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Nominees for the 2015 Primetime Emmy Awards

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Outstanding Drama Series

Better Call Saul, AMC

Downton Abbey, PBS

Game of Thrones, HBO

Homeland, Showtime

House of Cards, Netflix

Mad Men, AMC

Orange Is the New Black, Netflix

Outstanding Comedy Series

Louis, FX

Modern Family, ABC

Parks and Recreation, NBC

Silicon Valley, HBO

Transparent, Amazon

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Netflix

Veep, HBO

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

Kyle Chandler, Bloodline

Liev Schreiber, Ray Donovan

Jon Hamm, Mad Men

Kevin Spacey, House of Cards

Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul

Jeff Daniels, The Newsroom

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series

Anthony Anderson, Black-ish

Will Forte, The Last Man on Earth

Matt LeBlanc, Episodes

Jeffrey Tambor, Transparent

William H. Macy, Shameless

Louis C.K., Louie

Don Cheadle, House of Lies

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

Taraji P. Henson, Empire

Tatiana Maslany, Orphan Black

Robin Wright, House of Cards

Viola Davis, How to Get Away With Murder

Claire Danes, Homeland

Elisabeth Moss, Mad Men

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series

Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Veep

Lisa Kudrow, The Comeback

Amy Poehler, Parks and Recreation

Amy Schumer, Inside Amy Schumer

Edie Falco, Nurse Jackie

Lily Tomlin, Grace and Frankie

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones

Jim Carter, Downton Abbey

Jonathan Banks, Better Call Saul

Alan Cumming, The Good Wife

Michael Kelly, House of Cards

Ben Mendelsohn, Bloodline

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

Ty Burrell, Modern Family

Keegan-Michael Key, Key & Peele

Adam Driver, Girls

Andre Braugher, Brooklyn Nine-Nine

Tony Hale, Veep

Tituss Burgess, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

Joanne Froggatt, Downton Abbey

Christina Hendricks, Mad Men

Emilia Clarke, Game of Thrones

Lena Headey, Game of Thrones

Uzo Aduba, Orange Is the New Black

Christine Baranski, The Good Wife

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

Niecy Nash, Getting On

Gaby Hoffmann, Transparent

Allison Janney, Mom

Julie Bowen, Modern Family

Mayim Bialik, The Big Bang Theory

Kate McKinnon, Saturday Night Live

Jane Krakowski, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Anna Chlumsky, Veep

Outstanding Limited Series

American Crime, ABC

American Horror Story: Freak Show, FX

The Honorable Woman, Sundance

Olive Kitteridge, HBO

Wolf Hall, PBS

 

Outstanding Television Movie

“Agatha Christie’s Poirot” Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case, Acorn

Bessie, HBO

Grace of Monaco, Lifetime

Hello Ladies: The Movie, HBO

Killing Jesus, National Geographic

Nightingale, HBO

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie

David Oyelowo, Nightingale

Richard Jenkins, Olive Kitteridge

Mark Rylance, Wolf Hall

Timothy Hutton, American Crime

Adrien Brody, Houdini

Ricky Gervais, Derek: The Final Chapter

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie

Frances McDormand, Olive Kitteridge

Jessica Lange, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Queen Latifah, Bessie

Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Honorable Woman

Felicity Huffman, American Crime

Emma Thompson, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street (Live From Lincoln Center)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie

Richard Cabral, American Crime

Denise O’Hare, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Finn Wittrock, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Michael Kenneth Williams, Bessie

Bill Murray, Olive Kitteridge

Damian Lewis, Wolf Hall

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie

Regina King, American Crime

Sarah Paulson, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Angela Bassett, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Mo’Nique, Bessie

Kathy Bates, American Horror Story: Freak Show

Zoe Kazan, Olive Kitteridge

Outstanding Variety Talk Series

The Colbert Report, Comedy Central

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, Comedy Central

Jimmy Kimmel Live!, ABC

Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, HBO

The Late Show With David Letterman, CBS

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, NBC

Outstanding Variety Sketch Series

Drunk History, Comedy Central

Inside Amy Schumer, Comedy Central

Key & Peele, Comedy Central

Portlandia, IFC

Saturday Night Live, NBC

 

Outstanding Reality Competition Series

The Amazing Race, CBS

Dancing With the Stars, ABC

Project Runway, Lifetime

So You Think You Can Dance, Fox

Top Chef, Bravo

The Voice, NBC

Outstanding Structured Reality Program

Antiques Roadshow, PBS

Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, Food Network

MythBusters, Discovery

Property Brothers, HGTV

Shark Tank, ABC

Undercover Boss, CBS

 

Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program

Alaska: The Last Frontier, Discovery

Deadliest Catch, Discovery

Intervention, A&E

Million Dollar Listing New York, Bravo

Naked & Afraid, Discovery Channel

Wahlburgers, A&E

Outstanding Reality Host

Jane Lynch, Hollywood Game Night

Tom Bergeron, Dancing With the Stars

Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn, Project Runway

Cat Deeley, So You Think You Can Dance

Anthony Bourdain, The Taste

Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series

Paul Giamatti, Inside Amy Schumer

Bill Hader, Saturday Night Live

Louis C.K., Saturday Night Live

Mel Brooks, The Comedians

Bradley Whitford, Transparent

Jon Hamm, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series

Gaby Hoffmann, Girls

Pamela Adlon, Louie

Elizabeth Banks, Modern Family

Joan Cusack, Shameless

Christine Baranski, The Big Bang Theory

Tina Fey, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series

F. Murray Abraham, Homeland

Reg E. Cathey, House of Cards

Beau Bridges, Masters of Sex

Pablo Schreiber, Orange Is the New Black

Alan Alda, The Blacklist

Michael J. Fox, The Good Wife

 

Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series

Diana Rigg, Game of Thrones

Rachel Brosnahan, House of Cards

Cicely Tyson, How to Get Away With Murder

Allison Janney, Masters of Sex

Khandi Alexander, Scandal

Margot Martindale, The Americans

Outstanding Variety Special

Bill Maher: Live From D.C., HBO

Louis C.K.: Live at the Comedy Store, LouisCK.net

Mel Brooks Live at the Geffen, HBO

The Kennedy Center Honors, CBS

The Saturday Night Live 40th Anniversary Special, NBC

Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga: Cheek To Cheek LIVE!, PBS

Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series

Louis C.K., Louie, “Sleepover”

Mike Judge, Silicon Valley, “Sand Hill Shuffle”

Phil Lord and Chris Miller, The Last Man on Earth, “Alive in Tucson (Pilot)”

Jill Soloway, Transparent, “Best New Girl”

Armando Iannucci, Veep, “Testimony”

 

Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series

David Crane and Jeffrey Klarik, Episodes, “Episode 409”

Louis C.K., Louie, “Bobbie’s House”

Alec Berg, Silicon Valley, “Two Days of the Condor”

Will Forte, The Last Man on Earth, “Alive in Tucson (Pilot)”

Jill Soloway, Transparent, “Pilot”

Simon Blackwell, Armando Iannucci and Tony Roche, Veep, “Election Night”

Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series

Tim Van Patten, Boardwalk Empire, “Eldorado”

Jeremy Podeswa, Game of Thrones, “Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken”

David Nutter, Game of Thrones, “Mother’s Mercy”

Lesli Linka Glatter, Homeland, “From A to B and Back Again”

Steven Soderbergh, The Knick, “Method and Madness”

Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series

Gordon Smith, Better Caul Saul, “Five-O”

David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, Game of Thrones, “Mother’s Mercy”

Semi Chellas and Matthew Weiner, Mad Men, “Lost Horizon”

Matthew Weiner, Mad Men, “Person to Person”

Joshua Brand, The Americans, “Do Mail Robots Dream of Electric Sheep?”

For all other award categories, visit Emmy.com.

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‘Abigail’: Bite Me Harder Tiny Dancer

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A gang of misfit kidnappers find their tiny target far more bloodthirsty than they bargained for! 

So, unfortunately, the trailers gave it away and let’s be real that’s why most of us are here, the knowledge that the kidnap victim Abigail (Alisha Weir), codenamed by the would-be kidnappers appropriately as ‘tiny dancer’, is in fact, a vampire. Not a spoiler, point of fact, one of the film’s actual great selling points. And the reactions from the misfit club when faced with a real actual f*cking vampire, range hilariously from the blunt “no such thing as vampires” all the way to, “Are we talking True Blood or Twilight rules or what?” all while covered in buckets and buckets of blood. 

Anyway, the gang manages to subdue and abscond with the aforementioned Abigail, in a pre-prepared duffle bag, like you do, and converge to a new location, a house oddly similar to the one she was just taken from. Welcomed and given codenames by a man who introduces himself as Lambert (Giancarlo Esposito), our misfit club is told to simply hold down the fort in this strange old house with the girl chained up in a room and one person to attend her, for twenty-four hours, and they’ll all get paid. 

As inevitable as the tides, the dopey druggie Dean (Angus Cloud) is the first to die, and we’re going to give that death-style points for inspiring terror right off the bat. The very controlling Frank (Dan Stevens, holy crap yes that is the guy from FXs Legion) is also of course the most suspicious – of everyone around him, sure, but also he himself is totes sus. We don’t learn terribly much about the musclebound tank who gets dubbed Peter (Kevin Durand), he’s your pretty typical little-brains-heart-of-gold muscle-for-hire any proper gang needs, right down to the bottle problem. Sammy (Kathryn Newton), well, even for being a purported hacker-type, she has, like, reality issues. Rickles (William Catlett), he’s arguably the most dangerous among them, ex-military and yet somehow here and involved in kidnapping for a few mills. Joey (Melissa Barrera) is our Final Girl, and though she has the inevitable problems in her recent past, she seems more capable of doing the hard thing and still somehow empathizing at the end of the day. Must be her burning desire to get back with her son. 

The fit hits the shan pretty quickly, and Abigail morphs from tiny dancer to tiny monster, though honestly, the way Abigail spoke the entire time in the film, if the ‘nappers had been paying close enough attention, would have been a solid clue. The performance from Alisha Weir as Abigail is incredible, as she literally dances a fine line between comedy, tragedy, and outright monstrosity. With a face full of makeup and the force of a tiny tornado to back it up, Weir brings to mind the great performances of the vampires in 30 Days of Night who saw the practicality in the need to trap their food, but also, play with it a bit first before feasting! Anything else would give away the absolute fun time that is Abigail, so you should go see it, out in theaters now!

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Scrubs Reunion: The Band Gets Back Together

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Fans of the beloved medical comedy series Scrubs were recently treated to a thrilling surprise when John C. McGinley, who portrayed the iconic Dr. Perry Cox, dropped a photo on Twitter hinting at a potential reunion project. The image, showing McGinley alongside his former co-stars, sparked a wave of excitement and speculation among fans who have been longing for more adventures with the beloved Sacred Heart Hospital staff.

While details about the reunion project are still scarce, the mere possibility of seeing the gang back together again has sent waves of nostalgia through fans who fondly remember the show’s original run from 2001 to 2010. Scrubs was not just a sitcom; it was a heartfelt exploration of friendship, love, and the chaotic world of medicine, all wrapped up in a quirky and often hilarious package.

At the heart of the show was the bromance between JD (played by Zach Braff) and Turk (played by Donald Faison), whose antics and deep bond served as the emotional anchor for the series. Their dynamic, along with the sage wisdom (and relentless sarcasm) of Dr. Cox, provided viewers with memorable moments that have stood the test of time.

As we eagerly await more news about the Scrubs reunion project, one thing is for sure: it’s time to dust off those old DVDs, rewatch our favorite episodes, and get ready to welcome back our favorite gang of doctors, nurses, and janitors for what promises to be a memorable reunion.

But Scrubs was more than just its main characters. The supporting cast, including the eccentric Janitor (played by Neil Flynn), the neurotic Elliot (played by Sarah Chalke), and the wise-cracking nurse Carla (played by Judy Reyes), each brought their own unique flavor to the show, creating a rich tapestry of characters that fans grew to love.

While the photo shared by McGinley has fueled speculation about what the reunion project might entail, whether it’s a one-off special, a new season, or something else entirely, one thing is certain: fans are eagerly awaiting any opportunity to dive back into the world of Sacred Heart Hospital.

In an age where reboots and revivals are commonplace, Scrubs stands out as a series that has the potential to recapture the magic that made it a fan favorite in the first place. With its blend of humor, heart, and unforgettable characters, a reunion project has the opportunity to not only satisfy longtime fans but also introduce a new generation to the joys of life at Sacred Heart.

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‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes’: Rebellion with a cause

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The story of the rise of Coriolanus Snow, from teenage Capital City pawn to rising Dictator of the Hunger Games! 

Apparently no one out here in post-apocalyptic Panem has heard of irony and so they name their children things like Coriolanus (Tom Blyth), Tigress, and further off in Hunger Games lore, after swamp plants like Katniss. Corio’s father was a legendary general and that is pretty much the only reason young Snow and his meager family of grandmother called Grandma’am (Fionnula Flanagan) and sister Tigress (Hunter Schafer) are tolerated here in the Capital City at all. 

Most of the snotty youngsters at the academy won’t let Snow forget how far his family has fallen, but he’s generally not concerned with them. What is concerning is the strong disapproval of the drugged-up Dean Casca Highbottom (Peter Dinklage) and the creepy attention of Dr. Volumnia Gaul (Viola Davis) as she lurks in the classroom sniffing out talent. The Dean feels very strongly the annual Hunger Games should end, while Gaul is violently adamant that not only do the Games continue, but that they get as much more attention as possible. And young Snow is stuck in the middle, when the yearly prize money normally awarded to the academy student with the best grades gets switched out for, you guessed it, the student that can make this years’ Hunger Games as entertaining as possible. 

Whilst the students are protesting this sudden change, the annual Reaping is about to commence, and big shock and surprise, Corio’s candidate from District 12 Lucy Grey Baird (Rachel Zegler) is chosen as a Tribute. This is where the film begins to really take off on musical wings, for as it turns out, Lucy Grey can sing. Boy, can that gal sing! She can sing, she can play guitar, she can work a crowd, she can calm things down, she can fire ‘em up too! And Corio, being no dummy himself, instantly plots ways to use his Tributes amazing voice to draw attention to her, and admittedly his own, plight! 

Though far too many people sneer at the idea, Corio takes his position as Mentor to his Tribute seriously enough to sneak onto the tram taking the Tributes to their habitat, which turns out to be a completely appropriate moniker, as this year the Tributes are held before the Hunger Games in a large zoo habitat so the weatherman ‘Lucky’ Flickerman (Jason Schwartzman), host of this years games, can MC the hell out of everything up close and personal! 

What happens at this years Hunger Games and the subsequent consequences to both Corio and Lucy Grey is actually only half the story, and the movie. Coriolanus has always had to be opportunistic, but learning to be absolutely ruthless when necessary under the tutelage of Dr. Gaul, who basically thinks it’s always best to be merciless, is an eye-opening education indeed.  Even after they’ve both been consigned to military service and his friend Sejanus Plinth (Josh Andres Rivera) decides to finally rebel, Corio and Sejanus continue to deceive each other and themselves, to accomplish their separate goals. Not even the love Corio swears he feels for Lucy Grey can save him, or them, from the adamant absolute necessity of the Hunger Games continuing. And after all that’s happened, Coriolanus Snow has gotten a terrific education in the best way to be the absolutely ruthless next Hunger Games advocate, and oh yeah, President of Panem. 

The movie does itself no favors by trying to stuff not one but two major storylines and a bunch of side storylines sadly introduced and then ignored, into the film. It would have been entirely possible to turn Ballads of Songbirds and Snakes into two different movies, separated between feathers and scales if you like, and do justice to the major storylines in both. Blyth gives a fine  performance as a young Coriolanus Snow, but the fact that President Snow is played by Donald Sutherland in all three of the Hunger Games films means Blyth has incredibly large shoes to fill. Rachel Zegler as Lucy Grey is absolute fire, and yes the actress did sing the songs in the film herself, including the Hunger Games franchise epic song, ‘The Hanging Tree’. Every time Lucy Grey opens her mouth and sheer soul-searing music comes out, it provides a distinct counterpoint to the soul-crushing ambition of Coriolanus Snow and further demonstrates the District and Caste separation Hunger Games is known for. And if, by the end of the film, Coriolanus Snow has come to agree that the Hunger Games must continue but perhaps under his own auspices, he has no one but himself to blame when another younger but still rebellious female blows it all up in his face! 

Choose rebellion or conformity for yourself in The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

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