Game of Thrones Breaks Record and Wins Best Drama for Second Year

Winter might be coming for the residents of Westeros but for the creators of Game of Thrones and HBO it was clear skies again at the Emmys, where the series won the best drama series award for the second year in a row.

The HBO series was up for 24 awards and came away with 12 at Sunday night’s Emmy awards in Los Angeles, breaking a record set by the sitcom Frasier with a total haul of 38 Emmys.

The Battle of the Bastards episode was singled out for praise and won awards for best drama writing (David Benihoff and DB Weiss) and directing (Miguel Sapotchnik).

Veep, which has been nominated 42 times at the Emmys, won the best comedy category.

It was also a great night for The People v OJ Simpson, Ryan Murphy’s dramatisation of the OJ Simpson trial. The show picked up 22 nominations and won the outstanding limited series gong, while actors Sterling K Brown, Sarah Paulson and Courtney B Vance all picked up individual honors for their performances as Christopher Darden, Marcia Clark and Johnnie Cochran, respectively.

Rami Malek took home a surprise win for lead actor in a drama, for his performance as Elliot Alderson, a paranoid, socially awkward hacker in Mr Robot, while Tatiana Maslany won in the best actress category for Orphan Black.

The issue of diversity was constantly raised on the night with Jimmy Kimmel starting the evening by joking about Hollywood’s propensity for saying how much it cares about diversity without necessarily doing anything about it. One moment that wasn’t so funny was when Aziz Ansari was cut off before being able to give his speech after winning outstanding writing in a comedy series for Master of None.

“That was a little weird earlier, I just wanted to thank my parents who inspired the episode and acted in the show too,” he said, when he appeared later to give the award for best writing for a variety special. The band was also criticised for playing off a producer of The People v OJ Simpson, who was making an emotional dedication to her wife.

Former Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush appeared in a bizarre opening segment, playing a chauffeur for Julia Louis-Dreyfus. “If you run a positive campaign the voters will ultimately make the right choice,” he said in a self-effacing scene that poked fun at his disastrous campaign.

Kimmel’s own performance was at times controversial, especially a joke he made about Johnnie Cochran being “somewhere looking up at us” after Courtney B Vance’s win for his portrayal of him on The People v OJ Simpson.

The Emmy voters’ habit of picking the same winners continued with Jeffrey Tambor and Julia Louis-Dreyfus picking up lead actor and actress in a comedy. Louis-Dreyfus has won the award five years in a row for Veep, while Tambor picked up the award after winning last year for his performance in Transparent.

Tambor also led a tribute to Garry Shandling, who died in March and who he worked with on the Larry Sanders show. There was another tribute for Garry Marshall from Henry Winkler, who called him “one of the most beloved men in the history of our business”.

It was a good night for British talent with John Oliver winning for best variety talk, and Sherlock (best made for TV movie) and The Night Manager (best directing) also winning on the night.

Regina King won best supporting actress in a limited series or movie for the second year in a row for her performance in American Crime. Key & Peele won in the variety sketch category for their Comedy Central series, which ended after its fifth season. Ben Mendelsohn managed to cause an upset in the best supporting actor in a drama category by beating Game of Thrones stars Kit Harrington and Peter Dinklage.

Source : Guardian

Fans React As Beyonce Loses All Four Nominations At 2016 Emmys

So sad! Diva Beyonce didn’t manage to win any of the four Emmys that she was nominated for on Sunday night. The Sorry hitmaker had her fans on the edge of their seats with rumours of a surprise performance but what they got instead was disappointment all round at the 68th annual Emmy Awards.
Fans were hoping that Beyonce’s HBO special and visual-album Lemonade was going to scoop the awards, so the BeyHives were furious when Laverne Cox announced that directors of Grease: Live – Thomas Kail and Alex Rudzinski – had won the final Emmy for Outstanding Directing For A Variety Special.
“I wasted 2 hours for Beyoncé to not show up & to lose the EMMY #Emmys2016 ,” one disappointed fan tweeted. Another joked about Beyonce and Jay Z’s imagined conversation: “Somewhere Beyoncé is laying in a bathtub of money – Jay: Bey, you didn’t win the Emmy – Beyoncé: Who?”
While another added: “How you gonna bring Laverne Cox up to present an award Beyoncé is nominated in and have her give it to two white men #Emmys ”.

Kanye West Thinks “Keeping Up With The Kardashians” Deserves Emmys, All Of The Emmys

Kanye West recently sat down for a nearly two-hour-long interview with SHOWStudio, in a “live and unedited broadcast” as part of the site’s “In Camera” series.

Consider this prep for his presidential debates in a few years’ time; of course, he’s already a most talented orator, and offered many of the quintessential Kanye sound bites that we all know will inspire his electorate come 2020.

In other art forms Kanye believes get short shrift, he picked out the reality TV genre, and shows like Keeping Up With the Kardashians specifically.  Reality TV is “?so fucking new of an art form?,” Kanye argues, adding, “?My wife and my family should’ve had plenty of Emmys by now but reality shows are considered to be like rap was when the Mondrian [Hotel] wouldn’t let Run DMC and motherfucking Will Smith stay there because they were rappers.” Of KUWTK, he added that “everybody I know watches it,” even if some people probably only told him that to be polite.

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