Why Matt LeBlanc Hated The Joey/Rachel Love Story On 'Friends'

That's to the incredible cast, there are endless stories on Friends that have remained in our collective conscious for years and years. While fanatics still adore episodes like "The One Where Everybody Finds Out", they have a tendency to be a little iffy on the courting between Joey and Rachel. Well, it seems that fans were not the only ones who were slightly put off by way of the undeniable fact that Joey started courting the love of his highest buddy's life. Joey himself, AKA Matt LeBlanc wasn't a fan of this storyline both.

Of course, Matt loved his revel in making the display that helped him develop his massive $80 million net worth. He also adores his co-star, Jennifer Aniston, he just did not suppose his character should've had a courting with hers.

Here's why...

Matt Felt The Whole Concept Of The Joey/Rachel Relationship Was 'Wildy' Inappropriate

Yes, you learn that right... Matt was once so do away with by means of the thought of the Joey/Rachel dating that he called the whole factor "wildly inappropriate".

During a fantastic oral history of Friends by Vanity Fair, the cast and team mirrored on a lot of interesting behind-the-scenes tales from the show. This comprises the advent of the pilot, casting the series, and, sure, the Joey/Rachel courting. It was once a story selection that, unlikely the rest earlier than it, in truth scared the forged and crew of the beloved a success. But the time that story rolled round, Friends was once outlandishly a hit, so any major alternate in the show's design needed to be justified via the story and the characters... And this particular change didn't quite land with everyone...

Related: The True Story Of The 'Friends' Pilot

"In Season Eight or Nine we had Joey fall for Rachel, and that scared everybody," series co-creator David Crane advised Vanity Fair. "She was pregnant. The actors freaked out. Matt [LeBlanc] kept saying, 'It’s wrong. It’s like I want to be with my sister.' We said, 'Yes, it’s absolutely wrong. That’s why we have to do it.' You can’t just keep spinning the same plates. You have to go places where you’re not expected to go."

But this rationalization didn't somewhat sit down well with the man who brought Joey Tribianni to lifestyles.

"It felt wildly inappropriate," Matt LeBlanc mentioned to Vanity Fair. "That’s how close we all were to the character. I was like, 'That’s Rachel. She was supposed to be with Ross. Wait a minute.' Everybody got super-defensive about the whole thing."

Matt continued via announcing, "We went to David and Marta [Kauffman, the other creator of Friends] as a group and said, 'We’re really concerned about this. It doesn’t feel right. We have a problem with it.' David said, 'It’s like playing with fire, and then you put it down, and you go, ‘Remember when we played with that fire?’ We’re aware of everything. The feelings that you’re feeling, we’re feeling them, too, and we like it.'"

Related: Inside Jennifer Aniston's Relationship With Howard Stern

On best of this, it appears as even though Jennifer Aniston had equivalent feelings about the complete storyline. When asked by Elle if she was hoping that Rachel and Joey would end up together, she mentioned this:

"No! No, no They tried! I think there was a moment when Joey and Rachel got together that maybe it could happen, but it didn’t. It was Ross and Rachel all the way. I really believe that if there’s an afterworld of Friends, they’re still thriving. Don’t you? I just don’t think Joey and Rachel could have made it. I think it was more physical than emotional with them. They were friends with benefits, and they left it at that."

The Creators Wanted The Relationship To Fail

Just like David and Marta advised the solid of Friends back in the day, they set out for the relationship to fail.

"Once it actually started, it was heartbreaking because it couldn’t go anywhere. It was always going to be Ross and Rachel," David Crane said.

Related: 'Friends': The Truth About The Best Thanksgiving Episode

"The Ross-and-Rachel thing was fascinating. My rabbi, when I dropped my daughter off for Hebrew school, would stop me and say, 'When are you going to get them together?'" Marta Kauffman admitted.

But the 'will they/may not they?' of the Ross and Rachel dating was once integral to the display's luck.

"From a technical standpoint, it was really challenging to keep them apart without pissing off the audience," David mentioned. "In the pilot, Ross says to Rachel, 'Can I ask you out sometime?' We go through an entire season, 24 episodes, and he never asks her out. Every time it’s about to happen—we brought in the Italian guy, we threw a cat on his back. We kept asking ourselves, 'Will they let us go one more?'"

After that, Ross and Rachel went through plenty of tricky moments that saved them from discovering happy with one another. This comprises the agonizing fling with Joey.

"The episode [in Season Three] where Ross and Rachel are on a break and Ross sleeps with the Xerox girl—and the whole episode is in the living room with the other four locked in the bedroom—it’s really sad, and we kept going to the bedroom for funny," David Crane informed Vanity Fair. "That’s probably one of my favorite episodes. For the two of us, the emotional stuff was what sustained us."

Next: How Close Are 'Friends' Stars Matthew Perry And Matt LeBlanc Today?

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