Seems to me, some still don't quite understand the concept of HDR vs Tonemapping....
HDR is a technique to capture as much dynamic range you can in an image. It can be done with multiple exposures taken on sight, or later on with a (useable) single image with software. TONEMAPPING is where you get the "overcooked" effect. You can tonemap any image. If you want to "overcook" it because that's you vision for the image, then go for it! There still is a right & wrong way to do it. A dirty/muddy sky and halos are the wrong way. There are some images that HDR will not benefit because the the scene, itself, doesn't have enough dynamic range to really need it. The "overcooked" tone mapping shouldn't be used to "rescue" a boring image. If the composition and subjects cannot stand on their own, reshoot. The best "overcooked" stuff I've see is where the photographer shoots with the processed image of the scene already envisioned.