Television
When “Sex and the City” arrived on HBO in June 1998, sopranos were still singers with high voices, Larry David was the guy who wrote “Seinfeld,” and “Six Feet Under,” “Deadwood” and “The Wire” were years away from being credited with starting a revolution of original cable series programming.
June 1, 2018
World & Nation
Amid concern about the low fertility rate, an entrepreneur and sex guru is leading the way to adult entertainment.
Nov. 23, 2006
Entertainment & Arts
Tribune Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune, said its broadcasting unit has acquired syndication rights to HBO’s “Sex and the City” series.
Sept. 11, 2003
Unlike most of the so-called adult programming cable TV offers, “Sex and the City” actually is about sex: the complications, the vulnerability and the messiness (“An Outrageous Voice of Sex and the City,” by Paul Brownfield, Sept. 6).
Sept. 9, 2000
Politics
Poor Democrats. Poor Republicans.
July 21, 2000
Awards
Now folks can mix “Sex and the City” with online shopping.
Sept. 16, 2015
Television: Producers and writers voice fears that sex and violence ratings could lead to censorship, timidity and loss of advertising.
Feb. 19, 1996
Television: As networks’ summer numbers drop, HBO and Showtime launch provocative new programs.
June 5, 1998
We get letters . . . I would like to respond to your column, “The Bare Truths of TV Sex Wars.”
March 13, 1987
Reacting to Republican charges that Hollywood vulgarizes American culture with entertainment steeped in violence and sex, the executive producer of NBC’s popular “Law and Order” series said Tuesday that such rhetoric is a prelude to government censorship.
June 7, 1995