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  1. Miranda is heartbroken when she finds out that Steve ( David Eigenberg) has cheated on her. Sex and the City 2. Michael Patrick King. Story by : Darren Star. Screenplay by : Michael Patrick King. May 27, 2010. ( 2010-05-27) Two years after the events of the previous film, Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte and Miranda go on a trip to Abu Dhabi.

    Season
    Episodes
    Episodes
    Originally Aired(first Aired)
    May 30, 2008 ( 2008-05-30)
    20
    8
    January 4, 2004 ( 2004-01-04)
    20
    12
    June 22, 2003 ( 2003-06-22)
    8
    8
    July 21, 2002 ( 2002-07-21)
  2. Sex and the City – Season 6, Episode 17 The Cold War ... Watch Sex and the City — Season 6, Episode 17 with a subscription on Max, Netflix, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

    • Julian Farino
    • June 7, 1998
    • Sarah Jessica Parker
  3. Watch The Cold War (Season 6, Episode 17) of Sex and the City or get episode details on NBC.com

  4. season 6. The sixth and final season of the American television romantic comedy-drama Sex and the City aired in the United States on HBO. The show was created by Darren Star while Star, Michael Patrick King, John P. Melfi, series lead actress Sarah Jessica Parker, Cindy Chupack, and Jenny Bicks served as executive producers.

    • "The Caste System"
    • "No Ifs, And, Or Butts"
    • "Cock-A-Doodle-Do"
    • "Old Dogs, New Dicks"
    • "The Cold War"
    • "Unoriginal Sin"
    • "Lights, Camera, Relationship"
    • "Plus One Is The Loneliest Number"
    • "Running with Scissors"
    • "Sex and The Country"

    Comparing the dating travails of four fairly wealthy white women to the Indian caste system is just not OK, especially when the only person of color (Samantha's boyfriend's servant, no less) exists solely as the butt of a joke.

    Quelle surprise...a show this white managed to botch an episode about race by having Samantha complaining about the "racism" she experienced from a Black woman who would not let her date her brother. Silver lining: we meet Aidan.

    This episode does a pretty good job of bringing to a close all the main romantic dramas of Season 3 (Miranda and Steve, Carrie and Big, Charlotte and Trey), but the casual transphobia (including a lot of slurs) makes it unwatchable today.

    Big is the absolute worst, and Carrie wonders, "can you change a man?" The answer is yes, if you fall for all the romantic clichés this show was supposed to break down. Plus, Charlotte is at her most irritating level of prissy when she dates an uncircumcised man—the horror!

    The writers knew that Season 6 would be the final one, meaning they had one last chance to do all the things they wanted with the sow. Judging by this episode, they were desperate to put Samantha in an afro, do dog period jokes and get a few last uses of the homophobic f-word in under the wire.

    An episode of Sex and the Citywithout any sex at all, and therefore pointless. There are nice moments, like Carrie dedicating her book to Charlotte, but an episode about a christening is not what we signed up for with this show.

    Was this an episode, or just a 30-minute advert for Prada, intercut with footage of Smith Jerrod's ass and unrelatable scenes of Berger not being able to deal with the lack of success that his book has had? Also, what an awful episode title.

    The one with Carrie's book party. Here, the show makes the same mistake that fellow HBO show Entouragedid: The more the characters succeed, the less interesting they are.

    The worst thing about the Big and Carrie affair episodes is that we basically never see any of Natasha, like the show is too timid to make us feel bad about what Carrie is doing—and when she does appear, she quickly falls down the stairs.

    Watching Carrie bored at Aidan's cabin makes for a boring episode. The scenes of Miranda caring for Steve after his cancer diagnosis are sweet, though.

  5. Feb 1, 2004 · 29 min. 7.2 (572) In the season 6 episode 17 of Sex and the City, titled The Cold War, the iconic friendships and romantic entanglements that have defined the series take center stage as the characters grapple with the complexities of communication and vulnerability in their relationships. The episode opens with a sense of tension that hangs in ...

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  7. Carrie Bradshaw writes a column about sex and relationships in New York city. With three of her closest friends: Samantha Jones, who owns her own PR firm and is more interested in exciting "one-nighters" than long-term relationships; Miranda Hobbes, a cynical lawyer who prioritizes her career over her erratic lovelife, and Charlotte York, an art gallery curator who is a bit prudish when it ...

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