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Tag: The Emmys

  • Nate Bargatze’s money bit was great at the Emmys…until it wasn’t | The Mary Sue

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    We can expect the Emmys to deliver a few things. Bold fashion choices from its attendees, jokes about the evolution of television amid the streaming era, and at least one show sweeping in categories that nobody could have predicted.

    But this year, the 77th Primetime Emmys depended on a running bit that started strong… but ultimately recontextualized the night in a weird way.

    Relatively early into the three-hour-long Emmys telecast, host Nate Bargatze introduced a way to keep the acceptance speeches running on time: he would make a $100,000 donation to the Boys and Girls Club of America, and would deduct or add money depending on how long the speeches were. If a speech went longer than the proposed ceiling of a mere 45 seconds, which The Studio‘s Seth Rogen already did while accepting his first of several Emmys of the night before this bit was even announced, then thousands of dollars would be deducted at a rapid rate.

    Early on, Bargatze joked that the proposition was both a blessing and a curse, especially when the total dollar amount was coming out of his pocket. But ultimately, the entire bit became both a blessing and a curse. Sure, it was initially met with awkward laughter from the crowd, some of whom were probably delighted by the idea of being spared from rambling acceptance speeches. And the night did help raise some awareness for the Boys and Girls Club, between the occasional cutaway to comedian (and proud Boys and Girls Club alum) J.B. Smoove, and the fact that multiple children from the organization were on hand to help escort winners offstage.

    The Emmys, Gamified

    But as the telecast (and the speeches) wore on, the donation bit became a needless wrinkle in a night of already-unpredictable television. For one thing, the donation tracker was deployed inconsistently: sometimes it would pop up as a lower-third during a speech, sometimes it would be a giant imposing graphic on the stage, and sometimes it would take multiple segments to be addressed at all. The first few times the graphic popped up onscreen, I found myself involuntarily reacting to the dwindling number, and immediately losing focus on whatever was being said during the actual acceptance speech. This wasn’t just a side effect of me having spent most of my Sunday pre-Emmys watching NFL games: it was because the telecast had gamified the very thing we were tuning in for.

    That mentality appeared to bleed over into the room itself, as certain winners began to apologize profusely for going a few seconds over their time, or truncated their speech into a series of broken sentences to try to bring the total dollar amount back up. Hacks star Hannah Einbinder, whose last few sentences of her Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series speech were arguably one of the best moments of the night, promised that she’d make her own donation to the Boys and Girls Club to make up for it… which then confused Bargatze’s total even further. By the end of the night, after the number had dwindled well into the negatives, Bargatze announced that the numbers got so wonky that none of it mattered anyway: he would be donating $250,000 to the organization, with CBS tacking on an extra $100,000.

    But ultimately, it still did matter to the Emmys themselves. It added a weird, and honestly guilt-inducing, energy to the proceedings, especially when the telecast also included plenty of non-acceptance-speech moments that went long, as is to be the case with any piece of live television. (Jennifer Coolidge’s announcement of the Lead Actress in a Comedy Series winner dragged on for so long, it almost immediately led Bargatze to clarify that only the acceptance speeches would impact the donation total.) The fact that the night included so many first-time winners made it feel awkward too, as their rare opportunity to bask in the success often felt like blips in a charity telethon.

    This certainly isn’t the first or last time that major award shows have done a bit like this. Just with the Emmys, Andy Samberg once promised a jet ski to whoever had the shortest speech, and Conan O’Brien once threatened to suffocate Bob Newhart if the telecast went over three hours. But there is a fine line between making a bit work, and adding an awkward ticking clock to one of the biggest TV events of the year. After all, countless winners at the Emmys, Oscars, or otherwise, have just ignored the cues and given the speech they want to, anyway.

    (featured image: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

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    Jenna Anderson

    Jenna Anderson is the host of the Go Read Some Comics YouTube channel, as well as one of the hosts of the Phase Hero podcast. She has been writing professionally since 2017, but has been loving pop culture (and especially superhero comics) for her entire life. You can usually find her drinking a large iced coffee from Dunkin and talking about comics, female characters, and Taylor Swift at any given opportunity.

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    Jenna Anderson

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  • These Wins For 'Succession' Is Perfection | The Mary Sue

    These Wins For 'Succession' Is Perfection | The Mary Sue

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    Watching a frazzled Kieran Culkin take home the Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series at the Emmys? Perfect. Culkin has been winning awards for his work in season 4 of Succession as Roman Roy but taking home the Emmy for the final season is different. Especially when Sarah Snook joined him and took home Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.

    An emotional Culkin took to the stage, started to thank everyone and made a quip about being afraid of getting yelled at by Doris Bowman (Anthony Anderson’s mother and better known as “Mamma” whenever she’s on shows with him). What was really sweet was watching as Culkin thanked his wife, Jazz Charton.

    The two married in 2013 and have two children together, who Culkin thanked. He thanked his “beautiful wife” and went on to say “for sharing your life with me and for giving me two amazing kids.” But two isn’t enough for Culkin clearly because he said, on stage, that he wants to have a third child. “And Jazz, I want more. You said maybe, if I win!”

    It was, frankly, an adorable speech. For so many, they either know they’re going to win and are very composed or we get really honest and raw speeches, like Culkin’s. Maybe it is because he has often lost at the Emmys for Succession but to finally see Roman Roy take home the big prize, especially with the final season? It ruled! Actually, all the Succession wins were great!

    Culkin joined Saran Snook in the first timers club and to see Shiv and Roman win was amazing. Snook thanked her daughter, who she was pregnant with during filming, saying that her “biggest thank you” was to her, even if she “is to someone who won’t understand anything that I’m saying at the moment, but I carried her with me in this last season. And really, it was her who carried me.”

    She went on to dismiss her own talent and joke that it was easy acting while pregnant. “It’s very easy to act when you’re pregnant because you’ve got hormones raging. It was more that the proximity of her life growing inside me gave me the strength to do this and this performance, and I love you so much,” Snook said. “And it’s all for you from here on out. Thank you.”

    Some of the best characters on the show!

    Shiv (Sarah Snook) holding a phone to her brothers Kendall (Jeremy Strong) and Roman (Kieran Culkin) on Succession
    (HBO)

    While I am a Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong) girl myself, season 4 really highlighted the work that both Snook and Culkin have put into Shiv and Roman in the show’s four season run. Roman and Shiv used to be at each other’s throats, furious with each other as the younger siblings, but watching them be there for the death of Logan Roy (Brian Cox) all before chaos ensued by the end? Truly perfection from my favorite rich horrible family.

    The cast of Succession taking home Emmy awards is no surprise but to see Culkin and Snook get theirs for the final season is amazing.

    (featured image: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • 2023 Emmy Awards postponed amid Hollywood actors and writers strike – National | Globalnews.ca

    2023 Emmy Awards postponed amid Hollywood actors and writers strike – National | Globalnews.ca

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    The 75th Emmy Awards are the latest production to be put on pause due to the Hollywood strikes, and will not air as planned in September.

    A person familiar with the postponement plans but not authorized to speak publicly pending an official announcement confirmed the delay Friday.

    No information about a new date was immediately available.

    The Emmy Awards were scheduled to be broadcast on Fox on Sept. 18. Rules laid out by the actors’ union, the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, say stars cannot campaign for the Emmys or attend awards shows while on strike.

    Writers are also not permitted to work on awards shows until the strike ends.

    Whenever the next Emmy Awards are held, HBO will walk in the leading contender. The network is up for 74 awards for three of its top shows: Succession, The White Lotus and The Last of Us.

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    Ted Lasso has the most comedy category nominations with 21, including best comedy series and best actor for Jason Sudeikis.

    Roughly 65,000 SAG-AFTRA actors and 11,500 Writers Guild of America screenwriters are on strike, calling for better pay, structure with residual payments and protection from the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

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