It’s clear that a twinge of something dormant in her has reawakened, and now that it has, she simply can’t ignore it. No longer will she settle for going back to eating chia seed-topped fro-yo with her puppyish husband Steve (David Eigenberg), or sit idly by while her teenage son’s girlfriend pads around her kitchen in a T-shirt throwing ageist micro-aggressions in her direction.
![miranda gay sex scene miranda gay sex scene](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/12/17/09/51914621-10320483-image-a-20_1639733469009.jpg)
Miranda’s eyes light up, the camera capturing the frisson of early sexual tension something within her has shifted slightly. The scene shifts into slo-mo as Che breathes the smoke into Miranda’s mouth, the sultry outro to Alabama Shakes’ “Hold On” mewling in the background. At first, Miranda demurs, but when Che asks if they can shotgun it, she relents.
![miranda gay sex scene miranda gay sex scene](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/12/17/09/51914967-0-image-a-29_1639734677018.jpg)
After Miranda spews some guilty white-lady nonsense all over Che (which has, sadly, become a hallmark of Miranda’s character in the reboot), Che asks Miranda if she would like a hit off her joint to relax. Emboldened after watching the (frankly, terrible) Netflix stand-up special taping of Carrie’s podcast co-host Che (played by Sara Ramirez), Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) follows Che to the afterparty, where she comes across them at the bar smoking weed. There’s a moment in the third episode of And Just Like That, the new Sex and the Cityrevival, that offers a glimmer of what made the original franchise so iconic.