Jennifer Aniston is apparently not done voicing her thoughts on cancel culture, a subject she has spoken out about once or twice in the past already.
The former Friends star is currently gearing up for the third season of The Morning Show, which centres around a fictional US daytime show where one of its anchors has been accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women.
Ahead of the release of season three, Jen sat down with the Wall Street Journal for an expansive interview, in which the Emmy winner once again touched on the idea of “cancel culture”.
“I’m so over cancel culture,” she told the publication. “I probably just got cancelled by saying that.”
She continued: “I just don’t understand what it means.… Is there no redemption? I don’t know. I don’t put everybody in the Harvey Weinstein basket.”
Meanwhile, over on social media, people were quick to point out this isn’t Jen’s first time going off about “cancel culture”.
In September 2021, while promoting the second season of The Morning Show, Jen told The New York Times: “I hope we’re taking a moment to pause when agitated, and to take each case as it comes, and to use due process. It’s too easy when, with one click of a button, someone just disappears.”
Warming to her theme a few months later, she told IndieWire on the subject of “being cancelled”: “Obviously, that’s a new thing that’s happening. It’s the new sport.
“It feels reckless, which is why I think we really wanted to explore it in the show. What happens when someone gets cancelled? Where do they go? Is that it?”
Earlier this year, she also spoke about some of the controversies surrounding Friends which were levelled at the show both during its original airing and more recently, after many rediscovered the show thanks to streaming.
“There were things that were never intentional and others … well, we should have thought it through, but I don’t think there was a sensitivity like there is now,” she claimed.
Jen continued: “Now, it’s a little tricky because you have to be very careful, which makes it really hard for comedians, because the beauty of comedy is that we make fun of ourselves, make fun of life. You could joke about a bigot and have a laugh – that was hysterical. It was about educating people on how ridiculous people were. And now, we’re not allowed to do that.”
Elsewhere in her WSJ interview, Jennifer also spoke about her feelings towards relationships, and why she sees them as a “challenge”.
Read the full interview here.