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*[http://www.hbo.com/city Home of HBO's ''Sex and the City'']
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*{{tvguide show|id=100391 |title=Sex and the City}} – TV listings, cast and details, photos, videos and more.
*[http://www.flagr.com/maps/satc ''Sex and the City Map'']
*[http://www.flagr.com/maps/satc ''Sex and the City Map'']
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*[http://wgntv.trb.com/entertainment/syn/city WGNTV.com ''Sex and the City'']

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Sex and the City
File:SexandtheCity.jpg
Sex and the City title card
Created byDarren Star
StarringSarah Jessica Parker
Kristin Davis
Cynthia Nixon
Kim Cattrall
Country of originUnited States
No. of episodes94
Production
Camera setupSingle camera
Running timeapprox. 29 minutes
Original release
NetworkHBO
ReleaseJune 6, 1998 –
February 22, 2004

Sex and the City was a popular American cable television program based on the novel of the same name by Candace Bushnell. It was originally broadcast on the HBO network from 1998 until 2004.

Set in New York City, the show focused on the sex lives of four female best friends, three of whom are in their early-to-mid thirties, and one of whom, Samantha, is in her forties (though by 2004 they have reached their mid-to-late thirties and forties, respectively). A sitcom with soap opera elements, the show often tackled socially relevant issues, such as the status of women in society. Sex and the City premiered on June 6, 1998, and the last original episode aired on February 22, 2004.

The show was primarily filmed at New York City's Silvercup Studios and on location in and around Manhattan. Since it ended, the show has been aired in syndication on networks such as TBS, The CW, WGN, and many other local stations.

Overview

Carrie Bradshaw and her three best girlfriends navigate the rocky terrain of being single, sexually active women at the turn of the new millennium. The show became famous for shooting scenes on the streets and in the bars, restaurants, and clubs of New York City, while pushing the envelope of fashion and shattering sexual taboos.

Receiving consistent critical and popular acclaim, it was based on the book that was compiled from the New York Observer column "Sex and the City" by Candace Bushnell. The first season of the show is a free adaptation of its source material, but from the second season on, it took on a life of its own and went further than the book ever could. Each episode in season one featured a short montage of interviews that Carrie supposedly conducted while researching for her column. These continued through season two before being phased out. Another feature that was eventually scrapped was Carrie breaking the fourth wall (for example, looking into the camera and speaking to the audience directly). The last such event occurred in episode 3 of the second season, "The Freak Show".

Season one of Sex and the City aired on HBO from June to August 1998. Season two was broadcast from June until October,1999. Season three aired from June until October 2000. Season four was broadcast in two parts: from June until August 2001, and then in January and February 2002. Season five, truncated due to Parker's pregnancy, aired on HBO during the summer of 2002. The twenty episodes of the final season, season six, aired in two parts: from June until September 2003 and during January and February 2004.

Over its course of six seasons, "Sex and the City" was nominated for over 50 Emmy Awards, winning seven of them. Among the Emmys the show won were two, for Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series (Jennifer McNamara), one for its Costumes, a trophy for Outstanding Comedy Series for its third season in 2001, Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series in 2002 for the episode "The Real Me", and for its final season in 2004, Emmys for Sarah Jessica Parker (Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for the episode "An American Girl in Paris II"), and Cynthia Nixon (Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for the episodes "One" and "Ick Factor"). It has also been nominated for 24 Golden Globe Awards, and won 8. Its wins included Best TV Series - Musical or Comedy, and Best Actress in a TV Series - Musical or Comedy, (Sarah Jessica Parker) for three consecutive years from 2000 - 2002, Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Mini-Series, or Movie for Kim Cattrall, and another one for Parker.

Characters

Template:Spoiler

File:Sex and the City.jpg
(From left to right) Cynthia Nixon as Miranda, Kristin Davis as Charlotte, Sarah Jessica Parker as Carrie, and Kim Cattrall as Samantha
  • Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) is literally the voice of the show; she narrates each episode. Each episode is structured around her train of thought while writing her weekly column, "Sex and the City" for the fictitious newspaper, The New York Star. A member of the New York glitterati, she is a club/bar/restaurant staple who is known for her unique fashion sense; she violently joins together various styles into one outfit and it is not uncommon for her to pair inexpensive vintage pieces with high-end couture. The resulting outfits range from the ridiculous to the sublime. Throughout the six seasons Carrie meets famous people, both fictional and non-fictional. A self-proclaimed shoe fetishist, she focuses most of her attention on journalism. She works on her PowerBook in her apartment, writing newspaper articles focusing on the different aspects of a relationship. Carrie is also the thinker of the group. Often exceeding her spending limit in one shopping trip, it is unclear how the modest income of a newspaper columnist could support such an addiction. In later seasons, her essays are collected as a book and she begins taking assignments from Vogue and New York Magazine. In Season 4, it was revealed that Carrie had never before used email as she was having a hard time setting up an account to get in touch with Aidan. Carrie does not own a printer, so it's impossible to know how she submits her columns to the fictional New York Star. It has been suggested that she perhaps saves her columns on floppy disks and submits her work thusly. Aidan also buys her a Zip drive in season 4 so that she can back up her work after her computer crashes. She is never seen in a library and does not mention printing out her work in hard copy. Carrie is very proud of her home, a one-bedroom apartment in an Upper East Side brownstone, which she eventually purchases, and lives in for the run of the series.
  • Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) is an art dealer with a rigid Connecticut uptight blue-blooded upbringing. She is the most conservative and optimistic of the group, the one who places the most emphasis on emotional love as opposed to lust, and is always searching for her "knight in shining armor." Often scoffing at the lewder, more libertine antics that the show presents (primarily by way of Samantha), in her own way, Charlotte presents a more straightforward attitude about relationships, usually based around "the rules" of love and dating. Despite her conservative outlook, she has been known to make concessions (while married) that even surprised her sexually freer girlfriends (such as her level of dirty talk, oral sex in public and "tuchus-lingus"). She gives up her career shortly after her first marriage, divorces upon irreconcilable differences around in vitro fertilization and receives a Park Avenue apartment in the divorce settlement. She eventually remarries to her less than perfect, but good hearted divorce lawyer, Harry Goldenblatt after converting to Judaism. Charlotte was a star all through her academic and social life. A "straight A student" who eventually attended Smith College to major in Art History with a minor in Finance. Throughout the show it is also revealed that Charlotte was voted homecoming queen, prom queen, "most popular", student body president, track team captain, and was active as a teen model.
  • Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) is a career-minded lawyer with extremely cynical views on relationships and men. A Harvard University graduate from Philadelphia, she is Carrie's best friend, confidante, and voice of reason. In the early seasons, she is portrayed as masculine and borderline misandric, but this image softens over the years, particularly after she becomes pregnant by her on again-off again boyfriend, Steve Brady, whom she eventually marries. Miranda is nobody's fool and is smart enough to demand the "short hair discount." The birth of her son, Brady Hobbes, brings up new issues for her Type A, workaholic personality, but she soon finds a way to balance career, being single and motherhood. Of the four women, she is the first to purchase an apartment, and later on a home in Brooklyn. Miranda is obsessed with Jules and Mimi, an imaginary soap opera inside Sex and the City. The show first appears in Season 6, Episode 2. The small snippets shown have led to it being described as a "bi-racial sexually charged fictional BBC soap opera", and the damage of Miranda's TiVo by her cleaner, Magda, played a role in one episode. Miranda also has a love for hair dye, food and gossip.
  • Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), the oldest of the group, is an independent publicist and a seductress who avoids emotional involvement at all costs, while satisfying every possible carnal desire imagineable while never being affected by Sexually Transmitted Disease. She believes that she has had "hundreds" of soulmates and insists that her sexual partners leave "an hour after I climax." Throughout the course of the show, we learn Samantha's glamorous, impenetrable facade and dismissive approach to love actually hides a sensitive, caring heart. Though she refuses to drop her mask, privately she struggles with the defection of hotel magnate and philanderer Richard Wright and goes through emotional turmoil to avoid becoming attached to actor/model/waiter Smith Jarrod. The latter effort was to shelter herself from potential heartbreak and in that effort she ultimately fails. Aside from these, Samantha also has a number of other real relationships in the show, albeit far less than the number of her casual sex encounters. However, this is hardly exclusive to Samantha, though as a rule, hers are far more unconventional and frequent than those of her friends. For example, Samantha has a (relatively) long term relationship with a lesbian artist named Maria. In Season 3, she moves from her full-service Upper East Side apartment to an expensive loft in the then-burgeoning Meatpacking District. In Season 6, Samantha's character further develops when she is unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer when visiting a plastic surgeon for a breast implant consultation. An operation, chemotherapy, and her powerful will help Samantha to beat cancer, and it becomes clear the experience has endowed her with a new perspective (and a new excuse to be fashionable, as she thereafter begins wearing all manner of wigs, hats, and bandanas).

Episodes


Quotations

The following are quotations from the TV special, Sex And The City: A Farewell, that aired introducing the final episode:

  • Michael Patrick King, Executive Producer:
    "People thought, oh it's just about sex or it's just about fashion. And then slowly over the years people start to see it's really about love ... and relationships ... and sex ... and basically the battlefield of trying to be in love—whether it be with another person or with yourself."
  • Sarah Jessica Parker:
    "What the show has to have, and has had to have in order to survive six years, is a soul."
  • Kim Cattrall:
    "The show is a valentine to being single."
  • Cynthia Nixon:
    "These women would never wear the same outfit twice."
  • David Eigenberg:
    "They were honest about sex, they were honest about the humor of sex."
  • Kim Cattrall:
    "Being single used to mean that nobody wanted you; now it means you're pretty sexy and you're taking your time deciding how you want your life to be...and who you want to spend it with."

Broadcasters

Template:Infobox TV ratings

The United States cable channel HBO was the original broadcaster, and TBS ran reruns after the series ended. In Canada, the show airs on Bravo! Canada and Citytv Toronto, and in Germany it is shown on Pro7.

In the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Channel 4 and its digital sister channel E4 broadcast episodes of Sex and the City, while older episodes are rerun on Paramount Comedy 1. In Poland the show and its several reruns were aired by the public TV service TVP 2. In France the show is shown on M6, in the Netherlands it is aired by NET 5, and in Sweden it is aired by TV3 and ZTV. In Italy the show airs on La7 and on the cable channel Paramount Comedy. In Belgium the show used to run on VT4, later on Vitaya and Vijf TV. In Spain, it was aired by Canal+ España, Antena 3 and Cosmopolitan TV. In Finland it was broadcast on MTV3. In Portugal, it was aired on free-to-air SIC TV, with reruns on cable channel SIC Mulher.

In South Africa, Sex and the City is aired uncensored on a government-owned channel, the South African Broadcasting Channel #3 (SABC 3). The series is aired on a quarterly basis, and is rotated with other HBO series.

In Israel it was broadcast on Channel 2 by Reshet. In Russia, the show was aired by NTV Russia. In Romania, the show was aired by Pro TV and later by the sister channels Acasa TV and Pro Cinema. HBO Romania also aired all seasons. In Bulgaria, Sex and the City is aired by Nova Television. HBO Bulgaria also aired the show. In Turkey it is broadcast by ComedyMax channel.

In Australia it was broadcast on the Nine Network, late at night. Rerun rights were sold to Network Ten. Australian subscription channel W airs two episodes each weeknight. In New Zealand, the show aired on TV3.

In Indonesia it was broadcast on Trans TV, now the show airs on antv.

In México, the show airs in Spanish on TV Azteca. In Chile, it is aired subtitled at first by HBO Latin America, but later it was moved to Cinecanal and The Film Zone, and in Latin American dub by RED TV. In Brazil, it was aired by Multishow and FOX channels. Multishow exibits two versions of the series, the standard and the light versions. The light versions have some dialogs and scenes removed or replaced by "more polite" versions. Multishow also replaces the original subtitles with their own translated subtitles, usually in a lower quality than the originals.

In Japan, the show is aired by Lala.tv. Korea was one of the biggest TV broadcast nations, with Catch On, OCN and On Style all playing the series over the Korean cable network. In Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, India, and Pakistan the show airs on HBO Asia (season 1-6). Hong Kong's TVB Pearl also aired the show at midnight before, while later, TVB Drama, the pay TV channel of the same company, rerun the show on Sunday night. Sex and the City was banned in Singapore until July 2004, when the government allowed the television series to be aired on cable after being censored. In the Philippines, the show airs on HBO Asia while its reruns are being aired by free TV RPN-9. In Taiwan the show airs on Videoland MAX-TV and also airs on HBO Asia. In Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Denmark the series can be seen on TV3. In Hungary, where the show aired on HBO and Viasat 3, the latter only showing episodes up to the fifth season. After a number of reruns, Viasat has moved the show to an earlier time and, as per the rules and standards of broadcasting in Hungary, has recut the episodes (removing, among others, almost all references to genitals, a number of sexual conversations and non-heterosexual kisses) to be able to fit its rating to an equivalent of PG-13, resulting in many deleted scenes and indecipherable storylines.

Criticism

Some have criticized the show for pandering to audiences with little more than "perversion and sex." While fans of the show recognize these are important elements, they also point out that the show focuses largely on relationships. MadTV parodied the show as "Sluts in the City". The HBO slogan "It's not TV, it's HBO" became "It's not TV, it's porn (with Emmys)" MadTV's Michael McDonald appears as Carrie in drag with a visible crotch bulge. Jennifer Aniston on SNL portrayed her with a hideous fake nose. Other sketch shows have made fun of Miranda being color blind for her bright hair dye color and the women confusing sex with shoes.

Elitism and lack of diversity

Sex and the City has been criticized for focusing exclusively on wealthy, white characters and ignoring non-whites, the poor, and those living in New York's poorer neighborhoods; the characters themselves have been accused of being elitist. The show took place almost exclusively in Manhattan, often ignoring the 4 other boroughs in New York City (Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Staten Island). [1][citation needed]

Miscellaneous criticism

The female main characters' fixation with sex and penis size has been criticized for not being aligned with the views of real-life women.

The characters' fixation on penis size has also been criticized for promoting poor body image in men. The characters have been criticized for being shallow and superficial[2]. The show has also been seen as irresponsible in the way it portrays alcohol and tobacco use as glamourous. The women sip feminine candy colored cocktails such as Cosmopolitans as a prop and affect of sophistication.

Response to criticism

Fans of the show say that Sex and the City is a realistic portrayal of the sexual behavior and lifestyles of many urban Americans.[3] An unlikely supporter of the show is author and Latter Day Saint Orson Scott Card. Card stated that although the crudity of the series left him numb, the show contained some of the best writing on television. [4]

DVD releases

File:SATC Region1 Boxset.jpg
Region 1 Edition of Complete Set

All six seasons of Sex and the City have been released commercially on DVD. They have been released officially on region 1 (Americas), region 2 (Europe & Middle East), region 3 (Korea) and region 4 (Oceania) formats, but illegal bootleg editions have also surfaced for region 3 (Thailand) as well as region 0 (Universal) and can even be found on eBay. In addition to their region encoding, releases vary depending on which region they were released in. Region 2 DVD's of Sex and the City have been criticised by some fans for having little or no special features, but region 1 editions have included director commentary, cast interviews and more.

In addition to standard single season DVD Boxsets of the show, limited edition collectors' editions have also been released that include all 6 seasons in one complete set. Even these vary between region 1 2 and 4. While Europe got a complete set that came with special 'shoe box' packaging (a reference to Sarah Jessica Parker's character's love for shoes in the show), the USA and Canada version came packaged in a more traditional fold-out suede case and with an additional bonus DVD including many special features. Oceania's edition came packaged in a beauty case.

As well as missing out on some special features, many fans in Europe had trouble with the region 2 edition of the season 1 DVD. Unfortunately, the show was not converted into a PAL video signal, and remained in its original American NTSC format. This caused some compatibility problems with some European television sets and DVD players. All subsequent Region 2 DVD releases of the programme were appropriately transferred to PAL video and season 1 has since been re-released in PAL format. In Europe, Sex and the City boxed sets were released through Paramount Pictures (whose parent Viacom interestingly onced owned HBO's rival Showtime, before the CBS Corporation split at the end of 2005) - who owned at once, certain rights to the programme's broadcast as well -- it was probably because of Paramount's "no-extras" policy that the region 2 DVDs were critizied. American and Canadian DVDs were released through the programme's original broadcasters, HBO. In Australia, single editions have been released, where each disc is sold separately. In Korea, due to the popularity of the show, a complete, six-season, special DVD shoebox set was released--600 limited edition sets in 2005; 850 limited edition sets in 2006--at suggested retail price of $300 (US). All of them sold out immediately.

Selected episodes are also available as part of the Sex and the City Essentials DVD collection. These are four separately-packaged discs containing three selected episodes that fit a common theme.

Awards

2003

  • American Cinema Editors ACE Eddie Awards
Best Edited Half-Hour Series for Television - Episode: "Luck Be An Old Lady"; Wendey Stanzler, A.C.E.
  • American Women in Radio and Television (AWRT)
Gracie Allen Award
National/Network/Syndication Award Winners Entertainment Program/Comedy
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series - Casting: Jennifer McNamara
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made For Television - Kim Cattrall
  • Makeup Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards
Best Contemporary Hairstyling for a Television Series - Wayne Herndon, Donna Fischetto, Suzana Neziri
  • Utku TV Awards
Best Performance by an Actress-Sarah Jessica Parker

2002

  • ACE Eddie Awards
Best Edited Half-Hour Series for Television - Michael Berenbaum, "The Real Me"
  • CINE Golden Eagle Film and Video Competition
CINE Golden Eagle Award - Episode: "Easy Come, Easy Go"
Honorable Mention
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series - Episode: The Real Me; Michael Patrick King
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series - Jennifer McNamara
Outstanding Costumes for a Comedy Series - Episode: "Defining Moments" (Patricia Field, Rebecca Weinberg)
  • Golden Globes®
Best Television Series: Musical or Comedy
Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series: Musical or Comedy - Sarah Jessica Parker
Golden Satellite Awards
Best Television Series: Comedy or Musical
Gracie Allen Award: American Women in Radio and Television
Outstanding Comedy Series
  • Monte Carlo Television Festival
Golden Nymph Award: Outstanding Producer of the Year, Comedy
Outstanding Actress of the Year - Sarah Jessica Parker
Gold WorldMedal: Situation Comedy - Episode: "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
  • Producers Guild Golden Laurel Awards (PGA)

Danny Thomas Producer of the Year Award in Episodic Television, Comedy - Michael Patrick King, Cindy Chupack, John P. Melfi & Sarah Jessica Parker Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble In a Comedy Series - Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis, Cynthia Nixon, Sarah Jessica Parker

Comedy Episode - Episode "Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda"
  • WIN Awards

TV Comedy Series Actress - Cynthia Nixon, Episode: "My Motherboard, My Self"

2001

American Women in Radio and Television - Episode: "Attack of the 5'10" Woman"
  • Columbus International Film & Video Festival
Honorable Mention - Costume Designers Guild
Excellence in Costume Design Contemporary for Television - Patricia Field
  • Primetime Emmy® Awards
Outstanding Comedy Series
  • Entertainment Industries Council Prism Awards
Prism Award for Television, Series Comedy Storyline - Episode: "Quitting Smoking"
Commendation - Sex and the City: "What Goes Around Comes Around"
  • Golden Globes®
Best Television Series: Musical or Comedy
Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series- Musical or Comedy - Sarah Jessica Parker
  • Golden Satellite Awards
Best Television Series - Comedy or Musical
  • Makeup Artist & Hairstylist Guild Awards
Best Contemporary Makeup for Television (for a single episode of a Regular Series, Sitcom, Drama or Daytime) - Judy Chin; Episode: "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
Best Contemporary Hair Styling - Television (for a single episode of a Regular Series, Sitcom, Drama or Daytime) - Michelle Johnson; Episode: "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
  • National Council on Family Relations Media Awards
First Place, STD/AIDS - Episode: "Running with Scissors"
  • Producers Guild Golden Laurel Awards (PGA)
Danny Thomas Producer of the Year Award - Episodic TV Comedy
  • Screen Actors Guild Awards (SAG)
Outstanding Performance By An Actress in a Comedy Series - Sarah Jessica Parker
  • TV Cares
Ribbon of Hope Award
WIN Award - TV Series Actress - Cynthia Nixon; Episode: "My Motherboard, My Self"

2000

  • Gracie Allen Awards: American Women in Radio and Television
Gracie Allen Award - Episode: "Twenty-Something Girls vs. Thirty-Something Women"
  • CINE Golden Eagle Awards
Golden Eagle Award - Episode: "Ex and the City"
  • Columbus International Film & Video Festival
Honorable Mention
  • Golden Globe® Awards
Best Television Series: Musical or Comedy
Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series: Musical or Comedy - Sarah Jessica Parker
  • Media Project SHINE Awards
Scene Stealer

1999

  • CINE Gold Eagle Film and Video Competition
CINE Golden Eagle Award - Episode: "They Shoot Single People Don't They?"
  • Columbus International Film & Video Festival - Chris Awards
The Bronze Plaque
  • New York Festivals - Television Programming and Promotion Competition
Silver World Medal: Situation Comedy - Episode: "They Shoot Single People, Don't They?"
  • Women In Film
Lucy Award
  • WorldFest - Houston International Film Festival
Gold Award in the Television & Cable Production: TV Series: Comedy Division - Episode: "Secret Sex"

Soundtrack releases

There have been several CD Albums released to accompany the series Sex and the City. These releases span various record labels and some are even unofficial. The two albums from Irma Records are seen to be the best because they contain tracks used in the show's actual soundtrack that are difficult to find elsewhere. The other two releases have little or no tracks that appear on the programme's actual soundtrack.

The title theme song was written by Douglas J. Cuomo.

2000/2001/2002
Sire Records
13 Chart Hits - Including the Main Theme from the Show
  • Sex and the City - Official Soundtrack
March 1, 2004
Sony TV
2 Disc Set - 36 Hits.
  • Irma at Sex and the City - Part 1 - Daylight Session
April 19, 2004
Irma Records
2 Disc Set - Part of a 2 Part Collection. Ambient and Chilled Sounds from the Show's Soundtrack
  • Irma at Sex and the City - Part 2 - Nightlife Session
April 19, 2004
Irma Records
2 Disc Set - Part of a 2 Part Collection. House and Electronica Sounds from the Show's Soundtrack

Distribution and syndication

Sex and the City is currently syndicated in the United States by HBO corporate sibling (under Time Warner) Warner Bros. Television Distribution. The international rights to the series currently rest with CBS Paramount Television, the successor-in-interest to Paramount's television unit (through its acquisition of original international distributor Rysher Entertainment) now owned by CBS Corporation.

References

  • Amy Sohn (2004). Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell, Updated Edition. ISBN 0-7434-5730-7