Sarah Jessica Parker calls out male TV characters as she defends ‘condemned’ Carrie Bradshaw

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Sarah Jessica Parker is sick of the double standards on television.

In a new interview with HuffPost UK, the 60-year-old actress defended her iconic “Sex and the City” and “And Just Like That” character, Carrie Bradshaw, from fan backlash and called out the fact that certain male TV characters don’t get the same treatment.

Sarah Jessica Parker as Carrie Bradshaw in “And Just Like That.” Max

“It’s always interesting to me that [Carrie is] so condemned, but a male lead on a show can be a murderer, and people love him,” Parker said.

“And if a woman has an affair, or behaves poorly, or spends money foolishly, there’s a kind of punitive response to it,” she added.

Sarah Jessica Parker attends the “And Just Like That” Season 3 photocall in NYC on May 21. WireImage
Sarah Jessica Parker and Chris Noth in “Sex and the City.” Getty Images

But Parker did admit that she finds the continued discourse around Carrie “pretty fantastic.”

“That kind of connection and those kinds of strong feelings, both positive and negative, are pretty wonderful,” she acknowledged. “People are kind of captive in those moments to something, and I think that’s perfectly fine.”

Sarah Jessica Parker, John Corbett in “And Just Like That.” Craig Blankenhorn/Max

The Emmy Award winner recognized that while there’s been many times that Carrie has “made mistakes” or “not been mature in love,” she still appreciates her on-screen alter ego.

“I think, fundamentally, Carrie is an extraordinarily decent and good person – an extremely devoted friend, she’s generous of spirit and time, in all she has to offer,” said Parker.

Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon, Kristin Davis and Kim Cattrall in “Sex and the City” in 2002. Getty Images
Sarah Jessica Parker in “And Just Like That.” Max

After “AJLT” premiered in 2021 and “SATC” arrived on Netflix in 2024, Gen Z fans became Carrie’s biggest critics, deeming her once-celebrated actions selfish and toxic.

The younger generation’s biggest issue with Carrie was her on-again, off-again relationship with Chris Noth’s Mr. Big, which spanned six seasons and bled into “AJLT,” in which Big dies in the first episode.

Sarah Jessica Parker (Carrie) and Chris Noth (Mr. Big). Getty Images

But Parker has firmly been on Carrie’s side despite the online hate for the character.

In April, Parker was on “Today with Jenna & Friends” and dismissed the idea that she’s ever wanted Carrie to make a different decision.

Sarah Jessica Parker at the “And Just Like That” Season 3 photocall. WireImage

“It’s been such a sort of extraordinary experience,” she said about portraying Carrie. “I try to describe it as being contractually obligated to play somebody else — be somebody else — for about 27 years, to behave in ways which would be illegal if I, as a married person with children, ways in which I would behave in the city or with men.”

Parker also explained that she has “implicit trust and faith” in “AJLT” showrunner Michael Patrick King to validate Carrie’s choices.

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