The most brutal moment? Carrie tries to listen to Big’s voicemail. We watch her fingers hover over the phone. She dials. She listens to his voice for two seconds before she slams the phone down, gasping for air. It’s not melodramatic; it’s raw. Later, she finds a hidden key in his study—a key to a private storage unit. In any other episode, this would be a fun mystery. Here, it feels like a threat. What else didn’t she know?
Carrie decides to host a "celebration of life" for Big. But in true Upper East Side fashion, she lists it as a "Private Pay-Per-View" event on the invite. Yes, you read that right. She asks friends to Venmo $8.99 to watch a Zoom memorial. It’s so cringey, so disconnected from reality, that you have to laugh—until you realize she’s just trying to control something, anything , in a life that has become uncontrollable. Charlotte: The House of Perfection Cracks Charlotte York-Goldenblatt is trying to hold it all together with silk ribbons. She’s planning Lily’s piano recital with military precision, but her daughters are mutinying. Rock (formerly Rose) wants to cut their hair short. Lily is moody.
If the premiere of And Just Like That… hit us like a truck (literally, for one character), Episode 3 is the hangover. The shock has worn off. The funeral is over. And now, the women of Manhattan are left standing in the rubble of their old lives, trying to figure out who they are in a city that refuses to stop spinning. and just like that… s01e03 ppv
"When in Rome..." – Episode 103
And just like that… things got real. This episode belongs to Sarah Jessica Parker. Carrie Bradshaw is not okay. We knew that, but "When in Rome..." takes us inside the suffocating prison of early grief. She can’t sleep in the apartment. She can’t look at the closet. She ends up lying on the floor of the foyer because the bedroom "smells like him." The most brutal moment
It happens in the kitchen. A quiet, devastating fight. Steve is tired. Miranda is angry. He says she looks at him with "pity." She snaps back that she’s tired of being the only one who worries about money, about the future, about everything. The scene ends with Steve walking out to walk the dog. It’s not a slammed door. It’s a slow leak. You realize these two have been drifting apart for years, and this tragedy with Big just ripped off the bandage. Grade: B+
And just like that… we keep watching. What did you think of the Big memorial? Did you cringe at the PPV invite? Drop your thoughts in the comments. She dials
Episode 3 finally feels like And Just Like That… is finding its footing. The first two episodes were traumatic chaos. This one is mournful, awkward, and sometimes darkly funny—which is exactly what grief looks like.