I never watched an episode of Sex and the City. But it’s not difficult to get the gist of the show because of the hype surrounding how “ground breaking” it supposedly was. Naomi Wolf, good feminist in standing, sure thinks so. In a piece in the UK Guardian titled “Icons of the Decade,” the subtitle says, “Carrie Bradshaw did as much to shift the culture around certain women’s issues as real-life female groundbreakers.” And what “certain women’s issues” would those exactly be? Reading the piece you can’t help but come to the conclusion it was really only one issue: sex. It is after all in the title of the show. My first thought upon reading it was, “And you think this is a good thing?” So what was so great about Carrie Bradshaw and Sex and the City? Let me quote the first three paragraphs and I think you’ll get the picture: She’s not a brass-knuckled political figure, a Birkenstock-wearing Amazon or a breaker of corporate glass ceilings; she’s just a sassy single girl in New York City. So why am I so sure that Carrie Bradshaw – the charming, ever-hopeful star of the long running HBO series and hit








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