Jennifer Aniston, confident as ever — and rightfully so — wants everyone to know that she isn't afraid to pose nude at 50-years-old. In fact, she loves it.
Jennifer Aniston, confident as ever — and rightfully so — wants everyone to know that she isn't afraid to pose nude at 50-years-old. In fact, she loves it.
The pair discussed a number of things.
Like the possibility of Friends reboot...
Smooth move, Ellen.
Get Jen feeling nostalgic and sentimental before inquiring about a Friends reboot — that's the way to go.
She explained that the director of Friends took them to Vegas before the show aired in a private jet.
Fancy AF.
"I was terrified, right there [in the photo]," she said. "Because as you know..."
"You've always been scared of flying," Ellen chimed in.
"Do a Friends reunion, okay?" Ellen said.
Jen seemed totally on board with it — but didn't exactly confirm that there will be one.
"The girls [in the cast] would do it. The boys would do it, I'm sure."
"Even if everybody can't do it, you can do it," Ellen shot back.
"Yes, I can do it. I can do it by myself," Jen said.
Just knowing that it hasn't been ruled out entirely is good enough for me.
If that doesn't make your day I don't know what will.
Not everybody has the confidence to be naked on the cover of a magazine — so naturally, Ellen wanted to know how Jen felt about doing it.
Without so much as batting her eyes, Jen cooly replied: "I love it."
"You enjoy doing activities — so you’re not ashamed of… when you’re holding your breasts like that and getting a picture taken?," Ellen questioned.
"No one should be," she said.
Amen to that, sister!
It's 2019 — embrace those birthday suits, people!
"Only if you do it with me," Jen quickly fired back — forcing Ellen to take back her request.
"I heard that I just had a million-dollar body makeover," Jennifer replied.
She joked about how she got it done, saying, "You just sort of lift it all, and then tie it and snip it...throw it out!"
In 2018, she starred in the Netflix movie Dumplin', which is a feel-good movie about female empowerment.
In 2016, she wrote her own op-ed for HuffPost about the objectification of women in tabloids.
"It’s a weird obsession that people have and I don’t understand exactly why they need to take people who are out there to entertain you, and rip them apart and bully them? Why are we teaching young women this? It’s incredibly damaging."
"And I think celebrating them and being comfortable in them – no matter what age you are – is important," she went on.
"I’m covering my breasticles. There’s nothing offensive out there for anyone — unless they think breasts themselves are offensive," she added.