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  • Charlotte York: Not Necessarily the OG Practitioner of Shrekking, But Definitely the Most Successful Example of the Intended Result

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    Like “delulu” or “skibidi,” there seems to be no shortage of unexpected and (brainrot-inspired) slang words cropping up in the mainstream (and hell, even being added to the dictionary) in 2025. So it is that yet another word no one expected to crop up as “a thing” this year is “Shrekking.” Because, after all, it’s not as though Shrek 5 is out until next year. In any case, it’s a term that provides yet another testament to just how dire, how desperate dating (if it can even still be called that) has become in the post-swiping era. Not solely in the “straight” world either. Though that’s most assuredly, as Sabrina Carpenter would attest, where the male pickins are slimmest. 

    For those who couldn’t guess, the meaning behind the newly popular term is meant to indicate when someone is “dating down” a.k.a. lowering their expectations in the looks and personality (and, of course, etiquette) department in the hope that, because of said person’s glaring deficiencies, they might at least deliver in terms of treating you nicely instead of like shit. Alas, as Miranda Hobbes in Sex and the City said in the pilot episode, “I’ve been out with some of those guys. The short, fat, poor ones. It makes absolutely no difference. They are just as self-centered and unappreciative as the good-looking ones.” In other words, just as dickish and horrifying on the behavior front. 

    And, talking of Sex and the City (which is probably less tiring than talking of And Just Like That… or its series finale), it isn’t Miranda who is most known for “dating down,” despite that infamous line in the pilot, but rather, Charlotte York (Kristin Davis). More specifically, it’s her beloved dynamic with Harry Goldenblatt (Evan Handler), the “Shrek” of the relationship, that serves as at least part of the reason why women remain convinced that going for a guy who is less attractive than them will result in their thus far elusive “happily ever after.” Because, yes, ultimately Harry does turn out to be “living proof” (even if only in fictional form) that Shrekking can work. 

    Granted, more concrete, real-life examples of women doing so have not proven nearly as successful, with perhaps the first “prototype” in the land of the famous being Marilyn Monroe. And although it’s Arthur Miller’s appearance in comparison to hers that are called out the most (see: “Egghead Weds Hourglass”), Joe DiMaggio wasn’t exactly a looker either. In any event, Marilyn seemed to set a precedent for future hot girls (both famous and “civilian” alike) to lower their standards in the “aesthetics department” as well, all in the hope that there was something to this idea that uglier men surely must be nicer. Often times, however, it seems the uglier the dude, the crueler he actually is. Not so with Harry though…

    But back to the real-life examples of women who “dated down” and, unlike Charlotte, did not have the same fairy-tale ending. There was Princess Diana with Prince Charles (married for fifteen years, though living separate lives for a large bulk of that time), Christie Brinkley with Billy Joel (married for nine years), Julia Roberts with Lyle Lovett (married for just under two years) and Drew Barrymore with Tom Green (married for all of nine months). Shockingly, it was the latter who filed for divorce from her, though both cited irreconcilable differences. Much the same that Charlotte would with Trey MacDougal (Kyle MacLachlan) thanks mostly to her inability to reconcile with his erectile dysfunction. Even though it’s his mother (as usual), Bunny (Frances Sternhagen), who is the one making things feel so irreconcilable most of the time. This ramps up in the season five episode, “Plus One Is the Loneliest Number,” when Bunny traipses into “Charlotte’s” apartment one morning after the latter had just finished, shall we say, vetting her next Prince Charming, Justin Anderson III (Peter Giles). But it doesn’t take long for Bunny to chase him away by announcing that Charlotte is still married to her son. Sure, technically. Even though they’ve been separated for ages by now. 

    Bunny’s “pop-up” appearance, however, is what ultimately sends Charlotte straight into the arms of her true Prince Charming, initially mistaken for mere “Shrek” in the season five episode, “Critical Condition.” This is the first time Charlotte encounters her ogre, so to speak, after realizing that 1) she needs a lawyer to get Bunny off her dick about the apartment belonging to the MacDougals and 2) the lawyer she’s currently consulting with on her would-be messy divorce from Trey is too hot to be herself around. Or, as Carrie phrases it in a voiceover, “Charlotte realized she could never be as ugly as she needed to be in front of a man she considered so handsome.” It’s at that very moment that “gross” Harry, the other partner at the firm, walks in to grab a bagel and starts eating with all the grace of, well, a beast (with Charlotte and Harry at another point being described by Carrie as “the bachelorette and the beast”). Suddenly, Charlotte sees the potential in being able to speak freely about Trey—to get as “ugly” as she wants—with Harry. Thus, “And just like that, Charlotte changed lawyers.” And, in the process, would end up finding her Prince Charming as a result of quote unquote lowering her standards. 

    Of course, Harry’s “style” (sartorially, hygienically and otherwise) still takes some getting used to for Charlotte. And if it weren’t for the “hot s-e-x,” as she spells it out to Anthony (Mario Cantone), she might not be so easily enticed to go for the Shrekking maneuver before it had this name. But, in the next episode after meeting Harry, “The Big Journey,” he manages to turn on all the charm long enough to seduce Charlotte into bed (it doesn’t hurt that the bed in question is inside a very cheesy—but “hot”—bachelor pad he’s conveniently offered to show Charlotte as a way to help her find a new apartment). Out of nowhere, and much to her dismay, she finds herself falling for Harry’s line about her “perfect pink lips” and how he can’t stop fantasizing about them.  

    In the wake of the tryst, Charlotte confesses to Anthony at a gay club, “He’s my divorce lawyer and I don’t even like him,” in addition to, “I don’t wanna date him. He’s not very attractive.” And, as Charlotte made clear from the outset of the series, her criteria for Mr. Right not only includes a certain kind of job and “pedigree,” but also a certain kind of look (read: Ken doll handsome). Probably not just because Charlotte is vain, but also because she’s genuinely thinking about the “right” biological combination that will make her kids look attractive as well. 

    With Harry, however, all that staunch “logic and reason” of Charlotte’s goes right out the window along with her panties. For, by the time the finale of season five, “I Love a Charade,” rolls around, she can’t deny that not only is it “the best sex of her life,” but that she really does like Harry. That still doesn’t make it easy for her to totally ignore his general uncouthness or hairy back, but, in the end, she can’t deny that Shrekking actually paid off in a big way for her. Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) certainly couldn’t say the same about The Turtle (Timothy Wheeler) in the season one episode of SATC titled “The Turtle and the Hare.” Because, while The Turtle was willing to go along with all of Samantha’s “fixer-upper” ideas for him, Harry—a true Shrek through and through—did well to never much bother trying to alter his “crass” ways or physical appearance for Charlotte. Except a botched attempt at trying to get his back waxed for her in “I Love a Charade” (something that evidently “took” in subsequent seasons, for his hairy back never makes a cameo again). 

    In fact, it would turn out to be Charlotte making all the personal changes in her life for Harry, going so far as to convert to Judaism so that he’ll ask her to marry him (this plot, too, hits its rough patch in the sixth season, but eventually resolves by episode six, “Hop, Skip and a Week”). And while every other relationship in SATC can never manage to stand the test of time, it’s Charlotte and Harry’s that keeps on going strong, even in And Just Like That… (“zany”—read: non sequitur—as their plots are in these “later years” of their marriage). 

    Alas, Charlotte is among the rare examples to have gotten such a great relationship out of her Shrekking endeavors (which is probably why it’s fictional). And while many (especially women) are willing to try Shrekking, most end up only getting “Shrekked.” In other words, deigning to let someone less attractive have the privilege of accessing their body only to still end up being disappointed and/or getting their heart broken by the Shrek of the hour.  

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Party of One: With the And Just Like That… Series Finale, Michael Patrick King Gives Carrie the Ending He Always Wanted To—Albeit Poorly Executed

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    As has been Michael Patrick King’s wont throughout the third and final season of And Just Like That…, there have been a lot of callbacks to previous scenarios in Sex and the City. Whether this is truly intentional or not—or just a matter of not “remembering” the similarities (like not remembering that Lisa Todd Wexley’s [Nicole Ari Parker] dad had already died in season one)—the fact remains that the overall effect makes it seem less “calculated” and more like King and co. were out of truly fresh ideas. 

    With the supposed final chapter on Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) closing (though, based on past occurrences, viewers know that Bradshaw always has a tendency to “reanimate”), her conclusion is not only somewhat forced—a means to repair the ending that she was given for the series finale of Sex and the City—but also a redux of SATC’s season five episode, “Anchors Away.” In it, the running motif is based on something Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) tells her friends, including Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) and Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall): “Everyone knows you only get two great loves in your life.” She then spells out, without thinking, that Big (Chris Noth) and Aidan (John Corbett) were Carrie’s, leaving her somewhat flummoxed about what that’s supposed to mean for her romantic future. However, another running theme, one that’s always been there in this particular show, is that the city of New York is her great love. Or, as she cheesily puts it to the others, “You’re never alone in New York, it’s the perfect place to be single. The city is your date.” 

    That doesn’t mean the city still won’t make you feel like shit for being “alone,” as it does when Carrie, in her bid to have a little date with herself, de facto New York, ends up caught in a rainstorm after realizing the Guggenheim is closed on the day she wants to visit it (so much for being a seasoned New Yorker). Even though, at present, the Guggenheim is open seven days a week. In any case, as a result of the closure and bad weather, she’s led to Café Edison (another now defunct NYC institution); never mind that, geographically speaking, it wouldn’t have been possible for her to just “stumble into it” a few blocks from the Guggenheim, seeing as how it was about a forty-five minute walk to do so (Carrie instead describes it as a mere “several wet blocks later”). But then, SATC has never prided itself on a sense of realism—so how could anyone have expected that And Just Like That… would? 

    However, one thing that both shows undeniably have in common is parading the question that King brought up on Kristin Davis’ Are You a Charlotte? podcast, the question that has been at the core of the narrative from its inception: “Am I enough? Am I enough alone?” In “Anchors Away,” it seems as though, for Carrie, the answer is still no. In fact, she’s disturbed from the outset by her experience at Café Edison, when the proprietor barks, “Singles at the counter!” Carrie tries to push back with, “Oh, I was hoping to get a table—” “Singles, counter!”

    At said seating arrangement, Carrie is further horrified by a glimpse into her future via the other woman at the “singles counter,” Joan (played by Sylvia Miles, a New York fixture until her death in 2019), who begins gabbing with her immediately. Taking a shine to Carrie because she sees something of herself in this person, Joan announces of the singles counter at the café, “We single gals gotta have a port in the storm, am I right?” Carrie doesn’t look so convinced of that being true as she observes Joan crushing some white powder on her plate. Joan explains, “Lithium. I like to sprinkle it on my ice cream. You ever try it?” Carrie says she hasn’t and, when further questioned by Joan about what “mood elevator” Carrie is on, the latter tells Joan she isn’t “on” anything. Joan smiles, saying she used to be like Carrie until she broke up with some guy named Morty in ‘82, adding, “Thought somebody better would come along. Never happened.” Obviously, Carrie feels the sting of that comment, having recently ended things with Aidan for what was then the second time. 

    What’s more, the question of the week for her column is whether or not, “when it comes to being carefree single girls, have we missed the boat?” For Carrie, the idea of losing her ability to be single without judgment a.k.a. being single while also being “of a certain age” is what scares her the most. More than being single itself. Which is why, later, at the Navy party (with Fleet Week also being a through-line of the episode), Carrie takes a look around at the goings-on—including Charlotte flashing a tit to one of the Navy officers—and realizes this kind of scene isn’t for her anymore, informing Samantha, “I was right. This ship has sailed. And, tragically, I’m still on it.” 

    In the so-called final episode of And Just Like That…, “Party of One,” Carrie is met with a similar feeling in the opening scene, which itself echoes the one when she’s at the “singles counter” with Joan. Only instead of having a live “seat mate” this time, And Just Like That… aims to show just how far Carrie has been thrust into the future—apart from the robot servers and digital menus—with a Tommy Tomato stuffed toy (sure to become a real thing after this…then again, maybe not). This is the “creature” she ends up sitting across from at the restaurant. Of which she tells the host, “I was walking by. It looked so interesting.” A comment that sounds borderline racist in that an Asian restaurant would be described as “interesting” to her at this juncture of her existence in NYC. Or the fact that, also at this juncture, she should be surprised by a menu presented to her on an iPad, where she selects the items she wants via the screen. Treating it as though she’s never seen one before at another restaurant, Carrie goes through a whole “I’m so naïve” bit before the host that seated her presents her with the abovementioned Tommy Tomato, beaming at Carrie as she explains, “You don’t have to eat alone.” 

    This time, she’s even more horrified/affronted than she was when she got saddled with Joan at the singles counter. And also this time, the geography of where Carrie ends up eating totally doesn’t match the reality of where she would be. For the location it’s shot at, Haidilao Huoguo, is in Flushing. Oh sure, Queens might have come up in the world, but definitely not to the point where Carrie Bradshaw would fuck with it on a whim. Though that isn’t to say she wouldn’t shlep to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, which is where it looks like she, Charlotte, Lisa and Seema (Sarita Choudhury) are when they attend a bridal fashion show. Before entering said show, Carrie recounts what happened to her: “Ladies, they put a boy doll across from anyone eating alone.” Not exactly great publicity for Haidilao Huoguo, but oh well.

    What’s more, gone are the days when, as in the season two episode, “They Shoot Single People, Don’t They?,” the relative “lack of technology” didn’t make such an experience feel all the more sad and bleak. And yes, at the end of said episode, Carrie has the same epiphany about an “okayness” with potentially being alone forever, delivering the voiceover, “Instead of running away from the idea of a life alone, I’d better sit down and take that fear to lunch.” She does just that, and, since phones weren’t pervasive in 1999, when the episode aired, she didn’t even have that as a crutch for sitting alone at a restaurant either, proudly declaring, “So I sat there and had a glass of wine…alone. No books, no man, no friends, no armor, no faking.”

    This constant exploration of what it would mean to be truly alone, perennially single is the North Star of the SATC universe (in addition to the four friends being each other’s true soul mates). Coming up repeatedly every time Carrie found herself, yet again, in the position of being an “old maid” (another trope that arises in the season five episode, “Luck Be An Old Lady”). In AJLT, with the realization that both Big and Aidan, her “two great loves,” as Charlotte once put it, are no longer options—seeing as how Big is dead and Aidan is overused (which is really saying something considering how overused Big once seemed to be)—Carrie, for the first time, doesn’t appear as though she’s holding out hope for someone to be her “other half” in the future. 

    As she tells Charlotte during their “walk and talk” after the bridal fashion show, “Who will I be alone? Yes, I know I’ve lived alone a lot, but I’ve never lived alone without the thought that I wouldn’t be alone for long.” She then concludes, “I have to quit thinking: maybe a man. And start accepting: maybe just me.” Charlotte, of course, refuses to give credence to the idea that being single at Carrie’s age is acceptable (just as she refused to accept it back when they were all “spring chickens”). Or that it might be a genuine possibility, which is why she decides to invite Mark Kasabian (Victor Garber), the art gallery owner that employs her, to Thanksgiving at Miranda’s, hoping Carrie will see that there are, in fact, still plenty of non-jank fish in the sea. Even at “their age.”

    Carrie, of course, isn’t having it, mainly because she’s never been even remotely attracted to nice guys (this, too, was part of why Aidan never really “did it” for her—granted, he showed himself to be a true asshole later on, which was, funnily enough, when she was most committed to the relationship). But Carrie isn’t so quick to get on board with Charlotte’s plucky attitude about “male prospects” for the future, with even Duncan Reeves (Jonathan Cake), the British bloke she finally slept with after a season of flirtatious energy, not panning out as a viable suitor. 

    All of which leads Carrie—and the viewer—back to what she had said at the end of the SATC series finale, “An American Girl in Paris (Part Deux)”: “The most exciting, challenging and significant relationship of all is the one you have with yourself.” As King reminded, “That was the sort of mission statement of Sex and the City. The interesting trick to it is Carrie then answered a phone call from a man who was coming to be with her [Mr. Big]. [But] it was always in my mind, ‘What happens if there’s no phone call?’ How strong of an individual do you have to be to make that same sentence when there’s no one on the horizon?” With Carrie adding to that sologamist line while answering Big’s phone call, “And if you find someone to love the ‘you’ you love, well, that’s just fabulous.”

    But in And Just Like That…, with Big dead, Aidan insufferable and Carrie being “too old” to have as many options on the dating scene as before, it appears King saw the opportunity to give his ultimate main character the ending he wasn’t bold enough to back then. The ending he didn’t think viewers would accept back then: “The woman realized she was not alone. She was on her own.” This being the “dazzling prose” Carrie chooses to conclude her 1800s-era manuscript with, despite the recommendation her agent gives her about how this would be a tragedy, especially for the time period. 

    And yes, viewers would have been ready to accept this conclusion—if only it hadn’t all been delivered so poorly…and so randomly, to boot. Complete with the much talked about clogged/overflowing toilet scene, which has absolutely no relevance or use to the episode. It can’t even be argued that it offers “comic relief” value. It’s just full-stop disgusting and basically mirrors the belief that this entire series was a turd that kept floating up. Until now. For that was it, the end. Finito. No more. And, by playing the SATC theme song during the credits, it just goes to show that King and co. were fundamentally trying to signal that all they wanted was to do their best to give the original Sex and the City the ending they thought it deserved. The more “courageous” ending for Carrie. For, as King also told Davis on her podcast, SATC was always about “the anarchy of saying single people are enough, being single is enough.”

    However, the way Carrie makes it look in these final scenes of AJLT, it doesn’t come across like that at all. Not even with the contrived musical selection of Barry White’s “You’re The First, The Last, My Everything” (which, by the way, is still much too easily associated with Ally McBeal—the eponymous character of said series, incidentally, ending up “alone” as well, perhaps proving it was more avant-garde in its day than SATC). 

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Every Subject That Nobody Wants This “Illuminates” Already Happened on Sex and the City

    Every Subject That Nobody Wants This “Illuminates” Already Happened on Sex and the City

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    As though to prove a point about Sex and the City’s long-lasting impact, Megan Thee Stallion recently appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon to tell him, despite other things she had to promote, that she had only just started watching the show and couldn’t believe how long she had slept on it. It would seem that the creator of Nobody Wants This, Erin Foster, might have been banking on people (like Megan Thee Stallion) to continue sleeping on said show—otherwise why borrow so many tropes from it? Not least of which, of course, is that its female lead, Joanne (Kristen Bell), would have to convert to Judaism in order to be with Noah, a rabbi who she encounters at a dinner party hosted by her friend and “PR gal,” Ashely (Sherry Cola). Which is where the SATC comparisons already start to flicker in. Because while, sure, Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) didn’t have to convert to Judaism for Harry Goldenblatt (Evan Handler), it was an integral part of the storyline in terms of “making their relationship work” (in addition to Charlotte having to overcome how much less attractive Harry was than her).

    But, obviously, Joanne’s character is much more in line with Carrie Bradshaw’s (Sarah Jessica Parker) “breed.” For, like Carrie, Joanne is something of a “sexual anthropologist,” using her dates as fodder for her podcast, called, naturally, Nobody Wants This (on a related note: to “update” Carrie’s column shtick for the present, she does get a podcast on the SATC “sequel series,” …And Just Like That). The difference between her and Carrie (apart from sartorial bombast) is that Joanne “co-researches” the dating scene with her sister and best friend, Morgan (Justine Lupe). It is Morgan who serves as the three-in-one sounding board—embodying the Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte characters all at the same time—for all of Joanne’s dating woes/horror stories. And this is something we’re given insight into from the moment the show starts and Morgan comes to collect Joanne from a bad date that the latter ditches out on because the guy keeps talking way too much about his grandma and the tragedy of losing her when he was twelve.

    The shit-talking of the first scene segues into the podcasting (and continued shit-talking) of the second scene, wherein Morgan not only expositorily informs Joanne that they’ve recorded one hundred and nineteen episodes, but that, throughout each one, she has revealed the same thing over and over again: “When you find a nice, normal guy…you find fault with him.” Case in point: “Grandma Guy.” Morgan further proffers that maybe Joanne doesn’t even want to find a real relationship, a theory that of course has truth to it since, without “bad date inspiration,” she’ll end up like Carrie in the season five episode, “Unoriginal Sin,” lamenting, “I’m not getting laid. Therefore…I’m getting laid off” (though, ultimately, she wasn’t).

    This “deliberately self-sabotaging” epiphany comes for both women. That’s right, even blind-to-everything Carrie is forced to have this epiphany about herself after a bad breakup (the first one, anyway) with Mr. Big (Chris Noth). The “breakthrough” occurs when her friends make her see a therapist named Dr. G (Anne Lange), who has another patient named Seth (Jon Bon Jovi) that Carrie keeps flirting with in the waiting room. It’s only after the two finally have sex that they each understand why there were attracted to one another. For Seth, it’s because he immediately loses interest in a woman after sleeping with her. For Carrie, the according revelation is, “I pick the wrong men.”

    As for Joanne, she’s more open about the joy of picking the wrong men for the sake of “the story” a.k.a. her podcast, which has started to gain enough traction to become considered as worthy of being a corporate acquisition. This almost “willful” choosing of the wrong men is done in a similar vein as Carrie, who relies on not just her friends’ relationship horrors, but her own in order to come up with a weekly column called, what else, “Sex and the City.” It is in this headspace that Joanne gleefully accepts Ashley’s invite to a dinner party where all the male guests “sound terrible.” Including a rabbi named Noah Roklov (Adam Brody, perennially resurrected, if one will pardon the Christian allusion). Except that Noah turns out to be the man she’s instantly attracted to upon entering the space. Only she doesn’t know he’s the rabbi because he doesn’t come out and admit it, instead going along with her mistaken assumption that it’s another guy at the party with a beard.

    When she does get the big unveiling of his identity, the reaction is that there is no romantic future whatsoever. But, of course, that’s what makes the allure all the more prominent. Which is how she ends up walking into his temple soon after (such Carrie behavior) to exchange a “witty repartee” also in the style of “flirtatious” Carrie when Noah jokingly asks, “Are you a member of this temple?” She replies, “You guys do memberships? Is there a gym?” Ho-ho-ho-har-har-har.

    In “Either Aura,” the third episode, Joanne spends the majority of it dissecting a text and the lack of response it gets the way Carrie would spend entire brunches and lunches dissecting something Big or [insert name of some other asshole here] did and what it “means.” Then there is the kind of spiraling she does in the season three episode, “Drama Queens,” wherein it takes Aidan (John Corbett) ignoring her for her to suddenly comprehend that losing his interest would be the worst thing ever. That’s the same kind of spiral Joanne is on throughout “Either Aura,” waiting for Noah to respond to a text that her sister tells her was “weird” (the text being: “I think I’m pregnant” in regard to how good their first kiss was).

    At first, Noah’s availability is almost a detriment to his “desirability.” Because, as Carrie says in “Drama Queens,” “I’m used to the hunt and this is just…effortless. It’s freakin’ me out.” Charlotte eventually has to interject, “I don’t believe this! Now we’re dumping guys for being too available!” The prospect of Noah not being available (you know, for other reasons besides being a rabbi) is equally as terrifying to Joanne, prompting her to wonder (or being unable to “help but wonder”) if she’s a “good” person. As in, morally decent enough for a rabbi.

    All of this making “her stomach flip all on her own” (another Carrie quote from “Drama Queens”) plays into Carrie’s pondering for her column: “When things come too easy, we’re suspect. Do they have to get complicated before we believe they’re for real? We’re raised to believe that course of true love never runs smoothly. There always have to be obstacles in Act Two before you can live happily ever after in Act Three. But what happens when the obstacles aren’t there? Does that mean there’s something missing? Do we need drama to make a relationship work?”

    If that’s genuinely the caveat, then Joanne and Noah are destined to be together (and predictably do end up that way for the season finale). Their density of “obstacles” are further compounded by Noah essentially acting ashamed to be with her in the fifth episode, “My Friend Joanne.” Needless to say, this smacks of the “Secret Sex” episode of SATC in season one. The allusion to it, whether “intentional” or not, is already made in the first episode of Nobody Wants This, when Morgan mentions a guy named Greg who wouldn’t be seen with Joanne in public. But this thread picks up again when Noah takes her to a Jewish youth camp in Ojai and suddenly acts the opposite of a loving boyfriend when he realizes his boss is going to be there and, thus, introduces Joanne to a colleague as a “friend.” It takes some of the teen girls at the camp to spell it out for her: he introduced her as his friend. Hence, they’re definitely not together as solidly as she thinks.

    To be sure, as Noah tells his brother, Sasha (Timothy Simons), “I’m not ready to face the whole ‘I’m dating a shiksa’ thing” in public. In fact, he’s convinced he won’t have to because Rabbi Cohen (Stephen Tobolowsky) won’t be there…or so he thought. But when the big boss shows up, Noah fully fathoms just how much is at stake for him, career-wise, in dating someone as non-Jewish (read: totally white bread) as Joanne. Who also happens to be coming across as Carrie-level clingy in this episode, whining to Noah when he tells her they have to cancel their Carmel trip because of his unexpected work commitment, “What am I supposed to do? Just stay at home alone?” Yes, bitch, that’s exactly what you’re supposed to do. In addition, apparently, to being unavoidably disgusted when a man is too “nice.”

    Or, in Noah’s instance, too “sniveling.” Specifically, to Joanne’s parents, who he meets in the sixth episode, titled “The Ick.” And, what do you know, it’s an episode that speaks exactly to what Sex and the City already did in season six with “The Ick Factor.” Centered on Carrie’s “steady” of the moment, Aleksandr Petrovsky (Mikhail Baryshnikov), being way too over the top—therefore, “icky”—with his romantic gestures, Carrie struggles vis-à-vis how to deal with someone so cringingly saccharine.

    Much the same as Carrie, Joanne can’t “digest” a man who brings flowers “for respect” and says obsequious things that end up involving him doing a bad Italian accent (specifically, so he can utter the word “Prego”—as in the nasty sauce brand—when Morgan says she found an old Prego jar to put the flowers in). Morgan, attuned to her sister in ways that no one else is, clocks the look on Joanne’s face when taking in all of the icky things going on with Noah in this scenario. When Morgan calls her out about having the ick, Joanne tries to deny it—to which Morgan warns, “You can’t fight the ick, it’s like a Chinese finger trap: the harder you pull, the stronger it gets.”

    But naturally, as it happened for Carrie and Aleksandr, Joanne is able to surmount her icky feelings thanks to being candid with the object of her ick about it so that said object can work to remedy being so “icky.” However, if Aleksandr’s eventual fate is something to go by, Noah isn’t totally out of the woods in terms of redeeming himself as Joanne’s “forever person” (besides, that wouldn’t make for “compelling television,” n’est-ce pas? Gotta leave viewers on their toes).

    The grand denouement of Nobody Wants This is the bat mitzvah of Noah’s niece, Miriam (Shiloh Bearman), who grudgingly goes along with the Noah’s mom/her grandma Bina’s (Tovah Feldshuh), desired theme: “Miriam Takes a Bite Out of the Big Apple.” A more than slightly traitorous choice in L.A., but perhaps Bina is aware that the Jewish population in NY is larger, with L.A. coming in second in the U.S. after it for having largest population of Jewish people.

    To the point of New York versus L.A., it must also be said that, as Sex and the City’s “fifth character” is New York, Los Angeles plays a key supporting character in Nobody Wants This (even if it additionally betrays L.A. by having what can be called a “Philip Roth book cover font” for its title card).

    What’s more, much of Sex and the City was rooted in a “Jewish undertone” (apart from just Carrie bandying “keywords” like “mazel tov” so annoyingly) precisely because it was set in New York (see also: Charlotte’s wedding episode in season six, “The Catch”). Indeed, that was pretty much the extent of the “ethnic diversity” that the show “allowed” for. With Nobody Wants This, there’s about that same amount of “diversity” despite the narrative taking place in a city as racially varied as L.A. And yet, the show appears to count on the glamoring distractions of familiar storylines from Sex and the City—whether it relates to overbearing mothers, awkward situations with vibrators, emotionally distant men or fundamental incompatibility. And maybe part of that reliance stems from Foster underestimating just how many viewers can still cite Sex and the City episodes like scripture.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • SATC’s Most Titillating Character Gets the Limpest Cameo of All Time

    SATC’s Most Titillating Character Gets the Limpest Cameo of All Time

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    While many had foolishly expressed excitement over the prospect of seeing Kim Cattrall reprise her role as Samantha Jones (even if only for seventy-five seconds) on the second season of And Just Like That…, rightfully jaded types knew that no good could come of it. Only irritation (no STD pun intended). And sure, there have been some real shitty/disappointing cameos in television history (though none of them were ever on I Love Lucy), but this one really takes the cake (second only to another certain cameo on SATC by The Orange One). Indeed, the flimsy cameo by Cattrall as Samantha was matched only by Samantha’s even flimsier excuse to Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) for being unable to attend the final dinner in her “single girl” apartment. An apartment so “fabulous!” that Samantha was willing to ignore the tenuous relationship she’s had of late with Carrie, Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) and Charlotte (Kristin Davis). This being established from the outset of And Just Like That… as a reason to explain away the fact that Cattrall didn’t want to sign on for this travesty. Until they must have made her an offer she couldn’t refuse. Complete with the promise that she wouldn’t even have to film in the same room as SJP. 

    Instead, the phone call method would suffice. And Samantha is no stranger to phone call scenes (one of which Selena Gomez recently lip synced to promote “Single Soon”). Nor is Carrie, for that matter, who would often get minutes of script written for her coast-to-coast calls to Big (Chris Noth) during his California stint. So it is that Carrie greets her with the cheeseball line, “Hello London.” Never mind that this was the woman who could barely be bothered to text Carrie back after she said things like, “I miss you” to Samantha without any shame. Samantha’s lack of response to that text didn’t stop Carrie from continuing to speak to her as though she were a silent god, informing her that she kissed someone for the first time in the wake of Big’s death (and yes, Samantha did have the decency [?] to send showboating flowers to Big’s funeral). This was, apparently, enough to coax Samantha out of her silence, assuring Carrie that they would talk “soon.” When no text or call arrived after that, Carrie again took the initiative while standing on the Pont des Arts bridge in Paris (after scattering Big’s ashes, even though that’s not exactly “legal”—but who’s going to stop a rich white lady from doing what she wants?) to text her ex-bestie. The message?: “I’m in Paris, want to meet for a cocktail?” (No, she does not). For whatever reason, Samantha gets back right away with the reply, “How’s tomorrow night?” Carrie confirms, “FABULOUS.” That goddamn word that reiterates, every time, what era of gay man wrote these characters.

    This exchange, needless to say, is a far cry from Miranda telling Carrie in the first episode of And Just Like That…, “Hello It’s Me,” “You know, it is kind of like she’s dead. Samantha. We never even talk about her.” Carrie shrugs, “Well, what is there to say?” before giving the phony/hyper-expository backstory about how Samantha “dropped her as a friend” when Carrie “dropped her a publicist,” then going on to victimize herself by noting, “I thought I was more to her than an ATM.” Miranda confirms that she and Charlotte are still being iced out as well, remarking, “We texted and called, but we never heard back.” Never mind that it’s not in Samantha’s nature to be passive aggressive over confrontational. If she had a problem with Carrie, not only would she be direct about it (as she was when Carrie judged her for blowing the Worldwide Express guy), but she wouldn’t punish Miranda and Charlotte by extending her anger to them as well. 

    Alas, what can the writers do when Cattrall has been so unaccommodating…until now. “At least” bothering to make a cameo that further reiterates she will never actually be appearing on the show. Delivering her lines to Razzie Award-level perfection when she declares, “My flight’s three hours delayed Carrie, I won’t be able to make it there in time.” Carrie acts like she has no idea what Samantha might be referring to when she asks, “In…in time for what?” Samantha exclaims, “The last supper. Miranda and Charlotte told me all about it. I was gonna surprise you.” Again, we’re supposed to believe Samantha suddenly shifted from “dark mode” to texting everyone freely. But, of course, because her presence, telephonic or otherwise, is still so rare, Carrie acts like a teen girl whose crush has finally given her the time of day when she replies, “Oh my gosh. Well you did, I’m very surprised.”

    Samantha keeps carrying on the “breezy” conversation by adding, “Well the fog finally lifted. But the crew? Maxed out. Oh I am fucking furious.” Carrie then asks us to suspend our disbelief further by assuming that Samantha would come for anything longer than a dinner by saying, “No, no, no. Don’t worry. We’ll just get together tomorrow.” Samantha reminds her ex-bestie who the fuck she is by explaining, “Honey, I just left Heathrow. I was flying back on the first flight in the morning.” With Carrie incredulous that she would fly “all the way to New York” (a mere five hours from London) just to come to her party, Samantha adds, “Well it is your apartment and I have to pay my respects.” This mimics her attachment to it in the Sex and the City movie from 2008, during which Samantha flies out from L.A. (instead of just pretending she was going to fly out from London) to help Carrie pay the so-called necessary respects to her “single girl” apartment that she’s not getting rid of, per se, so much as moving out of to be in a more spacious apartment that Big bought for them. Although no one is expecting Samantha to show up (just as no one is in “The Last Supper Part Two: Entrée”), her arrival is met with screaming delight as Samantha explains, “A lot of shit went down in this place. Attention must be paid.”

    And it is, as the four women (plus Charlotte’s daughter, Lily, who would have been roughly four years old at the time), proceed to put on a fashion show of Carrie’s clothes for one another. Because, in case even the person with the most casual knowledge of Sex and the City wasn’t aware, clothes are “a thing” with this show. Rivaled only by shoes and purses. Yes, it’s often superfluous in the city, but no one ever said New York wasn’t the world’s main hub for capitalism. Carrie’s friendships are proof of that, with the likelihood of these women remaining friends if one of them had strayed from the “correct” socioeconomic path being nil. Even “starving artist” Carrie manages to out-rich everyone in the group by marrying Big (then later inheriting his fortune). This being how she’s able to keep her “single girl” apartment as a “spare” even when she moves out of it in the Sex and the City movie. Which, of course, turns out to be handy when Big leaves her with her metaphorical dick in the wind by clamming up and not being able to come to the wedding venue (a.k.a. 42nd Street NYPL) to marry her. Making continuous unanswered calls to her saying that he can’t go in without her, like the scared little puto he is. 

    And so, even though “it took four friends three days to put twenty years into thirty-eight boxes,” Carrie hires an assistant to help her unbox all that shit and put it back in the “single girl” apartment she couldn’t give up until Aidan (John Corbett) came back along in the And Just Like That… era. As the years went on before this point, it appeared as though nothing would have ever convinced Carrie to give up that place, so intertwined as it is with her identity. Not just for Carrie, but for Samantha, too. Which is why we’re expected to believe she would break down all her barriers to materialize for “The Last Supper.”

    Instead, she makes Carrie hold the phone up on speaker so she say, “Thank you for everything. You fucking fabulous, fabulous flat.” Carrie interrupts with, “Uh, Samantha, do you have a British accent?”And yes, to add to the extremely forced aura of this cameo, the writers conjured the SATC “Easter egg” of Annabelle Bronstein, the woman whose Soho House card Samantha used in season six to gain entry into the exclusive pool. And the same episode where the non sequitur cameo of Geri Halliwell occurred. Now matched only by the non sequitur cameos from Sam Smith and Samantha in this season of And Just Like That… But wait, as Cattrall asks, “Who’s Samantha? This is Annabelle Bronstein. I’m from Injuh.”

    And just like that, in roughly one minute and fifteen seconds, Cattrall effectively ruined her character by bothering to do this cameo at all, choosing not to stick to her guns about refusing to be involved in this latest “chapter.” As Samantha would have said, “These bitches need to be put in their places.” By not kowtowing to their desire to “use” her again. Especially for such banal and mundane purposes.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Samantha Jones Has a One-Night Stand With ‘And Just Like That…’

    Samantha Jones Has a One-Night Stand With ‘And Just Like That…’

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    It’s been 85 sleeps since Kim Cattrall’s return as Samantha Jones on the second season of And Just Like That was announced—and the tortuous wait to see the scene in question finally ended on Thursday with a brief, but blissful long-distance call from across the pond. The blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment marked Cattrall’s first onscreen appearance in the Sex and the City sequel series, which was officially renewed for a third season earlier this week.

    Perhaps sensing this long-awaited reunion, the show wastes no time in revealing Samantha’s cameo. “Hello, London,” Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie Bradshaw says in the Season 2 finale’s opening moments. “What’s shakin’, lady?” She’s speaking to none other than Ms. Jones, calling from the back of a car to deliver the solemn news that she won’t be able to attend Carrie’s “Last Supper” dinner party. Blame a flight delay—or, in reality, the longstanding rumored feud between Cattrall and SJP. 

    But despite the brevity, within her few minutes of screen time, Samantha confirms a few things: she’s still in contact with Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) and Charlotte (Kristin Davis); she feels close enough with Carrie to show up unannounced at her dinner party; and she can joke about her former life as a Manhattanite. After paying her respects to Carrie’s “fabulous, fabulous flat,” which she will now officially never set foot in again, Samantha sports a faux British accent as “Annabelle Bronstein.” Fans of the show will remember that Samantha uses Annabelle’s misplaced member pass in season 6, episode 10 of Sex and the City to get into the Soho House pool. 

    A beat-by-beat transcript of their interaction can be found below:

    Carrie: Hello, London. What’s shakin’, lady?

    Samantha: My flight’s three hours delayed, Carrie. I won’t be able to make it there in time.

    Carrie: In time for what?

    Samantha: The last supper. Miranda and Charlotte told me all about it. I was gonna surprise you.

    Carrie: Oh, my gosh. Well, you did. I’m very surprised.

    Samantha: Well, the fog finally lifted, but the crew? Maxed out. Oh, I am fucking furious!

    Carrie: Well, no, no, no, don’t worry. We’ll just get together tomorrow.

    Samantha: Honey, I just left Heathrow. I was flying back on the first flight in the morning.

    Carrie: Wait a minute…you were flying all the way to New York for an overnight?

    Samantha: Well, it is your apartment and I have to pay my respects. So, uh, put me on speaker. Go ahead, put me on speaker, and hold up that phone.

    Carrie: All right, you’re on speaker.

    Samantha: Thank you for everything, you fucking fabulous, fabulous flat.

    Carrie: Uh, Samantha, do you have a British accent?

    Samantha: Who’s Samantha? This is Annabelle Bronstein. I’m from ‘Injah.’ Ta and cheerio. And have a great night.

    Cattrall, who has made it perfectly clear that she does not like to be in a situation for even an hour where she’s not enjoying herself, filmed her single scene in New York City on March 22 sans contact with Parker or showrunner Michael Patrick King, Variety reported in late May.

    Details about the appearance were sparse at the time, but in June Cattrall listed a few of her demands for reprising Samantha on The View. “It’s very interesting to get a call from the head of HBO saying, ‘What can we do?’” Cattrall said. “I went, Hmmmm…” In that phone call with Max CEO Casey Bloys, Cattrall said that one of her main stipulations was getting famed Sex and the City costume designer Patricia Field back in the fold for And Just Like That. “One of those things was to get Pat Field back,” she said. “I just thought, ‘If I’m gonna come back, I’ve gotta come back with that Samantha style. I’ve got to push it. And we did!”

    King, who wrote and directed Cattrall’s credited “special appearance,” told Forbes before the season began premiering: “The interesting thing about Samantha and And Just Like That is I feel she’s always been in the show. She’s living in London and she’s texting with Carrie, primarily because Kim Cattrall was like, ‘I’ve retired Samantha for awhile, or forever.’ So, that was the reality. Then this year, all of a sudden, something shifted emotionally in the universe. The fans have created some sort of multiverse swirl of enthusiasm of the [Sex and the City] 25th anniversary and wanting to see them all again.”

    King continued, “All of a sudden, it manifested that Kim was like, ‘I’ll play Samantha for you for this little, sweet treat.’ So, I don’t know whether it’s about the nostalgia for the 25th, which is great. For me, it’s a great treat for the fans. What you’ll see, I’m not going to tell you because I’m mad you even know that you’re going to see it because my goal was to keep it a secret as much as we did Big’s death, but didn’t happen. It kind of magically just appeared. It was fun to write Samantha again. It’s great to see her in the show.”

    Just as Carrie orders another round of Cosmopolitans at season’s end, it’s hard to resist hoping that another serving of Samantha is still on the menu.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • No Sexual Pun Intended, But And Just Like That… Is Completely Overstuffed (With Characters)

    No Sexual Pun Intended, But And Just Like That… Is Completely Overstuffed (With Characters)

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    Perhaps because it takes a literal army to distract from the reality that Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) is no longer part of the narrative, And Just Like That… has packed the series full of additional characters. Characters who, to put it sexually, simply cannot be serviced. Not correctly, anyway. From the occasionally-referred-to Stanford (RIP Willie Garson) to the barely regarded Nya (Karen Pittman), the grab bag assembled here makes for plots that come across as half-cooked and decidedly “tacked on” at the last minute. 

    That has never been more overt than in the first part of season two’s deux-part finale, “The Last Supper Part One: Appetizer,” which even has to remember that Steve (David Eigenberg) is still technically a part of the narrative as well. Ergo, opening the episode with Carrie and Aidan visiting him at his new hot dog and clam outpost in Coney Island, where Carrie has, rather unsurprisingly, never ventured out to before.

    Doing its “best” to give everyone a dramatic, “sea change afoot” sort of cliffhanger, the central focus, of course, is still Carrie and Aidan. More to the point, the inevitability of how their relationship will flop this time around. Because obviously it will. That’s the nature of any series. The endless ups and downs until a final up can be offered to audiences when the show is actually over. Though the SATC women (even Cattrall, in her own cameo way) have made it apparent they never want it to be with this “new chapter.” And with the constant addition of characters, God or whoever knows there’s endless room for multiple spinoffs. Even though no one is really that interested in these “externals.” Not just because the writers do little to imbue them with much dimensionality, but because the audience knows full well they’re only there to overcompensate for 1) Samantha rightfully throwing up a peace sign to her friendship with a narcissist like Carrie and 2) provide “reparations” for the original series displaying no diversity despite New York laying claim to being among the most diverse cities in the world (though it comes across as fairly homogenous on the socioeconomic status front, largely due to what television is willing to portray and how much it really does cost to live in “the greatest” city in the world—ha!). 

    That said, we’re forced to pretend we really care about/are invested in the plotlines of Lisa Todd Wexley (Nicole Ari Parker) or Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez) or Seema Patel (Sarita Choudhury) or Nya Wallace. Their mini melodramas occasionally peppered in between the scenes of the usual cringe conversations and plotlines of the original trio. This includes Miranda’s (Cynthia Nixon) catastrophic dabblings with queerdom, Carrie’s self-imposed challenges with Aidan and Charlotte’s (Kristin Davis) realization that her life is essentially being a slave to her husband and children. Which brings us to the fact that, of late, Charlotte, of all people, has become the most interesting and divergent from her original character. Branded as everything from a “cum slut” (after getting depressed that Harry [Evan Handler] suddenly has retrograde ejaculation issues) to a deadbeat mother in her bid to return to being a full-time career woman, Charlotte has turned out to have the most engaging and entertaining journey compared to her “peers.” Not to mention one that has forced her character to at least somewhat challenge herself. A self, she would like to remind her family, that existed (even if presently dormant) long before they ever entered the picture and expected her to be “a certain way.” And then forever stay that way despite also mocking her for having no life outside of them. When she actually decides to go and get one, it’s suddenly too much. They can’t make dinner! They can’t order takeout decorously! They can’t wipe their own asses! They can’t live without her! Never mind the fact that they hated how over-involved she was before. Now it’s all they crave. 

    But because And Just Like That…’s new focus seems to be on the perennial 80s career girl question of whether or not a woman can “have it all” (and according to Samantha in the “All or Nothing” episode of Sex and the City, they can), Charlotte is getting the stereotypical family that “can’t deal” treatment. So, too, is Lisa, slapped with a pregnancy plot “twist” that makes zero sense amid her contempt for her positively filled-with-retro-viewpoints husband, Herbert (Chris Jackson). A man we keep wondering about in terms of how Lisa—a supposedly self-empowered artistic woman—would possibly be able to continue tolerating him. He’s honestly the worst. Apart from Nya’s shitty erstwhile husband, Andre (LeRoy McClain), who ends up impregnating another woman real quick after they agree to separate. In fact, that’s really about all we know of Nya’s “personality,” other than her inherent pastry chef skills after making a chocolate soufflé for herself on Valentine’s Day. And, oh yeah, she’s a professor who we haven’t seen do much teaching since Miranda took her class in season one. Which, again, makes it all very clear that these characters are straight-up filler. Yet they wouldn’t have to be if the series creators/writers didn’t feel obliged to pack the show to the gills with a slew of characters they can’t actually “tend to” (once more, no sexual innuendo intended). 

    Another one being Che, who, since their breakup with Miranda (a relationship that never computed in the first place), has intermittently been incorporated via scenes of them working at the veterinary office they’ve returned to after things in Hollywood didn’t pan out. The writers feel adding a few kernels of their flirtation with Toby (Alex Lugo), who comes into the office with a box of abandoned kittens, will not only suffice, but also give them a reason to want to go back to stand-up again. Even though, as we find out in the episode that follows, this plotline was really in service of Miranda. More to the point, shaming and humiliating Miranda. 

    Then, not to leave the “gay man box” unchecked, there’s still Anthony (Mario Cantone) and, presently, his younger Italian boo, Giuseppe (Sebastiano Pigazzi). For, without them, there wouldn’t be the “why should a man be limited to being a top or bottom when he can be both?” conversation. In truth, just when things feel like they might actually boil over to a moment of real tension, Michael Patrick King chooses to cut away to the next scene, remembering he has to get back to Seema, saddled with the “plot” of embarrassingly telling her “slapdash” man of the moment, Ravi (Armin Amiri), “I love you” in the midst of him chastely fucking her. The scene is given all of twenty seconds before King then moves to yet another minor character we had forgotten about because she pops up so randomly: Lisette Alee (Katerina Tannenbaum). Her presence being “necessary” in order for Carrie to “pass the baton” that is her “single girl apartment” to another single (white) girl. The only genre of human she would feel comfortable relinquishing her abode to. 

    Meanwhile, Miranda and Charlotte’s own lives are starting to become as filled with “subplot characters” as Carrie’s. Shit, even Che has to have a new subset of characters in their life because of their job (this being Judy [Patricia Black], her supervisor at the vet). And so, once again, jobs prove to be everyone’s bane (even in fictional worlds) thanks to creating way too many additional excess sub-sub-characters for the already excess amount of sub-characters. 

    On this note, while Charlotte has gone back to art dealing at the Kasabian Gallery (not a real place, in case you wanted to confirm), Miranda has been “gifted” with the opportunity to go from an intern to replacing her boss, Raina (Evelyn Howe), now on maternity leave. Making Raina, plus Miranda’s jealous coworkers (/enduring interns), “subplot characters” too. When Miranda goes to the UN for some work-related obligation, she also meets another lawyer type and has an exchange that seems completely superfluous unless they’re planning to make this woman Miranda’s next steady vag. This brings us to Charlotte and her new trio of gallery workers wanting to celebrate her big sale of an Alex Israel painting to Sam Smith (himself a new “character” briefly added into the mix, as though in the spirit of SATC cameos of yore, like Lucy Liu…or Geri Halliwell). 

    Lela (Bonnie Milligan), the coworker who made Charlotte feel better about her “fat” stomach (just another way And Just Like That… gets “inclusivity” wrong), manages to coax her into going out for after-work drinks (when Charlotte initially declines) by saying, “Big yikes, girl. You are the main character.” One can only say to themselves in response, “I wish.” Because someone being a main character on this show would require far fewer people to distract from such a concept. 

    Fittingly enough, in the poster for season two, the positioning of each character is so telling of where things stand with the series in terms of all “non-originals” being purely background. Which is exactly how they’re presented in the promo poster. What’s more, if characters keep cropping up at this rate, it’s safe to say the series writers really will need to take financial advantage of the unavoidable spinoff era of And Just Like That… Itself sort of a spinoff more than “a new chapter.” And, like most spinoffs, this one keeps jumping the shark. 

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Bradley Cooper Told This Lie To Land A Role On ‘Sex And The City’

    Bradley Cooper Told This Lie To Land A Role On ‘Sex And The City’

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    Bradley Cooper may be one of Hollywood’s most bankable leading men today, but in the early days of his career, he wasn’t above stretching the truth a bit if it helped him land a job.

    Appearing on Bravo’s “Watch What Happens Live” last week, fellow actor Cynthia Nixon recalled Cooper’s appearance on a Season 2 episode of “Sex and the City” that aired in 1999. In what was reportedly his first on-screen role, Cooper played Jake, a fleeting love interest for Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie Bradshaw.

    As Nixon noted, the scene required Cooper to drive a vintage sports car with a manual transmission ― something the future “Silver Linings Playbook” actor hadn’t quite mastered yet.

    “He told them he knew how to drive a stick because it was his first job and he was desperate to get it,” Nixon said. “And then the time came for him to pull out, and he was like, ‘I don’t know how to drive a stick.’”

    Check out Cynthia Nixon on “Watch What Happens Live” below.

    Speaking to Backstage in 2012, Cooper himself fessed up to the fib, saying that although he’d brushed up on his skills at a New York driving school shortly before filming the episode, he still had a tough time on the road.

    “I thought it went well when I learned on a Volkswagen, but then I was driving a 1962 Porsche convertible where the clutch was as if I was driving a bus,” he said. “And I had Sarah Jessica Parker in the passenger seat.”

    With a bit of extra practice and some assistance from a stand-in, Cooper was able to complete the scene ― and the experience helped cement his passion for acting.

    “I felt the same way I did when I first went onstage and performed,” he said. “I went, ‘I feel at home here.’ It was 2:30 in the morning, they blocked off 14th Street in Manhattan, and there were, like, a hundred people screaming for Sarah Jessica. I was like, ‘This is the imaginary world that I love watching in theaters.’ I loved it.”

    Cooper, of course, was just one of many “Sex and the City” guest stars who went on to achieve major success in television and on the big screen.

    Long before he was Roger Sterling on “Mad Men,” John Slattery had a multi-episode arc in the show’s third season as a Manhattan politician with a penchant for golden showers. Similarly, actors Murray Bartlett and Jennifer Coolidge ― both of whom have since won Emmys for HBO’s “The White Lotus” ― popped up in memorable roles in Seasons 4 and 6, respectively.

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  • Andy Cohen Dishes With ‘And Just Like That”s Cynthia Nixon, Sarah Jessica Parker

    Andy Cohen Dishes With ‘And Just Like That”s Cynthia Nixon, Sarah Jessica Parker

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    And Just Like That…, MAX’s sequel to the era-defining dramedy Sex & The City, has only released the three episodes of its second season, but you’d never know it from the media blitz we’ve been getting from its cast. The week closed with Andy Cohen getting not one but two separate scoops on the Sex-iverse: Cynthia Nixon revealed a gross-out scene from yesteryear we never saw; and Sarah Jessica Parker shared concerns about the season’s most-buzzed-about cameo.

    Nixon joined Cohen on his Bravo talk show Watch What Happens Live earlier this week to chat about her role as Miranda, which she originated with Sex & The City’s premiere more than 25 years ago. When Cohen asked about storylines cut in the show’s initial run, Nixon recalled “What Goes Around Comes Around,” back in Season 3. Miranda is so nervous about going out with the intimidatingly hot Detective Stevens (Timothy Gibbs) that she drinks too much on their date…but what we didn’t see was the payoff to that scene, in which Miranda throws up on him. Perhaps one of the And Just Like That… writers remembered it, and that’s how we got the Season 1 episode in which Carrie gets too drunk with another bereaved singleton, Jon Tenney’s Peter, and they both puke in the street.

    The next day, Parker visited Cohen on his SiriusXM radio show Andy Cohen Live, when — inevitably — the subject of Kim Cattrall’s return to And Just Like That… came up. In case you spent 2021 in a coma (if so: welcome back!), Kim Cattrall did not appear in the show’s first season, though her character, Samantha, was represented in the form of several text messages, and the gift of a floral arrangement for the funeral of Big (Chris Noth), late husband to Parker’s Carrie. Reportedly, the reason for Cattrall’s abstention was a feud between her and Parker, but after a personal appeal from HBO and Max content chairman Casey Bloys, and a request that original series costume designer Patricia Field dress her, Cattrall agreed to reprise her role. (The fact that she shot it entirely separate from any other cast member was not among Cattrall’s reported conditions, but it probably didn’t hurt!)

    On Cohen’s show, Parker stated that she “couldn’t have been more upset” that the news of the cameo leaked so long before it would air. “It’s a big bummer because it would’ve been so like fireworks in the middle….It’s a little exchange that is happy and it says everything about their relationship and all the stuff that’s off-camera. They’re talking. They talk all the time, and it comes at a significant moment of the series.”

    As someone who watched the entire first season of And Just Like That… hoping it might end with a surprise shot of Samantha happy and thriving on the streets of London (where, we’re informed in the AJLT series premiere, she has relocated), I can’t really disagree with Parker! It’s probably a drag for the cast members who did show up to know a certain segment of the viewership is just going to watch for the Cattrall cameo and then peace out forever, not least because Cattrall has said she is now absolutely, positively done with the franchise. But beyond that, it really would have been so much more fun for us all to have been surprised. Maybe the internet was a mistake.

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    Tara Ariano

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  • ‘And Just Like That…’ More Details About Kim Cattrall’s Return as Samantha Emerge

    ‘And Just Like That…’ More Details About Kim Cattrall’s Return as Samantha Emerge

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    As the world awaits Kim Cattrall’s return as Samantha Jones in the upcoming And Just Like That… season two, the last of the fabulous foursome’s husbands (sorry, Steve) is sharing details on what to expect from the top secret cameo.

    The source of new info was none other than Evan Handler, who plays Charlotte York’s (Kristin Davis) beloved husband, Harry. Speaking to People at a recent event, the actor said he thinks Cattrall’s reprisal is “great” and that he learned of it “the same day you did”: when it was reported by Variety in late May. The outlet revealed that Cattrall will appear in a single scene in the season two finale, which she filmed in New York City on March 22 without seeing or speaking with series star Sarah Jessica Parker or showrunner Michael Patrick King. 

    Handler appeared to confirm the isolated nature of the scene while painting a picture of where Cattrall filmed it. “Apparently, [her cameo] was shot in the garage somewhere with no contact with anybody, so the only place I have to welcome her is into my living room when it airs on television,” he said of the appearance. The cameo was subsequently confirmed by Max and Cattrall herself, who shared Variety’s post on her own social media with the caption, “Happy Pride.”

    Cattrall, who has yet to be featured in any of the trailers for the Sex and the City revival’s sophomore season, was reportedly persuaded to return by Casey Bloys, the chairman and CEO of HBO and Max content. After being approached by Bloys, Cattrall was apparently able to lure back SATC costume designer Patricia Field, who has not been involved with And Just Like That…, to outfit her for the scene, according to Variety. 

    The absence of Samantha from the latest series is partially owed to a rumored long-standing feud between Cattrall and Parker. “It’s very hard to talk about the situation with Kim,” Parker told The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast last June, before saying that a third Sex and the City movie “fell apart” because of Cattrall’s contractual requirements. Further explaining Cattrall’s absence, Parker said: “We did not ask her to be part of this because she made it clear that that wasn’t something she wanted to pursue, and it no longer felt comfortable for us, and so it didn’t occur to us.” A month prior, Cattrall shared her side of the story, telling Variety, “I was never asked to be part of the reboot. I made my feelings clear after the possible third movie, so I found out about it like everyone else did—on social media.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Kim Cattrall Will Reportedly Appear in ‘And Just Like That…’ but Not Alongside Sarah Jessica Parker

    Kim Cattrall Will Reportedly Appear in ‘And Just Like That…’ but Not Alongside Sarah Jessica Parker

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    And just like that… Cattrall is joining And Just Like That… albeit very briefly and without filming alongside Parker.

    Variety published the bombshell report that Cattrall will be reprising her role as Samantha in the season two finale of the series. Cattrall will only be in one scene, the outlet reported, and per its sources, she “shot her dialogue on March 22 in New York City, without seeing or speaking with the stars of the series, including Sarah Jessica Parker, or with And Just Like That showrunner Michael Patrick King.”

    Cattrall will be dressed by Patricia Field, Sex and the City‘s original costume designer, who has not been working on the rebooted series. The outlet did caution fans that “Cattrall’s appearance as Samantha will not be a continuation of the character for now.”

    Cattrall didn’t immediately confirm the news herself, with her rep not responding to Variety‘s request for comment.

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  • ‘And Just Like That…’ Season 2: Everything We Know So Far

    ‘And Just Like That…’ Season 2: Everything We Know So Far

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    Carrie Bradshaw and the girls are convening around the brunch table once more for the second season of And Just Like That…, HBO Max’s Sex and the City revival. The often divisive series from executive producer Michael Patrick King reunites Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon, and Kristin Davis as three of the four fabulous friends (so long, Samantha) viewers loved and sometimes loathed in the original series and subsequent films. A first trailer for the new season, which will debut on what was formerly known as HBO Max (come May 23, it’ll be just Max), teases twists amongst the expected collision of cosmos, Manolo Blahniks, and SJP voiceovers.

    Ahead, a preview of everything that’s been revealed about the next chapter of And Just Like That…, including what—exactly—is happening with Aidan Shaw. 

    Who is in And Just Like That… season two?

    Returning for round two are Parker, Nixon, and Davis, alongside Karen Pittman as Dr. Nya Wallace, Nicole Ari Parker as Lisa Todd Wexley, Sarita Choudhury as Seema Patel, and Sara Ramírez as the oft-memed Che Diaz. Miranda’s estranged husband, Steve (David Eigenberg), is back to nurse his broken heart, perhaps with his (former, current?) fellow bar owner Aidan Shaw, played by a returning John Corbett. (More on that below.) 

    Also set to reprise their roles are Mario Cantone as sometimes Samantha surrogate Anthony, Evan Handler as Charlotte’s husband, Harry, Christopher Jackson as Lisa’s husband, Herbert, and Niall Cunningham as Miranda’s son, Brady, as well as Cathy Ang and Alexa Swinton as Charlotte’s children, Lily and Rock, respectively. Candice Bergen, who played Carrie’s ruthless Vogue editor Enid Frick in the original series, is reentering the fold as well. New guest stars include feminist activist Gloria Steinem and Sam Smith, who teased their presence on set back in February via Instagram. 

    What will And Just Like That… season two be about?

    What can viewers expect from the upcoming season? The show is doubling down on Che Diaz, no matter how you feel about them breaking up Miranda and Steve or using something called a “Woke Moment” button. “One of my burning passions about season two is Che,” show creator Michael Patrick King previously told Variety. “I want to show the dimension of Che that people didn’t see, for whatever reason—because they were blinded, out of fear or terror. I want to show more of Che rather than less of Che. Like, really.” The last we saw of Che, they were headed to California for pilot season—and Miranda was hopping on a flight to join them.

    Meanwhile, Carrie is blossoming (outlandishly large flower ensemble included) in her single era after kissing her hot podcast producer, played by Ivan Hernandez. And from the looks of the first trailer, there’s a lot more canoodling where that came from. But she may not be done with the past just yet. In addition to the return of Aidan, Parker was spotted filming scenes in her iconic Vivienne Westwood wedding gown from the first SATC film. Whether this callback is part of a dream sequence or a cry for help remains to be seen. 

    As for Charlotte, in the season one finale she had her own bat mitzvah when her child Rock’s “they mitzvah” crashed and burned. In addition to scandal involving a “MILF list” at her children’s school as seen in the first trailer, Charlotte will further be exploring her youngest child’s gender identity, Davis told reporters at a press junket attended by Vanity Fair during season one. As for her elder child Lily, the show’s “Last Supper”–esque poster suggests she and Brady could be a thing, which is certainly better than the rumored alternative should Kim Cattrall had been involved. 

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    Savannah Walsh

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