“I was walking out of the hotel today…and I said to someone, ‘How did I get popular again?’,” Cox said, in a recent interview with Today. “I mean, I really feel like there’s paparazzi and it’s because Friends will, I think, never die.”

Originally airing in September 1994, Friends missed out on the modern television landscape in which multi-day, multi-platform ratings can dwarf the Live plus Seven Days (L+SD) numbers of days past.

Still, the ensemble sitcom starring Cox alongside Jennifer Aniston, David Schwimmer, Matthew Perry, Lisa Kudrow and Matt LeBlanc has experienced a sort of streaming renaissance over the last decade.

Following a five-year stint on Netflix, which ended in 2019, Friends disappeared from streaming services, but only for a short while.

Debuting on HBO Max in May 2020, the 10-season behemoth immediately became the new streaming service’s most-watched show, according to TV Guide.

A year later, Friends: The Reunion posted equally impressive numbers, drawing viewers from 29 percent of streaming households on its May 27, 2021 release date, according to Variety.

With HBO originals, such as Euphoria and Succession, making significant headway in the last two years, Friends has been knocked down a few rungs on the HBO Max ladder.

However, the sitcom remains among the streaming services top-15 most-streaming shows, and among the 30 most-watched television shows of all time, according to IMDb.

Citing the sitcom’s massive success from 1994 to 2004, as well as huge streaming numbers from the past few years, Cox compared the connection fans of all age groups feel to Friends is similar to the connection music-lovers felt to acts of the 1960s.

“We’re not, you know, The Beatles,” Cox told Today. “But people feel like they know you.”

“If we were all to walk down the street, six of us, it would be, I think it would be really interesting to people,” she continued. “It doesn’t matter what generation is watching it. It holds up. I think the comedy is relevant. People can relate to every character. I don’t care how big the cell phone is. The computer you can’t lift. Life is that way.”

Despite speculation that Friends remains as relatable today as it was in the 1990s and early-2000s, the 57-year-old Cox revealed to Today that she doesn’t remember much of the sitcom’s filming process.

Cox also said that, when she arrived for the Friends reunion episode in 2021, she realized just how many of the show’s 236 episodes she had no recollection of.

“I should’ve watched all ten seasons because when I did the reunion and was asked questions, I was like, ‘I don’t remember being there,’” she told Today. “I don’t remember filming so many episodes.”

“I’m kinda bummed that we didn’t spend more time taking pictures, because I don’t have a lot to look back at,” Cox added.

Last week, however, Cox told Newsweek that her 17-year-old daughter Coco Arquette thinks her current picture-taking habits are anything but relatable.

“I think I’m really cool,” Cox said. “And Coco, especially with my Instagram, she thinks I’m the biggest nerd and so annoying.”

Cox, who plays adult fiction writer Pat Phelps in new comedy series Shining Vale, described the show as “genre-bending,” and assured Friends fans that her latest endeavor has something to offer for everybody.

“It’s not your typical slasher thing but it’s funny, like Scream, it’s not just a straight down the middle comedy,” Cox said. “It actually is a dark comedy, but it’s very real, but it can also be silly.”