Rupp). Ultimately, Phoebe gave birth to triplets. Phoebe also had another sibling, a twin sister named Ursula -- actually the same character played by Lisa Kudrow in the earlier NBC sitcom Mad About You, which was still in production when Friends debuted on September 22, 1994.
The series' tenth and final season (2003-2004) wrapped up several loose plot strands. Having admitted that he always loved Rachel, Joey proposed to her, but the marriage never came off -- and in an eleventh-hour decision, Rachel forsook plans to move to Paris, and returned to Ross. After several desultory relationships, Phoebe married a nice guy named Mike (Paul Rudd). And as Friends approached its two-part finale, Erica, the birth mother of Monica and Chandler's soon-to-be-adopted baby went into labor -- and surprisingly delivered twins, which they named Erica and Jack. After the storyline of the series ended, Joey would end up moving out of New York, heading to L.A. to pursue a film career, thereby setting up the premise of Matt LeBlanc's spin-off sitcom Joey. At or near the number one ratings slot throughout most of its run, Friends also earned a veritable warehouse of Emmy Awards -- not to mention full-fledged stardom for all of the series' regulars. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Credit
Michael Curtis - Executive Producer, Adam Chase - Executive Producer, David Crane - Executive Producer, Marta Kauffman - Executive Producer, Scott Silveri - Executive Producer, Shana Goldberg-Meehan - Executive Producer, Greg Malins - Executive Producer, Andrew Reich - Executive Producer, Ted Cohen - Executive Producer, David Crane - Show Creator, Marta Kauffman - Show CreatorEpisodes
Friends: Season 01 (1994)The first season of Friends could easily have been retitled "Getting to Know You," as all the soon-to-be-familiar characters, and their equally soon-to-be familiar interrelationships, were swiftly and economically established. In the opening episode, Rachel Green (Jennifer Aniston) abandons her "Mr. Potato Head" spouse at the altar and moves in with her former high-school friend Monica Geller (Courteney Cox) in Monica's spacious New York loft apartment. Not long afterward, we meet Monica's brother, Ross (David Schwimmer), who is down in the dumps because his ex-wife, Carol (Jane Sibbett), has not only declared herself a lesbian, but will soon be giving birth to his son (named Ben), whom she and her partner intend to raise without any of Ross' help. Also, we are treated to the first of aspiring actor Joey Tribbiani's (Matt LeBlanc) dead-end "big breaks" when he is hired as Al Pacino's stand-in. Finally, airhead Phoebe Buffay (Lisa Kudrow) is given the opportunity to perform her treacly folk songs at the gang's favorite hangout, the Central Perk coffeehouse -- only to have her debut spoiled by a citywide power blackout. In other developments, Ross "adopts" a monkey named Marcel; Joey briefly falls for Phoebe's bitchy twin sister, Ursula (also played by Lisa Kudrow); and Joey's roommate, Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry), betrays a confidence by informing Rachel that Ross has a crush on her. A solid hit from the moment it left the starting gate, Friends wound up its freshman season as the eighth highest-rated program on American television. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One with the Blackout
- The One Where Nana Dies Twice
- The One Where Underdog Gets Away
- The One With the Monkey
- The Pilot
- The One with the Sonogram at the End
- The One with the Thumb
- The One with George Stephanplous
- The One with the East German Laundry Detergent
- The One with the Butt
- The One with Two Parts, Part 1
- The One With Mrs. Bing
- The One With the Dozen Lasagnas
- The One With the Boobies
- The One With the Candy Hearts
- The One with the Stoned Guy
- The One Where the Monkey Gets Away
- The One with Two Parts, Part 2
- The One with the Evil Orthodontist
- The One with the Fake Monica
- The One with the 'Ick' Factor
- The One with the Birth
- The One Where Rachel Finds Out
- The One With All the Poker
Friends inaugurates its second season as Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) digests the news that Ross (David Schwimmer) has a crush on her -- only to spot Ross with his new girlfriend, Julie (Lauren Tom). Forced to choose between the two women in his life, Ross goes with Rachel, and not long afterward the couple consummate their romance -- smack dab in the museum where Ross works. Meanwhile, Ross' lesbian ex-wife, Carol (Jane Sibbett), who has recently given birth to son Ben, "marries" her female lover, (Jessica Hecht). In other affairs of the heart, Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) is reunited with her husband, Duncan (Steve Zahn), a gay Canadian who'd wed her to get a green card (needless to say, the marriage is quickly dispensed with); and Ross' sister, Monica (Courteney Cox), begins dating an old family friend, Dr. Richard Burke (Tom Selleck). In a similar medical vein, Joey (Matt LeBlanc) thinks he's finally got his big showbiz break when he is cast as Dr. Drake Ramoray on the daytime drama Days of Our Lives; alas, just as he has gotten used to his affluent new lifestyle, "Dr. Ramoray" is abruptly killed off. Joey also moves out of his apartment, whereupon his roommate, Chandler (Matthew Perry), takes in a new tenant, a truly bizarre character named Eddie (Adam Goldberg), who when Joey moves back in, steadfastly refuses to go away. Friends wrapped up its sophomore season as the third highest-rated program on American TV, outflanked only by ER and Seinfeld. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One Where Ross Finds Out
- The One with Ross's New Girlfriend
- The One with the Breast Milk
- The One Where Heckle Dies
- The One with Phoebe's Husband
- The One with the Five Steaks and an Eggplant
- The One with the Baby on the Bus
- The One with the List
- The One with Phoebe's Dad
- The One with Russ
- The One with the Lesbian Wedding
- The One After the Superbowl, Part 1
- The One After the Superbowl, Part 2
- The One Where Ross and Rachel... You Know
- The One Where Joey Moves Out
- The One Where Eddie Moves In
- The One Where Dr. Ramoray Dies
- The One Where Eddie Won't Go
- The One with the Prom Video
- The One Where Old Yeller Dies
- The One with the Bullies
- The One with Two Parties
- The One with the Chicken Pox
- The One with Barry and Mindy's Wedding
As Friends enters its third season, the series' romantic intrigues intensify. Monica (Courteney Cox) breaks up with Dr. Richard Burke (played during season two by Tom Selleck); Chandler (Matthew Perry) gets serious with his new girlfriend, Janice (Maggie Wheeler), but she can't bear to part with her former husband; and the relationship between Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) and Ross (David Schwimmer) abruptly ends. And so it goes right up to the final episode of the season, in which, during a day at the beach, Ross and Rachel realize that they're still in love, Chandler begins mulling over the option of dating Monica, and Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) learns a shocking fact about her long-lost parents. Evidently, the viewers of America couldn't get enough of these plot entanglements; Friends closed out its third season as the fourth highest-rated program on network television. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One Where No One's Ready
- The One with the Princess Leia Fantasy
- The One with the Jam
- The One with the Metaphorical Tunnel
- The One with Frank, Jr.
- The One with the Flashback
- The One with the Race Car Bed
- The One With the Giant Poking Device
- The One with the Football
- The One Where Rachel Quits
- The One Where Chandler Can't Remember Which Sister
- The One with All the Jealousy
- The One Where Monica and Richard are Just Friends
- The One with Phoebe's Ex-Partner
- The One Where Ross and Rachel Take a Break
- The One with the Morning After
- The One Without the Ski Trip
- The One with the Hypnosis Tape
- The One with the Tiny T-Shirt
- The One with the Dollhouse
- The One With the Chick and the Duck
- The One with the Screamer
- The One With Ross's Thing
- The One with the Ultimate Fighting Championship
- The One at the Beach
Resolving the cliffhanging finale of season three, the fourth season of Friends opens with Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) learning the true identity of her biological mother (played by Teri Garr). Elsewhere, Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Joey (Matt LeBlanc) have a major falling out when both roommates fall in love with the same girl; Phoebe's half-brother, Frank (Giovanni Ribisi), asks her to be the surrogate mother to his children; and, trying to uphold their new "just friends, lovers no more" relationship, Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) and Ross (David Schwimmer) agree to start dating other people. Rachel's choice, albeit temporary, is Joshua (played by actress Aniston's real-life boyfriend at the time, Tate Donovan), whom she meets in her capacity as a department-store buyer, while Ross begins squiring a dour Englishwoman named Emily Waltham (Helen Baxendale). Ultimately, Ross and Emily decide to get married, clearing the stage for the season's riotous two-part finale, set in England. As the wedding ceremony approaches, Chandler and Monica (Courteney Cox) stop beating around the bush about their mutual attraction and end up sleeping together; and while taking the marriage vows in church, Ross lets slip that he's still obsessed with Rachel! Friends continued to reap healthy profits and ratings throughout its fourth season, closing out the year as America's fourth most-watched program. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One with Chandler in a Box
- The One Where They're Going to Party
- The One with the Girl From Poughkeepsie
- The One with the Jellyfish
- The One with the Cat
- The One with the 'Cuffs
- The One with the Ballroom Dancing
- The One with Joey's New Girlfriend
- The One with the Dirty Girl
- The One Where Chandler Crosses the Line
- The One with Ross's Wedding, Part 1
- The One with Phoebe's Uterus
- The One with the Embryos
- The One with Rachel's Crush
- The One with Joey's Dirty Day
- The One with All the Rugby
- The One with the Free Porn
- The One with Rachel's New Dress
- The One with Ross's Wedding, Part 2
- The One with All the Haste
- The One with the Wedding Dresses
- The One with the Invitation
- The One with the Worst Best Man Ever
- The One with the Fake Party
Season five of Friends opens just a few moments after the wedding of Ross (David Schwimmer) and Emily (Helen Baxendale), in which Ross all but sealed the doom for the union by invoking the name of Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) during the exchange of vows. It is also a scant few hours after Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Monica (Courteney Cox) have slept together for the first time. The latter couple tries to keep their romance a secret, but by mid-season everyone knows the truth. In later plot developments, the newly divorced Ross briefly moves in with Chandler and Joey; and surrogate mother Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) gives birth to triplets. In the now-famous season-five finale, Joey heads to Las Vegas for a juicy film role, and is eventually joined by the rest of his friends. Caught up in the glamour and glitter of Sin City, Monica and Chandler briefly consider a quickie Vegas marriage...only to find out that two of the other "friends" have beaten them to it! Friends wrapped up its fifth season on the air as the second most popular network program in America -- not to mention its post-Seinfeld status as the country's top-rated sitcom. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One with All the Thanksgivings
- The One with Ross's Sandwich
- The One with the Inappropriate Sister
- The One After Ross Says Rachel
- The One With All the Kissing
- The One Hundredth (with the Triplets)
- The One Where Phoebe Hates PBS
- The One with the Kips (Where Joey Finds Out)
- The One with the Yeti (Where Emily Breaks Out)
- The One Where Ross Moves In
- The One with All the Resolutions
- The One with Chandler's Work Laugh
- The One with Joey's Bag
- The One with the Girl Who Hits Joey
- The One with the Cop
- The One with Rachel's Inadvertant Kiss
- The One Where Rachel Smokes
- The One Where Ross Can't Flirt
- The One Where Everybody Finds Out
- The One with the Ride-Along
- The One with the Ball
- The One with Joey's Big Break
- The One in Vegas, Part 1
- The One in Vegas, Part 2
As Friends enters its sixth season, Ross (David Schwimmer) and Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) are husband and wife -- the end result of a drunken spree in Las Vegas. It doesn't take long for the couple to realize that their impulsive marriage was a mistake, however, and soon they're divorced. This whole unfortunate episode has caused Monica (Courteney Cox) and Chandler (Matthew Perry) to put their own tentative wedding plans in cold storage, though they do move in together upon returning to New York. In later romantic developments, Rachel panics when it looks as though Ross is going to hit it off with her sister Jill (Reese Witherspoon), and is no less concerned when Ross begins getting serious with another girl -- one of his students -- named Elizabeth (Alexandra Holden); meanwhile, Joey (Matt LeBlanc) has a brief fling with a lass by the name of Janine (Elle MacPherson). In the season finale, Chandler reconsiders marrying Monica, and is about to pop the question when her old flame Richard (Tom Selleck) shows up declaring his own love for her. Were it not for ER and the thrice-weekly Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, Friends would have been the number one network program in America, instead of merely number four; still, the series remained the nation's most popular sitcom. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One After Vegas
- The One With the Routine
- The One Where Ross Hugs Rachel
- The One With Ross's Denial
- The One Where Joey Loses His Insurance
- The One With Joey's Porsche
- The One on the Last Night
- The One Where Phoebe Runs
- The One With Ross's Teeth
- The One Where Ross Got High
- The One With the Apothecary Table
- The One With the Joke
- The One With Rachel's Sister
- The One Where Chandler Can't Cry
- The One That Could Have Been, Part 1
- The One That Could Have Been, Part 2
- The One With Unagi
- The One Where Ross Dates a Student
- The One with Joey's Fridge
- The One with Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E.
- The One Where Ross Meets Elizabeth's Dad
- The One Where Paul's the Man
- The One With the Ring
- The One With the Proposal, Part 1
- The One With the Proposal, Part 2
The twentysomething characters of Friends have all officially entered their thirties as the series itself enters its seventh season. Likewise "official," at long last, is the engagement of Monica (Courteney Cox) and Chandler (Matthew Perry), with Joey (Matt LeBlanc) agreeing to serve as best man at the wedding, and Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) and Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) accepting the invitation to be maids of honor. In fact, there's good news all around during season seven: Ross begins to bond with his son, Ben (Cole Sprouse), whose mother, Carol (Jane Sibbett), had divorced Ross when she came out as a lesbian; and struggling actor Joey returns to the role of "Dr. Drake Ramoray" on the daytime drama Days of Our Lives. Originally killed off by the writers, Dr. Ramoray is revealed to have been in a coma, and when he awakes, the brain of a woman has been transplanted into his skull -- but what the heck, a job is a job! Predictably, the season ends with the big wedding, and with a few "minor" complications, notably Chandler's disappearance the night before the ceremony, and Rachel and Phoebe's discovery that one of the women in the cast is pregnant -- but who? While Friends remained the top-rated sitcom in America, in the overall numbers it ranked in fifth place, following the reality series Survivor, the medical drama ER, and the twice-weekly game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One With Monica's Thunder
- The One With the Holiday Armadillo
- The One With Rachel's Book
- The One With Phoebe's Cookies
- The One With Rachel's Assistant
- The One With the Engagement Picture
- The One With the Nap Partners
- The One With Ross's Library Book
- The One Where Chandler Doesn't Like Dogs
- The One With All the Candy
- The One With All the Cheescakes
- The One Where They're Up All Night
- The One Where Rosita Dies
- The One Where They All Turn Thirty
- The One With Joey's New Brain
- The One With the Truth About London
- The One With the Cheap Wedding Dress
- The One With Joey's Award
- The One With Ross and Monica's Cousin
- The One With Rachel's Big Kiss
- The One With the Vows
- The One With Chandler's Dad
- The One With Chandler and Monica's Wedding, Part 1
- The One With Chandler and Monica's Wedding, Part 2
As expected, the eighth season of Friends picked up exactly where season seven left off -- that is, a few minutes after the wedding of Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Monica (Courteney Cox), with Joey (in a WWI uniform for his role in an upcoming movie) serving as best man. Also as expected, the mystery surrounding the pregnancy of one of the female Friends regulars is solved, with Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) turning out to be the one in the family way. It would take a few additional episodes, though, for Ross (David Schwimmer) to step forward as the father of Rachel's child. This plot development, however, did not lead to another wedding. Though Ross and Rachel were about to become parents, they did not see the need to become husband and wife, and in fact, both of them dated other people throughout the rest of the season, with Bonnie Somerville becoming a quasi-regular in the role of Ross' steady date Mona. In the course of season eight, Joey found himself falling in love with the pregnant Rachel, an affection culminating in a proposal at the tail end of the season -- just after Rachel had delivered a healthy baby girl, named Emma. Whether or not this would lead to a lasting relationship between Joey and Rachel was something that would have to be resolved during the next season. Meanwhile, Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow) had quite an eventful romantic life of her own, briefly pairing with guest stars Sean Penn (uncharacteristically cast as a nice guy) and Alec Baldwin (more characteristically cast as a well-meaning doofus whose overbearing enthusiasm drove everybody crazy). In keeping with this "celebrity guest" kick, Brad Pitt, husband of series regular Jennifer Aniston, showed up in one episode as one of Monica's high-school acquaintances. Though Pitt received no onscreen billing, his appearance was lavishly publicized throughout the civilized world, and was even deemed worthy of that loftiest of honors -- a TV Guide cover. Two Emmy awards were presented to Friends during its eighth season: the show itself received a statuette, as did Jennifer Aniston for Outstanding Lead Actress. Despite the formidable competition of CBS' Survivor, Friends remained the top-rated program on network television, posting a 15.0 in the Nielsens. ~ Rovi
- The One After "I Do"
- The One With Monica's Boots
- The One With Ross's Step Forward
- The One With the Red Sweater
- The One Where Rachel Tells...
- The One With the Video Tape
- The One With Rachel's Date
- The One With the Halloween Party
- The One With the Stain
- The One With the Stripper
- The One With the Rumor
- The One Where Joey Dates Rachel
- The One Where Chandler Takes a Bath
- The One With the Secret Closet
- The One With the Birthing Video
- The One Where Joey Tells Rachel
- The One With the Tea Leaves
- The One in Massepequa
- The One with Joey's Interview
- The One With the Baby Shower
- The One with the Cooking Class
- The One Where Rachel Is Late
- The One Where Rachel Has a Baby, Part 1
- The One Where Rachel Has a Baby, Part 2
With season eight of Friends concluding on a lively note as Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) gave birth to Ross' baby, season nine gets off to an equally lively start as Joey (Matt LeBlanc) "accidentally" proposes to Rachel, and Rachel "accidentally" accepts. This leaves Ross (David Schwimmer) out of the picture, and he puts up a brave front about it, while the rest of the "friends" (except Joey, of course) try to bring Ross and Rachel back together. Elsewhere, former Married...With Children co-star Christina Applegate shows up in the role of Rachel's sister Amy; and as newlyweds Monica (Courteney Cox) and Chandler (Matthew Perry) try to adjust to Chandler's new job, which will require him to commute back and forth between New York and Tulsa, word comes that the couple may never be able to have any children. The season ends with a jaunt to Barbados, a confession, and the long-awaited, long-delayed "Joey and Rachel kiss." Although its status as America's top-rated series was upset by the emergence of CBS's CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Friends remained the country's most-watched network sitcom during its penultimate year on the air. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One Where No One Proposes
- The One With Christmas in Tulsa
- The One Where Emma Cries
- The One With the Pediatrician
- The One With the Sharks
- The One With Phoebe's Birthday Dinner
- The One With the Male Nanny
- The One With Ross's Inappropriate Song
- The One With Rachel's Other Sister
- The One With Rachel's Phone Number
- The One Where Rachel Goes Back to Work
- The One With Phoebe's Rats
- The One Where Monica Sings
- The One With the Blind Dates
- The One With the Mugging
- The One With the Boob Job
- The One With the Memorial Service
- The One With the Lottery
- The One With Rachel's Dream
- The One With the Soap Opera Party
- The One With the Fertility Test
- The One With the Donor
- The One in Barbados, Part 1
- The One in Barbados, Part 2
With the official announcement that the tenth season of Friends would be its last, the series' fans loyally rallied around each episode, ensuring that the program would go out in a blaze of ratings glory. There was also little doubt that the many romantic intrigues that had evolved during previous seasons would finally be resolved -- happily or otherwise. Season ten begins with Ross (David Schwimmer), the father of Rachel's child, being upset over the burgeoning relationship between Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) and Joey (Matt LeBlanc) -- who, truth to tell, also feel awkward and uncomfortable about the situation. Meanwhile, Monica (Courteney Cox) and Chandler (Matthew Perry), having learned that they cannot have children, find a mother-to-be named Erica (Anna Faris) from whom to adopt a child; they also decide to move out of Manhattan and into a "real" home in Westchester. As for the eternally unlucky-in-love Phoebe (Lisa Kudrow), she is on the brink of a happily-ever-after denouement with her marriage to a nice fellow named Mike (Paul Rudd). The series' now-famous climactic episodes find Rachel deciding to give up both Joey and Ross by moving to Paris, and Joey preparing to go to L.A. in pursuit of movie work (thereby establishing the premise of Matt LeBlanc's new spin-off series, Joey); and Erica gives birth to twins, named Erica (after herself) and Jack (after Chandler's dad). As the last scene of the last episode approaches its final fadeout, it looks as though Ross will be left all alone...but there's still one more surprise in store. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- The One After Joey and Rachel Kiss
- The One Where Ross Is Fine
- The One With Ross's Tan
- The One With the Cake
- The One Where Rachel's Sister Babysits
- The One With Ross's Grant
- The One With the Home Study
- The One With the Late Thanksgiving
- The One Where Chandler Gets Caught
- The One Where the Stripper Cries
- The One With Phoebe's Wedding
- The One Where Joey Speaks French
- The One With Princess Consuela
- The One Where Estelle Dies
- The One With Rachel's Going Away Party
- The Last One, Part 1
- The Last One, Part 2
- The One With the Birth Mother
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