Kim Kardashian to Auction off ‘All’s Fair’ Clothing to Support Women

Kim Kardashian to Auction off ‘All’s Fair’ Clothing to Support Women

Kim Kardashian will auction off her wardrobe from Season One of Ryan’s Murphy’s All’s Fair, in support of women seeking legal aid.

“In All’s Fair, I play a lawyer who sees firsthand how the legal system can either empower women or leave them behind,” the reality star and actress wrote on X. “But in the real world, the ‘price of justice’ is a barrier that many women simply cannot afford.”

The auction will take place on Friday at Kardashian Kloset, with 100 percent of the proceeds going directly to the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles. It begins at 9 a.m. PT, lasting through the weekend and concluding Sunday, March 29, at midnight.

“The right to a lawyer shouldn’t depend on the balance of your bank account,” Kardashian said. “For many women, legal aid is the only bridge to a restraining order, a fair custody agreement, or the chance to rebuild a life from scratch. Supporting survivors means more than just helping them leave; it means ensuring our justice system recognizes the reality of abuse. We are making sure that ‘justice for all’ actually means all.”

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On Murphy’s All’s Fair, Kardashian stars as Allura Grant, the owner to an all-female law firm. The cast’s first season also featured Sarah Paulson, Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash-Betts, Teyana Taylor, Glenn Close, and others. Following its premiere on Hulu last fall, the legal drama was widely panned by critics, and currently holds a 6 percent average on Rotten Tomatoes. But Kardashian celebrated its terrible reviews, and the series was renewed for a second season.

In November 2025, Kardashian revealed that she didn’t pass the California bar exam (despite a psychic telling her otherwise). “Well … I’m not a lawyer yet, I just play a very well-dressed one on TV,” Kardashian said. “Six years into this law journey, and I’m still all in until I pass the bar. No shortcuts, no giving up — just more studying and even more determination. Failing short isn’t failure — it’s fuel.”

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