The first trailer for All’s Fair, the upcoming Ryan Murphy legal drama, drops viewers into a glittery and cutthroat world of Hollywood divorce law, complete with power plays, secrets and high-fashion suits. At its center: Kim Kardashian and Sarah Paulson, who appear to be on a collision course.
Kardashian plays Allura Grant, the ambitious founder of a boutique law firm. In one trailer sequence, she locks horns with Paulson’s character in a dramatic scene where her rivals attempt to outmaneuver her. Tensions are high, and the stakes feel personal.
“All’s Fair” unfolds in the vein of Suits meets Sex and the City, except here, the suits are sharp, the stakes are emotional, and the battles are often waged in court. The plot centers around a team of female attorneys who leave a male‑dominated firm and launch their own practice. According to the official logline, they are “fierce, brilliant and emotionally complicated” as they “navigate high‑stakes breakups, scandalous secrets, and shifting allegiances, both in the courtroom and within their own ranks.”
The trailer opens with sharp dialogue and incisive visuals, set to the pulsing tones of “Cell Block Tango” from Chicago. Scenes flash between boardroom face-offs and emotional crises. In one moment, a tear‑streaked Kardashian watches in shock; in another, Paulson warns, “We are not the only ones to suffer abuse. Plenty of women inflict it.” The clip also teases betrayals, injections, screaming matches and raw vulnerability.
A standout line, delivered by Glenn Close’s character, commands: “Get mad. Get hot. Get revenge.” Elsewhere, a voiceover from Kardashian’s Allura Grant declares, “It’s our own boutique. Women representing women.” Another powerful quip: “You know what a girl’s best friend is? Not diamonds. Her lawyers.”
The cast reads like a powerhouse brigade: in addition to Kardashian and Paulson, the ensemble includes Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash‑Betts, Teyana Taylor and Glenn Close. Executive producers include Murphy, Kardashian, Close, Paulson, Watts, Nash and Kris Jenner. The series is produced by 20th Television in association with Ryan Murphy Television.
The show is set to premiere Nov. 4, with the first three episodes dropping simultaneously on Hulu (and Hulu via Disney+). New episodes will follow weekly. The positioning suggests Hulu is banking on strong buzz and watercooler conversation from the start.
For Kardashian, the role marks one of her most prominent forays into scripted drama. She’s no stranger to high-profile media, but in All’s Fair she steps into sharply tailored suits, courtroom intrigue and fierce rivalry, worlds apart from reality television.
With Murphy at the helm, All’s Fair leans heavily into style, tension and interpersonal drama. The trailer showcases his signature flavor: glamorous female protagonists, layered betrayals, lush visuals, and heightened stakes. It’s bold, sexed-up legal spectacle with a feminist edge.
The series straddles a line many will watch closely: it promises empowerment while courting melodrama. Its success may depend on whether it balances glossy spectacle with genuine character depth, especially among its legacy actors like Close, Paulson and Watts.