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Do you remember Kendall Roy dropping the mic in the season finale of âSuccessionâ? What about the time âWatchmenâ revealed the identity of Doctor Manhattan? Or Moira officiating David and Patrickâs wedding on âSchittâs Creekâ?
Maybe you do, maybe you donât. Really, these Emmy-nominated moments didnât happen all that long ago. But if youâre like me, youâre probably struggling to recall what you did yesterday while wondering how itâs possible that pumpkin spice lattes have been a thing for a month now and that the leaves are already starting to turn â unless thatâs just the ash on them? Iâd go outside to check, but then Iâd have to deal with the unhealthful air or the murder hornets or the water turning into blood or whatever biblical plague is upon us this week.
Which brings us to the Emmys! Theyâre here! Theyâre happening! Nobody knows how. (Though producer Reginald Hudlin has given some hints.) But hopefully the Zoom links will work, Catherine OâHara wears something that would make Moira proud, and the screen will be filled with a sea of faces when âSuccessionâ wins for drama series. One ray of sunshine: I think most of the prizes will go to the best shows and performers. Like last year with âFleabag,â only without the undeserved âGame of Thronesâ win to spoil the night.
Hereâs how things should shake out on Sunday.
Thanks to COVID-19, Reginald Hudlin, the first Black executive producer in Emmys history, has many unknowns to plan for. But donât expect âThe Zoomies.â
âBetter Call Saulâ
âThe Crownâ
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
âKilling Eveâ
âThe Mandalorianâ
âOzarkâ
âStranger Thingsâ
âSuccessionâ
Should win: âSuccessionâ
Will win: âSuccessionâ
Could surprise: âOzarkâ
âOzarkâ and âSuccessionâ each earned 18 Emmy nominations, the most for a drama series. Both shows focus on horrible people doing unconscionable things, but thatâs about all they have in common. âSuccessionâ offers insights into the charactersâ inner lives and scarred pasts in ways that make you care and feel for them despite all their dirty deeds. Itâs also brutally funny, making it not just the best drama on television but also the finest comedy. âOzarkâ does not have a sense of humor. Plot, not character, is the showâs working engine. Netflix wants you to keep churning through the episodes, and you do, because you want to know how the Byrdes are going to escape whatever crazy predicament the show has wedged them into. But three seasons in, I donât have an emotional investment in these people, and I canât imagine enough voters do either.
Jennifer Aniston, âThe Morning Showâ
Olivia Colman, âThe Crownâ
Jodie Comer, âKilling Eveâ
Laura Linney, âOzarkâ
Sandra Oh, âKilling Eveâ
Zendaya, âEuphoriaâ
Should win: Aniston
Will win: Linney
Could surprise: Aniston
Every television academy member has probably seen âFriendsâ multiple times, either from their own viewings or revisiting it when their kids discover it. Because itâs a comedy, people take its craft for granted. And because it was a bit too popular and fun and breezy, it never did particularly well at the Emmys, winning only six prizes over its 10-season run.
But watching Aniston in âFriendsâ and on the public stage for the past couple of decades makes her work on âThe Morning Showâ an absolute revelation. She took everything she learned on that show and in her life and channeled it into her character, a famous morning news anchor whose talents are, yes, taken for granted. All this to say, Aniston should win. But since âThe Morning Showâ didnât earn a drama series nomination, I fear that she wonât. Which is a shame. Linney already has four Emmys. She doesnât need The One That Should Go to Aniston.
Jason Bateman, âOzarkâ
Sterling K. Brown, âThis Is Usâ
Steve Carell, âThe Morning Showâ
Brian Cox, âSuccessionâ
Billy Porter, âPoseâ
Jeremy Strong, âSuccessionâ
Should win: Cox
Will win: Cox
Could surprise: Strong
This is a toss-up between the two âSuccessionâ leads or, if the evening goes completely sideways, Bateman. Strong spent the season playing the dutiful son, even paying homage to his dad in song (âL to the OG,â deserving its own special Emmy) until Logan ordered him to be the familyâs âblood sacrificeâ in the finale. Kendall flipped the script to everyoneâs delight. But the episode ended with Cox making like Mona Lisa, smiling with ... pride? Appreciation? Constipation? You tell me. But that half-smile was perfect.
Helena Bonham Carter, âThe Crownâ
Laura Dern, âBig Little Liesâ
Julia Garner, âOzarkâ
Thandie Newton, âWestworldâ
Fiona Shaw, âKilling Eveâ
Sarah Snook, âSuccessionâ
Meryl Streep, âBig Little Liesâ
Samira Wiley, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Should win: Streep
Will win: Bonham Carter
Could surprise: Snook
In what seems like half a lifetime ago, Streep appeared to be a lock for this because A) she was so good as the unhinged, crucifix-fondling Mary Louise on âBig Little Liesâ and B) sheâs freakinâ Meryl Streep. But the showâs second season was perceived by many as a letdown, providing an opening for Bonham Carter, an actress who never seems to make good whenever sheâs nominated for an award. Maybe playing a royal will help. âThe Crownâ has found favor for its actors before (Claire Foy and John Lithgow won for its first two seasons), and, saving for a âSuccessionâ tsunami, Bonham Carter might finally have her prize. Best of all, she wonât have to leave London to collect.
Nicholas Braun, âSuccessionâ
Billy Crudup, âThe Morning Showâ
Kieran Culkin, âSuccessionâ
Mark Duplass, âThe Morning Showâ
Giancarlo Esposito, âBetter Call Saulâ
Matthew Macfadyen, âSuccessionâ
Bradley Whitford, âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
Jeffrey Wright, âWestworldâ
Should win: Culkin
Will win: Crudup
Could surprise: Macfadyen
Thereâs going to be a surprise or two in these overflowing supporting acting categories. Having three âSuccessionâ actors nominated is good for the show but possibly bad for their chances. If I had to choose, Iâd lean toward Culkin because his character, Roman, grew and â wonder of wonders â matured (a bit) over the course of the season. Plus, I (kind of) ship Roman and Gerri. But âThe Morning Showâ will probably win something, and if itâs not going to be Aniston, then maybe itâll be Crudup, so charismatic and enigmatic as the seriesâ mad hatter network executive.
âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ
âDead to Meâ
âThe Good Placeâ
âInsecureâ
âThe Kominsky Methodâ
âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
âSchittâs Creekâ
âWhat We Do in the Shadowsâ
Should win: âSchittâs Creekâ
Will win: âSchittâs Creekâ
Could surprise: âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
âMaiselâ topped all comedy series with 20 nominations. But this race has the same feel as last year when Phoebe Waller-Bridgeâs buoyant, beloved âFleabagâ swept through the comedy categories, defeating âMaiselâ for the series, writing and directing Emmys. âSchittâs Creekâ engenders the same giddy affection, a feel-good program about acceptance that has felt like a balm during these stressful times. Emmy voters have finally caught up to it and will likely give the series a big sendoff for its final season.
Christina Applegate, âDead to Meâ
Rachel Brosnahan, âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
Linda Cardellini, âDead to Meâ
Catherine OâHara, âSchittâs Creekâ
Issa Rae, âInsecureâ
Tracee Ellis Ross, âblack-ishâ
Should win: OâHara
Will win: OâHara
Could surprise: Rae
Iâve run out of ways to fall over myself praising OâHara, so Iâll just repeat that I would gladly watch any âSchittâs Creekâ episode again just to dip into her spectacular, peculiar pronunciation and the way Moira would drop arcane words into just about any conversation. Emmy voters have bedeviled us over the years, but they arenât balatrons or frippets. OâHara will win, and Iâll be positively glee-ridden when she does.
Anthony Anderson, âblack-ishâ
Don Cheadle, âBlack Mondayâ
Ted Danson, âThe Good Placeâ
Michael Douglas, âThe Kominsky Methodâ
Eugene Levy, âSchittâs Creekâ
Ramy Youssef, âRamyâ
Should win: Youssef
Will win: Youssef
Could surprise: Levy
Jon Cryer is the last actor to win this Emmy without his series also being nominated, with voters rewarding him both for his talent and enduring Charlie Sheen on âTwo and a Half Menâ all those years. So there is precedent for Youssef, who was also nominated for directing his excellent Hulu series. It wouldnât be shocking to see Levy prevail if voters decide to go all-in on âSchittâs Creek.â But Youssef won the lead actor comedy Golden Globe in January, and I think heâll make it to the podium again.
Alex Borstein, âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
DâArcy Carden, âThe Good Placeâ
Betty Gilpin, âGLOWâ
Marin Hinkle, âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
Kate McKinnon, âSaturday Night Liveâ
Annie Murphy, âSchittâs Creekâ
Yvonne Orji, âInsecureâ
Cecily Strong, âSaturday Night Liveâ
Should win: Orji
Will win: Borstein
Could surprise: Murphy
Rhea Perlman (âCheersâ), Laurie Metcalf (âRoseanneâ) and Doris Roberts (âEverybody Loves Raymondâ) all won this Emmy three years running. So why not Borstein, the standout from the most-nominated comedy?
Mahershala Ali, âRamyâ
Alan Arkin, âThe Kominsky Methodâ
Andre Braugher, âBrooklyn Nine-Nineâ
Sterling K. Brown, âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
William Jackson Harper, âThe Good Placeâ
Daniel Levy, âSchittâs Creekâ
Tony Shalhoub, âThe Marvelous Mrs. Maiselâ
Keenan Thompson, âSaturday Night Liveâ
Should win: Levy
Will win: Levy
Could surprise: Ali
Voters nominated Levy in four categories â writing, directing, producing and acting. And OH. MY. GOD ... he could win them all!
âLittle Fires Everywhereâ
âMrs. Americaâ
âUnbelievableâ
âUnorthodoxâ
âWatchmenâ
Should win: âWatchmenâ
Will win: âWatchmenâ
Could surprise: Haha, youâre kidding, right?
âWatchmenâ earned the most Emmy nominations of any program, pulling in 26. It canât win them all, as it shows up multiple times in the supporting actor, direction, cinematography and editing categories. But this extraordinary series is going to clean up, culminating with this win.
âAmerican Sonâ
âBad Educationâ
âDolly Partonâs Heartstrings: These Old Bonesâ
âEl Camino: A Breaking Bad Movieâ
âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverendâ
Should win: âBad Educationâ
Will win: âBad Educationâ
Could surprise: âEl Camino: A Breaking Bad Movieâ
I thought this could be something of a toss-up between âBad Educationâ and âEl Caminoâ until voters took a knife to my heart and failed to nominate Aaron Paul from the satisfying âBreaking Badâ continuation or even Bob Odenkirk and Rhea Seehorn from pre-âBreaking Badâ masterpiece âBetter Call Saul.â
Cate Blanchett, âMrs. Americaâ
Shira Haas, âUnorthodoxâ
Regina King, âWatchmenâ
Octavia Spencer, âSelf Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walkerâ
Kerry Washington, âLittle Fires Everywhereâ
Should win: King
Will win: King
Could surprise: Haas
This was the yearâs most competitive category, with the likes of Kaitlyn Dever and Merritt Wever (âUnbelievableâ) and Daisy Edgar-Jones (âNormal Peopleâ) being crowded out. Now that the dust has settled, though, King stands as the clear-cut favorite to win for her spectacular work on âWatchmen,â a performance that pivoted between grace and power with a subtlety that anchored the series in truth.
Jeremy Irons, âWatchmenâ
Hugh Jackman, âBad Educationâ
Paul Mescal, âNormal Peopleâ
Jeremy Pope, âHollywoodâ
Mark Ruffalo, âI Know This Much Is Trueâ
Should win: Mescal
Will win: Ruffalo
Could surprise: Mescal
Itâs hard to go against a respected actor like Ruffalo playing twin brothers, one a paranoid schizophrenic, the other a weary working man making sacrifices out of familial love and duty. âI Know This Much Is Trueâ feels like it was created in a laboratory, deep beneath the Television Academy building in North Hollywood, repeatedly tested and ultimately approved to win Emmys. But, personally, I donât know anyone who watched it through to the end, leaving an opening for, really, just about anyone else in this category. Who knows? Maybe voters will be burdened with guilt for overlooking âNormal Peopleâ and reward Mescal, and he can dedicate the award to Edgar-Jones, and weâll all swoon and immediately start to binge watch this epic romance again.
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.