Anonymous wrote:This show is cringe. And I say that as a 45 year old woman who came of age during the original series and LOVES it. I’ll watch this reboot no matter how awful (and hot damn it’s bad) because of my love for the original, but I am disgusted nearly every moment. Everything feels so forced. Like the caricatures of the original characters. So uninteresting. So gross (that opening montage of all the middle aged sex…did we really need that?). Really I don’t even consider it must see TV because it’s so boring and wince inducing but I tune in anyway because anything SATC related takes me at least partway back to my blissful 20s when I was a massive fan of the show.
Anonymous wrote:Susan Fales Hill is a writer on this show; she was a writer for the Cosby show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
"Concern" is probably the wrong word. But these are TV actors, playing roles of image-conscious people - I think it's pretty normal for us to notice how they look.
Any consideration to the fact that that might be why those enhancements happen? When a woman doesn’t color her hair she’s called a granny and when she does, she said she’s trying to look younger.
Sure! And some exploration of that on the show would be interesting - the cruelty of aging (and the cruelty of not aging, because it means you're dead). The tradeoffs, the choices, the mistakes, the successes! I feel like they did some of that in the original series. And in AJLT they had Miranda with grey hair for much of season 1, then when she dyed her hair red again it was supposed to represent her returning to her real self.
So much of this show has always been about how material things and the quest for beauty are a core part of who these women are. Of course that's easier when you're young - but I think it's even more interesting when you're not.
And I'm sorry, you're not going to put Kristen Davis up there in those fillers and expect that it'll go unnoticed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
"Concern" is probably the wrong word. But these are TV actors, playing roles of image-conscious people - I think it's pretty normal for us to notice how they look.
Any consideration to the fact that that might be why those enhancements happen? When a woman doesn’t color her hair she’s called a granny and when she does, she said she’s trying to look younger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
"Concern" is probably the wrong word. But these are TV actors, playing roles of image-conscious people - I think it's pretty normal for us to notice how they look.
Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
This. Ideally it's subtle and well done but still noone else's concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.
This. Ideally it's subtle and well done but still noone else's concern.
Anonymous wrote:Awesome thing about our appearance, it’s totally up to us individually if we color our hair, wear make up, have cosmetic work done. It’s not anyone else’s concern.