Only Murders In The Building - Season 1 -
Oliver’s obsession with sound design (recording the "foley" of dips and knitting needles) parodies the high production values of Serial . Charles’s hyper-analysis of people’s behavior mimics the fan who thinks they can solve a case based on a vocal fry. The show even features a scene where the trio discovers "the fandom" has found their podcast, leading to subreddit threads and obsessive fan art inside the show.
The series introduced a brilliant meta twist: . Tina Fey plays a smug, ridiculously successful podcast host (a clear send-up of Sarah Koenig or Crime Junkie host Ashley Flowers), serving as the antagonist the trio hopes to dethrone. It’s a commentary on the commodification of tragedy—but it never feels mean, because the show recognizes that we are all Cinda Canning. Why Season 1 Stands Above the Rest While the subsequent seasons (S2’s painting mystery and S3’s Broadway whodunit starring Meryl Streep) have their merits, Season 1 remains the magnum opus for a specific reason: Intimacy . Only Murders in the Building - Season 1
Whether you are a true crime obsessive, a fan of Steve Martin’s physical comedy, or just looking for a show that respects your intelligence while making you laugh, Only Murders in the Building - Season 1 is essential viewing. The series introduced a brilliant meta twist:
Verdict: Dip-worthy.
In the golden age of streaming, where television shows often blur into the background noise of endless scrolling, sometimes a series arrives that demands you put down your phone, lean in, and press play. Only Murders in the Building - Season 1 was that series. Premiering on Hulu (and Disney+ internationally) in August 2021, the show did something remarkable: it took the grim, exploitative edge of the true crime genre and wrapped it in a cozy, warm-hearted blanket of absurdist comedy and genuine New York melancholy. Why Season 1 Stands Above the Rest While