Steve Pond's Awards Beat: Here's Why Outstanding Drama Series Shouldn't Be Final Emmy Category This Year No images? [Click here](
ID=167008;size=700x180;setID=347001;uid={EMAIL}5677333;click=template_awards_beat [Awards Beat with Steve Pond]
August 20, 2021
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Emmys: Hereâs Why Outstanding Drama Series Shouldnât Be the Final Category This Year
Really, thereâs a different category thatâs been more important and influential to the past yearâs viewing
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By Steve Pond [Limited Series collage emmy magazine]
Clockwise from far left: “Mare of Easttown” (HBO), “The Underground Railroad” (Prime Video), “I May Destroy You” (HBO), “The Queen’s Gambit” (Netflix)
We all know whatâs going to happen at the end of this yearâs Primetime Emmy Awards. After every category but one has been handed out, Cedric the Entertainer will introduce a big star, who will read the nominees and hand the final award of the night to âThe Crownâ or âThe Mandalorianâ or âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ or âLovecraft Countryâ or âBridgertonâ or âPoseâ or âThis Is Usâ or âThe Boys.â Granted, we donât know everything thatâs going to happen at the end of the show â we donât know which show will be the final winner. But if history is any indication, we know the final category will be Outstanding Drama Series. Thatâs the Emmysâ prestige category, the one that always concludes the broadcast, the one where the credits begin to roll as the creators and cast of âSuccessionâ or âGame of Thronesâ or âBreaking Badâ or âMad Menâ celebrate on stage. But should it be the final category? Are drama series really the center of the television universe? And in particular, are they really the marquee category this year, when âSuccessionâ and âBetter Call Saulâ and âKilling Eveâ and âOzarkâ and âStranger Thingsâ werenât even eligible because the pandemic delayed production on their new seasons?  On [âTheWrap-Upâ podcast](in late July, Wrap Assistant Managing Editor Daniel Goldblatt offered a modest suggestion that hadnât even occurred to me: Why not end this yearâs Emmy show on Best Limited or Anthology Series? Heâs absolutely right. ID=167008;size=300x250;setID=284833;uid={EMAIL}5677333;click=template_awards_beat After all, what was the most bingeworthy show of the past year? âThe Queenâs Gambit,â right? What was the yearâs most impressive offering from Marvel Studios, in any medium? âWandaVision,â of course. The show that brought back appointment viewing in the spring, making us watch every Sunday so that we could figure out who-the-hell-dunnit and who would survive until Episode 7? âMare of Easttown.â The British import that bowled over the critics the way âFleabagâ did, only with drama instead of comedy? âI May Destroy You.â The searing look at the slavery era that became Mayâs hot-button show? âThe Underground Railroad.â The limited series that was so good, the Los Angeles Film Critics Association voted it 2020âs best film, even though it was actually a five-film anthology? âSmall Axe,â which found itself in such a competitive category that it couldnât even get an Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series nomination. And that list doesnât include other limited series that brought nominations to Ewan McGregor (âHalstonâ), Hugh Grant (âThe Undoingâ) and Cynthia Erivo (âGenius: Arethaâ). Letâs face it: Since âFargoâ and âTrue Detectiveâ came along in the mid-2010s (and, yes, âAmerican Horror Storyâ before that), the limited series has been TVâs real prestige format, drawing A-list actors who wouldnât want to commit to a continuing series but who love the idea of exploring complex stories at far greater length than they could in a standalone movie. And when the pandemic seriously disrupted the production schedules of drama and comedy series, it created a television landscape ideal for this yearâs uncommonly deep slate of limited series. Attention, Emmy producers: The limited series is the hottest format on television these days. Remember that when you plan the showâs order.Â
Read Steve Pond's recent Awards Beat coverage [HERE](#).
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