
From @EveryOutfitonSATC.
And Just Like That⊠has all of New York talking, the stock market shaking (looking at you, Peloton), and the haters eating crow. Picking up 20 years after its hot late-â90s predecessor left off, the HBO Max original sees Sarah Jessica Parker reprise her iconic role as (an older, wiser) Carrie Bradshawâalongside Cynthia Nixonâs Miranda Hobbes and Kristin Davisâs Charlotte Yorkâleaving die-hard Sex and the City experts with a lot to process. To make sense of it all, our editor-in-chief Mel Ottenberg consulted Chelsea Fairless and Lauren Garroniâthe founders of the viral @EveryOutfitonSATC Instagram account, hosts of the Every Outfit podcast, and authors of We Should All Be Mirandasâto shed some light on the matter. Below, the trio hopped on Zoom for a chat about Carrieâs nicotine addiction, the demise of Century 21, and the SATC episodes that never stop giving. â ERNESTO MACIAS
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LAUREN GARRONI: Oh wow, weâre doing video?
CHELSEA FAIRLESS: I like seeing your face. By the way, is that snow on your beret?Â
GARRONI: I think itâs just a little bit of fluff. I live in L.A. just like you do.
FAIRLESS: Sorry, Iâm very conscious of this because my apartment is full of fake snow from Christmas. You should see what it did to my Skims Cozy Collection robe, it was a real nightmare.
GARRONI: Oh no. I was looking at Jen Atkinâs Instagram and she posted a video of her cleaning the window with a Dyson being like, âIâm never doing a flocked tree again!âÂ
FAIRLESS: Yep, that was me.
GARRONI: Evidently, she sold her stake in Ouai.
FAIRLESS: Iâm sure she cleaned up. Now theyâll change all the formulas, and we wonât want to use it anymore.
GARRONI: Iâm glad sheâs adopted the Sophia Amoruso guide to not being cancelled, which is just moving on from something within five years of starting it.
FAIRLESS: Itâs pretty geniusâŠÂ
GARRONI: Speaking of, CNN is launching CNN Plus, and they just signed Alison Roman to do a show. She has a new stew with cabbage in it that I saw in a newsletter.
FAIRLESS: Can you make it and report back?
GARRONI: I mean, I can just make it for all of us. Capitalism has me feeling like a socialist lately.
FAIRLESS: You are dressed for the revolutionâŠ
GARRONI: I will forever be haunted by the moment when you and Mel were dm-ing about Emily in Paris, and Mel was like, âI donât believe that people are actually wearing berets.â Iâm like, âWell?!â [Points to her head]
FAIRLESS: Itâs very⊠itâs giving Emily in Paris.
GARRONI: What else can we talk about while we wait for Mel?
FAIRLESS: Well, Iâm not about to tell anyone where I buried a body. Iâm not about to spill the tea to Interview magazine about the location of the body. Here he is now.
MEL OTTENBERG: Lauren, your hair!
GARRONI: Welcome, Mel. During the pandemic, it was my goal to become more thotty, so Iâm back to long blonde hair.
OTTENBERG: Itâs also Carolyn Bessette-Kennedyâs birthday and youâre both really serving it. Did either of you even know? [All laugh]
GARRONI: Mel, youâll be happy to know Chelsea started Real Housewives, she started with Salt Lake City.
FAIRLESS: Because itâs not that intimidating to me, thereâs only two seasons.
GARRONI: As I explained it to Chelsea, they all look like female wrestlers and they want to be their daughters or fuck their sons.
OTTENBERG: It is, dare I say, the most riveting? The people are a new level of sociopath that I havenât seen before.Â
FAIRLESS: Before we start our Sex and the City spiral Mel, we have to ask you about Julia and Ye. Tell us everything.
OTTENBERG: Like you, I noticed that Julia and Ye were togetherâI saw it on Instagram or something. I always hate the first of week of Januaryâitâs such a fucking bummer, and magazines are always bad at that time of year because everyoneâs heart just isnât in it. But Julia in black, low slung hip huggers out at night with Ye felt like the only thing worth living for. I was like, âIâm living, Julia, what are those pants? â She told me theyâre Miaou. Then she and Ye called me and we talked on the phone. They were very cute, they sent me pictures, it was fun. I love their story. Watch this space.Â
GARRONI: You broke the internet! It somehow took the conversation away from the one year anniversary of the insurrection. By the end of the day, everyone was talking about one thing, and it was this.
OTTENBERG: I know, and I have feelings about that. Okay, letâs deep dive. And Just Like That⊠is not garbage, right?
FAIRLESS: I donât think itâs garbage. Even if it were, we have a podcast that dissects every last detail of Sex and the City, so weâd watch it anyway.Â

From @EveryOutfitonSATC.
OTTENBERG: By the way, I love your podcast. Itâs so fun to listen to people you really like bantering. You guys babble, edit it to make sure that youâre not going to be murdered for it, and then move on. Okay, explain to me what happens in the latest episode of And Just Like That... Howâs the alcoholism?
GARRONI: It jumps forward. Carrieâs like, âThree months later, I was in heels.â As I said in the last podcast, it took five episodes to get where the series should have started, and now itâs kind of fun again.
OTTENBERG: So Bigâs dead and Carrieâs like, âIâm wearing heels.â Is Carrie gonna fuck again? Any predictions?Â
GARRONI: She goes on a date for the first time! One thing that isnât discussed in the last episode is that Carrie impulsively buys a super modern apartment. Just Like That⊠has introduced the idea that Carrie is very into what I call âDead-Tech Modernism.â Look at Bigâs funeralâwhich looks like what Robert Longbowâs funeral might look likeâand this apartment that she buys and sells within one episode.Â
OTTENBERG: Do you guys think itâs shady that he gave whatâs-her-face a million dollars? I asked the right A-list womenâwho shall remain namelessâand they said it was weird.Â
FAIRLESS: Itâs weird.
OTTENBERG: He was like, âI loved you, we were married, hereâs a million dollars, bye.â
FAIRLESS: Itâs a bit overdramatic. Bigâs dead, itâs in his will, but it still feels a bit attention-seeking.
GARRONI: Especially to not leave a note. The writing in this show is caught between the world they set up in Sex and the City, and a desire to lead the audience down a new path that ultimately doesnât come full circle. Theyâre like, âCarrie is going to sell the brownstone, things are changing.â At the end of the episode, she moves into this new apartment and then sells it within a day.
OTTENBERG: Also, the way Carrie smokes? Itâs fucked up, and it makes me want a cigarette. I just watched the entire new season of Euphoria, and I donât do drugs anymore, but it has me like, âOooh, drugs!â But wait, how are the clothes?Â
GARRONI: When we talked to Molly Rogers [the Sex and the City costume designer] about the latest episode, she said she wouldnât have been able to do the show without Century 21. She was sad that it didnât exist anymore.

From @EveryOutfitonSATC.
OTTENBERG: RIP Century 21. Iâve gotta say, the cityâs fucked up and itâs hard to style. There are no weird, mixed bag stores anymore. That place was the biggest mixed bag. Remember those lingerie racks? It was the only place that would have a diamond-studded bra with a matching garter belt, all in chocolate brown! It was a fantasy. What else did she say? Was she cool?
FAIRLESS: Sheâs so cool. No bullshit whatsoeverâvery funny, very brash, doesnât give a fuck. We asked her, âDid you send your assistants to excavate Sarah Jessica Parkerâs storage unit? Because SJP kept all of Carrieâs clothes from the original Sex and the City.â She was basically like, âIâm not letting any of those sticky-fingered assistants touch any of that shit!âÂ
GARRONI: Sheâs amazing.
FAIRLESS: Mollyâs done a good job of translating Carrieâs style from the original seriesânot the filmsâand thatâs particularly evident in episode six. There are a lot of outfits in And Just Like That⊠which feel like original Sex and The City looks: itâs the â50s prom dress, the tuxedo jacket, the pearls. We lost that in the films, because theyâre informed by fashion in 2008 as opposed to 1998.
OTTENBERG: Totally. While I was watching the funeral scene I was like, âWhy wouldnât Carrie wear that to Bigâs funeral?â Itâs very classic Carrieâthe vintage shoes and all that. Also, werenât people being very anti-Miranda on the internet? Her characterâs so confusing to me now.
GARRONI: Well, youâre speaking to the authors of We Should All Be Mirandas, and we have a bone to pick.
OTTENBERG: Yes sweetie, I know!
FAIRLESS: Miranda has always been an under-appreciated Sex and the City character. Weâve gone to extreme lengths to reframe her as an aspirational figure in the years since the show ended. But the And Just Like That⊠writers have taken the wind out of her sails, kicked her down a notch, and made her a bit clueless and doofus-y, which is unfortunate. Maybe if she has enough sex with Che sheâll be her old self again.
GARRONI: I donât know why they gave three plot lines to Miranda, and no plot lines to Charlotte.
FAIRLESS: Her non-binary child is her plot line.
GARRONI: Chelsea and I have really had to switch off our feelings with this show, because weâve been pretty anti. We feel that if we were in the writersâ room, it would be a more satisfying watch. Episode six was the first time that any of the characters felt like their old selves, but aged up 20 years. Whatâs missing from the first five episodes is what made those old brunch, dinner, and cocktail scenes in Sex and the City so greatâthey each had such different perspectives on an issue. The picnic scene in episode six was the first hint we got of that.

From @EveryOutfitonSATC.
FAIRLESS: I have a more loving view of And Just Like That than Lauren does. I think its biggest weakness is the fact that we have no choice but to compare it to Sex and the City. SATC had such a distinctive structure and format, so anything that just departs from that is going to disappoint us. Even the lack of voice over is jarring.
GARRONI: My stance is, I understand the decisions theyâre making, and I donât disagree with the idea of making it more dramedy than hard comedy. I donât straight up hate it, but if it pivoted a few degrees, it would be kind of perfect. Like, why is she in this unaddressed career slump?Â

From @EveryOutfitonSATC.
OTTENBERG: But itâs clear that Carrieâs still cool, right? Sheâs gotten a little softer, and sheâs happy to be a little more random. The girl that had the bus ad, the girl who was âSingle and Fabulous?â wouldnât be on this random podcast that doesnât exist. Â
FAIRLESS: By the way, there is a real Carrie Bradshawâher name is Candace Bushnell. Sheâs a very successful novelist whose books are adapted into television shows, so that is another potential way Carrie could have gone.Â
GARRONI: Chelsea learned from Candace that she used to date Gordon Parks in the late â70s.
FAIRLESS: Thereâs a really fabulous photo that he took of her outside of the Plaza Hotel, very Carrie, in a full equestrian outfit.
OTTENBERG: Hot. Lexi is so major.Â
FAIRLESS: I think Candace is more like Samantha. Sheâs always with Countess LuAnn and has this pack of Samanthas that she runs around with in the Hamptons and uptown. Thatâs her vibe.

From @CandaceBushnell.
OTTENBERG: Also, is âSplat!â [Sex and the City Season 6, episode 18] the most major episode of all time? Itâs aged in the most extraordinary way, because the world is shit, the worldâs O-V-E-R. Nobodyâs fun anymoreâwhatever happened to fun? Weâve been talking about this non-stop since like 2000.
FAIRLESS: The only other episode that has the same camp value is âFashion Roadkillâ [Sex and the City Season 4, episode 2]. You have Kevin Aucoin as himself, you have the fashion show with Ed Koch, and you have Margaret Cho as the producer, most importantly.
OTTENBERG: That episode murdered me. I also feel like it has a positive message. When you live in this town, everyone wants to hate, but you gotta get up and keep doing the catwalk, because youâre fucking fierce. Iâve been here long enough to know when everyone hates what Iâm doing, or nobody cares, but you just gotta keep going until the next moment when everyone gets super excited again. Â
FAIRLESS: I actually experienced a version of that episode in real life. I had a rough year in 2016, and it was the first day of 2017. I decided to go for a jog, and I trip and fall off the curb the second I walk out the door, basically. It was the most ridiculous. I was just lying there in the gutter.
GARRONI: Didnât you fall in dog shit?Â
FAIRLESS: Yeah, okay, that detail I forgot. But like Carrie, I just had to pick myself up and move on.
GARRONI: That episode also has the line, where she says, âI used to buy Vogue instead of dinner because I felt like it fed me more.â
FAIRLESS: Amazing. I buy Interview instead of dinner to this day.
OTTENBERG: Oh, thank you so much.