is clapping back at critics who say the Sex and the City reboot is too «politically correct.»Cynthia Nixon, Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis and more members of the hit HBO Max series sat down with Andy Cohen for a special SiriusXM Town Hall where they discussed the series and the possibility of a second season.«I feel like people have watched it and they know it so well, inside and out.
And when you know something that's so familiar, it becomes tame. But I think that people forget how incendiary the show was and not just only because of the sexual frankness and the conversations and the scenes of sex, but how revolutionary this was to show back in the day four women having a lot of sex with a lot of different partners.
Marriage was kind of out there in the ether, but not necessarily something they were pursuing or even had made up their minds about,» Nixon began, touching on how revolutionary the original series was. «And I think I remember so well the initial chatter about this show, the first couple seasons saying, 'These were not real women.
Women don't really have sex like this. Women don't really talk like this. These are not women. These are gay men in drag,' and I think that because people know it so well, they've sort of enshrined it in nostalgia.
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