Letâs pick the picks
Gold Derby blogger Tom OâNeil prognosticates the Emmy nominees for the Envelope, today looking at the races for comedy, drama, variety and reality series, plus TV movies and miniseries. In the June 6 edition of the Envelope, OâNeil breaks down the acting categories. For ongoing discussion of the Emmy races visit TheEnvelope.com.
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COMEDY
WHOâS LAUGHING NOW?
WHOâS ahead in the top Emmy races? Hereâs a breakdown based on past results, votersâ quirky tastes and a good shake of a crystal ball.
The comedy category could see some newcomers, since two of last yearâs contenders were out of action this season (HBOâs âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ missed the eligibility cutoff date and low-rated âArrested Developmentâ was axed by Fox).
Expect last yearâs champ, âThe Office,â to return. Itâs still considered cool and it appeals to votersâ notorious elitism. NBCâs office may be set in the rather unglamorous Scranton, Pa., but its white-collar idiocy can be found in offices all across Hollywood.
It took several years for uppity voters to acknowledge slapstick superhit âTwo and a Half Men,â which some critics insist is better than its raunch-for-dudes reputation. Can it make it two in a row?
Overdue:
the theories
âScrubsâ didnât get nominated for best comedy series until its fourth season, but since then itâs been nominated twice, suggesting a steady voter base and a favorite to return to the top five, especially since it plans to wow judges with the castâs deft song-and-dance chops in the critically acclaimed âMy Musicalâ episode.
âScrubsâ probably took so long to catch on because voters tend to be guys older than 50 who may not connect with its frat-boy sensibility. Perhaps thatâs why HBOâs âEntourageâ hasnât been nominated. Voters, remember, are TV industry pros who consider such celeb wolf packs the scourge of Hollywood. Still, last year they gave an Emmy to its nastiest carnivore, Jeremy Piven. TV academy members may be finally getting âEntourage,â and its submission this year, âOne Day in the Valley,â is strong.
This Emmy voting pattern of delayed recognition gives hope to Showtimeâs âWeeds,â which has the same kind of hip âtude, plus sophisticated pretensions. If it breaks in, itâll be the first non-HBO cable show to do so, and its marketers are pressing hard to pull that off. Showtime was the first Emmy player to ship its DVD campaign box to voters.
The working-
class snub
âMy Name Is Earlâ (NBC) won best writing and direction last year but was shut out of the series race. Good news: Thatâs what happened to Foxâs âMalcolm in the Middleâ before it was recognized in its second season. Bad news: âEarlâsâ real problem might be its blue-collar sensibility.
Emmy snobbery against the working class could be whatâs behind votersâ refusal to recognize CBSâ long-running âThe King of Queens.â Its TV ancestor âThe Honeymoonersâ never won an Emmy, but thereâs still hope. Voters are watching the show: They actually nominated Kevin James for lead actor for the first time last year, causing jaws to drop all over TV land.
âKing of Queensâ has something else going for it too: length. Two-part episodes are permitted to compete against half-hours, and they often trounce them. âKingâ producers entered both parts of series finale âChina Syndrome,â which includes poignant scenes of the always-bickering lovebirds finally facing the option of soaring off in different directions. (USAâs one-hour âMonkâ has always had the double-time advantage, but it hasnât paid off with a series bid -- only in the race for best actor, which Tony Shalhoub has won three times.)
Rookies
The comedy lineup usually contains one or two rookies. âMen in Treesâ (ABC) has an outside shot, but the best bets are âUgly Bettyâ (ABC) and â30 Rockâ (NBC).
âBettyâ is a rare combination: a critically cheered superhit Hollywood canât help but adore as it mocks media lunacy, skewers its dastardly villains and exults in its fabulousness. âBettyâ already has won the DGA and Peabody and two Golden Globes. Producers are submitting the pilot, often a successful strategy.
But â30 Rockâ is more about TV media, so it may hit home harder, and it features the most delicious of todayâs villains: Alec Baldwin. Nielsen viewership is low, but Emmy voters traditionally donât care about that. It should make the top 10 runoff, which is based on a popular vote of academy members. Then its fate for making the final list of five nominees will be up to judging panels viewing one episode. Thatâll be âHard Ball,â full of hilarity when Jenna (Jane Krakowski) causes an uproar by confusing Barack Obama with Osama bin Laden while appearing on Chris Mathewsâ âHardball.â
Thereâs less certainty that âEverybody Hates Chrisâ will make the top 10, since it airs on nascent network the CW, but voters have probably heard TV criticsâ huzzahs. Its success will be up to the âEverybody Hates Malvoâ episode, a winner about Chris losing his job in the store when he refuses to unmask a thief.
Returning faves
Some top Emmy watchers believe âThe New Adventures of Old Christineâ (CBS) will get in, following its big victory last year for lead actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus. She has survived âThe âSeinfeldâ Curse.â
ABCâs âDesperate Housewivesâ fell off last year, reputedly due to a poor episode selection, but could rally with a strong entry, which has not been announced.
Other contenders: âItâs Always Sunny in Philadelphiaâ (FX), âHow I Met Your Motherâ (CBS), âExtrasâ (HBO), âThe Sarah Silverman Programâ (Comedy Central), âTill Deathâ (Fox), âReno 911â (Comedy Central) and âAndy Barker, P.I.â (NBC).
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DRAMA
THE HOT AND HEAVY
FOUR of last yearâs drama nominees return (only âThe West Wingâ left the air) and all look difficult to dislodge: 2004 winner âThe Sopranosâ (HBO), âGreyâs Anatomyâ (ABC), âHouseâ (Fox) and last yearâs champ â24â (Fox).
But competition is fierce in this boom time for TV dramas, making this Emmy race a true drama to watch.
ABCâs âLostâ hopes to avenge its failure to be nominated last year after winning the award for its first season in 2005. Some Emmy watchers blamed the snub on the episode its producers submitted -- it had dangling plot lines that baffled any judges not regular viewers of this serialized drama. This yearâs entry is a self-contained story cheered by TV critics: âThe Man From Tallahassee.â
Rookies
Critics are even more enthusiastic about âFriday Night Lights,â a front-runner to be named best new program by the TV Critics Assn. in July. But such acclaim has not translated into ratings success for NBC, so it might not make the top 10 runoff. Even if it does, will elite Hollywooders respond to a series about high school football in Texas?
The new series with the highest ratings and hip factor, NBCâs âHeroes,â should make the runoff easily, but then must face voter bias against fantasy programs that has probably kept âBattlestar Galacticaâ (Sci-Fi) from being nominated despite rave reviews. âLostâsâ early Emmy success proves that fantasy thrillers can occasionally break through.
âThe Tudorsâ is more akin to traditional academy tastes. A year ago a drama about Henry VIIIâs daughter, âElizabeth I,â swept the TV movie/ miniseries categories. This new Showtime series has the same highbrow appeal plus a studly young Henry plotting intrigue and warming up women in cold British castles.
ABC newcomer âBrothers & Sistersâ is so loaded with past Emmy favorites -- winners Sally Field and Patricia Wettig and nominees Calista Flockhart, Rob Lowe and Rachel Griffiths -- that it should do well with acting nominations. It could score a series nom too, since itâs similar to âFamily,â a three-time nominee in the 1970s about another Pasadena clan that won acting Emmys for Sada Thompson, Kristy McNichol and Gary Frank.
Chances for cable
Michael C. Hall was nominated as a mortician on âSix Feet Under,â but now is doing the killing on Showtimeâs âDexter.â Voters can be a bit squeamish about serial murderers, but he only does it to wreak justice, so itâs OK. âDexterâsâ best Emmy hope may be in the lead actor race, but it could slash its way into the series lineup too.
But: No non-HBO cable program has managed to break into this category.
The TV academy acknowledges that one wouldâve made the cut if new changes planned for this yearâs voting (judgesâ scores of finalistsâ episodes will be mixed on a 50-50 basis with results of the first- round popular vote) had been applied to last yearâs balloting. Best bets: FXâs long-running âThe Shieldâ or âRescue Meâ now could break through.
FXâs newest drama, âThe Riches,â may get noticed, thanks to the marquee draw of stars Minnie Driver and Eddie Izzard.
TNTâs crime-chasing âThe Closerâ scored a lead actress bid last year for Kyra Sedgwick and is in hot pursuit of a shot at best series. And the crack marksmen of âThe Unit,â a CBS show created by hipster David Mamet, also have Emmy in their sightlines.
Overlooked,
but not forgotten
âERâ (NBC), âDeadwoodâ (HBO) and âCSI: Crime Scene Investigationâ (CBS) have been nominated in the past.
Shows that have done well in the acting races are overdue for a series nod: âLaw & Order: SVUâ (NBC), âMediumâ (NBC) and âBoston Legalâ (ABC).
After failing to crack the comedy category for six years, acclaimed âGilmore Girlsâ (CW) moves into the crowded drama field for its final try at Emmy glory.
Also in competition: âSharkâ (CBS), âNip/Tuckâ (FX), âBrotherhoodâ (Showtime), âPrison Breakâ (Fox), âRomeâ (HBO), âBonesâ (Fox), âSleeper Cellâ (Showtime), âThe Wireâ (HBO), âDirtâ (FX).
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THE REST OF THE FIELD
TV MOVIE
Once again, HBO looms large
Sure looks as if HBO again will dominate the TV movie categories (itâs won 12 times in 15 years), with four strong entries:
âBury My Heart at Wounded Knee,â an adaptation of the bestseller about the defeat of the Sioux after their victory at Custerâs last stand, is an epic production with Anna Paquin and Aidan Quinn.
Jim Broadbent stars in the biopic âLongfordâ as a crusty British lord who believes so strongly in human redemption that he is easily manipulated by a psychopathic killer (Samantha Morton) seeking mercy from the state.
In the true-event-based âLife Support,â Queen Latifah is cast as a crack addict who becomes an AIDS activist. Inspirational life stories are popular in this category (âTuesdays With Morrie,â âWarm Springsâ are previous winners).
HBO also has another inspirational drama in âAngel Rodriguez,â about a troubled, homeless teen who seeks help from a good-hearted counselor (Rachel Griffiths).
But HBO has some competition.
Matthew Perry reaches out to help tough Harlem schoolkids in TNTâs true-life âThe Ron Clark Story.â Itâs already received nominations from the Globes, SAG and the writersâ and directorsâ guilds, so itâs ripe for Emmy attention.
Lifetime made sure voters took note of its three most Emmy-friendly movies by shipping campaign DVDs early. âWhy I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomyâ features âScrubsâ star Sarah Chalke as a real-life, sassy âgloss girlâ who strives to keep a positive attitude while battling breast cancer. âA Girl Like Meâ tells the true story of a single mom (Mercedes Ruehl) who campaigns for the rights of transgendered people after her son-turned-daughter is killed by a gang.
Considering recent headlines, voters might be tempted to give top Emmy noms to Lifetimeâs âThe Mermaid Chair,â starring Kim Basinger as a married woman who falls in love with a Benedictine monk. Because itâs likely that Basingerâs ex, Alec Baldwin, will be nominated for best comedy actor in â30 Rock,â an awkward reunion could occur on Emmy night.
Other contenders: âThe Librarian: Return to King Solomonâs Minesâ (TNT), âWallis & Edwardâ (BBC America), and three heartfelt Hallmark Hall of Fame productions on CBS: âThe Valley of Light,â âCrossroads: A Story of Forgivenessâ and âCandles on Bay Street.â
MINISERIES
Brits, true events, the West and a King
Three installments of PBSâ âPrime Suspectâ (2, 3 and 5) have won the Emmy for miniseries, so No. 7, âThe Final Act,â will be a formidable foe, with recent Oscar-champ Helen Mirren as the booze-bedeviled police detective who finally surrenders her badge.
PBS is also campaigning for âJane Eyre,â starring newcomer Ruth Wilson, who edged out Mirren for a BAFTA nod, as the forlorn governess in the adaptation of the Charlotte Bronte classic.
HBO, which has won five of the last 10 Emmy mini races, has âTsunami: The Aftermath,â starring Toni Collette, Sophie Okonedo and Chiwetel Ejiofor in an intense drama about the tragedy in Thailand.
TNTâs âNightmares & Dreamscapesâ showcases two award veterans in chilling tales by Stephen King: William Hurt as a hit man attacked by a battalion of indefatigable toy soldiers and William H. Macy as a novelist who swaps lives with his fictional gumshoe. Two of Kingâs long forms have been nominated in the past, âThe Shiningâ (1997) and âThe Standâ (1994), and TNT picked up the Emmy for the mini âJosephâ in 1995.
Emboldened by its Emmy win for Steven Spielbergâs âTakenâ in 2003, the Sci Fi Channel is campaigning for âThe Lost Roomâ starring Peter Krause and Julianna Margulies in a mystery about a hotel room thatâs a secret portal to an alternate universe.
AMCâs first mini, âBroken Trail,â was a bonanza hit, roping in 9.8 million viewers. TV Guide called the sprawling western epic an âinstant classicâ and The Times hailed the âquiet, lyrical performances of Robert Duvall and Thomas Haden Churchâ as cowboys herding horses from Oregon to Wyoming.
ABC, which last won this race in 2001 with âAnne Frank,â has the controversial âThe Path to 9/11,â which stirred controversy for its dramatization of events leading up to the World Trade Center bombings.
BBC America is hoping for its first Emmy win with the political thriller âThe State Withinâ about a British ambassador to Washington (Jason Isaacs) who faces off against a formidable secretary of Defense (Sharon Gless).
REALITY
Will âIdolâ make
its voice heard?
For the first four years of this category, CBSâ âThe Amazing Raceâ zoomed past Foxâs âAmerican Idolâ to win best reality competition series, leaving TVâs most popular show in the dust. With 22 defeats in all categories, including tech, âIdolâ needs only three more to become Emmyâs biggest loser.
âIdolâ has hopes of claiming the top prize this year, however, if it submits the âIdol Gives Backâ special to judges. Voting for it might be an irresistible and true act of charity.
All of last yearâs remaining nominees have a good shot to return: âDancing With the Starsâ (ABC), âProject Runwayâ (Bravo) and âSurvivorâ (CBS). NBCâs âThe Apprenticeâ was last nominated two years ago.
Other contenders: âAmericaâs Next Top Modelâ (CW), âAre You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?â (Fox), âBig Brotherâ (CBS), âThe Biggest Loserâ (NBC) and âTop Chefâ (Bravo).
In the separate category for best reality series (noncompetitive), ABCâs âExtreme Makeover: Home Editionâ has won the last two years, beating repeat nominees âAntiques Roadshowâ (PBS) and âPenn & Tellerâ (Showtime). National Geographicâs âThe Dog Whispererâ and Bravoâs âKathy Griffin: My Life on the D-Listâ took bites out of the category last year and could do so again.
Bravoâs âQueer Eye for the Straight Guyâ won two years ago but hasnât been nominated since.
Other contenders: âThe Real Housewives of Orange Countyâ (Bravo), âSexual Healingâ (Showtime), âThe Simple Life (âTil Death Do Us Partâ)â (E!), âSons of Hollywoodâ (A&E;) and âSupernannyâ (ABC).
VARIETY
Former colleagues could be rivals
The âLate Show With David Lettermanâ (CBS) swept this category five years in a row (1998 to 2002), and âThe Daily Showâ seems ready to match after claiming victories the last four years.
But just like on Comedy Central, âDailyâ now has a serious rival in spinoff show âThe Colbert Report,â which got four nominations for its first season last year.
Two trusty nominees usually return -- âLate Night With Conan OâBrienâ (NBC) and âReal Time With Bill Maherâ (HBO) -- though both shows have yet to win any Emmys, even in tech categories.
Two rivals with the strongest chance to break through are on NBC: âTonight Show With Jay Lenoâ (which won in 1995 but hasnât been nominated in three years) and âSaturday Night Liveâ (which won in 1993 and 1976, but hasnât been nominated in two years).
Other contenders: âJimmy Kimmel Liveâ (ABC), âThe Late Late Show With Craig Fergusonâ (CBS), âThe Undergroundâ (USA), and two Comedy Central shows, âMind of Menciaâ and âThe Showbiz Show With David Spade.â