‘Friends’ stars Jennifer Aniston, David Schwimmer reunite in Super Bowl ad
Jennifer Aniston and her “Friends” co-star David Schwimmer reunited for a new Uber Eats Super Bowl LVIII ad.
A snippet of the ad dropped on Tuesday where the “Morning Show” star, 54, didn’t seem to recognize Schwimmer, 57.
In the commercial, Aniston is on a set when her assistant brings her food from Uber Eats.
The “American Crime Story” actor then comes up to her to say hi and she fails to remember him.
He tries to hug her until she pulls away.
“Have we met?” she asks. “You still don’t remember, do you?” Schwimmer replies.
“I hate this town,” he jokes as Aniston strolls away and says, “Like I could forget 10 years of my life.”
The one-minute clip also featured David and Victoria Beckham arguing over their spices, as well as country singer Jelly Roll screaming in a bathroom after realizing his face tattoos won’t rub off.
The Super Bowl will go down on Sunday on CBS, with the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers battling it out on the field.
Aniston and Schwimmer’s spot comes just months after their fellow “Friends” star Matthew Perry died at the age of 54.
The cast of the hit NBC sitcom previously came back together in 2021 for the Max special “Friends: The Reunion.”
Perry passed away last October after being found unresponsive in a hot tub at his home in Los Angeles.
Alongside cast members Matt LeBlanc, Courteney Cox and Lisa Kudrow, both Aniston and Schwimmer penned heartfelt tributes to the “17 Again” star after his death.
The “Just Go With It” star wrote on Instagram in November: “Having to say goodbye to our Matty has been an insane wave of emotions that I’ve never experienced before.”
“We were always the 6 of us. This was a chosen family that forever changed the course of who we were and what our path was going to be,” she added. “He made all of us laugh. And laugh hard.”
The “Madagascar” actor quickly followed suit, scribing his own tribute to Perry on social media.
Schwimmer thanked Perry for “ten incredible years of laughter and creativity” and said he “will never forget [his] impeccable comic timing and delivery.”
“And you had heart. Which you were generous with, and shared with us, so we could create a family out of six strangers.”
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