David Letterman built a career on sharp jokes, unpredictable interviews, and a brand of late-night swagger that defined an era. But time has a way of shifting perspectives, and a lot of what once passed as comedy now reads very differently. One interview in particular keeps resurfacing—Jennifer Aniston’s 2006 appearance on The Late Show—an exchange that felt awkward then and looks downright uncomfortable now.
In 2006, Aniston was promoting The Break-Up, the film she starred in alongside Vince Vaughn. She walked onto Letterman’s stage looking relaxed in a black blouse and tailored shorts, unaware of how quickly the conversation would veer off-course. The introduction started normally enough, but Letterman’s attention locked immediately onto her appearance—specifically her legs.
“That’s a tremendous outfit,” he said, before turning the compliment into something else entirely. “And the reason that’s a tremendous outfit is because you have tremendous legs. Fantastic legs. You can only wear that if you have well-shaped, muscular, lengthy legs.”
Aniston let out a polite laugh—the kind celebrities develop as armor—but the discomfort flickered across her face. She tried shifting the conversation to the film, mentioning the warm weather as the reason she chose shorts. Letterman ignored the pivot. Moments later, he circled right back.
“You’ve got something there,” he added, nodding toward her legs again.
It landed with a thud in the room. And watching it now, it’s almost painful—because Aniston kept doing what professional women have done for decades: smile, redirect, keep the show moving.
But Letterman wasn’t done crossing lines. When the topic of Vince Vaughn came up, he pushed into personal territory, asking whether Vaughn had been the one who encouraged her to appear naked in the film. Aniston hesitated, visibly thrown. She finally deflected with a tight smile: maybe you should have asked Vince when he was here.
Still, he didn’t shift gears. Later in the interview, he looked at the camera and said, “I hope somebody at home is TiVoing this, because I can’t stop looking at this shot,” without clarifying which “shot” he meant. Aniston’s expression said everything—tight smile, eyes narrowing for half a second, posture stiffening.
The truth is, this wasn’t even the worst moment between them. A clip from 1998 continues to go viral for all the wrong reasons. During that interview, Letterman actually grabbed Jennifer Aniston’s hair, pulled her toward him, and sucked on a strand of it. On live television. Aniston looked stunned—uncomfortable in the way every woman immediately recognizes. She yanked her hair back. Letterman handed her a tissue, expecting her to wipe off the saliva he had just placed there.
Every time the clip resurfaces, people react the same way: How was this ever considered funny?
A tweet in 2021 put the spotlight on it again: “Since we’re talking about David Letterman being awful… is anyone ever going to address this?” And attached to the post was the clip—awkward, invasive, and almost surreal to watch with modern eyes.
Despite all of this, Jennifer Aniston kept returning to the show. She handled every uncomfortable moment with the same composure that has earned her a reputation as one of Hollywood’s most poised public figures. She never scolded him. She never looked visibly angry. She did what women were expected to do in those environments: endure it, laugh it off, maintain the peace.
In 2008, two years after the infamous “legs” interview, she was back on the show promoting Marley & Me. She brought Letterman a gift—a Brooks Brothers necktie matching the one she had worn on her GQ cover shoot, where she posed wearing nothing but that tie. It was a clever, self-aware gesture, and Letterman lit up. He immediately swapped his own tie for the one she brought him.
“This is exciting,” Aniston joked as she helped him adjust it. “I’m dressing Dave!”
Then Letterman looked down and noticed it was a bit short. “You know what they say about guys with short ties,” he teased, prompting a round of gasps and laughter from the audience. It was playful, light, and miles away from the unease of their earlier interviews—but the pattern was still there. Everything always drifted back to appearance, innuendo, or something physical.
At the time, audiences didn’t think twice. Today, the tone has changed completely. People are reassessing how women in Hollywood were treated—not just by Letterman, but across late-night TV. Anne Hathaway, Lindsay Lohan, Britney Spears, and Paris Hilton all had interviews that now read like interrogations, not conversations. Jennifer Aniston’s moments with Letterman fit the same mold: a talented actress forced to navigate inappropriate remarks with grace because calling them out wasn’t considered an option.
Aniston has never publicly criticized Letterman. That’s not her style. She’s built a career—and a reputation—on professionalism, kindness, and a refusal to stir drama. But the internet has taken up the job for her, pointing out just how badly these interactions have aged.
Rewatching the old clips now, what stands out isn’t the shock value. It’s the resilience. How Jennifer Aniston carried herself. How she managed to stay composed while the host of a major network show repeatedly pushed boundaries. How she kept coming back anyway—because for actresses in the early 2000s, turning down a Letterman appearance wasn’t an option if you wanted your film to succeed.
The culture has shifted dramatically since then. Younger generations are quick to call out behavior that once went unquestioned. Fans are revisiting old interviews and asking, “Why was this normal?” and “Why did she have to deal with that?” And they’re right to ask.
Jennifer Aniston has weathered decades of scrutiny—from her relationships to her body to her career—with more grace than most people could muster. Looking back at her interactions with Letterman, it’s impossible not to admire the strength beneath her composure.
The interviews haven’t aged well. The jokes don’t land anymore. But the woman sitting in the chair across from him? She handled it all with the kind of poise that still defines her.
And maybe that’s why these clips keep resurfacing—not to embarrass her, but to highlight just how much the industry has changed, and how much she endured without ever letting it break her stride.