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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.
The show pays loving homage to the architecture of classic New York films. The dimly lit hallways, the doorman (played by the legendary Jackie Hoffman) who knows your business before you do, and the rooftop views—it creates a claustrophobic intimacy. The building isn't just where the murder happened; it is the murder. What makes Only Murders in the Building - Season 1 so sharp is its refusal to mock true crime fans. Instead, it celebrates them with obsessive detail. Only Murders in the Building - Season 1
Later seasons expand the world to include Hollywood stars and huge set pieces. Season 1 is quiet. It is about the anxiety of living alone in a big city. It’s about the awkwardness of sharing an elevator with a potential killer. It’s about the sound of a falling body from the floor above. In the golden age of streaming, where television
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 . The show pays loving homage to the architecture