It’s time for part 3 of a six-part series on the Primetime Emmmy nominated shows with a political theme. Continuing on from yesterday’s ’13th’ vs. ‘O.J.: Made in America’ plus other non-fiction political programs at the Emmy Awards, today I’m examining the nominated scripted comedies that use politics for laughs (and occasionally a serious point).
The leading comedy, political or otherwise, is “Veep” with 17 nominations. It’s won Outstanding Comedy Series the past two years in a row and its star Julia Louis-Dreyfus has won Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series every year the show has aired, which makes for five consecutive wins. Impressive.
What’s also impressive is the number of Washington insiders who say that it is the most realistic portrayal of political life on American television, more so than “House of Cards,” the subject of tomorrow’s entry. I’ll begin with WYNC’s quote.
According to Jess Mcintosh, a democratic operative who works in communications, “Our lives are not like ‘House of Cards.’ There is really nothing that ‘House of Cards’ presents other than the names of certain Washington locations that bear any relation to reality.”
“‘VEEP’ is sometimes so painful to watch because it is so close to things that have happened in my world. I’m aware that it is funny, but I can’t possibly laugh at it,” she continues.
The Wrap elaborates on what “Veep” captures that “House of Cards” does not.
“The funny thing about `Veep’ is, we as people who worked in the White House always get asked, okay, what’s the most real? Is it `House of Cards? Is it `West Wing’? And the answer is, it’s `Veep.’ Because you guys nail the fragility of the egos, and the, like, day-to-day idiocy of the decision-making,” [Tommy] Vietor said.
I finish the comparison with this passage from The Atlantic.
House of Cards does get some things right. Its set design is impressive, down to the decor of the congressional offices and the style of the nameplates on the doors. And it correctly captures a new media landscape influenced by Politico and Buzzfeed (er, Slugline) while only somewhat exaggerating the corrosive impact of money on modern politics.
But Veep gets much more of the total picture, and it does so more enjoyably by presenting the capital as folly, not awash in soul-crushing darkness.
It may not make Congress’s approval ratings rebound from the gutter, but the truth that Veep captures is that the worst of the worst in Washington are more likely to be buffoons than monsters: Politicians and their aides are probably not killing people in D.C., but they often are shooting themselves in the foot.
There you have it. To paraphrase what a Canadian politician said about the Canadian left, our politicians are more likely to be gauche than sinister.
There are two other comedies with a political slant, “Black-ish” with four nominations and “South Park” with one. Follow over the jump for all the nominations of scripted comedies with political themes at the Primetime Emmy Awards.
I begin with the seventeen nominations in twelve categories for “Veep,” which also includes two nomionations for “Black-ish.”
Outstanding Comedy Series
“Atlanta” (FX)
“Black-ish” (ABC)
“Master of None” (Netflix)
“Modern Family” (ABC)
“Silicon Valley” (HBO)
“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” (Netflix)
“Veep” (HBO)
As I wrote above, “Veep” is a two-time returning winner in this category, so it’s definitely the favorite. The biggest competition I see for it is “Atlanta,” which won Outstanding Achievement in Comedy at the 2017 Television Critics Association Awards. A dark horse would be “Modern Family,” which won in 2014.
Outstanding Comedy Actress
Pamela Adlon (“Better Things”)
Tracee Ellis-Ross (“Black-ish”)
Jane Fonda (“Grace and Frankie”)
Lily Tomlin (“Grace and Frankie”)
Allison Janney (“Mom”)
Ellie Kemper (“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”)
Julia Louis-Dreyfus (“Veep”)
Again, as I wrote above, Julia Louis-Dreyfus has won this category every year that “Veep” has aired, so she is a prohibitive favorite. That written, she’s in very good company with her fellow nominees, especially Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Allison Janney. Tracee Ellis-Ross also does an outstanding job in “Black-ish.”
Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series
Alec Baldwin (“Saturday Night Live”)
Louie Anderson (“Baskets”)
Ty Burrell (“Modern Family”)
Tituss Burgess (“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”)
Tony Hale (“Veep”)
Matt Walsh (“Veep”)
Tony Hale of “Veep” won this award in 2013 and 2015, so he could do it again, especially as it’s an odd-numbered year. However, the returning winner is Louie Anderson. The other previous winner among the nominees is Ty Burrell, who won in 2014. Any of them could win, but none are safe. I suspect Alec Baldwin might win based on his Trump impersonations. I’ll have more to say about that next week. As for Matt Walsh, he was nominated against Hale last year and two years ago. He lost both times, so I don’t think he has much of a shot.
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series
Kate McKinnon (“Saturday Night Live”)
Vanessa Bayer (“Saturday Night Live”)
Leslie Jones (“Saturday Night Live”)
Anna Chlumsky (“Veep”)
Judith Light (“Transparent”)
Kathryn Hahn (“Transparent”)
I’m going to let Anna Chlumsky, who announced the nominees and found that she was a nominee in person, have the first word.
Yes, she’s been nominated five times. I don’t think she’ll win unless the voters split their ballots among the multiple nominees from the same shows. I doubt that will happen. Instead, I expect that Kate McKinnon, who won last year, will repeat. Still, that is a political show, even if it’s one I won’t get to until next week.
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series
Donald Glover (“Atlanta”)
Jamie Babbit (“Silicon Valley”)
Mike Judge (“Silicon Valley”)
Morgan Sackett (“Veep”)
David Mandel (“Veep”)
Dale Stern (“Veep”)
Last year’s winner, Jill Soloway (“Transparent”) isn’t returning, so this is an open field. David Mandel and Dale Stern of “Veep” are returning nominees, as is Mike Judge of “Silicon Valley,” so under normal circumstances I’d say they were the favorites. I’m not sure this year is normal and it may not work in favor of “Veep.” Instead, I suspect Donald Glover will pull an upset.
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series
Donald Glover (“Atlanta”)
Stephen Glover (“Atlanta”)
Aziz Ansari and Lena Waithe (“Master of None”)
Alec Berg (“Silicon Valley”)
Billy Kimball (“Veep”)
David Mandel (“Veep”)
Aziz Ansari is the returning winner, so I’d say he’s the favorite. As for the rest of the field, Alec Berg and David Mandel are returning nominees, so they have a shot. So does Donald Glover for “Atlanta.” I have a feeling it might be his year in comedy.
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series
Riz Ahmed (“Girls” — “All I Ever Wanted”)
Matthew Rhys (“Girls” — “American Bitch”)
Dave Chappelle (“Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Dave Chappelle”)
Lin-Manuel Miranda (“Satuday Night Live” — “Host: Lin-Manuel Miranda”)
Tom Hanks (“Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Tom Hanks”)
Hugh Laurie (“Veep” — “Blurb”)
Hugh Laurie is my choice for the best actor of the bunch, but I wouldn’t put it past the Emmy voters to pick either Lin-Manuel Miranda or Tom Hanks. I might have more to say about them and SNL next week.
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Program (Half-Hour or Less)
John Shaffner, Francoise Cherry-Cohen & Ann Shea (“The Big Bang Theory”)
Devorah Herbert, Ben Edelberg & Christopher Carlson (“Grace and Frankie”)
Tommaso Ortino, Susanna Codognato & Letizia Santucci (“Mozart in the Jungle”)
Richard Toyon, Jaclyn Hauser & Jennifer Mueller (“Silicon Valley”)
Cat Smith, Macie Vener & Dea Johnson (“Transparent”)
Jim Gloster, Andrew Leitch & Kimberly Wannop (“Veep”)
“Transparent” is the returning winner, so it’s the favorite. The next best bet is “Silicon Valley,” which won in 2015. “Veep” still has a chance, as it has been nominated in this category every year it has existed, which is since 2014, but I’m not optimistic.
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series
Alexa L. Fogel, Tara Feldstein Bennett & Chase Paris (“Atlanta”)
Cody Beke & Teresa Razzauti (“Master of None”)
Jeanne McCarthy, Nicole Abellera Hallman & Leslie Woo (“Silicon Valley”)
Eyde Belasco (“Transparent”)
Dorian Frankel & Sibby Kirchgessner (“Veep”)
“Veep” has won this category two years in a row and none of the previous winners are nominated (most are no longer being produced), so it’s the favorite. “Silicon Valley” and “Transparent” are the only other returning nominees and “Veep” has beaten both of them, twice in the case of “Transparent.” “Atlanta” might pull an upset, but I wouldn’t bet on it.
Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)
Rodney Taylor (“Ballers”)
Reed Morano (“Divorce”)
Tobias Datum (“Mozart in the Jungle”)
Tim Suhrstedt (“Silicon Valley”)
Jim Frohna (“Transparent”)
David Miller (“Veep”)
There is no returning winner, as the category didn’t exist last year. Therefore, I have no idea who might win, but I’m still rooting for “Veep.”
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series
Jennifer Lilly (“Master of None”)
Brian Merken (“Silicon Valley”)
Tim Roche (“Silicon Valley”)
Roger Nygard & Gennady Fridman (“Veep”)
Eric Kissack (“Veep”)
“Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” last year’s winner, is not returning. On the other hand, “Veep” and “Silicon Valley” are returning nominees, so I would say they’re the favorites.
Outstanding Sound Mixing For a Comedy Or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation
Joshua Berger, Michael Barosky (“Master of None” — “Dinner Party”)
Dean Okrand, Brian R. Harman, Stephen A. Tibbo (“Modern Family” — “Basketball”)
Andy D’Addario, Gary Gegan, Marco Fiumara (“Mozart in the Jungle” — “Now I Will Sing”)
Elmo Ponsdomenech, Todd Beckett, Ben Patrick (“Silicon Valley” — “Intellectual Property”)
John W. Cook II, Bill Freesh, Bill MacPherson (“Veep” — “Omaha”)
“Mozart in the Jungle” is the returning winner and likely favorite. The next most likely is “Modern Family,” which has won three times. As for “Veep,” it’s been nominated four years in a row. It may not be the best, but is certainly has consistent high quality.
That takes care of the categories that have “Veep” as a nominee, so it’s time to move on to “Black-ish.” I’m including the show here because it addressed Trump’s election.
The ABC sitcom “Black-ish” came out with one of the more explicit commentaries of any scripted show on the election of Donald Trump with its episode Wednesday night, “Lemon.” And critics are piling on praise for it.
The Emmy-nominated show, which has previously addressed Black Lives Matter and police violence, used the character Dre’s workplace to talk about the presidential election.
Anthony Anderson, who plays Dre, delivered an impressive monologue on the subject.
“I love this country even though at times it doesn’t love me back,” he said. “For my whole life, my parents, my grandparents, me, for most black people, this system has never worked for us. But we still play ball, tried to do our best to live by the rules even though we knew they would never work out in our favor, had to live in neighborhoods that you wouldn’t drive through, send our kids to schools with books so beat up you couldn’t read them, work jobs that you wouldn’t consider in your nightmares.”
He added: “You think I’m not sad that Hillary didn’t win? That I’m not terrified about what Trump’s about to do? I’m used to things not going my way. I’m sorry that you’re not and it’s blowing your mind, so excuse me if I get a little offended because I didn’t see all of this outrage when everything was happening to all of my people since we were stuffed on boats in chains. I love this country as much — if not more — than you do. And don’t you ever forget that.”
He definitely deserves his nomination.
Outstanding Comedy Actor
Anthony Anderson (“Black-ish”)
Aziz Ansari (“Master of None”)
Zach Galifianakis (“Baskets”)
Donald Glover (“Atlanta”)
William H. Macy (“Shameless”)
Jeffrey Tambor (“Transparent”)
This was one of the categories singled out in “Fear the Walking Dead: Passage” contributes to diversity at the 2017 Primetime Emmy Awards, when I quoted Wochit News.
The 69th Primetime Emmy nominees are the most diverse in the program’s history.
25 people of color were nominated across 18 onscreen acting awards, while 22 were nominated in 2016. Last year, people of color represented 24.6 percent of the major acting nominees. In 2015, that percentage was 21.9. In 2014, it was 9.7. In addition to the acting nominees, “Atlanta,” “black-ish” and “Master of None” received nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series. The shows’ leads, Donald Glover, Anthony Anderson and Aziz Ansari, will compete for the Lead Actor in a Comedy category.
That’s laudable, but Jeffrey Tambor is the two-time returning winner. He’s the favorite and has beaten most of these actors before. The one wild card is Donald Glover. I don’t think he’s ready to beat Tambor, even if it seems like his year.
Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
Wanda Sykes (“Black-ish” — “Lemons”)
Carrie Fisher (“Catastrophe” — “Episode 6”)
Becky Ann Baker (“Girls” — “Gummies”)
Angela Bassett (“Master of None” — “Thanksgiving”)
Kristen Wiig (“Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Kristen Wiig”)
Melissa McCarthy (“Saturday Night Live” — “Host: Melissa McCarthy”)
I wrote about this category briefly in Star Wars at the Primetime Emmy Awards, when I noted “the late Carrie Fisher was nominated for Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her appearance in ‘Catastrophe.'” I didn’t make a prediction then, so I’ll make it now. Fisher might garner a sympathy vote, but Melissa McCarthy was nominated last year and Tina Fey and Amy Poehler won last year. Based on that track record, I’d say either McCarthy or Wiig will win, probably McCarthy. She made an outstanding Sean Spicer.
Finally, a category with a show that has made political commentary a staple, “South Park.”
Outstanding Animated Program
“Archer” (FX Networks)
“Bob’s Burgers” (FOX)
“Elena and the Secret of Avalor (Sofia the First)” (Disney Channel)
“The Simpsons” (FOX)
“South Park” (Comedy Central)
I’m not rooting for “South Park.” I don’t agree with its politics, which are libertarian, but it would be unfair and incomplete to ignore the show. As for the nominee I am rooting for, it’s “Elena and the Secret of Avalor,” which I noted in Lots of politics in nonfiction television at the 2017 Television Critics Awards “looks like the most conventional fantasy.” That written, I doubt either will win. “Archer” is the returning winner. “South Park” last won in 2013 and “The Simpsons” last won in 2008. I expect “Archer” will repeat.
That’s it for scripted comedy. Stay tuned for the political nominees in drama followed by the political nominees in variety.
Don’t forget to vote in the poll for your favorite nominated comedy!
Originally posted at Crazy Eddie’s Motie News.