| # | Air Date | Episode Name | Watched? |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | Jun 22, 2003 | ||
| E2 | Jun 29, 2003 | ||
| E3 | Jul 06, 2003 | ||
| E4 | Jul 13, 2003 | ||
| E5 | Jul 20, 2003 | ||
| E6 | Jul 27, 2003 | ||
| E7 | Aug 03, 2003 | ||
| E8 | Aug 10, 2003 | ||
| E9 | Aug 17, 2003 | ||
| E10 | Aug 24, 2003 | ||
| E11 | Sep 07, 2003 | ||
| E12 | Sep 14, 2003 | ||
| E13 | Jan 04, 2004 | ||
| E14 | Jan 11, 2004 | ||
| E15 | Jan 18, 2004 | ||
| E16 | Jan 25, 2004 | ||
| E17 | Feb 01, 2004 | ||
| E18 | Feb 08, 2004 | ||
| E19 | Feb 15, 2004 | ||
| E20 | Feb 22, 2004 |
Sex and the City remains a definitive pillar of romantic comedy-drama television, having concluded its influential run on HBO. Beyond its surface-level glamour, the series revolutionized how female friendships and sexuality were depicted on screen. It introduced a candid, unapologetic dialogue about relationships that broke long-standing broadcast taboos and paved the way for prestige cable storytelling. By centering the lives of four distinct women in New York City, it created a blueprint for the modern urban dramedy that countless successors have attempted to replicate.
The show endures as a rewatch staple because it functions as both a time capsule of turn-of-the-century Manhattan and a relatable exploration of the search for connection. Fans return to the series for its sharp wit, iconic fashion, and the comfort of its core ensemble chemistry. Despite the evolution of social norms, the central questions about self-worth, career ambition, and the enduring power of platonic love continue to resonate with new generations of viewers, cementing its place as a cornerstone of popular culture.