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Jim Parsons, Conan O'Brien & four other Emmy nods we like
Every year, fans hope their brilliant-but-struggling show gets some Emmy love, and every year Emmy instead calls out Charlie Sheen's name for his gritty, complex work on Two and a Half Men. Sigh.
But not this year. Maybe voters had some free time to actually turn on the TV, because there's a fresh new energy to the Emmy nominations. Our favorites ...
1. Houston native Jim Parsons manages to be laugh-out loud funny as Sheldon Cooper on The Big Bang Theory, even when he's not doing anything. It's so impressive he'd be our favorite for Best Actor in a Comedy even if he didn't still swing by H-town once in a while.
2. Fans of Friday Night Lights have long wondered why the beautifully-shot and pitch-perfect emotional series has never caught on with more viewers or Emmy voters — with the departure of The Wire and Lost, it rivals Mad Men for best drama on TV. After six long years in the desert, it feels great to have the actors at the heart of the show — Kyle Chandler as Coach Taylor and Connie Britton as his wife and the principal of the high school — get nods for Best Actor and Best Actress in a Drama.
3. Zero nominations for Jay Leno. Zero nominations for Dave Letterman. One nod for the zany, short-lived The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien for Best Variety, Music or Comedy Series. The Emmy voters have spoken and they are on Team Coco.
4. How does one handle a consistently excellent ensemble comedy like Modern Family? Easy: Nominate everyone for Best Supporting Actor or Actress. We'll give the edge to Sofia Vergara's fiesty Gloria over Julie Bowen's repressed Claire and pick Eric Stonestreet as Cameron over Jesse Tyler Ferguson (Mitchell) and Ty Burrell (Phil). However ...
5. The Best Supporting Actor and Actress categories are stuffed with so many deserving nominees, we almost don't know what to do. How I Met Your Mother's Neil Patrick Harris should get a nod just for being awesome, and if Jane Lynch doesn't take home a statue for her portrayal of Sue Sylvester on Glee then we may have to stage an Emmy boycott.
In drama we hope the talented former secretaries of Mad Men, Christina Hendricks and Elisabeth Moss, don't split the vote (though The Good Wife's Archie Panjabi is also an excellent choice), just as we imagine Mad Men's John Slattery could triumph with Lost antiheroes Michael Emerson and Terry O'Quinn facing off.
6. With several nominees from the major categories doing double duty with Guest Actor or Actress nods, there could be some surprising shakedowns. Jon Hamm, Jane Lynch, Christine Baranski, Tina Fey and Neil Patrick Harris could all go home with trophies for guest appearances rather than for their day jobs. But if the Internet has taught us anything, it is to never underestimate the appeal of Betty White.