Sex and the City writer defends Carrie's spending

Photo credit: New Line Cinema
Photo credit: New Line Cinema

From Digital Spy

Anyone who's seen Sex and the City has no doubt wondered how on earth Carrie Bradshaw managed to live in that fabulous apartment in the middle of Manhattan all by herself, take taxis every day, eat out every night, brunch and sip Cosmos every week, and buy Monolos every other week ("there's your down payment") when all she did was write ONE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER COLUMN?!

Photo credit: HBO
Photo credit: HBO

Anyway, 15 years on from 'Ring a Ding Ding', the episode which still enrages most fans, where Sarah Jessica Parker's controversial character had to choose between buying or losing her place in New York – ending in BFF Charlotte having to bail her out – Sex and the City's writer and producer, Amy Harris, has spoken out about Carrie's unrealistic champagne lifestyle on a lemonade income.

"If people were pissed and hated that Carrie did that, I'm OK with that," she told CNBC.

"Sarah Jessica and I talked about this: we believe she [Carrie] paid her [Charlotte] back. It was a loan, not a gift, so she did have to learn to save a little, to not spend everything on shoes and clothes.

Photo credit: HBO
Photo credit: HBO

"In my mind, she had to acknowledge all the shit choices she'd made and the fact that she hadn't saved a penny and that was a big mistake, and so she was living with that.

"Carrie learned a lesson. I do believe she sat down every month and wrote Charlotte a cheque."

Photo credit: HBO
Photo credit: HBO

Harris also admitted that Carrie's spending divided the script writers, adding: "People are funny about money.

"The biggest fight we ever got into in the writers' room was about the money – that was a very big debate.

"Money is a tricky, complicated thing. Carrie spent it well on things she enjoyed, and luckily it all worked out well for her – I love happy endings."

'Ring a Ding Ding', was the 16th episode of the fourth season and originally aired on January 27, 2002.

At least now, in the current financial climate, millenials can relate to Carrie having no place to live – we'll all soon be forced to live in our shoes...


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