‘Show Me Yours’ (2004-2005) is the Canadian ‘Sex and the City.’ It talks about sex realistically while portraying incredibly hot sex. Like ‘SATC,’ it isn’t the sex that makes the show fun, but the underlying relationships.
As ‘Sex and the City’ week comes to a close here at CliqueClack, we ask one final question: how should ‘Sex and the City’ have ended? Should Carrie have walked off with Big, Aidan, or … HERSELF?
When I watched ‘Sex and the City’ in its heyday, I was a twenty-something without children. Now, as a thirty-something with two kids, I reexamine how the show portrays each character’s feelings about raising a family.
Do you remember Sarah Jessica Parker before she was Carrie Bradshaw? This week’s flashback is on ‘Square Pegs’ – her first big break that only lasted one season. Take a walk down memory lane with the best of the new wave fashions and that catchy theme song by The Waitresses.
As ‘Sex and the City’ Week gets underway, I’d like to examine some of Carrie Bradshaw’s most profound insights about life, love and relationships. As a writer and hopeless romantic myself, I can’t think of a better way to pay tribute to a show that was empowering to many women.
‘Sex and the City’s’ Mr. Big wasn’t perfect, but he did represent the fantasy man for many viewers. Why? Because Carrie was able to change him from a commitment-phobic jerk into her devoted forever man.
They are four of the most quotable characters on television … the women of ‘Sex and the City’! Here is a compilation of my favorite quotes from the series. Feel free to add your own.