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Sex and the City's And Just Like That... to end after third season

Sex and the City's And Just Like That... to end after third season

Daily Record6 hours ago
And Just Like That... is set to conclude after its third season, showrunner Michael Patrick King has confirmed
Sex and the City's spin-off And Just Like That... will end after its third series, TV bosses have confirmed. The HBO show, which reunites viewers with the much-loved characters, will cease broadcasting after its two-part finale.

Showrunner Michael Patrick King said he recognised the end was nigh whilst penning the final episode, explaining on Instagram that "it became clear to me that this might be a wonderful place to stop".

Despite the cast and crew knowing the programme's fate, they delayed the announcement to ensure "didn't want the word 'final' to overshadow the fun of watching the season".

And Just Like That premiered in 2021, continuing the original storyline with three of the four principal characters returning. Sarah Jessica Parker reprised her role as Carrie Bradshaw alongside Cynthia Nixon as Miranda Hobbes and Kristin Davis as Charlotte York.
Kim Cattrall, who portrayed Samantha, chose not to participate in the revival, though she made a fleeting appearance in the second series finale.

Sarah Jessica Parker, who has embodied Carrie since SATC's debut episode in 1998 and served as executive producer, reflected that the character has "dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years."
However, she now believes this chapter of her career feels "complete."
Kristin Davis, who plays Charlotte York, said online: "I am profoundly sad. I love our whole beautiful cast and crew. 400 artisans working so hard on our show with deep love. And to our loyal fans, we love you forever and ever."

Cynthia Nixon, known for her role as Miranda Hobbs, shared her thoughts: "I can't believe our wild beautiful And Just Like That ride is almost over. It has been such a delight from start to finish. I will miss working with these people everyday SO incredibly much but know we will always be a part of each other's lives. Get ready for a lot more carousels in the weeks to come! And don't miss these last few episodes: surprises in store!"
Sarah Jessica Parker took to Instagram with a heartfelt homage to her character, writing: "She changed homes, time zones, boyfriends, her mind, her shoes, her hair, but never her love and devotion to New York City.

"She devoted herself to hats, books, shoes, friends and the promise of a new day in her beloved city and the people she treasured most. She has worn shame, pride, honor, optimism and literally countless dresses, skirts, tutus.
"Held onto hands, hopes and the very best of people. Miranda, Samantha and Charlotte, there will never be better friends and what great fortune for Carrie to come to know and love Seema and LTW, most divine new connections."
She went on: "Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years. I think I have loved her most of all. I know others have loved her just as I have. Been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her.

"The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion. Therefore the most sentimental and profound gratitude and lifetime of debt. To you all.
"MPK and I together recognised, as we have in the past, this chapter complete. AJLT was all joy, adventure, the greatest kind of hard work alongside the most extraordinary talent of 380 that includes all the brilliant actors who joined us.

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"I am better for every single day I spent with you. It will be forever before I forget. The whole thing. Thank you all."
She concluded: "I love you so. I hope you love these final two episodes as much as we all do. Rabbit rabbit. Xxx, SJ."
Sex and the City premiered in 1998, spanning six series until 2004. Two cinema releases followed, the first in 2008 and a sequel in 2010.
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Goodbye And Just Like That: why it's the right time to end the cursed spin-off
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And just like that, it was over. Friday's announcement by the showrunner Michael Patrick King that the third series of And Just Like That would be its last was met with little surprise and I suspect some relief. Following a forthcoming two-part finale, Carrie Bradshaw will hang up her Manolos for good – and not a moment too soon. If a theme could be pulled from the scrambled threads of the third season of the Sex and the City reboot, it is, I think, the question of appearance versus reality. Early on in the series, rattled by the discovery of a rat infestation in her meadowy garden, Carrie seeks comfort from Aidan, the man she's technically in a relationship with but due to a muddled and implausible arrangement, can't actually be with for five years. Carrie thought her garden was perfect, she says, 'but I just wasn't looking underneath'. After three seasons of And Just Like That the answer to what lies beneath is, I fear, nothing. Take the shoes – in a frankly criminal throwback to one of the best plotlines of the original show, Carrie namechecks a superior earlier episode as she complains about her curmudgeonly downstairs neighbour asking her to remove her stilettos in the house. In A Woman's Right to Shoes, Carrie's stolen Manolo Blahniks stood for, in no particular order, the gulf that can open between friends at different life stages, the way marriage and motherhood are celebrated when the milestones of an independent life are not, attention inequity in friendships, and a woman's right to spend her money however the hell she chooses. In Under the Table, Carrie's shoes signify … that she has a crush. That's not to say And Just Like That hasn't had its moments of insight – they just tend to be immediately binned in favour of something silly. Despite episodes averaging 40 minutes in length, this season has been the trimmest so far, with excisions both necessary (Che Diaz) and unexplained (Nya) giving the remaining characters room to breathe. Seema learns that the key to romance is not pretending to be someone else, but letting go of the desire to be seen in a certain way. Lisa flounders in her attempt to balance work and family life. Charlotte, previously troubled by such challenges as the cancellation of her dog, finally gets a storyline worthy of her default mode of hysteria when Harry is diagnosed with prostate cancer. Charlotte and Lisa's Park Avenue-set struggles with family life have some meat to them, but are bedevilled by every interaction with their children seeming to have come straight out of a toothpaste advertisement, or hell. See: Charlotte freaking out about not being able to work the party circuit to sell art as her smug children talk about veganism and polyamory, or the Todd Wexley family's cringe banter and Lisa's dismissive comments that her husband should start Ozempic. At times like these the show feels like a charmless sitcom about the super-rich. In Sex and the City, the weekends in the Hamptons were just the backdrop to more resonant storytelling – in And Just Like That, sometimes the setting is the story. In one scene, Charlotte begins to spiral at Tiffany's, wondering if life is as fragile as the glass cabinets around her – but what might have been a serious meditation on midlife and mortality morphs into an unfunny joke about which society events Bitsy von Muffling is and isn't invited to. Sometimes these vignettes verge on outright cruelty – after Lisa's nemesis is marked as a gauche interloper by her Michael Kors handbag (wrong kind of designer, honey), it's a lot harder to see her mother-in-law's pronouncement that she has no time for the working class as mere satire. Meanwhile, the inexplicably homeless Miranda deflowers a nun, becomes a meme and gains a girlfriend, who, in lieu of a personality, possesses two Italian greyhounds and vile British colleagues apparently scooped straight from the cutting room floor of Too Much. It's not until the 10th episode that we get to see Miranda, who barely resembles the beloved judgmental ice queen of Sex and the City, do the first Miranda-y thing of the entire series so far, when she stalks the woman her son got pregnant. The one bright spot of the season has been its treatment of Carrie's faltering relationship with Aidan. 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How the cracks in a relationship can run so deep that even the layering sediment of time can't fill them in, but only hide them. When Carrie finally ended it, I felt a tug of genuine emotion that can only come from having spent so much time with these characters. A lot has been made this season of the idea of the hate-watch, especially given Miranda's obsession with a Love Island-style show called Bi Bingo. 'I finally discovered the joy of hate-watching,' she says, in what I assume is meant to be a winning nod at self-awareness by the showrunners. The thing is, I don't believe that's what those of us who loved Sex and the City (for who else would bother watching And Just Like That through three unexceptional seasons?) were doing. I'd describe it as something closer to hope-watching. We wanted to see the characters we loved, women once so convincingly and lovingly drawn, being flirty, frivolous and fabulously dressed in New York City. 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Sarah Jessica Parker ‘grateful' after end of And Just Like That is announced
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Named after Parker's character Carrie Bradshaw's catchphrase, the series follows the character and her friends as they live out their 50s in New York, with a two-part finale planned. In a post on Instagram, Parker, 60, said: 'Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years, I think I have loved her most of all. A post shared by SJP (@sarahjessicaparker) 'I know others have loved her just as I have, been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her. 'The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion, therefore the most sentimental and profound gratitude and lifetime of debt, to you all. 'MPK (Michael Patrick King, the series' showrunner) and I together recognised, as we have in the past, this chapter complete. 'AJLT (And Just Like That) was all joy, adventure, the greatest kind of hard work alongside the most extraordinary talent of 380 that includes all the brilliant actors who joined us. 'I am better for every single day I spent with you, it will be forever before I forget the whole thing, thank you all. 'I love you so, I hope you love these final two episodes as much as we all do.' In a statement announcing the show's end, King did not say when the finale episodes would air. A post shared by And Just Like That... (@justlikethatmax) 'While I was writing the last episode of And Just Like That season 3, it became clear to me that this might be a wonderful place to stop. 'Along with Sarah Jessica Parker, Casey Bloys (HBO chief executive) and Sarah Aubrey, we decided to end the popular series this year with a two-part finale and extended the original series order from 10 episodes to 12. 'SJP (Sarah Jessica Parker) and I held off announcing the news until now because we didn't want the word 'final' to overshadow the fun of watching the season. 'It's with great gratitude we thank all the viewers who have let these characters into their homes and their hearts over these many years.' Kristen Davis, who plays Charlotte York in the series said she was 'profoundly sad' to see the show end. She added in a post on Instagram: 'I love our whole beautiful cast and crew, 400 artisans working so hard on our show with deep love. 'And to our loyal fans, we love you forever and ever.' The original Sex And The City show follows Carrie and her three friends Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), Charlotte and Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon), and their dating lives, friendships and femininity. It initially ran for six series between 1998 and 2004, before two films, Sex And The City (2008) and Sex And The City 2 (2010) were released.

Sarah Jessica Parker ‘grateful' after end of And Just Like That is announced
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Named after Parker's character Carrie Bradshaw's catchphrase, the series follows the character and her friends as they live out their 50s in New York, with a two-part finale planned. In a post on Instagram, Parker, 60, said: 'Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years, I think I have loved her most of all. 'I know others have loved her just as I have, been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her. 'The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion, therefore the most sentimental and profound gratitude and lifetime of debt, to you all. 'MPK (Michael Patrick King, the series' showrunner) and I together recognised, as we have in the past, this chapter complete. 'AJLT (And Just Like That) was all joy, adventure, the greatest kind of hard work alongside the most extraordinary talent of 380 that includes all the brilliant actors who joined us. 'I am better for every single day I spent with you, it will be forever before I forget the whole thing, thank you all. 'I love you so, I hope you love these final two episodes as much as we all do.' In a statement announcing the show's end, King did not say when the finale episodes would air. He said: 'And just like that… the ongoing storytelling of the Sex And The City universe is coming to an end. 'While I was writing the last episode of And Just Like That season 3, it became clear to me that this might be a wonderful place to stop. 'Along with Sarah Jessica Parker, Casey Bloys (HBO chief executive) and Sarah Aubrey, we decided to end the popular series this year with a two-part finale and extended the original series order from 10 episodes to 12. 'SJP (Sarah Jessica Parker) and I held off announcing the news until now because we didn't want the word 'final' to overshadow the fun of watching the season. 'It's with great gratitude we thank all the viewers who have let these characters into their homes and their hearts over these many years.' Kristen Davis, who plays Charlotte York in the series said she was 'profoundly sad' to see the show end. She added in a post on Instagram: 'I love our whole beautiful cast and crew, 400 artisans working so hard on our show with deep love. 'And to our loyal fans, we love you forever and ever.' The original Sex And The City show follows Carrie and her three friends Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), Charlotte and Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon), and their dating lives, friendships and femininity. It initially ran for six series between 1998 and 2004, before two films, Sex And The City (2008) and Sex And The City 2 (2010) were released.

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