Game of Thrones
add a link
Game of Thrones: How the Emmys reward genre Televisione
Game of Thrones: How the Emmys reward genre Televisione
Usually they don't. The exceptions prove the rule.
parole chiavi: Game of Thrones, emmy awards, fantasy, season 5
|
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Game of Thrones: How the Emmys reward genre Televisione | EW.com
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
One of the most popular TV shows in the world just won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series. This should not be surprising: The Emmys tend to reward popularity, which is the right and duty of all popularity contests. But
is only the second fantasy series in the Emmys’ 67 year history to win the top dramatic prize. The other genre win occurred 10 years and two days earlier, when
won the Emmy at the precise moment of its quantitative peak. A few days after the 2005 Emmys — precisely 10 years ago today, in fact —
’s second season premiere set the show’s viewership record with 23 million viewers. The series slowly but steadily bled viewers from there.
got better, but it also got weirder, and anyone who has worked in a video store/been to an American high school can tell you that weird doesn’t always/maybe never equals popular.
wasn’t nominated for its second season. And it wasn’t nominated the next year, either — and that was the year that the Emmys nominated shiny new bauble
got nominated for its final three seasons, losing each time to
might be the least-watched TV show to ever fill a couple tow trucks with Emmy awards. But it sits nicely in Emmy history in the genre of “Highbrow Shows About Attractive White People Who Work/Sleep Together.” Back in the ’90s,
. Losing the Emmy to a doctor show, a lawyer show, and two cop shows: If that weren’t a true story, it would be a poignant allegory for the plight of genre fare at the Emmys.
The Emmys don’t run away from geeky stuff, per se.
received a Best Drama nod in its final season — and the original
both times. Picture young Jeffrey Jacob Abrams, not even 2 years old, gazing at the TV screen and dreaming of the day decades hence when he would reboot both franchises.) But when it comes to genre fare, the Emmys function a little bit like the Oscars. They like fantasy more than science-fiction. They might throw out one token nomination for the big prize here and there — but to win, a show or a movie needs to transcend its genre. It can’t just be a success; it needs to be a zeitgeist-defining sensation.
EMMYS 2015: Winners | Red carpet arrivals | Creative Arts winners | Best & worst moments | Best speeches | Nominees by the numbers | Quotes quiz | Live blog | Emmys review
just won, despite a divisive fifth season: pretty much everybody on Earth is watching the show.
keeps getting more viewers, probably because its so binge-friendly. (You could watch the entire run of
so far in 50 hours, which is coincidentally as long as it would take you to watch a couple seasons of
and listen to your friends promise you that it gets
The comparison is almost too easy to make, but this really is the TV equivalent of
sweeping the Oscars: Less a reward for a specific project, more of an admiring standing ovation by the motion picture industry for the sheer size and success of a phenomenon.
. There are very good statistical reasons for this. (Example A: the Film Crit Hulk HBO-voting conspiracy theory.) There is also the fact that, at some core level,
has the veneer of class: British accents, expensive locations. And
buries the usual genre trappings under a veneer of realism. This is partially a budgetary matter — the show can only do a couple big dragon scenes per year — but it reflects an approach that
ultimately became a show about time traveling pantheist Christ figures, but it started off with real people crashing onto a somewhat strange island.
can’t hide itself in the same way: Especially after the departure of initial showrunner Frank Darabont,
fully indulges itself as a zombie-bloodbath gorefest (even when they do a Terrence Malick episode.) Likewise, the gloriously indulgent
has gotten a Miniseries/Movie nomination for all of its steadily-less-hinged installments — and it positively mints acting nominations — but it has yet to take home the big prize.
’ win is great for genre television — and also business as usual. So it will be interesting to see how
fares at the Emmys in the next few years, as the show moves further away from its source material. And that’s the other intriguing subtext of the
win: The show based on George R. R. Martin’s novels finally won the Best Drama award for its
George R. R. Martin-y season. Maybe the TV Academy just loves Sand Snakes.
Vanessa Williams joins \'The Good Wife\'
Colin Trevorrow teases \'Jurassic World 2\' inspiration
Father John Misty covers Ryan Adams covering Taylor Swift
Gwen Stefani talks season 9 of \'The Voice\', her co-coaches, and girl power
\'Game of Thrones\': How the Emmys reward genre television
See how the \'Game of Thrones\' dragons are made in new behind-the-scenes clip
\'AHS: Hotel\' First Look: Go inside the beautiful but dangerous Hotel Cortez
This Is How Your Favorite Stars Celebrated After the Emmys
Best and Worst Moments of the 67th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards
Stars\' best Instagram photos from the 2015 Emmys
Selena Gomez, Hugh & Deborra-Lee, Sienna & Kate and More!
read more
accedi o registrati a fanpop per aggiungere il tuo commento