Bdmv !exclusive!: And Just Like That… S01
If the drama is mature, the comedy is deliberately, almost aggressively, chaotic. The show leans into the "Karen" trope with Miranda, twisting the character from a cynical lawyer into an unraveling wine-enthusiast. It is a jarring pivot. Miranda’s arc—leaving her husband, falling for Che, and fumbling through a mid-life identity crisis—is the season’s most divisive element.
It forces the show—and Carrie—to confront the terrifying reality of being single in your 50s, a vastly different landscape than being single in your 30s. The BDMV presentation renders the grief in high definition; the gloss of the wardrobe is still there, but the high-resolution image captures the exhaustion in Sarah Jessica Parker’s eyes. The season’s strongest moments are found in the silence following the tragedy. Watching Carrie sit with her grief, learning to eat a bagel alone, or navigate the intrusive condolences of a city that feels she belongs to the public, offers a maturity that the original series could never have achieved. and just like that… s01 bdmv
Inside the BDMV folder, the data is split into strict subdirectories: If the drama is mature, the comedy is