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Courteney Cox Returns To Real-Life 'Friends' Apartment, And She's Got Jokes

We couldn't BE any more excited.
Courteney Cox, Matthew Perry, David Schwimmer, Jennifer Aniston, Lisa Kudrow and Matt LeBlanc in a promotional shot from "Friends."
NBC via Getty Images
Courteney Cox, Matthew Perry, David Schwimmer, Jennifer Aniston, Lisa Kudrow and Matt LeBlanc in a promotional shot from "Friends."

Since an official “Friends” reunion isn’t happening anytime soon (*angrily bumps elbows together*), enjoy this bite-sized piece of nostalgia courtesy of Courteney Cox and her already-legendary Instagram account.

On Wednesday, the actress shared a video of herself returning to the apartment building featured on the long-running NBC sitcom during a night out in New York City. It’s quickly racked up more than a million views.

“Goodnight, guys. I’m going home,” Cox tells the camera as the “Friends” transition music plays in the background.

Cox captioned the video with “The One Where My Rent Went Up $12,000,” adding the hashtag #missthosedays — and sending “Friends” fans everywhere, including Busy Philipps, into a tailspin.

“Holy shit,” the “Dawson’s Creek” alum commented on the post alongside a string of heart and crying face emojis.

The beloved series, of course, wasn’t actually filmed in New York City, but in front of a live studio audience at the Warner Bros. lot in Los Angeles for the entirety of its run.

The production team, however, used exterior shots of various New York City locales to build out the world of the show.

The real-life “Friends” apartment building is located in the West Village neighborhood on the corner of Grove Street and Bedford Street and remains a popular tourist attraction that now houses the restaurant The Little Owl.

And, as Cox joked in her Instagram caption, the median rental price for a two-bedroom apartment in the neighborhood in 2018 hovers around $4,500, according to CNBC, making it pretty much impossible for the often-unemployed “Friends” character to afford.

Earlier this month, Cox shared another tribute to the series, recreating the often-quoted “pivot” scene on social media.

As for the chances of a full-blown “Friends” reunion, co-creator Marta Kauffman recently shut down the speculation once and for all, explaining that anything they’d do “could only disappoint.”

“There are several reasons,” she said. “One, the show is about a time in your life when your friends are your family. It’s not that time anymore. All we’d be doing is putting those six actors back together, but the heart of the show would be gone.”

“Two, I don’t know what good it does us,” Kauffman said of reviving the series. “The show is doing just fine, people love it. [A reunion] could only disappoint. ‘The One Where Everyone’s Disappointed.’”

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.