Cynthia Nixon reveals her biggest complaint with
Cynthia Nixon discovered some things about “Sex and The City” in a recent Rewatch.
The actor told Grazia that he saw the successful series before production began in “And so …”
According to The Outlet, Nixon said that 90% of things “were still quite good”, although “certain things have not aged well.”
“It was always very difficult to be in a program that was so white. I always hated him,” Nixon published in the function, published on Monday. “When we grew it, they told us: this is the world of Candace Bushnell and it is a very white world. I’m like, ok …”
In addition to the overwhelming White, Nixon explained that “some of the trans things, some of the homosexual things were a bit mixed to see.”
But, Nixon said the program was still a revolutionary in many ways.
“What you have to remember is that we were in our thirty -forty years,” he said.
“Of course, I look at the program now, we seem babies, but being single at that age, at that time, still had a kind of stigma.”
The program also projected quite radical messages for a single woman, said Nixon.
“You can be a woman, you can have a lot of sex with many different people. It did not make you a whore and that did not mean you were using sex to get something,” he shared. “You were having sex, because you enjoyed having sex!”

Tom Kingston through Getty Images
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“Sex and The City” was not the only show in the late 90s and early 2000s that fought with a lack of diversity.
Marta Kauffman, one of the “Friends” cookers, apologized for the program approach in his six white characters, which rarely interacted with other people of color.
“I have learned a lot in the last 20 years,” Kauffman told Los Angeles Times in an interview in 2022. “Admitting and accepting guilt is not easy. It is painful to look at yourself in the mirror. I am ashamed of not having known it better 25 years ago.”


