The TV shows Emmy voters should be casting their ballots for


Hey all – I know you’ve been drowning in roundtable interviews and endless For Your Consideration cocktail parties from shows trying to earn your support. Voting on nominations ends today at 10 p.m. PDT, so I thought I’d offer a few suggestions for underrated performers and shows that I really hope get a shot at Emmy gold this time around.

Given the fragmented state of TV viewing these days, I know it’s tougher than ever to agree on what constitutes the best programming. But that’s also an opportunity for you all in the Television Academy to reach beyond usual suspects for new voices, new shows and performances that might otherwise be overlooked.

And for non-Emmy voters, consider this a list of cool shows and performances to catch up on. Nominations are announced on July 15. (And if the Emmy voters get it wrong, I’ll correct everything with my DEGGY awards, announced just before the Emmy ceremony Sept. 14.)

Best actress in a comedy Uzo Aduba from Netflix’s The Residence 

Uzo Aduba as Cordelia Cupp

Yes, Aduba is beloved by Emmy voters, who have nominated her five times with three wins, including two for her signature role as Crazy Eyes on Orange Is the New Black. But I worry, with the industry’s eyes focused this year on higher profile comedies like The Studio, Hacks and Dying for Sex, that Netflix’s quirky take on a whodunit inside the White House will be missed. Aduba’s performance as avid birder and consulting detective Cordelia Cupp, the investigator who unravels it all, is central to that glorious mix, commanding every scene as a sharp-eyed sleuth who is clearly the smartest person in the room – and isn’t shy about letting you know it.

Best supporting actor in a drama Vincent D’Onofrio from Daredevil Born Again on Disney+ 

Vincent D'Onofrio plays Wilson "Kingpin" Fisk in Daredevil Born Again.

Best actor in a drama Matthew Goode from Netflix’s Dept. Q 

Matthew Goode as detective Carl Morck.

Released just before this year’s Emmys deadline, this Scotland-set crime drama also deserves its own nomination for a twisty story centered on a damaged detective investigating a horrific, unsolved crime. Cool as the series is, it’s Goode’s turn as arrogant detective Carl Morck, an English man transplanted to Edinburgh – unable to admit how he’s been traumatized by a shooting that paralyzed his former partner – that holds everything together. Goode has been excellent in a lot of things, from playing legendary film producer Robert Evans in The Offer to the villain in Zack Snyder’s Watchmen movie. His role as Morck isn’t exactly the kind of thing Emmy voters line up to recognize – but they should.

Best talk series Have I Got News for You on CNN

Comedian Roy Wood Jr. hosts the show Have I Got News For You on CNN, as seen in this screenshot from a clip in April.

Screenshot from /Youtube

This is a category historically dominated by newsy satires like The Daily Show and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (before Oliver was shunted off to a new category he now dominates). But this Americanized version of a long-running British TV staple has quietly emerged as one of the most fun ways to process our chaotic times, led by Daily Show alum Roy Wood Jr. as host alongside team captains Amber Ruffin and Michael Ian Black. Whether it’s making fun of Steve Bannon’s musical about the 1992 Los Angeles Riots – with clips from a table read featuring Rob Corddry, of course — or Ruffin explaining she lost her gig performing at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner by “talking s***” about Republicans beforehand, the fake game show they present every week is a telling but heartening way to absorb tough news events.

Another best talk series Hot Ones on YouTube

Host Sean Evans interviews Bad Bunny on an episode of Hot Ones from January.

First We Feast/Screenshot from YouTube

I know – I’m pushing it here with a second pick in this category. But even though I think the one new nomination in this category will likely go to Netflix’s uneven Everybody’s Live with John Mulaney series, I think it’s a crime that the most unconventionally innovative interview show in recent years hasn’t yet gotten a nomination. Yes, it’s a silly setup – celebrities answering questions while eating hot wings. But host Sean Evans makes it count with brilliant touches, including sharp, insightful questions and the decision to eat wings right alongside the guest – a level of entertainment worthy of a little Emmy gold, I say.

Best limited series Fight Night The Million Dollar Heist on Peacock

Taraji P. Henson as Vivian Thomas in Fight Night The Million Dollar Heist.

Fernando Decillis/Peacock

It sounds a little odd to contend that a series featuring megastars like Samuel L. Jackson, Taraji P. Henson, Don Cheadle, Terrence Howard and Kevin Hart would be an underdog in anything. But it seems the industry has slept on this excellent, blaxploitation-tinged production, based on a real event in which some of America’s most fearsome gangsters were robbed while attending a party after a Muhammad Ali fight in 1970. The story touches on everything from Atlanta’s rise as a Mecca for Black people to the integration of the city’s police force, with Hart nailing a mostly serious role and Jackson chewing the scenery as only he can, playing the “Black Godfather” Frank Moten.

Best comedy series Mo on Netflix

Mo Amer as Mo.



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