Kim Kardashian’s new Hulu legal drama, All’s Fair, didn’t just get bad reviews. It got biblical ones.
Critics called it “tacky,” “tasteless,” and “televised brain death.” Rotten Tomatoes gave the series a jaw-dropping 0 percent, Hollywood’s equivalent of a restraining order.
And how did Kim respond?
She posted about it. Proudly. Because of course she did.
“Have you tuned in to the most critically acclaimed show of the year!?!?!?” she wrote on Instagram, alongside photos of herself looking unbothered and heavily airbrushed.
The post doubled as a highlight reel of hate.
Tweets calling it “some of the worst acting I’ve ever seen” and mocking its “predictable storylines” were plastered between glam shots of Kim posing in a fur-trimmed crop top.
Another post leaned into the chaos. “Does a show need to be good? No. That’s the art.”
Despite the critical carnage, the series appears to be finding an audience.
According to viewing data circulating online from Disney’s streaming platforms, All’s Fair has ranked among the most-watched titles globally, hitting number one in multiple countries and landing in the top ten across dozens more.
Hate watching? Absolutely.
The show has since crawled up from 0 percent to a generous 5 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, the kind of score critics give when they feel bad.
USA Today called it “the worst show of the year.” The Guardian said they “didn’t know it was still possible to make television this bad.”
Director Anthony Hemingway also tried to calm the waters: “You can’t please everybody,” he said. “It may not be something you can connect to.”
Kim’s representative posted a statement about her “working hard, adjusting, and finding purpose.”
At the All’s Fair premiere, Kim arrived dressed like legal Barbie in purple fur and brown leather, flanked by co stars Niecy Nash-Betts, Sarah Paulson, and Naomi Watts.
All of whom now have to pretend this was a great idea.