When news broke last summer that John Corbett was set to reprise his role as Aidan Shaw — Carrie Bradshaw’s other great love, the one whom she could never commit to for too long — on the new season of “And Just Like That,” it simultaneously felt like a played out joke straight out of a Che Diaz comedy set and the best news ever.
After all, we’ve journeyed down this road before (several times, actually), and it usually leads to bad decisions and/or chain smoking. And as far as nostalgia plays go, since we can’t yet experience the real love story from “Sex and the City” — the friendship between Carrie, Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte — because of Samantha’s absence, Aidan is the next best thing, not unlike his ranking in Carrie’s partner roster.
Following the death of Mr. Big (Chris Noth), her great (and torturous) love, early in Season 1 of “And Just Like That,” Carrie has cautiously reentered the dating pool. After some false starts and questionable choices, this season, she emails her old flame: “Hey Stranger …” reads the subject line. (And, yes, we choose to believe she emailed from her shoegal@aol.com account.)
And just like that, after 13 years, Aidan Shaw is back.
Like many of Carrie’s suitors, Aidan is either loved or loathed by fans. Some see him as a victim to Carrie’s whims and immaturity, others see him as an example of toxic masculinity with red flags that rival Carrie’s. Whatever team fans are on, Aidan could be endgame for Carrie. “And Just Like That” creator Michael Patrick King recently told the New York Times: “I didn’t bring Aidan back to fail.”