Kim Kardashian and Naomi Watts in “All’s Fair.”
Disney/Ser Baffo
Kim Kardashian’s new legal drama All’s Fair is getting gutted by Rotten Tomatoes critics.
Created by Ryan Murphy, Jon Robin Baitz and Joe Baken, All’s Fair premieres on streaming on Hulu on Tuesday with the series’ first three episodes. The official summary for All’s Fair reads, “A team of female divorce attorneys leaves a male-dominated firm to open their own powerhouse practice. Fierce, brilliant and emotionally complicated, they navigate high-stakes breakups, scandalous secrets and shifting allegiances — both in the courtroom and within their own ranks.
“In a world where money talks and love is a battleground, these women don’t just play the game — they change it.”
Kardashian stars as Allura Grant in All’s Fair, alongside Naomi Watts as Liberty Ronson, Niecy Nash-Betts as Emerald Green and Sarah Paulson as Carrington Lane. Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another) also stars in All’s Fair as Milan, while Glenn Close plays Dina Standish.
As of the publication of this article, All’s Fair has earned a 0% “rotten” rating from Rotten Tomatoes critics based on five reviews.
The RT Critics Consensus and audience summary are still pending. So far, the series has earned a 48% “rotten” Popcornmeter score from fewer than 50 verified user ratings.
What Are Individual Critics Saying About ‘All’s Fair’?
Angie Han of The Hollywood Reporter is among the top critics on RT who gives All’s Fair a “rotten” review, writing that Kim “Kardashian’s performance, stiff and affectless without a single authentic note, is exactly what the writing, also stiff and affectless without a single authentic note, merits.”
In her “rotten” review summary on RT, Lucy Mangan of the Guardian writes that All’s Fair is “fascinatingly, incomprehensibly, existentially terrible … It’s so awful, it feels almost contemptuous.”
Ed Power of the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph isn’t any kinder in his “rotten” review summary of All’s Fair on RT, writing, “Ryan Murphy is the high priest of tacky, tasteless television, and this year he has outdone himself with a show of mind-bending horror sure to trigger nightmares in the unsuspecting viewer.”
Ben Dowell of The Times in the U.K. isn’t a fan of All’s Fair, either, writing in his RT review summary, “It thinks it’s a feminist fable about spirited lawyers getting their own back on cruel rich men but is in fact a tacky and revolting monument to the same greed, vanity and avarice it supposedly targets.”
The first three episodes of All’s Fair are streaming on Hulu, with new episodes set to be released every Tuesday through Dec. 9.


