Sarah Jessica Parker is standing by her iconic “Sex and the City” character, Carrie Bradshaw, while taking aim at the gendered double standards that continue to dominate television storytelling. In an interview with HuffPost U.K., Parker addressed the growing wave of criticism that’s emerged around Carrie, particularly among younger audiences discovering the show through streaming, and fans are rallying behind her.

Once a beloved symbol of fashion and female friendship, Carrie has more recently become a divisive figure online, with critics calling out her perceived selfishness, immaturity in love, and contradictory attitude toward sex, despite making a career writing about it.
Parker acknowledged that her character isn’t perfect. “She’s made mistakes,” she said. “She’s not been mature in love at times.” But what frustrates her most is the uneven playing field when it comes to flawed characters on television. “It’s always interesting to me that [this is] so condemned, but a male lead on a show can be a murderer, and people love him,” she said. “And if a woman has an affair, or behaves poorly, or spends money foolishly […] there’s a kind of punitive response to it.”
Fans rallied behind Parker’s comments, taking to social media to agree. “She’s not wrong,” one user wrote. Another added, “Like how Joe from ‘You’ is one of Netflix’s most beloved male characters, and Georgia from ‘Ginny & Georgia’ is one of the most criticized female characters.”
Sarah Jessica Parker Calls Out Double Standards
Joe Goldberg and Georgia Miller have been generating plenty of buzz recently, especially with their latest seasons, which landed on Netflix just weeks ago. Despite the fact that both characters have committed murder, Joe has garnered a surprising amount of fan admiration, while Georgia continues to face harsh criticism. A similar pattern can be seen with Dexter Morgan from “Dexter,” a serial killer who remains widely beloved by viewers.
Parker went on to highlight how audiences tend to judge women more harshly than men, even when male characters commit objectively worse acts. “I just think it’s interesting, the ways in which we judge women, and not men,” she said.
Fans continued to chime in with, “In ‘SATC,’ I feel like Carrie gets more hate than Big!” and “I don’t know much about her show, but she’s right. I do love when Dexter murders people.”

Despite the criticism, Parker sees the passion behind the reactions, positive or negative, as a sign of how powerful the character still is. “I ultimately think that all those feelings are pretty fantastic,” she added. “That kind of connection and those kinds of strong feelings, both positive and negative, are pretty wonderful. People are kind of captive in those moments to something, and I think that’s perfectly fine.”
With “Sex and the City”’s legacy still under a microscope, and “And Just Like That…” bringing the character back into the spotlight, Parker’s defense of Carrie Bradshaw reminds viewers that complexity shouldn’t be a luxury reserved only for male characters.