| All's Fair | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Genre | |
| Created by |
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| Starring | |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 6 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
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| Producer | Danielle Wang |
| Cinematography |
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| Running time | 44-52 minutes |
| Production companies | |
| Original release | |
| Network | Hulu |
| Release | November 4, 2025 – present |
All's Fair is an American legal drama television series created by Ryan Murphy, and starring Kim Kardashian, Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash-Betts, Teyana Taylor, Matthew Noszka, Sarah Paulson, and Glenn Close. The series premiered on November 4, 2025, on Hulu. It received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, who criticized the writing and Kardashian's performance, but was the most-watched scripted Hulu show debut in three years. In November 2025, the series was renewed for a second season.
| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by [1] | Original release date [2] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Pilot" | Ryan Murphy | Ryan Murphy & Jon Robin Baitz & Joe Baken | November 4, 2025 |
| 2 | "When We Were Young" | Anthony Hemingway | Ryan Murphy & Jamie Pachino | November 4, 2025 |
| 3 | "I Want Revenge" | Anthony Hemingway | Ryan Murphy & Joe Baken | November 4, 2025 |
| 4 | "Everybody Dance Now" | Anthony Hemingway | Lyn Greene & Richard Levine & Joe Baken | November 11, 2025 |
| 5 | "This Is Me Trying" | Uta Briesewitz | Lyn Greene & Richard Levine | November 18, 2025 |
| 6 | "Divorce Is Like a Death" | Uta Briesewitz | Ryan Murphy & Joe Baken | November 25, 2025 |
| 7 | "Letting Go" [3] | TBA | Lyn Greene & Richard Levine | December 2, 2025 |
| 8 | "Oh, Jesus!" [4] | Anthony Hemingway [5] | Lyn Greene & Richard Levine | December 9, 2025 |
| 9 | "Interior Law Offices" [6] | TBA | Ryan Murphy & Joe Baken | December 9, 2025 |
From 2023 to 2024, Kardashian starred in the twelfth season of American Horror Story as publicist Siobhan Corbyn. [7] Because of Kardashian's involvement with American Horror Story, the series creator, Ryan Murphy, wanted to continue working with her, which led to the series being created and pitched to Kardashian by Murphy, Jon Robin Baitz, and Joe Baken in 2023. [7] Parts of the initial pitch meeting with Murphy, Kardashian, and her mother Kris Jenner, were shown in the fifth season of The Kardashians , on May 30, 2024. [7] [8]
In December 2023, it was announced that Hulu had given a straight-to-series order to a legal drama series created by Murphy, with Kardashian starring as the series protagonist, a divorce lawyer and owner of an all-female law firm. [8] [9] Kardashian committed to star in and executive produce the series, with Jenner also committing to executive produce. [8]
In July 2024, Halle Berry and Glenn Close joined the series to star and executive produce, and the series was also given the title, All's Fair. [10] Later in July 2024, it was announced that Berry had left the project. [11] In August 2024, it was announced that Sarah Paulson, Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash, and Teyana Taylor would be joining the series to star, with Paulson, Watts, and Nash also executive producing. [12] In September 2024, it was announced that Matthew Noszka would be joining the series. [13] In October 2024, it was announced that Ed O'Neill would be joining the series in a recurring role. [14]
The series is executive produced by Ryan Murphy, Kim Kardashian, Glenn Close, Sarah Paulson, Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash, Jon Robin Baitz, Joe Baken, Jamie Pachino, Lyn Greene, Richard Levine, Anthony Hemingway who also served as a director, Kris Jenner, Alexis Martin Woodall, Eric Kovtun, and Scott Robertson,. [12] Production companies involved with the series are Ryan Murphy Productions, Trillium Productions, and 20th Television. [12] [15]
In November 2025, Hulu renewed the series for a second season. [16]
The series begin filming in California in October 2024, [17] [18] on a budget of $69.7 million. [19] In July 2024, the series was awarded $14.1 million in tax credits from the California Film Commission. [19] [20] On March 21, 2025, Watts revealed that filming of the first season had been wrapped. [21]
All's Fair was released on November 4, 2025, on Hulu in the United States. It was also simultaneously released on Disney+'s Hulu hub in the U.S. and internationally. [22]
All's Fair ranked No. 1 on Hulu's "Top 15 Today" list—a daily updated list of the platform's most-watched titles—on its premiere. [23] Streaming analytics firm FlixPatrol, which monitors daily updated VOD charts and streaming ratings across the globe, reported that the series was the most-streamed show on Disney+ globally as of November 5. [24] The series became Hulu's most-watched premiere for an original scripted series in three years, attracting approximately 3.2 million viewers globally within three days of release. [25] [26] Hulu announced that content related to All's Fair generated over 7 billion social media impressions and 190 million video views following its debut. [27] [28] Luminate, which measures streaming performance in the U.S. by analyzing viewership data, audience engagement metrics, and content reach across various platforms, reported that All's Fair generated 2.61 million hours viewed in the U.S. between October 31 and November 6, ranking as the 15th most-streamed series for that week. [29] During the following period, November 7–13, the series placed No. 13 overall with 3.9 million hours viewed. [30] For the week of November 14–20, the show recorded 636,059 views, ranking 13th for the week. [31] By November 20, content tied to All's Fair had accumulated a total of 10 billion social media impressions. [32] [33]
All's Fair received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, many of whom counted the series among the worst television series ever made. [34] [35] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 3% based on 30 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Too awful to love, too boring to war over." [36] Metacritic gave the series a weighted average score of 17 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike". [37]
Angie Han of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the series was "brain dead", stating that "characters are so thin, their storylines so flimsy and their motives so underbaked that there's no recognizable emotion underlying any of it, and thus no feeling to be provoked by watching it". [38] The Guardian 's television critic Lucy Mangan gave the series zero stars out of five, writing that "I did not know it was still possible to make television this bad. I assumed that there was some sort of baseline, some inescapable bedrock knowledge of how to do it that now prevents any entry into the art form from falling below a certain standard. But I was wrong." [39] The review was the paper's 18th zero-star review in its history. [40] Ed Power of The Telegraph gave the series one star, calling the show "a crime against television" and a "mind-bending horror sure to trigger nightmares in the unsuspecting viewer". [41] USA Today 's television critic Kelly Lawler called the show "the worst TV of the year", detailing that it was an "unmitigated disaster of [...] outlandish proportions". [42] Ben Dowell of The Times specifically criticized Kardashian's performance, stating that she "must have quite a healthy ego to star in what may well be the worst television drama ever made". [43] Kayleigh Donaldson of TheWrap stated that "it's truly baffling how terrible All's Fair is". [44]
Nick Levine of the BBC noted that certain viewers responded positively to the series' high camp aesthetic and statement fashion. [45] Corinna Mason of Popviewers reported that Kim Kardashian responded to the negative critical reception of All's Fair by engaging with it on social media, reposting and joking about reviews instead of issuing "damage control." Mason described this approach as a "meme-powered promotional cycle," noting that it generated attention for the series and maintained public interest despite largely unfavorable critiques. [46] Louis Staples of Bazaar also highlighted Kardashian's engagement with the discourse, noting that she was "secretly enjoying being back in the cultural fray" and leveraging attention to maintain visibility. He further contextualized the show's reception within a broader pattern of "low art" or culturally dismissed media achieving influence over time, noting parallels to works like Showgirls and the Kardashians' reality series, Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Staples suggested that All's Fair exemplifies the contemporary "attention economy," where even negative engagement can contribute to a series' prominence and cultural impact. [47]