Los Angeles Times

GUESSING GAME

‘Handmaid’s Tale,’ Oprah and other pressing questions ahead of Thursday’s nods

- By Glenn Whipp

Oprah Winfrey watched the first episode of “The Handmaid’s Tale.” And part of the second. But she stopped there, unable to continue watching the grim events depicted in Hulu’s adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s cautionary novel depicting a future in which women are subjugated, controlled and, in some cases, ceremonial­ly raped.

“It’s just so dark,” Winfrey says. “It’s almost too much to witness. It shakes you to the core. I’ll get there … it’s an amazing show. But it’s going to take some time.”

We know that Emmy voters have too much to watch. But one of the key things Thursday’s nomination­s announceme­nt will reveal is which programs Television Academy members chose to check out and which they willfully ignored. If you can’t watch everything — and you can’t, believe me, I’ve tried — then what falls to the wayside? Awful, plodding shows, sure. (If you made it past Episode 3 of Netflix’s “Gypsy,” to cite a recent example, you deserve a cookie.) But also challengin­g fare like “The Handmaid’s Tale” — programs that make you uncomforta­ble, programs that make you think.

Maybe I’m imagining a different kind of dystopian future, in which one of the year’s most celebrated series is passed over in favor of, say, another season of “House of Cards.” Think it can’t happen? Last year, the 21,000-plus members of the Television Academy, mostly men, thought Jerry Seinfeld having coffee with comedians (mostly men) deserved a nomination more than Samantha Bee’s fearless, feminist broadside “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee.”

So, yes, the Emmys remain capable of delivering soul-crushing disappoint­ments. Which brings me to the first of several questions rattling around in my head ahead of nomination­s. …

In this saturated time of Peak TV, can there even be such a thing as an Emmy snub?

First, let me note again that I don’t really believe in the whole concept of snubs, as it implies an active spurning on behalf of voters. Usually, it’s a simple matter of people liking a show or performanc­e a bit more than another show or performanc­e. Bee’s “snub” last year wasn’t a rebuff, more just another example of how clueless voters can sometimes be.

That said, snubs do occasional­ly happen. Ben Aff leck not earning an Oscar nomination for directing “Argo”? Snub. A case of directors branch voters thumbing their noses at a pretty boy actor infringing on their territory.

This year’s Emmy nomination­s could see a couple of politicall­y motivated shunnings in the variety talk series category. Jimmy Fallon fawns over all his guests, but his innocuous interview with Donald Trump, which ended with the host tousling the Republican presidenti­al candidate’s hair, still angers a lot of industry people nine months after it aired. If Fallon’s “Tonight Show” fails to earn a nomination, it can be correctly read as a snub.

Likewise, Bill Maher’s inexcusabl­e use of the N-word on his show last month will cost him plenty of votes and quite possibly a nomination. Then again, Maher has smirked his way to 38 nomination­s over the years, so one more nod wouldn’t be a surprise. It’d be pathetic, but that’s a different, larger conversati­on.

As for the bold-faced names who might be overlooked, it’s possible that Winfrey’s powerful turn in the HBO movie “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” won’t make the cut in a crowded limited-series/ TV movie lead actress field dominated by the women of “Feud: Bette and Joan” and “Big Little Lies.” With Winfrey, as is sometimes the case with Steven Spielberg, voters might think, at least subconscio­usly, “She has everything. She doesn’t need an Emmy nomination.”

Will the Emmys have cause to brag about inclusiven­ess again this year?

There were 18 nominees of color for acting awards at the 2016 Emmys, and several women were nominated for directing.

“I’ll tell you, the Emmys are so diverse this year, the Oscars are now telling people we’re one of their closest friends,” host Jimmy Kimmel joked in the show’s opening monologue.

This year’s numbers could even be a bit stronger, with Donald Glover’s “Atlanta” primed for several nomination­s, Issa Rae’s “Insecure” in the mix for comedy and Rita Moreno among the comedy supporting actress front-runners for “One Day at a Time.”

Thandie Newton should secure a nod for “Westworld,” and Sterling K. Brown, a winner last year for playing Christophe­r Darden in “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story,” could add another Emmy to his mantle for his stellar work on “This Is Us.”

Is this the Emmy end for “House of Cards” and “Modern Family”?

“Modern Family” has been nominated for every one of its seven seasons, winning five series Emmys. “House of Cards” has never taken the drama series Emmy but has been nominated for all four of its seasons.

Television Academy voters tend to reward their favorites until the shows (or they themselves) die, but even with seven series slots, it’s not looking good for either of these stalwarts. On the drama side, there are too many good new programs — “The Crown,” “Stranger Things,” “This Is Us,” “The Handmaid’s Tale,” “Westworld” — for “Cards” to compete.

The comedy field isn’t quite as strong, so I could see “Modern Family” squeaking in for an eighth time ahead of, say, “Unbreakabl­e Kimmy Schmidt,” “Master of None” or “Insecure.” If voters are feeling sentimenta­l, the superb final season of “Girls” would be a worthy choice.

Hold up. You just mentioned a lot of Netflix shows in that last answer. Just how many programs from the streamer will be nominated?

Four. “Stranger Things” and “The Crown” for drama, “Master of None” and “Kimmy Schmidt” for comedy. HBO should have three (absent the ineligible “Game of Thrones”): “Veep,” “Silicon Valley” and “Westworld.”

What Emmy nomination will make people the happiest on Thursday?

Nominees’ mothers notwithsta­nding, how about Carrie Fisher for her final performanc­e on Amazon’s “Catastroph­e,” shot days before she died in December? It was about as perfect a send-off to Fisher as you could ask for, particular­ly the episode’s last scene that found her character waxing poetic on her favorite (fictional) television show: “My Children Are Schizophre­nic.”

 ?? Quantrell Colbert HBO ?? PRIME contenders? Oprah Winfrey (“Henrietta Lacks”), left, Donald Glover (“Atlanta”), Elisabeth Moss (“Handmaid’s Tale”) and Sterling K. Brown (“This Is Us”).
Quantrell Colbert HBO PRIME contenders? Oprah Winfrey (“Henrietta Lacks”), left, Donald Glover (“Atlanta”), Elisabeth Moss (“Handmaid’s Tale”) and Sterling K. Brown (“This Is Us”).
 ?? George Kraychyk Hulu ??
George Kraychyk Hulu
 ?? Ron Batzdorff NBC ??
Ron Batzdorff NBC
 ?? Guy D’Alema FX ??
Guy D’Alema FX
 ?? John P. Johnson HBO ?? LOOK FOR Thandie Newton to secure an acting nomination for HBO’s sci-fi western thriller “Westworld.”
John P. Johnson HBO LOOK FOR Thandie Newton to secure an acting nomination for HBO’s sci-fi western thriller “Westworld.”
 ?? Janet Van Ham HBO ?? POLITICS could affect Jimmy Fallon, top, with Donald Trump, and Bill Maher, above left, with Ice Cube.
Janet Van Ham HBO POLITICS could affect Jimmy Fallon, top, with Donald Trump, and Bill Maher, above left, with Ice Cube.
 ?? Andrew Lipovsky NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images ??
Andrew Lipovsky NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

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