READ WHY THE KARDASHIANS MOVED THEIR SHOW TO HULU AS THEY COVERED VARIETY MAGAZINE. (PHOTOS).
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Television has always been part of the Kardashian business model — they are TV stars first, and without an anchoring series, it’s possible that their ancillary businesses would suffer. Their reality show paycheck, which they won’t specify but insiders say is worth nine figures, makes up only a fraction of their net worth, yet it’s crucial for branding. All the family members will earn the same salary for the Hulu show, Khloé tells Variety. “We are all equals,” she says.
“It definitely played a factor because we give so much of our personal lives up for entertainment,” Khloé says of the financial terms of the contract. “We always have our private family conversations, and we’re pretty brutal, me and my sisters, with what we will settle for or not settle for. But not all money is good money. It has to be a good fit, and Hulu was just the perfect fit for us.”
Walt Disney Television’s chairman of entertainment, Dana Walden, was integral in signing the Kardashians — and confirms they didn’t come cheap. “We stepped up to a great deal that they very much deserve,” the exec says. “Who would you want more for your unscripted slate than the Kardashians? They perfectly symbolize our strategy, which is taking big shots, but the right shots, and betting on incredible talent and best-in-class opportunities in each genre.”
The sisters never enter negotiations. They leave that to Jenner. “She fights like a pit bull,” Khloé says of her mom.
Kris’ DNA, naturally, has rubbed off on her children. “I hope that I’ve inspired other women to take chances and follow their dreams,” Kylie says of her beauty empire.
When asked whether a bidding war ensued when the family left E!, Jenner remains coy. “We had options for sure, but I’m not one to kiss and tell.”
“I have the best advice for women in business,” Kim says. “Get your fucking ass up and work. It seems like nobody wants to work these days.”
The Kardashians have been the subjects of harsh criticism over the years, but they’ve never been accused of not hustling. Kim bristles at the characterization that’s followed her for years — that she’s just famous for being famous. “Who gives a fuck,” she says. “We focus on the positive. We work our asses off. If that’s what you think, then sorry. We just don’t have the energy for that. We don’t have to sing or dance or act; we get to live our lives — and hey, we made it. I don’t know what to tell you.”
Kim says she’s just being “factual”: “With all respect, and with love, I’m not, like, being a bitch.”
On another day, before getting on the phone for a conversation, Kim has just returned from Milan Fashion Week, disembarking from her new $95 million private jet that’s customized with cashmere walls. Naturally, her mode of travel has become public fodder, like every other detail of her life. After touching down, she heads to her monochromatic mansion in the Los Angeles enclave of Hidden Hills and hops on the call. Like her mom, she’s a master multitasker.
“I literally just landed and walked into my house,” she says. “I had a really good time, but I never want to travel and be away from the kids for too long, so two days was perfect. I have to prioritize everything.” She spent the 12-hour flight studying law.
Last December, after failing three times, she passed the “baby bar,” an exam that in the state of California allows an individual to become an admitted attorney through an apprenticeship. “When I went to the White House and was able to get someone released from prison, that was the biggest moment for me where I realized I can make a difference,” Kim says. “Am I exhausted? Yes, of course, but I’ve come too far. You hear about a case, and it’s someone’s life that you can help for the better, and then you get re-motivated again. It’s an ongoing cycle.” Her goal is to start her own law firm that would employ formerly incarcerated individuals to continue the fight for prison reform.
“Sorry, I’m eating a little bit too,” she says on the phone as she chews on vegan Chinese chicken salad with pita bread that she describes as “grilled and crispy and the best thing I’ve ever had, actually. I’m stuffing my face because my daughter has a basketball game and I can’t be late to pick her up from school.”
Forty minutes into our conversation, Kim asks if she can briefly hang up and call back, so that she can jump into one of her luxury cars (all painted a matching custom gray) to drive to 8-year-old North’s game. All of the Kardashian women say they prefer to drive themselves, rather than be chauffeured. And whenever they can, they pick up their kids from school.
“The paparazzi are super respectful about school stuff,” Kourtney says in a separate interview. “I guess I stay in a bubble, but I’m really able to have really normal days. It’s not like the paparazzi follow us all day.”
That’s not always true: These days, photographers can’t get enough shots of Kim with new boyfriend Davidson. “I have not filmed with him,” Kim says when asked whether he’ll appear on the Hulu show. “And I’m not opposed to it. It’s just not what he does,” she says, speaking about Davidson for the first time publicly. “But if there was an event happening and he was there, he wouldn’t tell the cameras to get away. I think I might film something really exciting coming, but it wouldn’t be for this season.”
Kim says that when the new show premieres, viewers will see “how we met and who reached out to who and how it happened and all the details that everyone wants to know.” She continues, “I’m definitely open to talking, and I definitely explain it.”
At the same time, Kim admits she’s learned to be more private with some aspects of her life, especially after 2016, when she was famously robbed in a Paris hotel room and held at gunpoint. As a result, “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” experienced a lull in its later seasons. The sisters seemed more guarded and less invested, and the series became a show about Scott Disick, Kourtney’s ex-partner, and Khloé pulling pranks on Jenner. “We used to share so much in real time, and once we realized that real time can get a little bit scary and tricky, we have saved so much more,” Kim says. “I think we’re still really good at sharing. I think we’re just really cautious and careful, and I think that’s OK.”
Another arc of Kim’s life that is playing out on the
world stage is her divorce, though she’s handled the personal matter with great restraint. Last week a judge granted her motion to drop “West” from her name, and she’s set to rebrand KKW Beauty this year. West has persistently harassed Kim online and in his appearances tied to his latest album, “Donda 2.” In court documents, Kim claimed that West’s posts have caused her emotional distress.
But before things turned acrimonious, West filmed scenes for the Hulu series, and he figures into a major arc in the first episode. “Being in the public eye and having disagreements publicly is never easy,” Kim says. “But I do believe in handling it all privately. I believe in championing publicly and criticizing privately. I don’t think I would ever criticize the father of my children on my TV show. That’s just not really what I’m about, and I just don’t think that would ever make me feel good.
“I’m always really respectful of what the kids will see. The reality is, we’re always a family. We always will have a love and respect for each other. And even if there’s moments where it might not seem like that, there are so many moments that are super positive. I do think it’s important for people to see that things aren’t perfect all the time, but that they can get better.”
Kim gasps when she hears that this reporter has seen the first episode of the new show. “I’m dying to know what you think,” she says. “I haven’t talked to anyone that’s seen it except for you, my friends and my family. Did you see the drones at the beginning? My goal,” she explains, “was that it was familiar and felt like home, like, ‘Oh, my God, they’re back.’ But updated or just a little bit more intimate.”
Family docu-series have struggled to succeed on streaming services. Gone are the days of cable’s celeb-reality boom, when anyone who craved fame strove to land a show at E!, Bravo or MTV. In the new era, audiences care less about reality TV and more about Instagram.
Retaining what made “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” a hit was critical, says executive producer Ben Winston, whose production company, Fulwell 73 (James Corden is a co-partner), is behind the Hulu series. “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” Winston says. “It feels different, but yet, ultimately builds on the great show that they did.”
To make for a better production schedule for the busy women, the cast regularly shoots individually, whereas “Keeping Up” often had everyone together for scenes. Variety has learned that Caitlyn Jenner, who transitioned in 2015 and ran for governor of California as a Republican last year, will not appear in the Hulu series. Rob Kardashian, the son of the family, is not a main cast member, though audiences might eventually see him in a cameo. Rob was a significant presence in early seasons of the E! show, but he dropped out due to mental and physical health issues, which were touched on during the series. He reemerged in his own 2016 spinoff, “Rob & Chyna,” which chronicled his doomed relationship with Blac Chyna, with whom he has a child. Ever since, Rob has stayed out of the limelight.
Rob isn’t the only one who had personal issues crop up on camera. For Kourtney, the final years at “Keeping Up” became “a really toxic place for me,” attributing that solely to her own personal burnout. But she wants to make clear that she is not the reason the show came to an end. “No,” she says. “I think that we were all ready to move on to something else.”
The streaming structure allows for a tighter turnaround, so events playing out on-screen are closer to what’s actually happening in real life, flipping on its head the model of reality television as evergreen content. “We wanted it to be as current as possible,” Kim says. “We hated how long we had to wait. That was like the death of us, because once we got over something, we had to rehash it all over again.”
In early conversations with Walden at Disney, Kris Jenner considered a home on a linear network, but ultimately settled on streaming solely on Hulu. “We wanted to be with someone that’s tech forward, so we’re with the times,” Khloé says. “For us to be still on cable was just not so on brand for us.”
In addition to Kim’s divorce, the show will also pull back the curtain on the status of Khloé’s relationship with NBA player Tristan Thompson, with whom she shares 3-year-old daughter True. In January, Thompson, who is on the Hulu series, admitted a paternity test confirmed he fathered a child with another woman. “I wish I never had to talk about that because it’s not a fun thing to talk about,” Khloé says. “But it is part of my journey in life, so we will see it on the show.”
But just how long will the Kardashians document their lives for TV?
Kourtney believes the Hulu show will be the last chapter of her career in reality TV. “I see myself living in another city,” she says. “I don’t think I see myself filming on a show in five years. I would probably envision myself, like, just living.”
Kim has also pondered such a possibility. “Sometimes I think, ‘Oh, my God, the dream. I can stop being Kim K. in 10 years,’” Kim muses. But when asked if she truly considers a life away from the cameras, she laughs.
“No,” she says. “I don’t.”
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