Steve Pond's Awards Beat: Here's the Emmy Rule That Makes Voters Look Lazy No images? [Click here](
ID=167008;size=700x180;setID=347001;uid={EMAIL}5858505;click=template_awards_beat [Awards Beat with Steve Pond] August 12, 2022
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Here’s the Emmy Rule That Makes Voters Seem Lazy It’s tempting to blame Television Academy members when they keep nominating actors from the same few shows, but is the system to blame?
[- - -] By Steve Pond [Emmy All of the Above Ballot] Illustration by Brian Taylor for TheWrap For the most part, voting for showbiz nominations is pretty simple. If youâre voting in a category in which there will be five nominations, you typically have five slots to fill on your ballot; if there are 10, you have 10 slots. But the Emmys havenât worked that way since 2017, when the Television Academy added a simple sentence with complicated reverberations: âVote for all entries in this category that you have seen and feel are worthy of a nomination.â
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That means that if a member of the Television Academyâs acting peer group is casting a ballot in, say, the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series category, they could vote for as many of the 434 eligible actors as they wanted, scrolling through all 55 pages of the ballot and clicking every time they saw an actor â or, crucially, a show â they liked. ID=167008;size=300x250;setID=284833;uid={EMAIL}5858505;click=template_awards_beat The idea, no doubt, was to help voters who might throw up their hands at the idea of narrowing hundreds of eligible contenders to a single handful. But by doing away with limits, youâre telling voters that they donât have to be choosy or worry about spreading the wealth â that they can vote for all the actors on their favorite shows and still have slots left over for other performances they may have liked.
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And when some shows are inevitably more popular and more widely viewed than others, and all the actors on those shows are getting votes, the system tilts the playing field in favor of the biggest shows and all but invites them to grab an inordinate share of the nominations.
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âThe (Motion Picture) Academy’s proportional system give the most value to your top choices â the ones that reflect your best insights and knowledge,â said Rob Richie, president and CEO of FairVote, a nonpartisan research organization that advocates for the type of ranked-choice voting system used for the Oscars. âThe Emmysâ system gives equal weight to every pick you make, which give more support to âsafeâ choices that have more name recognition.â
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Thatâs exactly whatâs been happening in recent years, and it certainly happened this year. In the Outstanding Supporting Actor and Actress in a Limited Series categories, for example, âThe White Lotusâ and âDopesickâ took a remarkable 13 of the 14 nominations, leaving Seth Rogen from âPam & Tommyâ as the only one nominee from any other show. Eight of the 10 eligible âWhite Lotusâ actors and five of the seven contending âDopesickâ ones were nominated, while 83 other shows with 403 eligible performers were shut out. Â
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âSuccession,â meanwhile, had three of the six nominees in the Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series category, four of the six in guest actor and an additional five in the two supporting categories, landing 14 total acting noms to break a 46-year-old record that had been set by âRich Man, Poor Manâ (and tied by âRootsâ) at a time when the Emmys had additional acting categories that have since been discontinued.
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This kind of consolidation is very different from what we saw in 2016, the year before the voting change was made. Even with shows like âVeep,â âHouse of Cards,â âGame of Thronesâ and âSNLâ landing more than five nominations each, that year saw 46 different series (17 dramas, 19 comedies and 10 limited series) nominated for acting, with each show averaging almost exactly two nominations.
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The previous year, 52 programs divided the 97 nominations, less than two per show. [Continue reading this column here.]( Read more of Steve Pond’s Awards Beat coverage [HERE](#).
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