Hulu says All’s Fair delivered its biggest scripted originals debut in three years, drawing 3.2 million global views in its first three days even as the legal drama absorbed withering early notices. The series, created by Ryan Murphy and starring Kim Kardashian as the head of a high-profile Los Angeles divorce firm, bowed on November 4 with a three-episode drop. The streamer highlighted the milestone as part of a broader push to spotlight demand for buzzy, celebrity-driven launches across both Hulu and its sister platform.
The audience surge arrived alongside unusually sharp critical reactions. Review aggregators list a low critics’ score and a far stronger audience rating, suggesting a split between professional reviews and early fan response. As of this week the show holds a 5% critics score and a 67% audience score, a gap the company’s performance update implicitly leaned into by emphasizing viewership rather than sentiment.
Kardashian, who has spent recent years studying law and integrating legal themes into her on-screen projects, responded to the critiques by stressing that the series has found an audience and by sharing positive fan messages on social platforms. Creatively, the show pairs Kardashian with a high-profile ensemble and leans on glossy production values, a case-of-the-week structure, and interpersonal storylines designed to travel well in marketing materials and trailers. Industry chatter has also focused on the extent to which star-driven brand recognition can convert curiosity into early sampling on streaming, where completion metrics often determine renewal prospects.
The streamer’s framing of first-week performance puts All’s Fair among recent titles that have set platform-specific marks without traditional Nielsen context, reflecting a continuing trend in which services share selective metrics to shape the narrative around a launch. For viewers, the immediate question is whether the premiere bump sustains as weekly episodes roll out and whether word of mouth stabilizes closer to the fan reaction reflected on ratings dashboards.















































