Fox didnât just launch a show. It ignited a war.
On paper, Best Medicine is a monster success. The medical dramedy exploded out of the gate with 10.8 million viewers across platforms, including Hulu â marking Foxâs biggest debut in nearly three years. Executives are celebrating. Advertisers are thrilled. Headlines are glowing.
But online?

Itâs chaos.
Because while the numbers scream hit, the audience reaction tells a very different story â one filled with anger, disbelief, and accusations of betrayal.
For longtime fans of the British original Doc Martin, this isnât a remake. Itâs an offense.
Social media lit up within hours of the premiere. Viewers werenât debating plot points or performances â they were questioning why the show exists at all. Words like âdisgraceful,â âembarrassing,â and âsoullessâ began trending alongside the title. Some fans didnât even finish the episode before posting furious reactions.

âThis misses the entire point of Doc Martin,â one viewer wrote.
âThey took something sharp and human and turned it into network fluff,â said another.
âJust because you can remake it doesnât mean you should,â echoed hundreds more.
Whatâs fueling the backlash isnât just nostalgia â itâs tone. The original series thrived on restraint, awkwardness, and emotional discomfort. Critics of Best Medicine argue the Fox version sands down those edges, replacing subtle character tension with broader jokes and a shinier, safer formula designed to please everyone⊠and satisfy no one.
Ironically, critics themselves are split â but far gentler. Reviews praise the castâs commitment and the showâs accessibility, calling it âcompetent,â âwatchable,â and âpolished.â Compliments that, to furious fans, sound like insults.
Because this isnât about competence.
Itâs about soul.

And thatâs where the divide becomes brutal.
The showâs massive debut proves curiosity was sky-high. People tuned in expecting magic â or at least respect for what came before. Instead, many walked away feeling like something intimate had been repackaged, diluted, and sold back to them with a smile.
Now the question hanging over Best Medicine isnât whether itâs a hit.

Itâs whether those millions will come back.
Because record-breaking premieres donât guarantee longevity â especially when the loudest voices arenât just disappointed⊠theyâre offended.
This could still become Foxâs next long-running success.
Or it could go down as a textbook case of how big numbers canât save a remake that loses the trust of its audience.
One thing is certain:
Best Medicine didnât just debut.
It detonated.