And Just Like That is coming to a close with its third season. It’s the show that came after Sex and the City, continuing the story years later, with the same familiar faces. Some changed, some missing, some completely new. The news about the final season came from Michael Patrick King, the person who’s been shaping this world behind the scenes. Almost at the same time, Sarah Jessica Parker posted a goodbye on Instagram. No big announcement, no grand campaign. Just a simple clip with moments from Carrie’s story, and a message that sounded both personal and final.
There wasn’t much buildup. No teaser, no warning. It just happened, like when something ends and everyone quietly agrees that it’s time. No long statements or headlines trying to explain too much. Just a quiet acknowledgment that something was ending. King later shared that the choice to conclude the series came during the writing of the final episode. It wasn’t planned far in advance, but it became clear, as he put it, that
“the arc had reached its natural close.”
A farewell in her own words
In her post, Sarah Jessica Parker reflected on Carrie’s entire journey. She shared a poetic list of events and traits that shaped the character across time. The structure was rhythmic and emotional. She wrote about the moments that defined Carrie, starting with how she
“crossed streets, avenues, and Rubicons.”
She mentioned how Carrie
“broke hearts, heels, habits,”
and how she
“loved, lost, won, tripped, leaped, fell short and into puddles.”
The text captured the everyday chaos and emotional intensity that always followed the character.
Near the end of the post, Parker expressed something deeper. A feeling she’d been carrying for a long time. She wrote,
“Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years. I think I have loved her most of all.”
She followed that by acknowledging the reactions Carrie inspired in others:
“I know others have loved her just as I have. Been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her.”
Then she added,
“The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion. Therefore the most sentimental and profound gratitude and lifetime of debt. To you all.”
The message also included a note of appreciation for the people involved. Parker described And Just Like That as
“joy, adventure, the greatest kind of hard work alongside the most extraordinary talent of 380.”
She thanked the creatives and artists who helped bring the show to life. She also named the longtime friends in the story and celebrated newer ones, calling Seema and LTW
“most divine new connections.”

Carrie Bradshaw and a changing world
The character of Carrie Bradshaw was first introduced in 1998. A writer living in New York, observing life, relationships, friendships, and her own uncertainty. Over the years, the role grew and adapted. It stayed relevant because it followed change, not just in fashion or technology, but in people. The stories didn’t try to freeze her in time. They allowed room for aging, for doubt, for the awkwardness that comes with starting over at any age.
Sex and the City had six seasons and two films. And Just Like That added a new perspective, showing what happens when the people once called modern are now older, with different priorities and harder questions. The new series brought different tones, moments of discomfort, and attempts to talk about subjects the original never touched. Sometimes it worked. Sometimes it didn’t. But it kept trying.
Why the ending feels different
King explained that they waited to announce the conclusion of And Just Like That because they didn’t want the word final to hang over the current episodes. Viewers were still watching, still reacting, and he wanted the story to unfold on its own terms. He made it clear the decision wasn’t tied to backlash or performance. It was based on timing and a shared sense between him and Parker that this chapter had reached its natural endpoint
“this chapter [was] complete.”
The third season of And Just Like That was expanded from the usual ten episodes to twelve. The final two will be released as a two-part conclusion. The first part arrives on August 7, followed by the series finale on August 14. Both will stream exclusively on Max. These episodes will bring closure to a franchise that began more than 25 years ago

A long goodbye to And Just Like That
Kristin Davis, who played Charlotte York throughout the franchise, also shared a message. She said,
“I am profoundly sad,”
and spoke with love about the cast, the crew, and the hundreds of people who helped shape the series across its long run. Her words echoed the tone of Parker’s post. Not overly sentimental, but quietly emotional.
For many viewers, the connection to And Just Like That was never just about Carrie. It was about their own lives moving alongside hers. The series grew with its audience. It was never flawless. But it captured something that felt real enough to hold on to.
One last reflection
The goodbye that Sarah Jessica Parker shared at the end of And Just Like That didn’t read like a summary. It wasn’t built to explain or wrap everything up neatly. It sounded like something written late at night, when the city is quiet, and a person finally has space to feel what’s been waiting.
She ended with,
“It will be forever before I forget. The whole thing. Thank you all. I love you so. I hope you love these final two episodes as much as we all do.”
It wasn’t a goodbye meant to close a door. It was one meant to keep the light on, just for a moment longer. Carrie Bradshaw is stepping off the screen, but the voice, the questions, the rhythm of how she thought out loud, they stay. And even for a story this familiar, that kind of ending still matters.
Not every story has to last forever. Sometimes it’s enough that it happened.