Emmys 2013: The story lines to watch as the show unfolds
Some view it as TVâs biggest night. A few this year might call it the three-hour lead-in to the penultimate episode of âBreaking Bad.â Tomayto, tomahto. The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards are upon us!
The sure-to-be twerk-free soiree in downtown Los Angeles will air on CBS at 5 p.m. PDT with host extraordinaire Neil Patrick Harris leading the carousel. Itâs a night when an online sensation is âHouse of Cards,â not Rebecca Black. A night when the âDownton Abbeyâ folks freak us out with their modernity.
After the jaw-dropping (eh, maybe not) Creative Arts Emmys â which last week saw sitcom veteran Bob Newhart finally take home the gold â weâre pumped to see what the main event has in store.
EMMYS 2013: Full coverage | Top nominees | Complete nominee/winner list
Letâs consider the possibilities:
âą Netflix could solidify itself as a TV force rather than just an online streaming service that dishes out outrageously pathetic recommendations based on our viewing pleasures. Its breakout series âHouse of Cards,â which kicked off a series of launches for the site this year, has made Emmy history. The political-intrigue saga, up for best drama, marked the first time TVâs top awards have recognized an online program as equal to that delivered on a traditional platform. Itâs up for nine nominations.
âą Or could the blood-tastic Red Wedding seal the deal for âGame of Thronesâ in the best drama category? The television academy hasnât typically recognized genre shows in the main categories â hello, weâre waiting for a âWalking Deadâ nomination. But maybe a turning point is upon us?
MORE EMMYS: Nominee reactions | Snubs & surprises | Winners timeline | Emmy hosts
âą Last yearâs Golden Globes opened our eyes to the possibility that there are good hosts besides Harris. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, one of several girl-power pairings, will present together on Sunday night.
âą Sure, there are a lot of repeat names and series, but thereâs a good number of first-time nominees â Vera Farmiga (âBates Motelâ), Jeff Daniels (âThe Newsroomâ), Kerry Washington (âScandalâ), Emilia Clarke (âGame of Thronesâ), Zachary Quinto (âAmerican Horror Story: Asylumâ), Morena Baccarin (âHomelandâ) to name just a few. Will beginnerâs luck seize the night?
âą âScandal,â by sheer force of will, has become a hit. Thereâs no denying the show has been wrapped up in buzz. Now itâs taken on historic proportions. Washington is up for lead actress in a drama for her role as crisis fixer Olivia Pope. Sheâs the first African American to earn a nomination in the category since 1995. And if she wins, sheâll be the first African American to do so. Prognosticators donât see it happening, but the Emmys are at least fully aware of the significance. Theyâve paired Washington with Diahann Carroll, who made history in 1968 as the first black actress in television history to star in her own series (NBCâs âJuliaâ), to present during the ceremony.
âą Movie stars and filmmakers are crashing the joint like never before. Kevin Spacey. Jane Fonda. Shirley MacLaine. Al Pacino. Helen Mirren. Michael Douglas. Matt Damon. Steven Soderbergh. Jane Campion. Itâll feel as if weâre getting a sneak peak at the Oscars! Or maybe just Golden Globe Redux?
âą Is Bryan Cranston back with a vengeance? Damian Lewisâ win last year in the lead actor category for his run on âHomeland,â over Cranston (the sadistic Walter White of âBreaking Badâ), nearly gave us whiplash. So, after an arm-hair-raising first half of a final âBreakingâ season, will the presenter in the category remember Cranstonâs name?
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