It seems a lot of straight men need a word coach or a lawyer when it comes to discussing 'Sex and the City.'
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
'Sex and the City' is about outsiders. Single girls as lepers, should have been married by now. It's the reason the whole thing took off.
A lot of people who wrote for 'Sex and the City' have gone to write about marriage and motherhood.
I had more sexist encounters as a lawyer than I had as a journalist.
Shows like 'Sex and the City' got women involved again in a political way. They were drawn into the personal stories of the four women who together make up one complete cosmopolitan woman. We want to have community, and the show filled that void in our lives: friendship between women.
I used to be told if I talked about my sexuality in any way that we wouldn't have a tennis tour.
I think people have this sort of idea that 'Sex and the City' was this overnight sensation, and that can't be farther from the truth.
It's kind of a shame that it's even an issue. Not being gay, I can't fully appreciate how complicated that is. In the article, the interviewer asked me, and I said that if I were, I would just say it.
We were so hungry for 'Sex and the City' that even though it was heightened and written by gay men, we just needed to see different women on television. Give us another movie.
Now when you have administrators deciding what sexuality is, and what's a taboo and what's not in terms of content, you got guys, like, Trent Lott who equates homosexuality with a disease.
Proclaiming a sexual preference is something that straight men never really have to bother with.