Quick Read
- Ryan Murphy’s ‘All’s Fair’ premieres November 4, 2025, on Hulu (and Disney+ internationally).
- Kim Kardashian leads an all-female divorce attorney team, joined by Naomi Watts, Glenn Close, Niecy Nash, Teyana Taylor, and Sarah Paulson.
- The show features high-stakes legal battles, shifting alliances, and scandalous secrets.
- Kardashian candidly discussed using ChatGPT for law exams, calling the AI a ‘frenemy’.
- Season 1 has 10 episodes, with the first three released on premiere day.
All’s Fair: Ryan Murphy’s Legal Drama Shakes Up Hulu
There’s a certain kind of electricity that crackles when a creator like Ryan Murphy rolls out a new show. This November, Hulu welcomes All’s Fair—a legal drama with a twist: the power isn’t just in the courtroom, but in the hands of a female-led cast determined to rewrite the rules. And at the heart of this story? Kim Kardashian, stepping into the role of Allura Grant, a driven divorce attorney whose personal and professional lives collide in unpredictable ways.
Meet the Cast: Star Power and Real-World Resonance
Murphy’s ensemble is nothing short of formidable. Kim Kardashian takes center stage as Allura Grant, channeling her own experience as a businesswoman and public figure into a character who’s fierce, vulnerable, and relentlessly ambitious. Kardashian’s journey from reality TV to scripted drama isn’t just a career move—it’s an emblem of how public personas can shift and evolve.
Joining Kardashian is Naomi Watts as Liberty Ronson, a relentless attorney with sharp wit and a drive to prove that women can lead in any industry. Watts’s resume is stacked: Oscar nominations for 21 Grams and The Impossible, and recent turns in Netflix’s Gypsy and Murphy’s own The Watcher. Her character, Liberty, helps anchor the new all-female firm at the center of the show.
Glenn Close embodies Dina Standish, the seasoned mentor and “queen of the legal world.” With eight Oscar nominations and a career that spans Fatal Attraction, Damages, and more, Close brings gravitas to the series, lending authority to the mentorship and alliance that drives the team forward.
Teyana Taylor, playing Milan, is the bold, outspoken aspiring lawyer whose emotional intelligence often becomes the glue holding the group together. Taylor’s acting chops, showcased in A Thousand and One and Coming 2 America, add depth to a character navigating ambition and loyalty.
Sarah Paulson steps in as Carrington Lane, the “brilliant yet abrasive” attorney hired by Allura’s ex-husband—a rival whose ambition is matched only by her willingness to challenge relationships. Paulson’s history with Murphy (from American Horror Story to Ratched) sets the stage for a high-stakes legal duel that’s as personal as it is professional.
Rounding out the cast is Niecy Nash as Emerald Green, a former L.A. cop turned investigator. Nash, known for her Emmy-winning role in Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story and appearances in Claws and Origin, brings warmth, wit, and loyalty to the group—qualities Murphy himself compared to the bonds seen in Sex and the City (Primetimer).
The Legal Battlefield: Divorce, Scandal, and Shifting Allegiances
The show’s premise is as much about breaking away from old systems as it is about the law. In All’s Fair, a team of female divorce attorneys leaves a male-dominated firm to start their own powerhouse practice. Hulu’s synopsis says it best: “Fierce, brilliant, and emotionally complicated, they navigate high-stakes breakups, scandalous secrets, and shifting allegiances—both in the courtroom and within their own ranks.”
The first season, consisting of ten episodes, kicks off with three episodes released on premiere day, followed by weekly installments every Tuesday. For international viewers, Disney+ will carry the series—ensuring that Murphy’s legal world reaches far beyond the U.S. courtroom.
Behind the Scenes: Kardashian’s Real-Life Legal Journey—and AI’s Unlikely Role
While Kardashian’s character is locked in a legal battle onscreen, her off-screen story is no less compelling. In a recent interview for Vanity Fair, Kardashian revealed she’s been using ChatGPT for “legal advice” while studying for law exams. The result? Mixed, at best. “It has made me fail tests … all the time,” she admitted, describing the chatbot as a “frenemy.” When asked by costar Teyana Taylor if she viewed ChatGPT as a friend, Kardashian laughed, “Yes, a frenemy. And then it’ll say back to me, ‘This is just teaching you to trust your own instincts. So you knew the answer all along.’”
It’s a candid moment—one that blurs the lines between the scripted world of All’s Fair and the realities faced by women in law today. Kardashian’s struggle with AI mirrors broader questions about technology’s place in education, professional development, and even therapy. “I screenshot all the time and send it in my group chat. Like, can you believe this bitch is talking to me like this? This is insane,” she shared (PEOPLE).
The California bar exam isn’t just a plot point—it’s a real challenge, with five essays, a performance test, and 200 multiple-choice questions. For Kardashian, the journey has been as much about perseverance as it is about mastering the law.
Celebrity Culture, Representation, and the Power of Storytelling
Murphy’s show arrives at a time when the intersection of celebrity, technology, and representation is under the microscope. The cast’s real-life achievements and struggles add layers of authenticity. Kardashian’s experience with AI, Watts’s acclaimed performances, Close’s mentorship, Taylor’s emotional intelligence, Paulson’s rivalry, and Nash’s loyalty—each actor brings something genuine to the table.
Murphy’s comment, “It has what Sex and the City has, which is girlfriends. It has like a bond of women trying to get through an experience together,” speaks to the heart of All’s Fair. This isn’t just another courtroom drama—it’s a story about change, challenge, and solidarity in a world where money talks and love is a battleground (TVfanatic).
As the series debuts, it promises not only gripping legal battles and scandalous secrets but also a look at how women navigate power, loyalty, and ambition—on screen and off.
Assessment: ‘All’s Fair’ doesn’t just promise high-stakes drama; it delivers a layered narrative where fiction and reality collide. By casting women with real-life experience in law, media, and public scrutiny, and by weaving in the modern tension between technology and trust, Ryan Murphy crafts a show that’s as timely as it is entertaining. The result is a legal drama that resonates with anyone who’s ever had to fight for their place—in court, at work, or within themselves.

