TV's Lipstick Jungle reruns an already tired plot

TV's Lipstick Jungle reruns an already tired plotNew York  - As a plot for a television show, this might sound a little familiar: Attractive power-women juggle careers and relationships in Manhattan. When things go badly they comfort each other by drinking cocktails or going shopping.

This is what viewers got from Lipstick Jungle, a US television series cancelled in March now making its way to European television. If it sounds a lot like Sex and the City, which debuted on US television in 1998 and gained a worldwide cult following, there's good reason. Candace Bushnell, author of the book Lipstick Jungle, also wrote the book Sex in the City and created the famous character, sex columnist Carrie Bradshaw.

In a shot aimed at Desperate Housewives, another successful US television series about the misadventures of a group of suburban women, the creators of Lipstick Jungle included married men and affairs.

Lipstick Jungle's main character is Wendy Healy played by Brooke Shields. The character is a hard-driven film producer who after work has to appease her neglected husband and daughter. Nico Reilly, who is played by Kim Raver, is editor-in-chief of a glossy magazine who is torn between her spouse and a young lover. The trio is completed by Victory Ford, played by Lindsay Price. Ford is a fashion designer who struggles with scathing criticism and feels drawn in by the advances of a billionaire.

US television critics have called the phenomenon of Sex and the City copycats "Blahnik fatigue," referring to the shoe brand popular among well-off women. Just as NBC tested its Lipstick Jungle series, competing network ABC tried doing the same with Cashmere Mafia with Hollywood star Lucy Liu.

Former Sex and the City producer Darren Star conceived the series which was about attractive power-women juggling careers and relationships in Manhattan. When things go badly they comfort each other by drinking cocktails or going shopping. Sound familiar? Exactly the critics' point.

No wonder that Cashmere Mafia was cancelled after its first season, while Lipstick Jungle was axed in the middle of its second. So many over-styled power characters actually are not good for ratings. Furthermore, Bushnell's Lipstick Jungle seemed more like a cheap imitation of Sex and the City than a logical sequel.

The New York Times took a jab at it, saying it had stale dialogue, boring set designs and uninspired fashion. It said the outfits worn by the spoiled Serena van der Woodsen and Blair Waldorf, characters on the teen soap opera Gossip Girl, were more exciting, not to mention the intrigue among kids at an elite New York City school.

People who still can't get enough of tales about big city women in stilettos can look forward to another Sex and the City movie currently being filmed in New York and due out next year. (dpa)