⁍ How September’s ceremony airing on ABC will look is anybody’s guess.
⁍ ‘Everything is different,’ said Tom O’Neil, editor of the Gold Derby awards website.
⁍ In 2019, less than a quarter of the acting bids went to people of color.
– Television has been America’s constant companion amid an unyielding virus and whirlwind of racial reappraisal. But will the Emmy nominations arriving Tuesday reflect the times or retreat to the familiar? The announcement itself was forced to bow to health safeguards, going virtual and without the usual mini-swarm of reporters and anxious publicists on hand at the TV academy’s Los Angeles headquarters. How September’s ceremony airing on ABC will look is anybody’s guess, reports the AP. As emcee Jimmy Kimmel said in June, it’s unknown where, how or why it will be held, ‘but we are doing it and I am hosting it.’ The first major entertainment awards of the pandemic era clearly is a traveler without a map. ‘Everything is different,’ said Tom O’Neil, editor of the Gold Derby awards website. Among the changes: ‘for your consideration’ promotional events to woo Emmy voter support were abandoned out of COVID-19 concerns. With isolation-forced time on their hands, TV industry members may have been more diligent about searching out potential nominees that otherwise would have been overlooked. That also required adjusting to the academy-mandated switch from series DVDs to online screenings (aimed at saving resources). ‘We have to be prepared for everybody to be blown away by lots of surprises on nominations morning,’ O’Neil said, quoting a veteran Gold Derby prognosticator. Which may be a good thing.
Source: https://apnews.com/96fbbe8d3043d0b17ec419840b7fb14b