Empire (2015)

TV show · 2015 · Drama, Soap · English

Curator score: 7.1/10 (43.4K ratings)

Their reign. Their rules.

Overview

A powerful family drama about the head of a music empire whose three sons and ex-wife all battle for his throne.

Ratings

Production

20th Century Fox Television, Imagine Television Studios, Lee Daniels Entertainment, Little Chicken Productions, Danny Strong Productions

Cast

Terrence Howard, Taraji P. Henson, Bryshere Y. Gray, Trai Byers, Gabourey Sidibe, Ta'Rhonda Jones, Serayah, Nicole Ari Parker, Meta Golding, A.Z. Kelsey, Rhyon Nicole Brown, Mario, Katlynn Simone, Wood Harris

Where to watch

Hulu, Tubi TV

Curator Review

Verdict

A glossy, high-voltage family soap with big performances, sharp hooks, and a strong first-season engine. It’s most rewarding if you want melodrama, music-industry intrigue, and ruthless power plays; later seasons become more uneven and repetitive.

Best for

  • Viewers who like heightened primetime soaps
  • Fans of music-industry drama and family succession stories
  • People who enjoy big, memeable performances and cliffhangers

Skip if

  • You want subtle character drama
  • You dislike camp, excess, or soapy reversals
  • You prefer tightly plotted shows that stay consistent across all seasons

Overview

Empire is built on pure soap-opera propulsion: a dynasty fight over a music label, with betrayals, alliances, and public humiliation arriving at a relentless pace. The show’s appeal is immediate and very watchable, especially in its early run, where the combination of family warfare, hip-hop spectacle, and outsized performances gives it a real pop-culture charge.

Worth noting

Terrence Howard and Taraji P. Henson anchor the series with star power, and the ensemble is designed for maximum friction. The music and fashion elements help it feel bigger than a standard family drama, and the show knows how to end an episode on a hard turn. At its best, it’s addictive, glossy, and shamelessly entertaining.

Bottom line

The downside is that the series can become repetitive as it stretches across six seasons, with escalating twists sometimes replacing deeper development. It remains a strong pick for viewers who embrace melodrama and spectacle, but it’s less satisfying if you want long-form consistency or realism. The first season and select stretches after it are the main draw; later episodes are more of a commitment than a revelation.

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Topics

soap opera, family drama, music business, melodrama, glossy, campy, primetime, ensemble, power politics, bingeable

Open Empire (2015) on Curator TV