Can we be BFFs? Agree with everything you said (except there was one male character I didn't like, Anthony Marentino; too over the top). And which is your favorite TV episode of all time?! |
THIS! I went back and watched and couldn't believe Carrie was ever considered a good friend of an "it girl" in our society. She was THE WORST friend and a pretty shitty girlfriend, too. Every single conversation she has in the series she always turns back around to talk about herself. |
The show was called Sex and the City not Career in the City or Hobby in the City. |
I think the first few seasons of dating seemed more realistic than where they all ended up. |
I would love to be friends! And I wouldn't say it's my favorite, but definitely ONE of my favorite comedic episodes ever: Take Me Out to the Ballgame. |
Being an "It Girl" doesn't have anything to do with being likeable. I always thought Carrie was meant to be an anti-hero. I don't think any of the main characters were meant to be heroes. |
I mean, do you people actually know anything about the show? It was based on a series of essays from a newspaper column about 30- something sex and dating in NYC. It was conceived as a show about sex and dating in NYC. That's why the early episodes explore specific dating tropes-- the 20- something guy, men who only want to date models, secret sex, the f*ck buddy, etc. |
This! GG was such an awful show. I never understand the love for it. I admit that SATC hasn't aged particularly well though. I agree with some pp's that it broke new ground, but now that women's sexual liberation is more the norm, there's not much left to glean from it and it's no longer fresh. I enjoyed it back in the day though. |
Hobby in the City sounds like a show that I’d be interested in now, at age 42. |
That’s your opinion. |
But the show was so eyecatching at the time because it was talking about and showing things that other shows were not. I mean, this was the age of Ally McBeal and the practice. And Stargate! I mean, there was Buffy the Vampire Slayer which was breaking new ground in different ways. SATC was a show for adults about adults (sometimes acting like children, but eh?).
The story arc that had the most impact on me was the one about Carrie and the dude who wasn't as successful a writer as she was, who had all sorts of feelings about it and couldn't come through for Carrie because of it. That was stuff that I don't remember other shows dealing with at the time. That's a real issue in relationships with successful women and it was so interesting to see it actually represented on TV without the woman seeming like an absolute nutbag because of course on any other show/movie of the time it would be written so that the guy was the sympathetic character in that relationship and the woman was an overbearing shrew who was trying to control him. Anyway, wow, lots of weird feelings about SATC, sorry. |
First full frontal male nudity! |
The red pill incel has arrived. |
I think I loved the show because it talked about modern romance in way my 80s upbringing wouldn't touch with a 10 foot pole. |
Steve is not a loser. He owns a bar with Aidan.
Also he is a high quality person, I know not something that is valued on DCUM. |