At age 19, Bushnell moved to New York City and sold a children's story (which was never published) to
Simon & Schuster. She continued writing and worked as a freelance journalist for various publications, struggling to make ends meet for many years. Bushnell began writing for
The New York Observer in 1993. She created a humorous column for the paper (1994–1996) called "
Sex and the City", based on her dating experiences and those of her friends. In 1997, Bushnell's columns were published in an anthology, also called
Sex and the City, and soon became the basis for the popular
HBO television
series of the same name. The series aired from 1998 to 2004, and starred
Sarah Jessica Parker as
Carrie Bradshaw, a socially active New York City sex and lifestyles columnist, a character whom Bushnell has said was her
alter ego. The series entered
syndication and was also made into two films:
Sex and the City (2008) and
Sex and the City 2 (2010). A third film was announced in December 2016, but was canceled and replaced by the sequel miniseries
And Just Like That…, on
HBO Max. Bushnell went on to publish several international and
The New York Times bestselling novels including
Four Blondes,
Trading Up,
Lipstick Jungle and
One Fifth Avenue. In 2005, Bushnell served as one of three judges for the reality television show
Wickedly Perfect on
CBS. She began hosting a live weekly talk show on
Sirius Satellite Radio in 2007. The show, called "Sex, Success and Sensibility," was canceled in late 2008 after the merger of Sirius and
XM Satellite Radio, when Bushnell was asked to continue the show with a 50% pay cut and refused. Bushnell won the 2006
Matrix Award for books, and the Albert Einstein Spirit of Achievement Award. In 2009 she wrote a comedic web series, The Broadroom, about women over 40 dealing with workplace issues. It starred
Jennie Garth and was created in partnership with the magazine publisher
Meredith Corporation's
Meredith 360 division. Bushnell's 2005 novel
Lipstick Jungle was adapted for television and aired on
NBC in 2008. The series
Lipstick Jungle starred
Brooke Shields and ran for 20 episodes. In 2009, Bushnell wrote articles for Meredith's
More magazine. In 2008,
HarperCollins contracted Bushnell to write two books for young adults about Carrie Bradshaw's high school years. The first of these,
The Carrie Diaries, was published in 2010. The other,
Summer and the City (Carrie Diaries Series #2), was published in 2011.
The Carrie Diaries was a number one
New York Times Bestseller. In 2012, Bushnell was sued in federal court by her former friend and manager Clifford Streit (who inspired the
Sex and the City character
Stanford Blatch), who claimed that Bushnell reneged on a settlement in which she agreed to pay him 7.5% of anything she earned from the
Sex and the City TV series and the two
Sex and the City movies, an amount Streit estimated was at least $150,000. ==Personal life==