The biggest snubs and surprises of the 2024 Emmy nominations
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Emmy nominations arrived Wednesday morning, and looking over my list of non-negotiables, it would appear that Television Academy voters checked off most of the boxes.
Jon Bernthal, Jamie Lee Curtis and Bob Odenkirk all secured nominations for that episode of âThe Bearâ that set a new standard for emotionally exhausting family holiday gatherings. Jean Smart will be back in the house for âHacks,â joined by Hannah Einbinder, who should absolutely be winning the Emmy for comedy supporting actress. And though the final season of âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ was only pretty good, Larry David will return too, good news if your jam is awkward red-carpet interviews.
Even with the usual deluge of submissions, the nominations managed to deliver a fair number of surprises, pleasant and otherwise. And, yes, there were omissions, which, for the sake of alliteration and search engine optimization, weâll call âsnubs.â Because when it comes to this kind of list, thatâs a non-negotiable too.
FXâs âThe Bearâ and âShogunâ were among the top nominees for the 76th Emmy Awards announced on Wednesday.
SURPRISE: âReservation Dogsâ (comedy series)
After three seasons and accolades from just about every awards group â Peabody, Writers Guild, American Film Institute, Independent Spirit Awards, for a start â the Emmys finally showed some love to televisionâs best coming-of-age series just as it was bidding viewers goodbye. You canât help but wonder what might have been had the Emmys jumped on board sooner, but the show is wistful enough all by itself. No sense in dwelling on what-ifs in this moment of overdue recognition that included the great DâPharaoh Woon-A-Tai (Bear Smallhill) in the lead actor category.
Acclaimed FX comedy âReservation Dogsâ and âTrue Detective: Night Countryâ were among the Native American stories honored in the 2024 Emmy nominations.
SURPRISE: âPalm Royaleâ (comedy series)
Is this really a surprise? Well, yes ... and no. Yes, because this Kristen Wiig vehicle was an epic disappointment, a cartoonish slog, a mishmash of tones that might have worked if it had ever picked an approach and stuck with it. (It could have been, for instance, a fun, campy soap.) But Apple TV+ gave it a big promotional push, and the names in the cast â Allison Janney, Laura Dern, Carol Burnett â demanded a certain reflexive respect that it didnât quite merit.
SURPRISE: Selena Gomez, âOnly Murders in the Buildingâ (lead actress comedy)
You like her! You finally like her! Three seasons in, Gomez â an ongoing, essential presence in the showâs central trio alongside Steve Martin and Martin Short â earned her first nomination for Huluâs still-delightful murder-mystery comedy. Yes, she often functions as the sane, disaffected millennial caught between the two comic legendsâ antics, a (sometimes) thankless role that she manages to nonetheless ace.
SNUB: Kelsey Grammer, âFrasierâ (lead actor comedy)
Grammer won four Emmys for playing the good Dr. Frasier Crane, taking the last one 20 years ago for what was then the showâs final season. But the reboot too often felt like a cautious exercise in nostalgia. And, apparently, voicing support for a convicted felon doesnât help your cause with many Emmy voters.
SNUB: âThe Curseâ (drama series)
Nathan Fielder and Benny Safdieâs pitch-black comedy about a married couple attempting to launch a reality TV show was so excruciating to watch that it ended up being submitted as a drama and no one objected. It was inventive and weird and terrifying and so wholly alienating that I genuinely wonder how many voters saw it through to the end. Not enough, apparently (Emma Stone didnât even nab a nomination), which, fortunately or unfortunately (I canât decide) should put an end to any plans for a second season.
SURPRISE: âRipleyâ (limited series)
I always try to make the generous assumption about awards season voters, which sometimes makes me look foolish. I say that in case youâre wondering how it can be surprising that the yearâs best limited series, a gorgeous, meticulously crafted adaptation of Patricia Highsmithâs 1955 novel, pulled off a nomination. Some people found âRipleyâ to be a bit too methodical in its storytelling. I thought its meticulous attention to detail was riveting and take heart that enough Television Academy members agreed.
SNUB: âMasters of the Airâ (limited series)
Donât dads vote for the Emmys? Sure, this lavish presentation of the American air campaign against Nazi Germany didnât have the impact of âBand of Brothersâ and âThe Pacific,â but its old-school Greatest Generation approach to history more than satisfied.
SURPRISE: Naomi Watts, âFeud: Capote vs. the Swansâ (lead actress limited series)
Playing Babe Paley, she smoked 200 cigarettes a week. Thatâs worth a nomination all on its own.
This week, we sit down with Naomi Watts to discuss âFeud: Capote vs. the Swansâ and talk to showrunner Issa LĂłpez about âTrue Detective: Night Country.â
SNUB: Kate Winslet, âThe Regimeâ (lead actress limited series)
âThe Regimeâ didnât quite land as a farcical examination of empty political spectacle and populist authoritarianism, but Winslet was an absolute delight playing the unhinged autocrat who can make an off-key rendition of âIf You Leave Me Nowâ into a thing of ridiculous beauty.
Netflix led the Emmy nominations with 107 overall, but it was FX that received the most in the marquee categories, including a record tally for âThe Bear.â
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