New York Post

GET OFF YOU HIGH HORSE!

Kevin can’t wait: stop with ‘Yellowston­e’ Emmy snubs

- Michael Starr TV EDITOR

WELL, that sucks. Cable TV’s biggest series, “Yellowston­e,” and its star, Kevin Costner, failed to snare a single Emmy nomination Tuesday morning — a head-scratcher that makes no sense, even in the inscrutabl­e WTF? world of the TV Academy and its voters.

And all this even after academy Chairman/ CEO Frank Scherma introduced the nomination ceremony — hosted by JB Smoove and Melissa Fumero — by rhapsodizi­ng about the record number of submission­s and the magnificen­ce and impact of television in the 21st century.

Really?

I mean, how do you ignore a (Paramount Network) series that’s averaged as much as 14 million viewers a week, spawned three spinoffs/prequels (“1883,” “1923” and “6666”) and transforme­d its co-creator, Taylor Sheridan, into a creative TV titan without peer? He’s already snared

Oscar winners Helen Mirren, Harrison Ford,

David Oleyowo and Sylvester Stallone for upcoming shows — and has accomplish­ed all of this in a digital world where viewers are migrating in droves to streaming platforms, no less. C’mon, people. You can almost hear the late Rodney Dangerfiel­d: “What’s a series gotta do to get some respect around here?”

I don’t get it, especially for a show that’s been embraced by viewers from coast-to-coast. It hasn’t fared much better in its previous three seasons — one measly nomination last year for Outstandin­g Production Design. Apparently, Costner, who’s also an Oscar winner (“Dances With Wolves”), doesn’t cut the mustard with TV Academy voters, nor does the show’s solid supporting cast (including Cole Hauser, Kelly Reilly, Luke Grimes, Kelly Asbille and Wes Bentley). It would be interestin­g to know why. OK, so prequel series “1883” earned a nomination for cinematogr­aphy and music — I guess that’s better than nothing (?) — but stars Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, who were excellent in their leading roles were completely snubbed. Yikes.

Meanwhile, the list of nominees tells you all you need to know about the power and, let’s face it, the quality, of traditiona­l network television (ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC).

It’s nearly non-existent in the 2022 TV universe, while cable still has a pulse … barely.

“Abbott Elementary” and series star Quinta Brunson were the lone nominees (on ABC) representi­ng the Big Four in the major primetime Emmy categories. Cable networks FX, HBO, Showtime, and AMC fared marginally better — yet were still overwhelme­d by streamers Netflix, Hulu (“Only Murders in the Building” and stars Steve Martin and Martin Short and Elle Fanning for “The Great”), HBO Max, Apple TV+ et al. (Broadcast fared better in the Variety/Talk category, with ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” “Late NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” and

CBS’ “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” nominated.)

HBO, which traditiona­lly snares a boatload of nominees, did so again this year, with “Succession” (and stars Brian Cox and Jeremy Strong), “Barry” (and star Bill Hader), “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” “Insecure” (Issa Rae, Best Actress, Comedy) and “Euphoria” (Best Drama and star Zendaya) all represente­d. FX (“What We Do in the Shadows” and Donald Glover for “Atlanta”) and AMC (“Better Call Saul” and star Bob Odenkirk) squeaked in, as did BBC America (Jodie Comer/ Sandra Oh, “Killing Eve” — talk about enough already).

As for the rest of the field (notwithsta­nding “Yellowston­e”), the TV Academy got most of it right.

The internatio­nal phenomenon “Squid Game” was nominated (along with star Lee Jung-jae) as was its Netflix stablemate “Stranger Things,” which shattered digital viewing records in its fourth season. Also faring well: “Hacks” (and last year’s winner, Jean Smart), “Severance” (and star Adam Scott) and last year’s Best Comedy, “Ted Lasso” (and star Jason Sudeikis) — the latter two Apple TV+ — as well as “Yellowjack­ets” (and star Melanie Lynskey).

None of these series would be anywhere without terrific supporting casts — but don’t tell that to the cast of “Yellowston­e” — they’ll be nowhere to be found when the Emmys air on Sept. 12, live on NBC.

And that’s a shame.

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from top: Kevin Costner (“Yellowston­e”), Zendaya (“Euphoria”), Jeremy Strong (“Succession”), Adam Scott (“Severance” and Quint Brunson (“Abbott Elementary”).
Clockwise from top: Kevin Costner (“Yellowston­e”), Zendaya (“Euphoria”), Jeremy Strong (“Succession”), Adam Scott (“Severance” and Quint Brunson (“Abbott Elementary”).
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