I’m in a very perturbed mood at the moment, which is not conducive to reflections on Comfort TV. However, it’s ideal for discussing the Emmy Awards. This year’s ceremony is approaching, and I am already looking forward to my annual tradition of ignoring it completely.
There was a time when I loved the Emmys, from the moment the nominations were announced to the awards show itself, which paid due homage to the television of generations past while honoring the best shows and performances from the previous year.
My Emmy disenchantment was a gradual phenomenon, that escalated as I watched brilliant, critically-acclaimed shows go virtually ignored (The Gilmore Girls, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), and the same actors win almost every year while equally deserving performances were overlooked. You can read more about this in last year’s Emmy rant.
But my biggest gripe with the Emmys, and one I acknowledge I am almost alone in expressing, is the placement of network shows and cable shows in the same categories. I don’t believe it is fair, and as a result of this iniquity cable shows now dominate in both nominations and wins.
Network television broadcasts are still regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, and are limited by standards and restrictions implemented by that government agency. We won’t debate here whether that is still appropriate or necessary (I think it is) – it means that the networks have to play by different rules.
Networks also have to select the programs they choose to air with an eye toward a larger viewing audience. HBO’s Girls draws about 800,000 to 1 million viewers, and it’s hailed as a hit. If a network series pulled that number it would be canceled.
Cable’s Emmy dominance, and the edgier fare it offers, have caused many to dismiss network television as boring and uninspired, a dinosaur on the path to extinction. Whether that prognosis proves accurate or not, network television still draws more viewers than cable TV, but its shows are not recognized by the Emmys because of the perception that all the good stuff is on cable.
Why is any of this important? Because one of the ways we recognize that the television of decades past is worth celebrating and preserving is the number of Emmys these shows received. Even shows like Bewitchedthat did not receive a lot of Emmys were nominated often, an acknowledgment that the series was among the best situation comedies of its era.
Today’s network TV shows have largely been denied that measuring stick of achievement, because Emmy nominations and statues are going to shows on cable by at least a 3:1 margin.
My solution is to create two categories – broadcast Emmys and cable Emmys. It’s not so far-fetched, as we already have separate Emmy presentations for daytime shows and for local market productions. And there would be no shortage of competition, with eligible shows from four networks plus PBS and the CW.
Let’s look at just one category as an example – Best Actor in a Drama Series. This year’s nominees are Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad), Hugh Bonneville (Downton Abbey), Damian Lewis (Homeland), Kevin Spacey (House of Cards), Jon Hamm (Mad Men) and Jeff Daniels (The Newsroom).
That’s one network show, four from cable, and one from however you want to classify Netflix. If there was a separate category for broadcast TV, that would make room for equally deserved nominations for Nathan Fillion (Castle), Charles Esten (Nashville), Michael Emerson (Person of Interest), Jonny Lee Miller (Elementary) or John Noble (Fringe).
In the pre-cable era, all of these performances would have been nominated, along with Megan Hilty in Smash, and Madeleine Stowe in Revenge, and Dana Delaney in Body of Proof. You can find just as many deserving and overlooked candidates in the comedy categories.
Would an Emmy nomination for Dennis Quaid have saved Vegasfrom early cancellation? It was Emmy nominations that once convinced viewers to try a sitcom call Cheers that finished dead last in the ratings after its first season. Today, it would have been shunned for shows like Veepand Enlightened and Louie and Girls, and it would have disappeared, remembered only as another failed network newbie.
Just another reason why I won’t be watching the Emmys this year.