| News HBO Dominates Primetime Emmy Nominations By Todd Longwell For the second year in a row, cable giant HBO outdistanced its competitors by a wide margin when the nominations for the Primetime Emmy Awards were announced on July 15 at the TV Academy’s Leonard H. Goldenson Theatre. HBO received 124 nominations, including 21 for its miniseries adaptation of Tony Kushner’s Pulitzer Prize play Angels In America and 20 for its mob series The Sopranos, besting last year’s total of 109. Second place NBC was far behind with 64 nominations, followed by CBS with 44, ABC with 33 and Fox with 31.
Presenters at the brief early-morning press conference were Academy Chairman Dick Askin, Academy President and COO Todd Leavitt, three-time Emmy winner Edie Falco, star of The Sopranos, and Tony Shalhoub, a winner last year for Monk (USA Network). Both Falco and Shalhoub were nominated again this year.
Nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series went to Arrested Development (Fox), Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO), Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS), Sex and the City (HBO) and Will and Grace (NBC).
"That was really a surprise," said Askin of Joan’s nomination, "because it’s a first-year series and everyone has been complaining about how stratified and stagnant the process can be and that really just blew all the assumptions and the rhetoric out the window, because here’s a series on broadcast television that gets recognized right off the bat."
Is it working? "I think you’re seeing some impact, certainly," says Leavitt, citing Joan of Arcadia as a program that might’ve locked out by more established programs in previous years. "Typically changes like that take several years to manifest themselves. It’s the start of a process. Our whole mission here is to salute excellence and to be reflective our industry and to figure out how to best do that. Every year we’re trying to make it better." After Falco and Shalhoub completed their presentation, Askin stepped forward to announce the nominees for Outstanding Reality Competition Program, which this year graduated from a special class area award to a full-fledged Emmy category. "In the past, it’s been in a catch-all category with specials, etc., so we defined it and set it aside so it would have its own focus," said Askin after the announcement. "And, actually, it turned out to be a very interesting category this year, with The Apprentice in there along with Last Comic Standing (both NBC)" which were joined by fellow nominees The Amazing Race (CBS), American Idol (Fox) and Survivor (CBS). "Reality is a part of television whether you like it or not and you might as well recognize it because a lot of the work is really excellent." |






