Viewed today, those interviews feel like a time capsule of what women in Hollywood were expected to endure to promote their work. Aniston arrived to talk about films, yet the conversation kept veering back to her body, her legs, her rumored love life. She did what countless actresses did then: laughed, deflected, stayed charming, and got through it. That composure, once praised as professionalism, now reads as survival.
The resurfaced clips aren’t just about David Letterman or Jennifer Aniston; they expose a system that normalized discomfort as entertainment. Audiences are finally naming what was wrong in plain sight: the entitlement, the casual objectification, the way a woman’s boundaries became a punchline. Aniston has never publicly condemned those moments, but viewers are doing it for her, rewriting the standard for what we’re willing to laugh at—and what we’re not anymore.