SPOILER ALERT: This review contains plot details from the first three episodes of “All’s Fair,” now streaming on Hulu.
It probably says all you need to know about “All’s Fair” that a legal drama ostensibly about women’s empowerment begins with a pilot written and directed by men. In fact, of the three episodes now streaming on Hulu to mark the series’ premiere, only one includes a major credit by a female creative — and it’s shared between executive producer Jamie Pachino and co-creator Ryan Murphy, who collaborated on the script for Episode 2. But this is a review, so I’m obligated to expand: “All’s Fair” is a clumsy, condescending take on rah-rah girlboss feminism, half-baked even by the standards of an overextended Murphy , who co-created the show with Joe Baken and Jon Robin Baitz

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