The latest season of Sex and the City spinoff And Just Like That is sparking outrage with a storyline that mocks religious values. Rosie O’Donnell plays Sister Mary, a nun who loses her virginity to Miranda in a hotel room after meeting at a lesbian bar. Critics say the scene ridicules faith and pushes radical agendas onto viewers.
Hollywood’s attack on traditional morality hits a new low here. A nun breaking her vows for casual sex isn’t “progress”—it’s a slap in the face to believers. The show glorifies sin while mocking the sacred commitments of religious life. This is exactly what’s wrong with woke entertainment today.
Miranda doesn’t even realize Mary is a nun until after their encounter. The show treats celibacy and spiritual dedication as punchlines. Instead of respecting people of faith, it portrays them as hypocrites waiting to stray. This isn’t storytelling—it’s propaganda.
Conservative commentators are slamming the episode as another example of left-wing Hollywood’s agenda. They argue shows like this deliberately undermine Judeo-Christian values to normalize extreme behavior. When did respecting religion become too “old-fashioned” for TV?
Rosie O’Donnell’s casting adds fuel to the fire. Her history of crude Trump insults and far-left politics makes her a fitting choice for this role. The message is clear: faith is a joke, and anyone who takes it seriously is backward.
Fans of the original Sex and the City say the spinoff has lost its charm. Once a fun show about friendship, it’s now a hollow shell pushing divisive messaging. Ratings keep dropping as viewers reject lectures disguised as entertainment.
The episode’s defenders claim it’s “bold” and “inclusive,” but conservatives aren’t buying it. Forcing nuns into woke storylines isn’t creative—it’s lazy and disrespectful. Real inclusivity would mean respecting diverse beliefs, not trashing them.
This controversy is part of a bigger cultural battle. Everyday Americans are tired of elites mocking their values. Until Hollywood learns that lesson, shows like this will keep alienating the heartland—and failing.