The Borneo Post (Sabah)

A ‘Sex and the City’ reboot without Samantha? Fans aren’t pleased, but it can still be fabulous

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‘SEX and the City’ fans couldn’t help but wonder: What would a reboot of the popular HBO show look like?

Seventeen years after the show concluded, we’re about to get an answer: On Sunday, HBO Max announced that three of the four best friends would be getting back together for a 10-episode reboot called ‘And Just Like That ...’

What will it be without Kim Cattrall playing publicist Samantha Jones, the friend who was always pushing the rest of the crew to be more adventurou­s? Here’s a big clue: Sex has vanished from the show’s title.

Fans of the HBO hit, which ran from 1998 to 2004, expressed their displeasur­e on Twitter, responding with GIFs of Samantha saying “That’s just stupid,” wondering what the point is in reviving the show without Samantha, or suggesting the character get her own spinoff set in London. For years, Cattrall has made clear that she doesn’t want to be part of a third movie or a reboot.

But for Jennifer Armstrong, author of ‘Sex and the City and Us: How Four Single Women Changed the Way We Think, Live, and Love,’ the change makes sense. While Armstrong says a show without Samantha “is very hard to imagine,” she notes that “characters, people, humans move on all the time. Friendship­s end.”

The show’s creators will account for Samantha’s absence in some way, Armstrong says: Maybe she drifted apart from the other women; maybe Samantha stayed in Los Angeles, where she had moved in the first ‘Sex and the City’ movie; or maybe she bought a farmhouse in upstate New York during the covid-19 exodus. Armstrong notes that a group of friends not all being in the same place 17 years later is “more realistic” than if they had all been still friends and still living in New York.

While it would have been so fun to see her, Armstrong says, she also views Samantha as a symbol of her era. “So much of the transgress­iveness of ‘Sex and the City’ was her and the way she contribute­d to the discussion­s. She brought the dirtiest words and filthiest thoughts. She said things in a straightfo­rward, unapologet­ic fashion. That was a huge part of what made the show sociologic­ally a huge deal at the time.”

Perhaps we’ve learned the lessons Samantha had to offer. “Samantha taught the next generation of women to talk openly and frankly about their sexual desires,” Armstrong says, adding that since ‘Sex and the City’ went off the air, other TV shows, such as ‘Broad City’ have pushed the envelope further.

When the show ended in 2004, Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) and Charlotte York Goldenblat­t (Kristin Davis), were in their late 30s. Seventeen years later, they’d be in their 50s. Even if they’re single, they’re probably not sleeping their way through New York, as they were in their 30s.

 ??  ?? Kim Cattrall
Kim Cattrall

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