If you thought legal dramas were all stiff suits and stern judges, Kim Kardashian will change that for you. All’s Fair, Ryan Murphy’s newest Hulu series, flips the genre on its head. It’s bold, stylish, and full of powerful women who aren’t afraid to fight dirty—both in and out of the courtroom. Premiered on November 4, 2025, the show has already dropped its first three episodes, with new ones arriving weekly. It’s a mix of courtroom tension, female empowerment, and deliciously dramatic storytelling that screams “add to watchlist now.”
The Plot: Women Taking the Power Back

The story centers on Allura Grant (Kim Kardashian), a fierce divorce attorney who breaks away from her male-dominated firm to start her own all-female legal powerhouse. Alongside her are Liberty Ronson (Naomi Watts), the cool-headed strategist, and Dina Standish (Glenn Close), the veteran legal mind who knows every courtroom trick in the book.
Their mission? To represent women, outsmart their rivals, and prove that ambition and empathy can coexist. But as the firm’s reputation grows, so do the rivalries, secrets, and betrayals simmering beneath the surface.
It’s equal parts Suits, Big Little Lies, and The Good Fight — just glossier and more unapologetically feminine.
The Star-Studded Cast

The lineup is honestly ridiculous in the best way possible:
- Kim Kardashian as Allura Grant, turning heads in her first major scripted role.
- Naomi Watts bringing her trademark cool authority to Liberty Ronson.
- Glenn Close, because every great legal drama needs a legend to command the room.
- Sarah Paulson, Niecy Nash-Betts, and Teyana Taylor round out the dream team, adding charisma, chaos, and charisma (again).
Oh, and yes — a surprise cameo by Jessica Simpson in the pilot episode got everyone talking. Because why not?
Ryan Murphy’s Court of Style

Ryan Murphy, the creative force behind American Horror Story and Feud, takes the courtroom genre and injects it with designer heels, emotional depth, and razor-sharp dialogue. Every office scene looks like it could double as a Vogue spread, but beneath the glamour is a real exploration of gender politics, ambition, and the cost of success.
Naomi Watts described it perfectly in an interview: “It’s rare to go to work surrounded by women who are not only strong but supportive. We’re all rooting for each other.” That sisterhood energy runs through the entire show.
Why You Should Watch

Because it’s fun. Because it’s fiery. And because watching Kim Kardashian go toe-to-toe with Glenn Close is something you didn’t know you needed. The show doesn’t aim to be realistic law — it’s heightened, witty, and drama-first. Think more Verbal Sparring in Valentino than Law & Order. Still, it sneaks in commentary about female power, image, and how women have to work twice as hard to be taken seriously.
All’s Fair is glossy, gutsy, and way more addictive than you’d expect. It’s not just another courtroom show — it’s a fashion-forward, emotionally charged, and proudly female take on justice and reinvention. Verdict: Ew, Guilty (SNL shoutout) of being your next binge.
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