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5 Sex and the City Asian-relevant moments from the original series, from Lucy Liu to a dim sum pun to a request for sex in exchange for money

  • And Just Like That, the new Sex and the City series, premieres on December 9 – here are five cringeworthy to noteworthy Asian-relevant moments in the original
  • In one episode, a character is thrown out of a flat by an Asian woman named Sum – and a dim sum pun is made. In another, Lucy Liu makes a stellar cameo

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December 9 will see the global premiere of And Just Like That, the new name for Sex and the City. Photo: HBO GO

With reboots being the cultural trend of the moment – Dexter, Frasier and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air are all primed to be discovered by a new generation of viewers – it’s perhaps not surprising that anticipation runs high for the return of Sex and the City, a romantic comedy-drama series that defined television in the late 1990s.

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December 9 will see the global premiere of And Just Like That, the succinctly titled new name for SATC, a 10-episode limited series on HBO Max.

Kim Cattrall, who played the sexually adventurous Samantha, is the only one of the quartet of glamorous, accomplished women led by journalist Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) not returning for the reprise. Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) and Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) are both back as Carrie’s BFFs.

The trailer also teases the return of favourites like wealthy financier Mr Big (Chris Noth), level-headed bar owner Steve Brady (David Eigenberg) and the fast-talking wedding planner Anthony Marentino, played by Mario Cantone.

For the first time in the history of the franchise, there will be a South Asian in a significant role. Sarita Choudhury will play Seema Patel, a powerful Manhattan real estate broker. Choudhury, who is of British-Indian descent, has been in thriller series Homeland and US drama Little Fires Everywhere.

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Despite the original show’s acclaim (it won multiple awards, spawned two films, and made tulle skirts for adults a thing) in retrospect it was rampantly out of touch with real life. The four best friends are white. Their husbands/boyfriends are white. In the mind of series creator Michael Patrick King, New York – where the show is set – is made up of white people.
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