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HBO announced that it would end the Sex and the City reboot called And Just Like That. Thus ends decades of sexual propaganda, originally designed to “empower” women to be sexually promiscuous and lead full lives without men – ending up as cautionary tales of youth obsession, biological denial and social decay.
How sad.
The original show taught a generation of women that men would let you down, that wanting a husband or child was pathetic, and that casual sex carried no emotional or physical cost. All evidence to the contrary. And what did it leave behind? A cohort of women facing unintended childlessness, chronic loneliness, and deep regrets.
Can we make a direct causal link between Sex and the City and declining fertility rates? Of course not. But I’ve heard from many middle-aged women who feel the show lied to them—and who now hope their daughters are smart enough to ignore it.
And then came the reboot: a desperate attempt to prove that the party never ends. The characters are now in their 50s, but the messaging remained frozen in time. We were expected to believe:
- That their sex drives are unchanged since age 30—biological denialism at its peak;
- That affirming a child’s gender transition is progressive—despite mountains of evidence to the contrary;
- That abandoning your husband and children for a non-binary partner is an act of brave self-discovery;
- That sexual desirability should still be a defining goal of a woman’s life after 50.
But in a culture that scolds older women as “Karens,” the answer is not to act like JLo and show more skin to prove you’ve still got it. Where does wisdom fit in? What does life experience count for?
Humans are the only species that live decades beyond our reproductive years. These “extra” decades should be used to guide the next generation, not to cosplay relevance with Botox and one-night stands.
And Just Like That never got the message.
Good riddance to a truly socially corrosive piece of media.