9 'Sex and the City' episodes that have aged poorly
"Sex and the City" premiered 26 years ago, on June 6, 1998, and is now available on Netflix.
The show is often praised for its forward-thinking characters and sex-positive storylines.
But it's also teeming with insensitivities relating to the LGBTQ+ community, race, and more.
"Sex and the City" premiered 26 years ago on June 6, 1998.
The HBO show is undoubtedly a cultural phenomenon, and made actors like Sarah Jessica Parker and Cynthia Nixon household names. Its movie spinoffs were also huge moneymakers: The first film, which was released in 2008, earned over $418 million at the worldwide box office, while 2010's "Sex and the City 2" earned over $290 million, according to Box Office Mojo data.
The series recently landed on Netflix for the first time, bringing all six seasons of the iconic show to a whole new audience. However, despite its popularity, there are quite a few episodes of "SATC" that haven't aged well, especially for Gen-Z viewers who might be watching the show for the first time.
Here are nine of the most controversial episodes of "Sex and the City."
In the second episode of the series, a male friend of Carrie's reveals he secretly videotapes his sexual encounters, unbeknownst to his female partners.
Episode: Season 1, episode 2
Not only is this behavior morally wrong, it's also illegal. However, Carrie simply brushes it off as something off-putting. To make matters worse, Samantha finds the fact he videotapes his sexual encounters endearing and even asks him to film her. At the very least, he does so with her consent.
In a 2018 exploration of "Sex and the City" and the #MeToo era for Vanity Fair, "Sex and the City and Us" author Jennifer Keishin Armstrong called attention to this moment as something sexually predatory that likely flew over everyone's heads at the time.
In "The Caste System," the girls discuss Steve being "working class."
Episode: Season 2, episode 10
Even the name of the episode is culturally insensitive, but the problems don't end there. While Miranda takes out Steve to improve his wardrobe, Samantha dates a man with a live-in Southeast Asian female "servant" named Sum. In the episode, Sum's only purpose is to act as a villain. She pretends to not speak English well in order to get closer to her employer and make him break up with Samantha, then paints herself as a victim.
The storyline is a classic case of othering and includes racist puns at Sum's expense.
In a 2016 Refinery29 article, writer Hunter Harris observed that "Sex and the City" was "a show that was simultaneously progressive and regressive, where people of color were either stereotypes or punchlines."
In the season two episode "Evolution," Carrie and the girls question Charlotte's date's sexuality because he's interested in things that are stereotypically associated with gay men.
Episode: Season 2, episode 11
The man Charlotte is dating reveals he loves Cher, compliments her on her Cynthia Rowley dress, and is terrified of a mouse.
In the episode, the girls discuss whether he is a "gay straight man" — a straight man who comes across as gay — or a "straight gay man" — a man who is really gay but presents himself as straight. The problematic conversation buys into stereotypes about straight and gay people and their interests.
In the episode "Boy, Girl, Boy, Girl," sex columnist Carrie Bradshaw claims bisexuality doesn't exist and makes many uncomfortable comments to the bisexual man she is seeing.
Episode: Season 3, episode 4
In a brunch scene, there are many problematic statements about bisexuality. Carrie, for example, describes bisexuality as a "layover on the way to gay town." Charlotte also weighs in on the subject, saying people should "pick a side and stay there." Miranda calls bisexuality "greedy" and "a problem."
Throughout the episode, Carrie repeatedly pesters her bisexual love interest about whether he is attracted to men or women more and even asks if she "kisses better than a guy." Carrie ends up leaving him at a party after a game of all-gendered spin the bottle, where she describes herself as an "old fart."
In 2018, even Sarah Jessica Parker, who played Carrie, told a reporter at the Wall Street Journal's Future of Everything Festival that "there was no substantial conversation about the LGBTQ community" on the show, according to Refinery 29, which cited an article by Pink News.
Carrie dates a recovering alcoholic in the season two episode "Was It Good for You?" She later breaks up with him and he relapses.
Episode: Season 2, episode 16
Patrick Casey and Carrie met on the street and immediately got off to a rough start. He told her he was in Alcoholics Anonymous and that his sponsor had told him not to date anyone until he'd been sober for a full year. However, they began dating anyway.
Carrie soon realizes Patrick had become addicted to having sex, which he'd never done without alcohol. After Carrie says she wants to take a break from their relationship, he relapses and strips in the street outside her apartment, calling out her name in the middle of the night.
The episode did little to highlight the nuances of alcoholism. To make matters worse, Carrie even joked that she'd "like to be [an alcoholic] someday" after Casey told her about being in AA.
In the episode "No Ifs, Ands or Butts," Samantha gets into an argument with the sister of a Black man she is dating and uses racially insensitive language.
Episode: Season 3, episode 5
After Samantha gets more serious with top record producer Chivon Williams, his sister Adeena confronts Samantha to tell her she doesn't approve of her older brother dating a white woman. The two get into an argument, in which they both say racially charged and insensitive things.
The episode is uncomfortable at best — and downright racist at worst — in its depiction of interracial relationships, and it makes out Adeena to be the closed-minded one.
Sundra Oakley, who played Adeena, told Vanity Fair in 2018 that she was overjoyed to have a role on the show, but "even a few years later ... it's like, oh man, why did it have to be that way? Why couldn't it have been a different story?"
In one episode teeming with insensitivities that would not go over well today, Samantha gets annoyed by sex workers she can hear in the street outside her apartment.
Episode: Season 3, episode 18
In arguably one of the most controversial episodes of "Sex and the City," Samantha gets into a turf war with sex workers who frequent her neighborhood in the Meatpacking District and are described as being transgender (this is never confirmed by the characters themselves, only alleged by the four main girls). She explains how every night, she can hear them yelling outside her window.
While no one likes to deal with noise late at night, she handles it in a problematic way, using a derogatory slur for transgender people and even throwing a bucket of water on them one night.
"It was disappointing to me, as a Black trans woman, to see Black trans women enter the world of 'Sex and the City' and be so thoroughly othered," actress Laverne Cox told Variety's "My Favorite Episode" podcast in 2019. She added, however, that she still loved the show.
When Samantha begins seriously dating a woman in the fourth season, the other girls mock her and say she's "become a lesbian" because she "ran out of men."
Episode: Season 4, episode 4
This is another example of problematic language around non-straight relationships. Carrie, Charlotte, and Miranda repeatedly make fun of and invalidate Samantha's new relationship by comparing Samantha's shift in sexuality to saying she's a fire hydrant or a shoe.
The episode does little to discuss the idea of bisexuality or sexual fluidity and provides a terrible example of how to react to a friend coming out.
When Carrie first meets love interest Aleksandr Petrovsky, she assumes he has called the wrong number because she doesn't recognize or "understand" his Russian accent on the phone.
Episode: Season 6, episode 12
In the scene, Carrie attempts to get past the embarrassing, problematic exchange by pretending that Petrovsky was talking to her "sister" instead of her. Carrie also proceeds to refer to Petrovsky as "the Russian" throughout the season, and when she tells Mr. Big she's moving to Paris to be with her new boyfriend, he calls him a mildly derogatory slur for Russian people.
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