Friends' David Schwimmer has shared the sweet way he and co-star Matt LeBlanc marked the 30th anniversary of the beloved sitcom.
Looking back on three decades of the show, Schwimmer opened up to Australian radio station Nova about navigating the big milestone.
"Do you reflect when you hit a milestone like 30 years? Do you think, 'Wow what a great run’? Or do you go, 'God, I feel really old, don't say that'?" asked host Smallzy.
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"All of the above," the Ross Geller star said, before explaining what "happened to be back in Los Angeles around the day that marked the 30th year of when we aired".
"I took [Matt] LeBlanc out to dinner, actually," he shared. "We reminisced and toasted to the 30 years."
What to Read Next
Schwimmer has most recently starred in the second season of Goosebumps, which is subtitled The Vanishing and premiered on Disney+ on January 10.
The anthology show serves as an adaptation of RL Stine's series of novels, with each season following new characters and a new storyline.
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The Vanishing sees two twins visit their divorced father during summer vacation, and uncover a spooky mystery in the local area. Meanwhile, their dad attempts to investigate the death of his brother, who died when they were children.
"The season begins when twins Devin (Sam McCarthy) and Cece Brewer (Jayden Bartels) are sent to spend a summer in Gravesend, Brooklyn, with their divorced dad," reads the logline. "A threat is stirring, and they quickly realise that dark secrets are among them, triggering a chain of events that unravel a profound mystery."
Alongside Schwimmer, McCarthy and Bartles, season two also stars Ana Ortiz, Arjun Athalye, Eloise Payet and Stony Blyden.
Goosebumps: The Vanishing streams on Disney+.
Reporter, Digital Spy
Stefania is a freelance writer specialising in TV and movies. After graduating from City University, London, she covered LGBTQ+ news and pursued a career in entertainment journalism, with her work appearing in outlets including Little White Lies, The Skinny, Radio Times and Digital Spy.
Her beats are horror films and period dramas, especially if fronted by queer women. She can argue why Scream is the best slasher in four languages (and a half).

















