Kim Kardashian, Ryan Murphy
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Naomi Watts, Glenn Close, Sarah Paulson, Teyana Taylor and Niecy Nash-Betts fill out the series about an all-female firm of divorce lawyers who represent all-female clients.
Ryan Murphy and director Anthony Hemingway have responded to the early critical reaction to All’s Fair, the new Hulu show starring Kim Kardashian. The update comes as the show’s initial reviews sparked widespread discussion following its low Rotten Tomatoes score.
Comic Book Resources on MSN
Ryan Murphy's New Hulu Show Debuts to Rare 0% Rotten Tomatoes Score
Ryan Murphy is a brilliant creative mind responsible for series like Glee and America Horror Story. However, his recently released legal drama, All's Fair, has debuted to shockingly dismal reviews.
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.
Ryan Murphy's new legal drama, All's Fair, has debuted with a 0% on Rotten Tomatoes, with several reviews awarding it the lowest possible score.
The “worst TV drama ever,” “existentially terrible” – Ryan Murphy’s star-studded new drama series is getting the worst reviews of the year. Seems like Kim Kardashian won’t be getting an Emmy anytime soon.
The new Ryan Murphy-directed legal drama — which also stars Teyana Taylor, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close and more — was slammed by several critics.
Following the divisive success of Monster: The Ed Gein Story, Ryan Murphy has moved on to the shockingly unsuccessful legal drama, All’s Fair. Despite boasting some of the biggest talent out there – and Kim Kardashian – it was widely slammed in the reviews and recieved a rare 0 per cent on Rotten Tomatoes. Why do I now want to watch it more?
Television: Ryan Murphy, Hollywood’s laureate of bad taste, has produced one of the worst things Disney+ has ever foisted upon its subscribers
Kallmekris on MSNOpinion
Netflix and Ryan Murphy Just Crossed the Line
Netflix has crossed a line. Imagine turning a real, deceased woman into a fictional accomplice to a serial killer, and fabricating murders that never happened. That’s exactly what happened with their latest true crime drama.