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Quibbling Siblings dish on the Emmy awards

Every week brother and sister team Bob and Debbie take on a new topic. This week, dish with us about the Emmy winners and losers.

Debbie:

It probably didn’t escape you that the Emmys were on Sunday night. I honestly didn’t watch them, except I happened to catch the segment where Ricky Gervais was about to make fun of Mel Gibson, but didn’t because he’s been through a lot … and so have the Jews. Ricky, you’re awesome. Anyone who mocks Mel Gibson is alright by me.

But anyway, even though I didn’t watch, I do know who won and lost, so let’s dish on that.

I can’t really argue with too many of the comedy wins because Modern Family is the best writing out there and Jane Lynch and Eric Stonestreet are completely awesome. I may take issue with Edie Falco if I’d seen more than the pilot of Nurse Jackie, but I can’t help but think that someone out there’s got to be funnier than her.

I’m sure you’re loving the Mad Men writing win, but I would have liked to see Dexter win a few more.

My only other immediate observation is what the heck is Temple Grandin, ’cause I feel like I missed something….

Bob:

Seriously, the TV movie and miniseries categories seem out of place at this point in time. There were only two miniseries nominated! How is that possible? They should probably, at the very least, combine them all into one category.

I agree, it was nice to see Modern Family get a lot of attention, and Jane Lynch is about the only thing that keeps me coming back to Glee. She deserves every award out there if you ask me. I don’t want to hate on Glee because I don’t think it’s a bad show, and I there is a lot to like about it, but I was a little relieved to see that it didn’t pick up best comedy. I just think it’s way overhyped and Modern Family is a better show. (The Gleeks are going to destroy me in the comments, aren’t they?)

The biggest surprise of the night, for me, was Archie Punjabi‘s win for The Good Wife, which was almost as shocking as Julianna Margulies’ loss. I love the show and enjoy the character, but I was even a little confused when she was nominated. She does a fine job on the show, but the character hasn’t really been given that much to do. Add in the amazing work that Rose Byrne and the ladies from Mad Men did last season and I am flabbergasted.

Overall, I was pleased. It was nice to see Jim Parsons and Aaron Paul recognized for their excellent work. Bryan Cranston won again, with good reason, and Mad Men took home top prize for the third straight year. With season four shaping up to be the best one yet, I can’t imagine Mad Men won’t be up there again in 2011.

Debbie:

I was wondering how you felt about the Margulies loss; I know you have championed The Good Wife and her performance all season long. You’re right about Archie Panjabi, although I wonder what episodes all the gals submitted for review. That could have made a huge difference.

Rah, rah for Bryan Cranston. I get that he’s awesome because I can’t even believe he’s the same guy that played Malcolm’s dad, but I always want Michael C. Hall to win (although if John Lithgow hadn’t walked away with best guest actor, I would have surmised that monkeys voted). Although this year, Hugh Laurie was the deserved one. What a season for House, and based on his work in the season premiere alone, he should have walked away with it.

Oh, and I kinda love that Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution won the reality category … one step closer to changing how the world eats. Now that’s the kind of reality TV I can get behind.

Hmmm … I guess I really did have more to say.

Bob:

Well, all those neglected actors will have their chance next year because Breaking Bad is taking such a long break between seasons, it’s not even going to be eligible for next year’s Emmys. Disappointing for us fans, but I suppose Laurie, Hall, and Hamm must be excited.

And what is with Lithgow being nominated for guest actor? Wasn’t he in Dexter just as much as Martin Short was in this season of Damages? It seems like they may have been bending the rules a bit to make sure that Lithgow got his trophy. Though, from what I hear about his performance, it probably would have been a safe bet in the supporting actor category too.

Debbie:

Oh, I can answer the Lithgow question. Short was in last season of Damages and it’s open for him to continue on as well. Lithgow was a one-season wonder and there’s no changing that, no matter how awesome his performance was. That’s got to be a criteria in deciding supporting actor or guest actor. Let me tell you, if you watched this season of Dexter, you’d look upon those 3rd Rock from the Sun reruns a little differently … as in, you’d run from the room in fear at the sight of Lithgow.

How about you — what do you all have to say about the Emmys?

Photo Credit: AMC

12 Responses to “Quibbling Siblings dish on the Emmy awards”

September 2, 2010 at 12:52 PM

I’m very happy with the comedy wins for all of the categories, but Edie Falco seemed as confused as I that she was even in a comedy category. I never ever thought of Nurse Jackie as a comedy! She even said in her speech that “I am not funny!” lol
I thought Jimmy Fallon was a great host. I was bummed that Lost didn’t win anything!
I’m not a mini-series watcher so that didn’t faze me at all. I did start to wonder if maybe I should have watched Temple Grandin??? I never heard of it till that night.

September 2, 2010 at 12:55 PM

Don’t led Edie fool you, shows decide themselves which category to enter into. Nurse Jackie submitted itself as a comedy.

September 2, 2010 at 2:25 PM

True, I realize that they submit the shows. I guess that’s why Edie won “best actress” ..lol. I admit I do laugh watching that show, the characters around her can be funny. Usually I find myself laughing at a situation which you know you should not be laughing at, but you can’t help it.

September 2, 2010 at 7:33 PM

Julianna Margulies totally didn’t deserve to win. I expected her to, but I was resigned to it. I’m kind of glad she didn’t, because she definitely wasn’t the best lead actress in a drama last season.

Bob, it didn’t escape me that 30 Rock walked away empty handed…. :)

September 2, 2010 at 8:52 PM

I don’t watch The Closer, so I can’t really comment on the winner, but I think you underestimate the subtle, nuanced performance that Margulies gave. The character is not a big, emotional person. She is withdrawn, somber, and I would even say cold. That’s a whole lot harder to make interesting and compelling than a big over the top personality. Of course, so much of Elisabeth Moss’s performance on Mad Men is about subtlety. Maybe you just have a problem picking up those nuances, Aryeh. ;oP

30 Rock had its day. I still love it (even more than Modern Family), but I certainly wasn’t upset with any of the losses. It had two episodes nominated for writing this year. No other comedy can boast that. I don’t care how good a comedy is, after 5 years or so (and we’re moving into season 5 of 30 Rock) they lose something. I think it’s impossible to keep a comedy fresh for that long. Friends got stupid, The Office was terrible last season, I’m not sure why I still watch HIMYM… I think it’s hard for any show to sustain itself creatively for so long.

September 2, 2010 at 10:17 PM

Alicia’s long-suffering wife is nuanced to her detriment, while her “love affair” with Will was only subtle insofar as there was no chemistry between them.

Don’t get me wrong … I thought her fantastic, and she arguably turned in the best performance of the five nominees in her category (just not of all lead actresses in dramas). But was it an award-winning performance? No.

Since I don’t want Debbie to think I’m ignoring her, Modern Family totally didn’t deserve the win. Ouch! :)

September 3, 2010 at 1:27 PM

BAH! What would you have seen win instead? I think MF is clever, unique and well-written so I was glad to see it win.

September 3, 2010 at 2:47 PM

I think The Middle. The problem is it certainly doesn’t speak to as wide an audience as Modern Family. But Patricia Heaton and Neil Flynn (and Atticus Shaffer!) are doing some really great, albeit overlooked, work.

Or Hank. ;)

September 4, 2010 at 8:46 AM

Well, yeah, OK … Hank totally deserved it. I guess a cancellation must make it ineligible for nomination. ;-)

September 5, 2010 at 8:16 AM

No, I got it this time! :)

I, like Emmy, forgot what was arguably the strongest comedy on TV last season — Californication was brilliant. David Duchovny was outstanding (how was he overlooked in the lead category?), and the rotating cast of characters last season, including Embeth Davidtz, Diane Farr, and Peter Gallagher made it not only overwhelmingly funny, but also extremely well acted. At this point it’s just chitter-chatter, but I realize that I’m to blame as well for overlooking such a fantastic season of television.

September 3, 2010 at 3:29 PM

Aren’t opinions fun?!?

September 4, 2010 at 9:58 AM

I laughed my ass off when Kyra Sedgwick got the Emmy. Not because she didn’t deserve to win but because I had to think of Aryeh’s review of the show. Hehe… *snicker* still funny.

I think it’s Laurie’s bane that “House” airs on Fox. There’s not much else to it if you ask me Deb. The other shows win because they aren’t on that network.

What I found remarkable this season? Amazing Race didn’t win and it was about time. Even though the show is great I think it won too many years in a row. I guess the voters finally found a show that deserved to win more than the only other reality program that isn’t about yelling or boobs.

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