Kim Kardashian, All's Fair
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Kim Kardashian has again tried her hand at acting, this time for a new legal drama called All’s Fair, which comes from the same creator of American Horror Story, Ryan Murphy. Despite a stacked cast of Kardashian herself,
The Hollywood Reporter’s TV critic Angie Han writes that “these characters are so thin... there’s no recognizable emotion underlying any of it, and thus no feeling to be provoked by watching it.”
“All’s Fair” may not have won over Hollywood critics, but the spectacle still brought a ratings win for Hulu. The Kim Kardashian-led Ryan Murphy legal drama scored 3.2 million views globally after three days, per internal data, marking Hulu’s biggest scripted series debut in three years.
Is the Kim Kardashian show actually intentionally bad? In the age of the hate-watch, the truly terrible can do numbers.
Taylor stars in the legal drama alongside Kim Kardashian, Naomi Watts, Glenn Close, Sarah Paulson and Niecy Nash-Betts
Simpson plays Lee-Ann on the widely-panned Hulu show, a role she “disappear[ed] into… with real depth and emotion.”
The first three episodes of All’s Fair are now streaming on Hulu. New episodes drop Tuesdays at midnight ET. If you’re new to Hulu, you can get started with a 30-day free trial on the streamer’s basic (with ads) plan. After the trial period, you’ll pay $10.99/month. If you want to upgrade to Hulu ad-free, it costs $18.99/month.
Anthony Hemingway, who helmed four episodes of Ryan Murphy's buzzy Hulu legal drama, offers his take on working with reality star and series lead Kardashian, as well as Sarah Paulson's foul-mouthed antagonist and those scathing early reviews.