Genre Archive » Television

The 2006 Emmy Nominations: Lost in the Shuffle

Dana Rowader:

grey's anatomyThe 2006 Emmy nominations are more apt to frustrate avid TV viewers than to please them. I’m glad to see The Office get nominated for Comedy Series and Grey’s Anatomy and House get nominated for Drama Series. I’m pleased that my favorite reality show, Project Runway, has been nominated again for Reality-Competition Program, as well as the very fun and entertaining Dancing With the Stars. And it’s nice to see Candice Bergen and Jean Smart, who both brought a lot to their respective shows, Boston Legal and 24, this past season, get nominated for Supporting Actress in a Drama Series.

But I’m very disappointed that the best new comedy series of the season, Everybody Hates Chris, has been completely ignored in all categories, and that the final season of Six Feet Under, which contained some of the most moving episodes of television in recent memory, was not recognized in the Drama Series category (though the acting nominations for Frances Conroy and Peter Krause are well-earned). I’d accuse the Academy of making this a popularity contest, in that they often ignore great shows with smaller viewership, like Veronica Mars, but they’ve also managed to almost completely ignore one of the best and most popular shows on television, Lost. How Terry O’Quinn, for example, can be passed over in favor of William Shatner (Boston Legal) or Gregory Itzin (the whiny, though evil, president on 24) in the Supporting Actor in a Drama Series is beyond me.

It’s clear that the Academy struggles with the issue of who to recognize when it comes to great shows with talented ensemble casts. Thought it’s nice to see Steve Carell get nominated for The Office, it’s frustrating to see the work of the rest of the cast, especially Rainn Wilson and John Krasinski, get ignored. And, when it comes to Grey’s Anatomy, it’s hard to understand how Katherine Heigl, who arguably had the most moving storyline of the season, and for whom the two-part finale was basically a spotlight on her talents, has been overlooked in favor of Sandra Oh, who was already nominated last year. However, it’s great to see Chandra Wilson, who plays one of the show’s most consistently entertaining and interesting characters get a nod. It’s clear that the Emmys could really do with some ensemble acting categories, like the Screen Actor’s Guild Awards. The only way to properly recognize the talented casts of so many shows on television is to admit that TV is, very often, a medium for ensembles rather than just individual stars.

coverI’d also like to question the Academy’s general overlooking of many great cable shows, especially Deadwood, Rome, Big Love, and Weeds. Weeds did get a nomination for Elizabeth Perkins‘ supporting work, but Mary-Louise Parker was just as, if not more, deserving, and the series itself could have been nominated.

Overall, this year’s Emmy nominations are rather baffling. With their focus on a lot of departing shows, I’d hope that many more deserving series and actors will be nominated next year, now that many historically over-nominated shows like Will & Grace (which has grown stale over the years) and The West Wing (which has become somewhat irrelevant by now) have vacated the airwaves.

Nathan Southern:

coverArrested Development may have a few seasons and a handful of past Emmys under its belt, but the 2006 nod for Outstanding Comedy Series fits the bill. The series continues to stretch the boundaries of what’s possible within a sitcom format, on the twin levels of content and style. Some commentators compared it to Seinfeld when it debuted in 2003 (doubtless because of its manic willingness to try anything) but its über-hip, pseudo-documentary setup bears closer comparison to the Norman Lear-produced Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (and its Fernwood spin-off) from the late ’70s, as well as Martin Mull’s White People specials from the mid to late ’80s. It’s an approach that almost, at times, seems to be kissing off the ludicrous reality trend that continues to sweep the airwaves.

Curb Your Enthusiasm was fresh and funny when it debuted in 2000, but it became repetitive, redundant, and dull two or three seasons in, and despite minute flashes of brilliance in a handful of episodes from recent seasons, this program has quickly worn out its welcome, as has Scrubs. Arrested may draw fierce competition from The Office because of that program’s similar documentary-style approach (and lead performance by Steve Carell) but should still win, hands down.

Matt Tobey:

coverWith all due respect, Nathan, Curb Your Enthusiasm and Scrubs were both in top form in their most recent outings, even if they, like any given sitcom in history, can’t touch the sheer brilliance of the late great Arrested Development. Admittedly, Curb hit a relative slump in the fourth season, but in season five it fought back and pushed the envelope harder than ever. For proof, look no further than the episode that found Larry befriending a registered sex offender (played with skillful restraint by The Daily Show’s Rob Corddry). As for Scrubs, it’s consistently hilarious and charming while somehow remaining fresh episode after episode.

If I have any gripes with the comedy nods, it’s the snubbing of both newcomer My Name Is Earl and Entourage, a show that clearly hit its stride last year. Nominating Two and a Half Men and passing over those shows is baffling and stupid. It’s also dumb. And asinine. And obtuse.

As for the dramatic nominations, I’m with Dana. It’s great to see 24 recognized for what was probably its best season to date, but by overlooking Lost, Rome, and Big Love, the Emmys flushed all of their credibility down the toilet. That said, I guess you do have to give them credit for flushing an intangible down a toilet. That’s kind of impressive.

Perry Seibert handicaps the Emmys:

coverDrama Series: House is here because academy voters thought they were voting for Bleak House. Odds 50:1. The West Wing’s nomination is from the voters who just got around to watching the first three seasons on DVD. Odds 200:1. The Sopranos continues to make network television producers jealous, meaning it probably won’t win the big prize. Odds 25:1. Grey’s Anatomy is well-written, well-acted, very popular, and totally female-oriented. They are in a dead heat with 24, which is likely to win if Keifer Sutherland pulls McDreamy’s fingernails out one at a time while electroshocking female academy members into submission. Odds for the chick doctors: 3:1, same as the odds for the sleep-deprived alpha male.

Comedy Series: Curb Your Enthusiasm won’t win because it’s on cable. Odds 50:1. Arrested Development won’t win because it’s a network show that should have been on cable. Odds 100:1. Two and a Half Men didn’t win any Emmys the first time it was on — when it starred Paul Reiser and Greg Evigan and was called My Two Dads — so why start now? Odds 250:1. Scrubs is a nice, solid, well-written program that is content to be exactly that. Odds 30:1. The Office managed the impossible by becoming in its second year more thematically and dramatically rich than the series that inspired it. The characters are well-rounded, deeply flawed, and the relationships develop at a perfect pace. It’s the best show on television. Odds 1:1.

Delayed, Not Defeated

heroesIt looks as though fans will have to wait until fall to find out the latest comings and goings of their superpowered friends, be they time travelers, indestructible megalomaniacs, or goodhearted young women dealing with both a language barrier and life as an involuntary spreader of plague. According to Ain’t It Cool News, Hayden Panettiere, a.k.a the conflicted, almost immortal cheerleader Claire Bennett has confirmed that new episodes of Heroes will not be shooting until April, despite progress in the writer’s strike.

What I’m Watching: Dead Like Me

deadlikemeFrom the moment Georgia “George” Lass uttered the angst ridden and eerily prophetic words on what would ultimately be the last day of her life, I was hooked. She explained that she had little interest in being a good or a bad person, because bad people were punished by society’s laws, while good people were punished by Murphy’s Law (cut to a shot of an unlucky woman impaled on her own picket fence in an attempt to rescue a cat from a tree). Either way, she tells us, we’re screwed. Shortly afterwards, George is staring at the sad remains of her body after it was unfortunately decimated by debris from the miscalculated de-orbiting of the Mir space station – specifically, by the space station’s high-velocity toilet seat.

I almost skipped this show. It seemed suspicious of Showtime to air a death focused comedy drama with heavy supernatural overtones in the glory days of Six Feet Under. Considering Bryan Fuller’s Dead Like Me was cancelled after only two seasons, I have a sneaking feeling a lot of people felt that way. Maybe it was a case of Murphy’s Law as applied to TV. At any rate, Dead Like Me was nothing like Six Feet Under. Played with equal parts sensitivity and sass by Ellen Muth, George spends the first season grappling not only with the event of her own death, but with the half-afterlife that was presented to her immediately following. Rather than going to the great beyond herself, George is commandeered by a veteran reaper (of the Grim variety) named Rube (Mandy Patinkin), who explains the terms of her new job. As the newest reaper in the Accidental Deaths division, George is handed a post-it note bearing the location of a fatal accident to be and the initials of the doomed. While she isn’t responsible for the croaking of any individual soul, she is required to guide them into the next world. Despite their different personalities, all of the reapers (Patinkin, Muth, Rebecca Gayheart, Callum Blue, Jasmine Guy, and Laura Harris), however unintentionally, help each other cope with the empty spaces left by their deaths. The DVDs help me cope with the empty space of Dead Like Me’s cancellation.

Dana Rowader’s The Year in TV

The year may have ended with a no-end-in-sight writers’ strike, but 2007 brought many exciting, entertaining hours — and half-hours — to viewers before the networks started to run out of new content. Here’s a rundown of my favorite series from the past year.

New Shows
In 2007, two new series knocked my socks off, while several others proved to be quite enjoyable additions to the TV schedule.

Mad Men: After first seeing ads for this show in the theater before movies over the summer, I would never have guessed that it would be one of my favorite new series, let alone one of the best I’ve ever seen. But something drew me to it by the time it actually aired, and I was captivated before the show even started by the awesome opening credit sequence. Both salacious and understated, Mad Men dwells in the excessive, smoke-filled world of 1960’s top-notch Madison Avenue admen while also evincing an admirable degree of subtlety and restraint in its storytelling. A sense of foreboding despair and emotional repression permeates most of the characters’ lives, contrasting the material luxuries they outwardly enjoy. Though the series boasts a talented ensemble, Jon Hamm brilliantly portrays the most enthralling character: the enigmatic, tragically flawed star adman Don Draper. Beyond the performances, I’d be remiss not to mention the set and costume design; the environment in which the characters live and work is brought to life with such an extreme degree of detail that it becomes more than just a character of its own. I’ve always been a great lover of period dramas, and Mad Men ranks up there with the best of them, including films.

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Heroes “Finale” Talkback

DANA ROWADER: So, first off, what did you think of the Heroes “finale”? Thumbs up or down?
MATT TOBEY: Thumbs up, with reservations.
TRACIE COOPER: Thumb up and slightly to the left.
AMANDA VAN KEUREN: I still can’t think of it as a finale-finale, but I actually thought it was kinda crappy.
HEATHER PHARES: I thought it was pretty obviously and clunkily put together.
AVK: Yeah, sloppy to the max.
MT: I will say that I liked it better than the season-one finale.
DR: I was going to ask that, too…how people think it compared to the somewhat disappointing season-one finale.
STEPHEN THOMAS ERLEWINE: It’s hard for me to separate my thoughts about the finale from my overall frustration/disappointment with this season.
MT: Much like the entire second season, the episode seemed like they were making it up as they went along.
HP: Good point.
AVK: As disappointing finales go, I guess it was OK.
HP: Yeah, I think season-one finale was better, if only because it was clearly intended to be a finale. However, this was more action-packed and felt like there was more at stake.
TC: It felt very rushed — Peter nuking the virus after all that buildup, especially. Like…”n/m, no virus.”
AVK: Yeah…psych!

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