Kim Kardashian, All's Fair
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Ryan Murphy’s new series is essentially the world inside your phone, made into a TV show.
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,
Ryan Murphy's 'All's Fair,' which wallows in revenge-fueled and wealth-worshipping cynicism with reality star Kim Kardashian at the center, may be terrible, but it captures an unfortunate moment in American culture.
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.
“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.
Simpson plays Lee-Ann on the widely-panned Hulu show, a role she “disappear[ed] into… with real depth and emotion.”
Kim Kardashian’s legal drama "All’s Fair" just premiered on Hulu and Disney+. When do new episodes come out? Here’s the full release schedule and how to watch Season 1.