Only Murders In The Building - Season 1 May 2026
Unlike many shows that use modern technology as a gimmick, Only Murders integrates the true-crime podcast format into its very DNA. As the trio records their podcast about the murder they are investigating, the show plays with narrative reliability. Are they documentarians or vigilantes? Are they helping the deceased or exploiting him for Spotify streams?
For anyone who has ever listened to a podcast and thought, “I could solve that,” or for anyone who has ever ridden an elevator with a neighbor and wondered what they are hiding, this show is a perfect ten-episode escape. It proves that even in a city of eight million strangers, three misfits with a microphone can find the one thing that matters most: connection. Only Murders in the Building - Season 1
While the penultimate episode delivers a twist that genuinely recontextualizes everything you’ve seen, the finale sticks the landing not through shock, but through pathos. The murderer is caught not by a gunfight or a car chase, but by a conversation in a diner and a missed text message. In a genre obsessed with elaborate Rube Goldberg machines of motive, Only Murders reminds us that the most dangerous thing in New York isn't a psychopath—it's miscommunication and the quiet, desperate desire to be seen. Unlike many shows that use modern technology as
In an era of prestige television dominated by grim anti-heroes and nihilistic twists, Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building arrived in 2021 like a perfectly baked Bundt cake at a funeral: unexpectedly comforting, surprisingly rich, and exactly what the room needed. Are they helping the deceased or exploiting him
Their friendship is the true mystery of Season 1. The plot—investigating the death of their neighbor Tim Kono (Julian Cihi)—is merely the engine. The fuel is watching three isolated people use a murder to cure their loneliness. They don’t just solve a crime; they build a family.
Season 1 brilliantly satirizes the ethics of the true-crime industrial complex (complete with a hilariously smug rival podcaster played by Tina Fey) while still delivering the visceral satisfaction of clue-hunting. The show gives you everything: hidden emerald rings, tattooed fingers, cat food poisoning, and a 6th Avenue subway grate that holds a secret. It respects the audience enough to play fair with the clues, but it never forgets that the emotional stakes are higher than "whodunnit."