For me,
the Emmys were a bit of a mixed bag this year.
I loved some decisions, side-eyed others, and there were a few awards
that genuinely surprised me in the midst of a lot of predictable ones. As far as the telecast itself goes, I enjoyed
Seth Meyers as a host. He gives good
smart-aleck without being overly biting.
All his digs at network TV made me smile, and, though there were a few
too many McConaughey jokes overall, Meyers’s “Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey
intro battle” with Amy Poehler was super fun.
Billy Crystal’s remarks about Robin Williams were lovely, and Weird Al’s
rendition of the Game of Thrones
theme was a delight.
Onto the
awards. First off, did Modern Family really need another win? It’s a nice show, and I like it, but really? It just makes me shake my fist all the more
at the lack of love for The Mindy Project
this year, or Community ever. That said, I got a kick out of Ty Burrell’s
speech “written by the kids of Modern
Family.” And as rote as Jim Parsons’s
win was, I’m okay with it. Maybe Sheldon’s
possible aceness is bringing out my solidarity, but I still love Sheldon, and I
thought he had a good year.
Drama
was, predictably and well-deservedly, a near-sweep by Breaking Bad. Of course it was
going to win just about everything, and nobody
was taking that trophy from Bryan Cranston.
And if Tyrion’s trial wasn’t enough to get Peter Dinklage another
statue, I’m glad Aaron Paul won. Still,
that didn’t leave much love for other shows.
Maybe now that Breaking Bad is
over, Hannibal can at least get a
nomination or two (or twelve? please?) thrown its way.
Or a
win for House of Cards, for that
matter. I’m surprised that we didn’t see
a stronger showing from Netflix in general.
Kevin Spacey was my only pick for a possible Cranston upset, and I
really wish Orange is the New Black
had been better recognized. As I hoped,
though, the fabulous Uzo Aduba snagged a win for her sterling portrayal of
Suzanne (too bad she got it at the pre-awards.
Bad form, Emmys!)
It was
interesting to me that The Normal Heart
won best TV movie. I thought it was very
well done, of course, but it’s always a little weird when something wins the top
award in its genre and nothing else. Writing, directing, acting – nada. Fargo
similarly took home few trophies (though it also grabbed a directing award,)
but its best miniseries win wasn’t expected for me, since that show is so tight
and insane and amazing.
However,
Sherlock’s snatching up of several
top awards definitely surprised me. To
go from having zero Emmys (despite consistent nominations) to the triple whammy
of best writing, lead actor, and supporting actor for a miniseries/TV movie is
a big turnaround. Have the Emmy voters
joined tumblr? I wish Benedict Cumberbatch
and Martin Freeman had been around to accept their awards, though, especially
Freeman. I have a feeling he’d have been
absolutely befuddled to win an Emmy, and that would’ve been some amusing
television.
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