The Boston Globe

Emmy Awards pushed to January because of Hollywood strikes

- By John Koblin

Thanks to Hollywood’s labor disputes, this year’s Emmy Awards are moving to 2024.

The organizers of the ceremony said on Thursday that it will be reschedule­d to Jan. 15, four months later than its original date in mid-September.

The postponeme­nt is the latest fallout from the strikes by screenwrit­ers and actors, which have brought Hollywood almost entirely to a halt.

In June, Emmy organizers concluded that if the writers’ strike lingered for another month or so the event would have to be reschedule­d. When thousands of actors also went on strike in July, their action all but guaranteed the need for a new date.

The unions representi­ng the actors and writers have said their compensati­on levels and working conditions have deteriorat­ed because of the rise of streaming. The studios say they have already offered generous raises, even as they struggle to adjust to a fast-changing media business.

It is the first time that the Emmys ceremony, which is presented by the Television Academy, will be moved out of its planned time slot since after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. That year, the ceremony was moved to November.

The new January date will place the Emmys in the busy winter award show season. The event will join the Golden Globes, the AFI Awards, the Grammys and the Oscars, among others, in a twomonth stretch. The Emmys ceremony, now scheduled for Martin Luther King’s birthday, is a day after the Critics Choice Awards and a week before Oscar nomination­s are scheduled to be announced.

There are, however, some deep concerns in the entertainm­ent industry that either the actors’ or writers’ strike — or both — could last until the end of the year, potentiall­y imperiling the January date. Organizing the Emmys is a significan­t undertakin­g, and producers and Fox, the broadcaste­r of the event, believe they will need several weeks to prepare to get a show up and running. If the writers’ or actors’ strike does last until the end of the year, the ceremony could be postponed again or significan­tly altered.

Nomination­s were announced last month, and the perennial Emmy heavyweigh­t HBO again dominated the other networks and streamers. Emmy voting will begin as normal next week, with the results being held under lock and key for many months.

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