Kim Kardashian has poked fun at the overwhelmingly negative critical reception to Ryan Murphy’s new legal drama All’s Fair, joking that it is “the most critically acclaimed show of the year”.
The series, which stars Kardashian alongside Naomi Watts and Niecy Nash-Betts as a team of female divorce attorneys, premiered on 4 November to terrible reviews from critics and a zero per cent score on review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes. (It has since crept up to five per cent).
Sharing an Instagram post featuring a collection of reviews of the show, Kardashian said Wednesday: “Have you tuned in to the most critically acclaimed show of the year!?!?!? All’s Fair streaming now on @hulu and @disneyplus.”

In one screenshot, a viewer had written: “Some of the worst acting I’ve ever seen in my life alongside the most predictable storylines and the most ridiculous styling. I’m obsessed and I need 14 seasons.”
Another said: “All’s Fair on Hulu dares to ask the question, ‘Does a show need to be good?’ and the answer is no, it doesn’t. We have legendary actresses here giving the worst performances of their careers, it takes a special kind of talent to pull that kind of inability out of them. Amazeballs.”
Kardashian also included a meme that said: “Critics realizing their reviews of All’s Fair ended up making people watch and love the show.”

In the closing slide, Kardashian sent a final message to the show’s detractors – with a tweet from Disney Hulu’s press office stating that All’s Fair is currently the most-watched title on Disney+ in the world, making it “top 10 in a total of 36 territories across the globe”.
A large proportion of media outlets have critically panned the show. The Independent’s Adam White called the show “property porn for the age of Skims and Selling Sunset; sleek, post-Keeping Up with the Kardashians fantasy-land aspiration, starring literally Kim Kardashian”.

The Guardian’s Lucy Mangan gave the show zero stars, writing: “I did not know it was still possible to make television this bad.” She called All’s Fair “fascinatingly, incomprehensibly, existentially terrible”.
The Telegraph’s Ed Power said it would be “unfair to single out Kardashian” as “her participation is just one disaster among many”.
Meanwhile, Angie Han from The Hollywood Reporter attributes Kardashian’s “stiff and affectless” performance to the writing, which she said is “also stiff and affectless without a single authentic note”.
In another scathing review, The Times’s Ben Dowell said the show felt like it was scripted “by a toddler who couldn’t write ‘bum’ on a wall”.
On social media, however, the reception has been mixed – with some fans branding the show “high camp” and “chic”.
The show follows Kardashian, Watts and Nash-Betts as a trio of affluent female divorce attorneys who leave a male-dominated firm to open their own practice in Los Angeles, specialising in high-profile divorce settlements for the rich and famous.
Speaking about her role in All’s Fair, Kardashian told the BBC she was honoured to work with her co-stars, whom she called “the best acting coaches in the world”.
Acknowledging her status as a reality star, Kardashian said the makers of the show “took a chance on working with” her.
“The last thing I would want to do is be unprofessional, be late or not know my lines,” she said.
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