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Cquote1
"It's about four straight women who act like gay men."
—Patty explains the basic premise of "Nookie In New York", The Simpsons
Cquote2


Acceptable Feminine Goals, the series!

A Four-Girl Ensemble series running on HBO for six seasons, followed up by two movies. Single thirtysomething (or fortysomething) ladies date lots and lots of men (and one woman) and go through every possible dating foible out there. While earlier seasons had a Guy of the Week set-up and dating foibles drove the plots, the later ones were considerably more character based and focused on their respective long term relationships. While mostly episodic, there were several story arcs.

Adapted from Candace Bushnell's tell-all New York Observer column (and subsequent book) of the same name.

Examples of:
  • Acceptable Feminine Goals: The series and the movies are basically about what women should expect and should aim for in life.
  • Adult Child: One of Steve's key flaws is this, as he watches Scooby Doo and talks with a vaguely-childish rhotacism (his "r" nearly becomes "w"). Miranda gets over it after a while.
    • The actor who played Steve later gave an interview in which he good-naturedly complained about going from a guy who read Chekhov in bars to someone who was addicted to Scooby Doo.
  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: Miranda starts dating a guy who is a bossy asshole in public, which she hates, but also a bossy asshole in the bedroom, which she loves.
  • All Guys Want Cheerleaders: Miranda worries Robert is more interested in a cheerleader for the Knicks. He isn't.
  • All Women Love Shoes: Taken Up to Eleven.
    • One can't help but notice that the shoes they are wearing in the page image have a prominent focus. This is intentional.
  • Ambiguously Jewish: Carrie, though she claims to have no religion and goes to church once, and Stanford.
  • Anguished Declaration of Love: Miranda to Steve
  • The Artifact: The first season's episodes usually included montages of extras talking directly to the camera, supposedly answering Carrie's questions for her column and allowing the writers the opportunity to pad the show out a little with throwaway lines. By the second season, the characters could more effectively carry each episode, and they began reducing those scenes and got rid of them as a narrative device at the end of the season.
  • At the Opera Tonight
  • Author Avatar: Carrie Bradshaw, for Candace Bushnell.
  • Baby Talk: In one episode Samantha meets a great guy ... who speaks in baby talk while they're in bed. It squicked her out to no end.
  • Backhanded Apology: Big's wife to Carrie.
  • The Beautiful Elite: As far as middle aged single Manhattan women go, they're pretty good finds to say the least.
  • Big Applesauce: And how. To make it more interesting, nearly every one of the stores, clubs, and restaurants they hit is real.
  • Bigger Is Better in Bed: Several episodes mention this, but it's notably subverted in one where Samantha thinks she's going to have the best sex of her life with a well-hung man, and finds out she actually doesn't enjoy it.
  • Blind Date
  • Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: Carrie's friends are the blonde Samantha, brunette Charlotte, and redhead Miranda.
  • Body Sushi: The movie has a scene in which Samantha does this as a Valentine's Day present for her lover.
  • Bowdlerize:
    • The syndicated version. Mad Magazine referred to it as The View II
      • Some of the censoring of lines were not quite subtle. --> "Get the frig out of my friggin suit lady! There's a friggin fire!"
      • Upon finding out Miranda doesn't have a hotel room reserved for her: "Great. Great. Great." Carrie, embarrassed: "I'm sorry about her sir, she's from New York."
    • And, consequently, The Movie. Though it did feature a near-shot of a male member, and had one of the most revealing sex scenes.
  • Braces of Orthodontic Overkill: Miranda wore braces in "Hot Child In The City", after learning she was a tongue thruster. She had her braces removed by the end of the episode once she decided that being a tongue thruster was the lesser of two evils. Although the braces she wore looked normal, it's worth mentioning because she was in her mid-thirties, making her older than the usual children/teenagers you normally see wearing braces on tv.
  • Break the Motivational Speaker: When Charlotte takes Carrie to a relationship motivational speaker, Charlotte's almost tragically unsuccessful attempts at trying to find Mr. Right ends up stumping the speaker, who ends up suggesting she might just not be trying hard enough. Much to Carrie's frustration.
  • Camp Gay: Stanford and Anthony.
  • Camp Straight: Charlotte dates an incredibly flamboyant straight guy, and thinks she's found the best of both worlds when it comes to men. But in the end she realized she wanted to be with a guy who's willing to step on a spider for her, and not stand on a chair screaming like a girl.
  • Captain's Log: Once an Episode finds Carrie at her computer summarizing the day's events.
    • Played with when in one episode as she is typing on her computer, the narration suddenly is interrupted when the computer malfunctions.
  • Casanova: Too many to count. Heck, there are even female examples. (Samantha, anyone?)
  • Caught with Your Pants Down: Miranda had a brief encounter with a guy who actually called his parents over specifically for them to accidentally walk in on them in bed, much to Miranda's horror.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: Somewhat in the final season. Charlotte struggles with infertility and a miscarriage, Samantha develops breast cancer.
  • The Charmer
  • Check, Please!
  • Children Are a Waste
  • Chronic Hero Syndrome: At first Charlotte thought it would be romantic dating a guy willing to punch out sleezy men who harass her. Until she realized he wouldn't stop picking fights with people over the smallest reason.
  • City Mouse: Carrie in a cabin.
    • Miranda and Steve on their honeymoon.
  • Crossover: In a recent Stella Artois commercial, Carrie meets The Dude.
  • Coolest Club Ever: Usually one shows up at least once an episode. Samantha's a PR agent so she sort of has to get connections with hotspots.
  • Conveniently-Common Kink
  • Converting for Love: Charlotte couldn't marry Harry unless she converted to Judaism for him. She takes the classes and ceremonies, and becomes a proud genuine Jewish believer, and willing to put away her treasured Christmas decorations to be "authentic", even when Harry says she doesn't need to. Even when they briefly break up she stays with the religion because it's what she truly identified with now.
  • Costume Porn
  • Derailing Love Interests: Steve was a nice charming guy when dating Miranda the first time. But when the writers decided they needed to have her be single again, Steve suddenly became obsessed with the topic of babies and watching cartoons all day. This happens frequently with any Temporary Love Interest the girls pick up that only last an episode or two.
  • The Ditz: Charlotte
  • Discriminate and Switch: Samantha announces, with some trepidation, that she's in a committed relationship with a woman. Carries' aghast response: "You're in a relationship?"
  • Digital Bikini: In the censored versions of the episodes they give the characters digitally added lingerie over their topless/nude bodies. If you didn't know otherwise you probably wouldn't even notice.
    • Especially since Sarah Jessica Parker always wore a bra in her sex scenes anyway.
  • Dogged Nice Guy: Skipper.
  • Doomed New Clothes: Carrie's pink tutu, and the dress she wears when she falls in the river with Big.
  • Do Not Do This Cool Thing
    • The Movie ostensibly had a message about rejecting the importance of labels (in both senses of the word), despite large chunks of the movie which are practically in-movie commercials for designer labels. The orgiastic display of wedding dresses alone...
    • In a larger sense, the series as a whole falls victim to this. We're supposed to be at least somewhat horrified by the narcissism and shallowness that's all-too-frequently on display, but the characters and their environment are a bit too glamorous for the "moral" to really take. Bushnell's original columns were considerably more trenchant in their appraisal of their social milieu.
  • Double Standard: Miranda is often the one to point these out, like when she gets pity for being single in her 30s that one wouldn't bestow upon a single 30-something male.
    • Yet she hypocritically insists that there must be something wrong with a 30-something unmarried man, whereas a 30-something unmarried woman is simply being "choosy".
  • Drag Queen: Charlotte goes drag king in an episode.
    • Samantha once dated a man who is now a drag queen using the stage name "Samantha".
  • Early Installment Weirdness: The first episodes featured on-the-street "interviews" discussing the plotted events, characters Breaking the Fourth Wall and some can even pass an inverted The Bechdel Test with men talking about something other than women.
  • Escapism: The biggest reason for the show's success. Everyone knows materialism is bad and the girls' One-Hour Work Week is hardly realistic, but millions of viewers tuned in just to see the four ladies live glamorous lives and screw hot guys in New York.
  • Erotic Eating
  • Even the Guys Want Him: Samantha's plan for making Smith a star.
Cquote1

 First the gays. Then the girls. Then the industry.

Cquote2
  • Everybody Has Lots of Sex: Except Charlotte's first husband.
  • Everybody Is Single: for most of the series
    • In the last season everyone had either gotten married or started up serious relationships. When Carrie mentions to someone that none of her friends are looking for a date right now, it sort of caught her off guard because she had never said this before.
  • Everyone Looks Sexier If French
  • Everything's Sparkly with Jewelry
  • Fag Hag: Carrie and Charlotte.
  • Fairytale Wedding Dress: Any wedding on the show is more than likely to have one.
    • Except for Miranda's spur of the minute ceremony, which was small and simple to the extreme.
  • Fashion Show
  • Fate Drives Us Together
  • Female Gaze: One of the first things Samantha said about Smith is "Will you look at that ass?"
  • Fetish: Entire episodes revolved around them, including ones which were Squick to some of the girls, such as a guy who wanted to be peed on.
  • Firemen Are Hot: Played straight and later averted (i.e., a calender-full of dancing mounds of muscle juxtaposed with a bunch of fat, hairy dudes eating chips).
  • First Gray Hair: Samantha, leading to a horribly botched dye job. At the end of the episode, she solves the problem by shaving it all off.
  • 555: Averted with the phone numbers. The producers signed up for phone numbers expressly so they could use them on the show and not have to do this. However, Carrie's address for the first few seasons, 265 East 73rd Street, doesn't exist (it's right where Second Avenue crosses).
  • Flanderization: With the exception of Carrie, all the female protagonists get this, particularly Charlotte, who goes from being the more innocent person (VERY relatively speaking) in her peer group to just being a complete moron.
  • Fluffy Fashion Feathers: Feather coats occasionally show up.
  • Foiler Footage (the series finale ending)
  • Food Slap: Samantha Jones dresses in her finest and heads off to meet Richard, who's sitting at a table in very nice restaurant, waiting for her. As Samantha approaches him, he smiles and tells her how great she looks. She gives him a big smile back, tosses a drink in his face, turns on a dime, and triumphantly walks away.
  • Formally Named Guest Dog: Carrie's book reading is interrupted by the appearance of one Mr. Winkle, a real celebrity dog, who has a book of his own which he's signing (by putting his paw print on it).
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble
  • Friends Rent Control: Carrie can afford to buy her apartment back after she sold it. Miranda and Samantha have the money to live the lifestyle depicted, but not the free time. And averted with Charlotte, who came from money and got her large apartment in her divorce settlement.
  • Friends with Benefits: Dissected by Carrie, who distinguishes between "Friends with Benefits" and "fuck buddies".
  • Fur and Loathing: Just the movie.
  • Gay Paree: Where Alexandr takes Carrie in the finale.
Cquote1

 Alexandr (to his dinner guests): "I think Paris is the greatest city in the world."

Steve: "Easy, buddy. You're talking to New Yorkers here."

Cquote2
  • Grandma, What Massive Hotness You Have!: The end of the first movie has Samantha turning 50, and she's still got some Christmas Cake left in her. Additionally, throughout the series, despite being the oldest of the group, she is also the most experienced and promiscuous and never has any trouble attracting men.
  • Gretzky Has the Ball: Charlotte's King Charles Cavalier Spaniel is purchased because it has "one leg shorter than the others" and shown at a Westminster-like dog show in that episode, without training, while in heat. There's a lot wrong here, starting with the fact that estrous is an immediate disqualification from dog shows. The idea that an unevenly hocked dog with no prior experience, an amateur handler and a disqualifying (as well as obvious and terribly disruptive to the other dogs) medical condition could win any sort of legitimate major dog show is as accurate as saying Carrie Bradshaw could enlist and play for the NFL. The only thing remotely justifying about it is that the judge was enamored with the handler- but even that wouldn't have helped her get all the way to the show ring.
    • Actually, from what her previous owner said, she'd had extensive training and been entered in dog shows before, but never managed to win.
  • "Happy Ending" Massage
  • Heart Is Where the Home Is: (Big vs. Aleksandr)
  • Heterosexual Life Partners: The women always drive the point that they are soulmates.
  • Hollywood California: Not nearly as cool as Big Applesauce.
  • Hollywood Pudgy: Miranda's "baby weight", Samantha in the movie after she gains- at most- five pounds.
  • Hot Mom: Miranda and Charlotte.
  • Housewife: Charlotte after her first wedding.
  • Hypocrite: Carrie's reaction to Aidan buying her a new computer, when most of what she buys could easily cost double.
Cquote1

 Aidan: "It's like a little purse."

Carrie: "That's a very expensive 'purse'."

Cquote2
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: "When you're tired of New York, you take a nap-a. You don't move to Napa!"
    • This is lampshaded in an episode where Carrie tries to write an article for Vogue and the editor hates it, saying her cheap puns are terrible.
  • Infallible Narrator: Not only does Carrie seem to know every intimate detail in the lives of her three best friends, it looks like she describes it all in her popular magazine column! And her friends are never bothered by this!
  • Ironic Echo: Carrie chews out Miranda in the movie using almost the exact same lines that Miranda used to hammer Steve earlier on.
    • "I'm sorry. I can't. Don't hate me."
  • It Is Always Spring: For the first few seasons, thrown out entirely by the time of season 6.
  • Its Pronounced Tropay: Aleksandr Petrovsky fails to teach Carrie the difference in pronunciation between his name and "Alexander".
  • I Was Quite a Looker: Samantha plans ahead and decides to have professional nude pictures taken now, so when she's "...80 and my tits are on the floor..." she can look back and remember.
  • Ivy League for Everyone: Carrie and Miranda went to Ivy League schools (Brown and Harvard Law, respectively). Charlotte went to Smith, a Seven Sisters College (which was essentially the Ivy League for Women until the actual Ivies went co-ed). It has been mentioned that Samantha has been to college, but never said which.
  • Jerkass: Too many to count, but the guy who gave Miranda an STD particularly stands out.
  • Ladykiller in Love: On the sparse times where Samantha pursues a serious relationship.
  • Law of Inverse Fertility: Charlotte is dying to get pregnant, while Miranda manages to get accidentally knocked up with one working ovary and testicle. Also, Charlotte finally does get pregnant the "old-fashioned way" after giving up following a miscarriage and a successful adoption.
  • Like Parent, Like Spouse: Carrie wonders if her problems with men have to do with her father walking out on the family when she was 5, though Miranda assures her that she has the exact same problems and her dad was home every day at 7.
  • Likes Older Women: Smith, and that college freshman Samantha slept with who promptly fell in love with her. In fact, nearly all of Samantha's boyfriends fall into this character, as most of them appear to be much younger than her.
  • Lingerie Scene: Notably with Carrie. Because Sarah Jessica Parker was a producer on the show, she never had to do her sex scenes topless, while the other women did.
  • Lipstick Lesbian: Charlotte wants to get in with a posse of them in one episode.
    • Also Maria, Samantha's Portuguese lover from season 4 (and therefore Samantha, for a time).
  • Little Black Dress: One of the more common dresses of course.
  • The Loins Sleep Tonight: Trey in particular.
  • Long Bus Trip: Skipper, who disappears during season 2, and was never mentioned again.
  • Looking for Love In All the Wrong Places
  • Love Freak: Charlotte is a true and passionate advocate of true love, and one season was determined to get married by the end of the year. This was mostly used as a foil to Miranda's jaded views on relationships, and Samantha's very casual outlook on love.
  • Lower Deck Episode: Stanford is the only character outside the lead 4 who ever got his own subplots now and then.
  • Man in a Kilt: Trey's wedding
  • Magical Negro: Louise in the movie
  • Mars and Venus Gender Contrast: A driving trope for the whole series.
  • Maternally Challenged: Carrie spends an episode now and then questioning if she's cut out for motherhood, and Miranda had next to no idea how to care for a kid, which is why her maid became so useful.
  • May-December Romance: particularly Samantha and Smith. Which made for some episodes of her being self-conscious. When she starts finding gray hairs (and not on her head), she worries that he'll stop thinking of her as an "older" woman and start thinking of her as an "old" woman.
  • Meaningful Name: Throwaway characters will often have names that either set up Incredibly Lame Puns or comment on their relation to the story.
Cquote1

 Carrie Voiceover: "As soon as Samantha met Dante, she knew she was in Hell."

Cquote2
Cquote1

 Samantha: First the gays, then the girls, then the Industry.

Cquote2
  • Pet Homosexual: Stanford and Anthony. Stanford does have his own occasional subplot though.
  • Pretty in Mink: So many furs. And in keeping with the "Everything's Better With" spirit of this trope, the furs are some of the few outfits worn more than once.
  • Product Placement: And how. Absolut asked them to make an entire subplot in an episode involving Samantha getting her boyfriend on an enormous poster in Times Square for their newest drink, Absolut Hunk.
  • Ready for Lovemaking
  • Real Life Writes the Plot: Shortened fifth season due to Sarah Jessica Parker's pregnancy. Also, the length of time between the series and The Movie due to negotiations falling through with Kim Cattrall in the first go-round.
  • Really Gets Around: Most notably Samantha, although many other characters qualify.
  • The Red Stapler: The name "Aidan" seems to be shooting up in popularity on the baby name charts in recent years.
  • Retail Therapy
  • Right Through His Pants
  • Right Through the Wall: Samantha's neighbours who always have loud sex after the late news. She joins in one night, and they invite her for a threesome.
  • Rule of Glamorous
  • Runaway Bride: Carrie.
    • Big, in The Movie.
  • Scenery Censor: When Sarah Jessica Parker was pregnant in the fifth season
  • Seinfeldian Conversation: Frequently over lunch, while discussing problems such as whether or not it is awkward to talk to your boyfriend while he is peeing with the bathroom door open.
  • Sequel Goes Foreign: Second movie goes to Abu Dhabi.
  • Serious Business: The episode where Charlotte's latest catch wants to try having anal sex with her. She and her friends have a group meeting and discuss the pros and cons of whether or not she should go through with this as if it was a serious personal crisis.
    • For a woman like Charlotte who's dating a guy she really likes, it kind of is.
  • Settled for Gay: Carrie once seriously contemplated marrying her gay friend to help him access his inheritance. She decided against it after realizing she would be unable to convince Stanford's grandmother of his heterosexuality.
  • Shiksa Goddess: Charlotte converts to Judaism so that Harry would marry her, leading to some frustration on her part when she ends up being more traditional and religious than he is.
    • Before Harry, she was this to a Hasidic artist she slept with in the first season.
  • Shirtless Scene: Happens a lot, but Smith is probably the most naked man on this show.
  • Shout-Out: Carrie liked comparing her romances with various classic romance films. Including quoting lines and singing the theme to The Way We Were. Plus an episode between her and Big had the theme to Breakfast at Tiffany's playing throughout.
    • More subtle in one of the early fifth-season episodes where they go out to the Hamptons. Miranda says a sarcastic "Fabulous ..." in response to something, followed immediately by Samantha shouting "Absolutely!" into her cellphone behind her.
  • Shrouded in Myth: One of the earlier episodes involves a man known only as "Mr Pussy", who is a cunning linguist of legend amongst Manhattan women. When Charlotte tries to date him, Samantha is aghast that she's "bogarting Mr. Pussy!"
  • The Smurfette Principle: A rare inversion: the show had no male characters at all in the main cast; even Big and Steve (the two most frequently recurring characters) appeared in rather less than half the episodes of the series. Carrie's friend Stanford, the next most frequent, showed up in less than a third of the episodes.
  • South of the Border: Charlotte screws up on her "don't drink the water" plan.
  • Sports Widow: One of Samantha's Guys of the Week refuses to have sex while his basketball team is playing. Sam tries to indulge his fandom, but when he turns out to have a team for every season, she walks away.
  • The Stoner: Samantha's a pot smoker and has a dealer. The other girls happily smoke it too, though none of them resemble the stereotypical unglamorous example of a marijuana smoker.
  • Suddenly Sexuality: Ultimately averted. Samantha had a fling with a woman for a few episodes, which by her standards is pretty long. But in the end she realized she liked penis too much, and couldn't exactly settle with just using strap-ons.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Miranda's recurring love interest in season one was Skipper. But the rest of the series he's replaced by a very similar but slightly more attractive Steve.
  • Tantrum Throwing: Maria does one of these half-deliberately towards the end of her relationship with Samantha.
  • Terrible Interviewees Montage: in The Movie
  • Three-Way Sex: Usually with Samantha.
  • Throwing Out the Script: Samantha does this at a breast cancer charity dinner.
  • Token Minority: Louise in The Movie, and that one guy Samantha dated until his sister objected.
  • Token Shipping: Subverted when one of the girls sets Carrie's gay friend Stanford and Charlotte's gay friend Anthony up on a date. Both men are insulted and annoyed because they have nothing in common apart from their sexual orientation.
  • Trailers Always Spoil: Or more to the point, DVD menus always spoil. If you have never watched the series before and are watching them on DVD, alot of plot items are given away on the seasons 2-6 DVD menus.
  • Transvestite: Samantha deals with some noisy ones outside her apartment by pouring a bucket of water on one of them.
  • Triang Relations
  • True Love Is Exceptional: Charlotte, who thought Trey was her prince charming but ended up finding true happiness with Harry.
  • Twenty-Four-Hour Party People: Anytime the girls hosted a birthday party, baby shower, wedding etc.; most of their guests were a bunch of random characters that were never seen before and would never be seen again for the rest of the series. Carrie frequently had pals she'd known for years who only appeared for one episode, but this can't explain all of them.
  • Two-Timer Date: Charlotte, who in one episode sets up dates with two men on the same night. It backfires on her when the first guy brings some chicken soup to her apartment since she said she was sick ... only to run into Charlotte and the other guy.
  • Ugly Guy, Hot Wife: Charlotte only sleeps with short, pudgy, hairy Harry on a whim, but ends up falling for him, and he's by far the nicest guy in the entire series, and they're by far the happiest couple together. Since Kristin "Charlotte" Davis has frequently topped "Most Beautiful Woman Alive" lists, it's a particular stand-out.
    • A less extreme version is Miranda (slightly more attractive than normal) and Steve (slightly less attractive than normal).
  • The Unfair Sex: Completely averted when Carrie cheats on Aiden with Big, as she and everyone else on the show agree that she was not in any justified in doing it.
    • And played straight in The Movie when Carrie reacts to Big's temporary cold feet like he left her at the altar (even after he had changed his mind to go through with it), going so far as to chew him out in the middle of the street and have a Heroic BSOD over it.
  • Unlimited Wardrobe
  • The Un-Reveal: Big's real name, until the final episode. (John James Preston.)
  • Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist: Unintended by the writers, but arguably Carrie Bradshaw - juvenile, shallow, whiny, and self-absorbed. Yet, we're supposed to root for her because of her great sense of style.
    • She does occasionally get Karmic Retribution, such as the episode where she realizes she has "spent $40,000 on shoes and has no place to live".
  • Watch It Stoned: One of Samantha's boyfriends got her to indulge in his vice of taking Viagra recreationally.
  • Wedding Day: Many, whether it's for the main girls or another character. Miranda kept hers rather low-key though.
    • Charlotte and Harry's is notable for being of the "everything goes wrong" version. They see it as a sign of good luck.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: When Charlotte finds out about Carrie's affair with a married man, she is pissed. Especially because she herself is married, and wanted Carrie to imagine how Charlotte would feel if she found out her husband was cheating on her. Also when Carrie is low on money and needs some assistance, Miranda and Samantha offer some money to lend, but Charlotte instead points out that Carrie is almost 40 and maybe should be more focused on her responsibilities first before shoes and parties.
  • Where Everybody Knows Your Flame
  • Workaholic: More of an Informed Attribute of Miranda's. She's trying to make partner at her Law Firm (which can be a grueling prospect in real life), while getting into adventures with the girls and raising her son alone for periods. At one point she tries to shorten her work week to 55 billable hours and the other attorneys are aghast (Which is a little bit Reality Is Unrealistic because that's still right on Partner track levels of billing). Lawyers who understand the importance of sleep ask for 6-8 a day, which still translates to a good 9 hours spent at work a day.
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