Jason was interviewed by Elle Magazine here's the juicy interview:
The SATC stud who made you forget about Aidan and Big tells Andrew Goldman a thing or two about the G-spot and French romance
Apart from Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte, and Miranda, there are a few characters that everybody knows would undoubtedly make an appearance in Sex and the City: The Movie—Profound Relationship Ambivalence would have to be there, as would Insanely Expensive Shoes, and even that old nelly Cosmopolitan would snag a cameo to remind us that it was the pink-drink heyday of 1998 when we first met Manhattan’s least-married foursome. But what about Jerry “Smith†Jerrod, Samantha’s boy toy turned loyal companion in the show’s final season? Big surprise: The hunk made the cut. And collecting the big movie check for the appearance is Jason Lewis, the 36-year-old Long Beach, California, native—and former male model—who played Jerrod, an aspiring actor who seemed to not own a shirt. A special note to Samantha-like cougars looking for a little real-world SATC action: Lewis is single and just loves him an older lady, especially one with a French accent and a riding crop.
ELLE: When we first met Smith Jerrod, your character on Sex and the City, he was waiting tables and had a devoted clientele of women who hoped to bed him. Since you too once waited tables, I wondered if this ever happened to you?
JASON LEWIS: No, but I did get picked up on an airplane to New York once. It was pretty hot. I was probably 20. I was sitting next to this woman who must have been in her early forties. We had a couple drinks. I guess she was just looking for an Âadventure, because we made plans to meet at the Limelight later. I had absolutely no idea what the Limelight even was. It was an overwhelming evening.
ELLE: Have you always liked older women?
JL: Older women rock, especially when you’re young. Young people should sleep with older people. Sex is something best done with experience.
ELLE: Just how old a woman have you been with?
JL: When I was living in France, I had a couple-month affair with a woman who was around 50. I never let her see where I lived, because I was a little scared of her. We’d meet in the city and she’d take me out to her chateau, have this great dinner, make love. In the morning, I’d ride her horse while she cooked me breakfast. Then she’d drop me off in Paris.
ELLE: Just to be clear, when you say chateau, is this just a fancy thing the French will call their shack or mobile home?
JL: No. I actually mean chateau. I was like, My God, what am I doing out here?
ELLE: On the show, you and Kim Cattrall’s character, ÂSamantha, are depicted having sex in a number of configurations I’d never seen before. Were these positions familiar?
JL: No, but luckily we had one of those Xeroxed flyers of 101 sexual positions.
ELLE: There was one butt-to-butt position I couldn’t even figure out.
JL: The one where I’m treating her like a chair? Yeah, I think to actually do it you’d have to lean a lot farther forward. All we had were diagrams.
ELLE: In the show, there’s an episode in which your character is plagued by gay rumors. Which of your habits would prove that you’re irrefutably straight?
JL: This is how I’d answer that question: Who the fuck cares? It just depends on your taste and proclivities. I know gay men who dirt-bike just like I dirt-bike.
ELLE: The women of Sex and the City often deal with men they’re not entirely attracted to. Have you ever been with a woman who’s had a deal-breaker of a physical attribute?
JL: I was with a particularly malodorous girl once—beautiful but really stinky. She had every body odor. I remember thinking, Your arms stink. Your breath stinks. Oh, God, even your hair stinks. I had no idea what to do. I remember asking a female friend, “What do I do? Slip her acidophilus when I cook for her?â€
ELLE: Did you mention the odors when you broke up?
JL: No, because there were other reasons. I think if I really loved somebody, I could probably get over their stench.
ELLE: Smith Jerrod appears to be very skilled sexually. Do you think you’re good at it?
JL: I’ve read a book or two on the subject. The Kama Sutra’s definitely one of them.
ELLE: Quick: I’m giving you 45 seconds to tell me as much as you can about what you picked up in that book.
JL: Oh, man, do we really want to get into the G-spot?
ELLE: We do.
JL: Okay. Right up inside it’s a little fleshy pad, and it’s a little different on each woman. You need to stimulate the thing before you attack it. But once it’s awoken, it’s all about gentle pressure from the outside and kneading it from inside.
ELLE: You spent a great deal of time nude on SATC. What’s the longest sustained period of time you’ve been naked off set?
JL: One night when I was 17 or 18, me and my buddies went from party to party naked—we were drunk. I was a little bit of a wild child.
ELLE: How do women respond to naked men in a social situation?
JL: We all went home alone that night.