Sarah Jessica Parker criticizes a inequal treatment between men and women in fiction

Sarah Jessica Parker criticizes a inequal treatment between men and women in fiction


“A male protagonist in a series can be a killer and people love him,” said the actress

Famous for interpreting the character ‘Carrie Bradshaw’ In ‘Sex and the city’the actress Sarah Jessica Parker exposed, in a recent interview with HuffPost UKThe difference in the way the public reacts to the decisions of male and female characters.




“I find it interesting as we judge women and not men”, He said.

Sarah Jessica Parker comments criticism

Currently, the artist returned to the small screen to relive the iconic journalist who follows ‘And just like that’, who has won a third season in May for a year. The success of the series, however, has also generated many criticisms of Parker’s character on social networks. With this, the actress noticed that in fiction this phenomenon tends to affect women more than men.

“I’ve always found it curious [Carrie] So be condemned as a male protagonist in a series it can be a murderer and people love him. If a girl has a relationship, either it behaves badly or spends money out of the money […] There is a sort of punitive response to this “, declared.

However, for Sarah, this type of reception is still important as it shows that production is influencing the public in some way. “In the end, I think all these feelings are fantastic. This type of connection and emotions are strong, positive and negative, they are wonderful. People are a bit attached to something in these times, and I think this is perfectly normal,” underlined.

The actress also took the moment to defend Carrie and ask fans to try to understand the character, noting that “Intelligent people sometimes make wrong decisions and are foolish in their judgmentS “.

“I think, basically, Bradshaw is an extraordinarily decent and good person. He is an extremely dedicated friend, generous with spirit and time, in everything he has to offer”, concluded.

Source: Terra

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