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Everything about Carrie Bradshaw totally explained

Caroline Marie Bradshaw (always referred to as Carrie) is the fictional narrator of the HBO sitcom/drama Sex and the City played by actress Sarah Jessica Parker. She is a semi-autobiographical character created by Candace Bushnell, who published the book Sex and the City based on her own columns in the New York Observer.
   On the HBO series, Bradshaw is a New York newspaper columnist, party girl, fashionista and later, freelance writer for Vogue. Her weekly column, "Sex and the City", provides the title, story lines, and narration for each episode.
   In 2005, Carrie Bradshaw was listed as number 11 on Bravo's 100 Greatest TV Characters.

Character history

The New York Star, called "Sex and the City," which focuses on Carrie's sexual escapades and those of her close friends, as well as musings about the relationships between men and women, dating, and New York. The column provides Carrie with a certain amount of notoriety in New York; she's frequently recognized by people who read the column and is occasionally described as an icon. In the third season, her column is optioned for a film starring a fictionalized Matthew McConaughey. In the fifth season, a collection of her columns are compiled into a book.
   She begins to write freelance articles for Vogue at the end of season four. Although she initially has trouble dealing with Enid (Candice Bergen), her abrasive editor at Vogue, she does find her feet and ends up befriending her.
   She is an on-off smoker, enjoys cocktails, particularly Cosmopolitans—her character's fondness for them helped to popularize the drink—but she is, at heart, an old-fashioned girl and is deeply romantic. She is on an endless search for true love, and refuses to settle for, as she puts it, "anything less than butterflies." Despite this, she repeatedly expresses doubts that she's the type to get married and raise a family.
   Carrie is a resident of Manhattan, New York. She lives in a brownstone on the Upper East Side at the fictional house number of 245, on East 73rd Street. She lives in this apartment throughout the series, and buys it in the fourth season. In the initial episodes of the first season, Carrie's apartment is seen to be above a coffee shop somewhere near the vicinity of Madison Avenue (despite its stated address). By approximately the fourth episode the usual facade of a series of brownstones adjacent to hers is adopted, and remains that way throughout the series.
   Little is mentioned about Carrie's life before the series, although she's been living in New York for about eighteen years. In the fourth season, around her 35th birthday, Carrie states that her relationship with the city is "about 18 years", implying she moved to New York when she was about 17 years old. She doesn't seem to have been from a particularly wealthy family, unlike her friend Charlotte, as we're told when she first arrived in New York she wore Candies and took the Subway. It is mentioned that her father left her and her mother when she was five; no siblings are ever mentioned. It is also revealed that Carrie had one abortion in the 1980s, after a one night stand, when she was twenty-two years old. Though she'd been dating for many years before meeting (and nick-naming him) Mr. Big in the first episode of the series, he's her first true love, the man she thinks may be her soulmate. She tells Charlotte York that she lost her virginity in Seth Bateman's smelly rec room on the ping pong table in the 11th grade. In Season 6 (Episode "Boy Interrupted") Carrie meets up with another boyfriend from high school named Jeremy (portrayed by David Duchovny). They finally go "all the way", something they didn't do in high school. Carrie later finds out that Jeremy is headed back to a psychiatric clinic.

Wardrobe

Carrie has been described as someone who "lives for fashion", and has confessed to buying Vogue instead of dinner. A known shoe lover with an affinity for expensive designer shoes (notably Manolo Blahniks, but also Christian Louboutin and Jimmy Choo), Carrie claims she's spent over $40,000 on shoes. Her pairs seem to average around $450-500, and it's implied that she's at least, if not more than, 100 unique pairs.
   She frequently mixes kitschy vintage finds with haute couture. It is mentioned that Barneys, Bergdorf Goodman and Saks Fifth Avenue are among her favorite places to shop. Carrie equates taking a boyfriend to meet her parents with taking a boyfriend to meet the sales assistants at Prada. Her friend Charlotte claims that Carrie dragged her to eight shows at New York's Fashion Week. Carrie once agreed to model for a charity fashion show (featuring both "real people" and models) on the condition that she could keep the outfit, a Dolce and Gabbana original. Carrie is also known to have worn Chanel, Jeremy Scott, Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Balenciaga, Givenchy, Alexander McQueen, Vivienne Westwood, Roberto Cavalli, Helmut Lang, Chloé, Marni, Marc Jacobs, Jean Paul Gaultier, Manolo Blahnik, Heatherette, Sonia Rykiel, Versace, Miu Miu, Fendi, Missoni, Moschino, Betsey Johnson, Oscar de la Renta, Vera Wang, and Gucci, Christian Louboutin, amongst others.
   Carrie's incredible wardrobe appears to be entirely unaffordable for a writer on a modest income. Indeed, many of the people around her comment that she can't afford her shopping addiction. Carrie occasionally maxes out credit cards, couldn't secure a loan on her own due to poor savings as a result of extensive shopping, and has admitted her "shoe needs" have accounted for most of her spending.
   Carrie is particularly known for her addiction (calling it her "substance abuse problem" in one episode) to shoes. Notable moments include an incident when she's mugged near West Broadway and the bandit makes off with her Manolo Blahnik pink suede strappy sandals that she purchased "half off at a sample sale!" and that are her favorite shoes.

Relationships

"Mr. Big"

"Mr. Big" appears in the first episode as a wealthy man who accidentally meets Carrie on the streets of Manhattan. Their relationship is a story arc running the length of the series. It should also be noted that her relationship with Big evolved throughout the length of the show. At the start, she was intimidated and awed by him. However, eventually Carrie and Big share a friendly and often passionate intimacy, yet Mr. Big remains (in producer Michael Patrick King's words) "always slightly out of reach". Mr. Big's name is never mentioned until the last episode of the 6th season, where it's revealed his name is John.

Aidan Shaw

Aidan Shaw, a Manhattan furniture designer (John Corbett), is her next serious boyfriend after Mr. Big, Carrie met him through her friend Stanford Blatch. Their first relationship ends when Carrie confesses, on Charlotte's first wedding day, that she'd an affair with Mr. Big. Later in the series, they get back together and become engaged. However, the engagement is broken when Carrie discovers she isn't ready to move on and marry him, and he isn't willing to wait for her. During the sixth season premiere, Carrie runs into Aidan on the street. She discovers that he's married a fellow furniture designer, Cathy, and has a son named Tate (who is played by Sarah Jessica Parker's real-life son). The two agree to meet for coffee; Carrie states in voiceover that "there are some dates you can't wait to keep, and there are some you both know you'll never keep". With Aidan looking on, Carrie walks away, not looking back, and it's implied that they've finally come to terms with the pain they caused each other.

Jack Berger

Following the end of her relationship with Aidan, Carrie begins to date Jack Berger (Ron Livingston), a writer with a mixed degree of success. She meets him while discussing her upcoming book at her publisher's (Amy Sedaris) office. He is a novelist, and feels insecure about Carrie's newfound success as a writer after her book goes international and she begins receiving high-sum royalties. After an initially rocky start (in which Berger must end his relationship with his unseen original girlfriend, Lauren) they form a rather playful relationship and one that initially seems to make Carrie very happy. As Carrie's success begins to mount, and particularly after Berger's second novel isn't picked up for publication, the relationship deteriorates, culminating in a 'break' between the two. Berger returns, professing his love for Carrie and stating that he wishes to try again, but ends up leaving afterwards, in the middle of the night. Berger breaks up with Carrie on a Post-it note which reads, "I'm sorry, I can't. Don't hate me." After this hasty departure, Berger is referenced in only one more episode—after Carrie runs into his friends at a bar, she regrets leaving Berger an angry message (through his friends), stating that his break-up method was rude and pathetic.

Aleksandr Petrovsky

Carrie meets and begins a relationship with Aleksandr Petrovsky (Mikhail Baryshnikov) in the sixth season. He is a rich, successful and older Russian artist. Carrie enjoys the relationship but problems arise when she discovers he already has a daughter in her twenties and doesn't want to have any more children. Carrie feels forced to choose between a long-term relationship with Petrovsky, and the possibility of having children. She decides to stay in the relationship, despite mounting evidence that he'll never be able to fully commit to her emotionally as he's very self-involved, and even at one point claims that Carrie is "not his friend, she's his lover".
   He asks Carrie to leave her job and life in New York and move with him to Paris. After some degree of convincing, she accepts but is disappointed and confused upon her arrival. She doesn't speak French and Petrovsky leaves her alone often to tend to his own career. She leaves him and Paris in the series finale, thanking him for everything he'd shown her in their relationship, even though it couldn't work out.

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