'Friends' End Has Aniston Looking for Sedation Jennifer Aniston pouts when asked how she juggles making movies and doing her TV show "Friends" -- a question that gets asked every time she does press for movies like "Rock Star," "The Good Girl" and "Bruce Almighty.""After a couple of weeks, I'm not going to have that problem anymore," the actress says while shilling for her upcoming comedy "Along Came Polly," referring to May's demise of the NBC comedy after 10 seasons."It already is one of the hardest things -- we have three shows left -- we're all just really raw nerves over there, emotional, nobody knows what to do, we're all a little bit out of our bodies," says Aniston, who won an Emmy in 2002 for her role as Rachel Green. "It's 10 years of incredible people, but it's ending, and it doesn't seem like it really needs to."It's a feeling that other TV veterans can empathize with. "Friends" co-star Matthew Perry bumped into Mary Tyler Moore recently and asked how she survived the end of her show which ran from 1970 to 1977. "She hasn't gotten over it," Aniston tells Zap2it.com. "We heard the same thing from Rhea Perlman and Danny DeVito. Danny just did our show and said not a day goes by where he doesn't think about the family he had on his show; it's unlike any movie, play."DeVito was in "Taxi" in the late '70s and his wife, Perlman starred in "Cheers" in the early '80s."I think I'm never going to have an experience close to this doing anything, anywhere," Aniston says. "We were joking last night that we needed to be sedated in the next few weeks. We have a hard time just talking, reading lines, we did that forever ... ."As for herself, once "Friends" wraps production and "Along Came Polly" hits theaters on Friday, Jan. 16, Aniston is planning on taking a full course of rest and relaxation."A long vacation, that's what I'm going to need."
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