Do Emmy Episode Submissions Still Matter? Kathy Bates, Quinta Brunson and Britt Lower Make the Case
In the lead drama actress category, frontrunner Kathy Bates — who made history as the oldest nominee ever — opted for the penultimate 17th episode of 'Matlock's' inaugural season from CBS. 'I Was That, Too' reveals the truth about Matty (Bates) to Olympia (Skye P. Marshall) and provides an absolute masterclass in acting from Bates, blowing the story wide open.
More from Variety
Fifth Season's Noah Greenshner on 'Severance,' Emmy Glory and the Studio's Creator-First Approach
Netflix, Prime Video and Beyoncé Lead Wins in 77th Emmy Juried Categories
A Salute to Legends Like Kathy Bates, Jean Smart and Harrison Ford on Finally Getting Their Emmy Flowers
Her closest competitor, Britt Lower, submitted the acclaimed 'Attila' episode from Apple TV+'s dystopian 'Severance' — where 'Innie' Helly R. learns that her 'Outie' Helena slept with Mark S. and decides to form her own memories. It's a showcase for Lower's dual performance as the mysterious dual versions of her character.
The hurdle for Bates is precedent. In the past 20 years, only two lead drama actress Emmys have been won as the sole nominee for their shows — Tatiana Maslany for 'Orphan Black' in 2016 and Patricia Arquette for 'Medium' in 2005. It's a steep climb for Bates' procedural drama.
Elsewhere, Bella Ramsey chose 'Convergence,' the season two finale from HBO's 'The Last of Us' — the harrowing finale episode that showcases depth and intensity for the 20-year-old performer. A very wise choice.
Three-time 'Hacks' winner Jean Smart submitted 'I Love LA' — the fourth episode showing the first taping of 'Late Night with Deborah Vance' and how it doesn't go according to plan. It's hard to bet against Smart at this point, looking to continue her historic run.
Previous winner Quinta Brunson went with 'Strike' from ABC's 'Abbott Elementary,' that highlights Janine's growth during a pivotal teacher protest. Notably, this episode isn't among the required six episodes submitted for the comedy series trophy, nor is it her own writing episode. Moreover, her Emmy-nominated supporting actresses — Janelle James and Sheryl Lee Ralph — also submitted different episodes entirely. Is this a thoughtful strategy to get TV Academy members to watch more episodes of the 22-episode season? Perhaps.
Ayo Edebiri's 'Legacy' from 'The Bear' presents a tightly wound character unraveling as her character Sydney, considers a position at a different restaurant.
When a show like 'The Bear' dominates multiple categories — as it did last year — it raises the question: Are voters casting ballots based on their full impression of the series, rather than comparing submissions side-by-side?
Streaming has fundamentally changed television consumption. Bingeable formats and serialized storytelling make it harder for voters to isolate an individual episode. Instead, performances are judged within the context of a season-long arc, making specific episode submissions feel almost arbitrary.
Still, for performers in highly competitive categories, the right episode can crystallize a character's transformation, emotional arc, or comic brilliance in a way that lingers in voters' minds.
So, does it still matter?
The short answer: yes — but maybe not as much as it used to. While episode selection remains an important strategic tool, momentum and overall series reception appear to be the strongest indicators of Emmy success.
Interestingly, the lead actress limited series category doesn't require performers to submit a specific episode. Instead, voters evaluate the performance across the entire series. However, that's not the case for supporting categories, which begs the question — why?
Your guess is as good as mine. The TV Academy is always chock full of weird, unexplainable rules.
The 77th Emmy Awards, hosted by comedian Nate Bargatze, will broadcast live on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on CBS. The ceremony will also stream live and on-demand through select Paramount+ packages.
Awards Circuit Predictions: Emmys
Current Emmy Predictions (as of Aug. 13, 2025)
Drama Series: 'Severance' (Apple TV+)
Comedy Series: 'The Studio' (Apple TV+)
Limited Series: 'Adolescence' (Netflix)
TV Movie: 'Rebel Ridge' (Netflix)
Lead Drama Actor: Noah Wyle, 'The Pitt' (HBO Max)
Lead Comedy Actor: Seth Rogen, 'The Studio' (Apple TV+)
Lead Actor Limited: Stephen Graham, 'Adolescence' (Netflix)
Lead Drama Actress: Kathy Bates, 'Matlock' (CBS)
Lead Comedy Actress: Jean Smart, 'Hacks' (HBO Max)
Lead Actress Limited: Michelle Williams, 'Dying for Sex' (FX)
Supporting Drama Actor: Tramell Tillman, 'Severance' (Apple TV+)
Supporting Comedy Actor: Harrison Ford, 'Shrinking' (Apple TV+)
Supporting Actor Limited: Owen Cooper, 'Adolescence' (Netflix)
Supporting Drama Actress: Carrie Coon, 'The White Lotus' (HBO Max)
Supporting Comedy Actress: Catherine O'Hara, 'The Studio' (Apple TV+)
Supporting Actress Limited: Erin Doherty, 'Adolescence' (Netflix)
Guest Drama Actor: Shawn Hatosy, 'The Pitt' (HBO Max)
Guest Drama Actress: Kaitlyn Dever, 'The Last of Us' (HBO Max)
Guest Comedy Actor: Bryan Cranston, 'The Studio' (Apple TV+)
Guest Comedy Actress: Julianne Nicholson, 'Hacks' (HBO Max)
Competition Program: 'The Traitors' (Peacock)
Structured Reality: 'Shark Tank' (ABC)
Unstructured Reality: 'Love on the Spectrum' (Netflix)
Talk Series: 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' (CBS)
Scripted Variety: 'Last Week Tonight with John Oliver' (HBO Max)
Variety Special Live: 'Beyoncé Bowl' (Netflix)
Variety Special Pre-Recorded: 'Adam Sandler: Love You' (Netflix)
Documentary Series: 'Social Studies' (FX)
Documentary Special: 'Pee-wee as Himself' (HBO Max)
Hosted Nonfiction: 'My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman' (Netflix)
Exceptional Merit: 'I Am Celine Dion' (Prime Video)
Directing Drama: Ben Stiller, 'Severance' (Apple TV+)
Directing Comedy: Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, 'The Studio' (Apple TV+)
Directing Limited: Philip Barantini, 'Adolescence' (Netflix)
Directing Documentary: Matt Wolf, 'Pee-wee as Himself' (HBO Max)
Directing Variety Special: Liz Patrick, 'SNL50: The Anniversary Special' (NBC)
Directing Variety Series: Paul Pennolino, 'Last Week Tonight with John Oliver' (HBO Max)
Directing Reality: Cian O'Clery, 'Love on the Spectrum' (Netflix)
Writing Drama: 'Severance' (Apple TV+) — 'Cold Harbor' by Dan Erickson
Writing Comedy: 'The Rehearsal' (HBO Max) – 'Pilot's Code' by Nathan Fielder
Writing Limited: 'Adolescence' (Netflix) – Series by Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham
Writing Variety Series: 'The Daily Show' (Comedy Central)
Writing Variety Special: 'Your Friend, Nate Bargatze' (Netflix)
Writing Nonfiction: 'Martha' (Netflix) by RJ Cutler
Game Show: 'Jeopardy' (ABC)
Game Show Host: Jimmy Kimmel, 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire' (ABC)
Reality Host: Alan Cumming, 'The Traitors' (Peacock)
Animated Program:'Arcane' (Netflix)
Best of Variety
Final Emmy Predictions: Documentary Programs — Wide‑Open Races Could Decide Which Networks Top the Nomination Leaderboard
Final Emmy Predictions: Supporting Actress (Comedy) — Could History Repeat With Another Barrier-Breaking Lineup?
Final Emmy Predictions: Supporting Actress (Drama) - Can Katherine LaNasa or Allison Janney Ride 'The White Lotus' Overload?
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Kevin Costner slams lawsuit as 'blatant lie'
After a stunt professional accused the Horizon: An American Saga - Chapter 2 director of breaching intimacy protocols, Costner filed a scathing response to her lawsuit this week. In May, lead stunt double Devyn LaBella filed a breach of contract lawsuit against Costner, 70, alleging he had failed to provide a safe working environment, and that she had been forced to perform a "violent" unscripted rape scene without the legally required notice or consent, and without a mandated intimacy coordinator present. This week, Costner's legal team filed a response in the LA Superior Court refuting LaBella's claims.


CNET
28 minutes ago
- CNET
This is the Ultimate '90s Cyberpunk Movie (No, It's Not 'The Matrix')
The cyberpunk movement has given us some of the best science fiction movies: Blade Runner, Ghost in the Shell and, yes, The Matrix. But there's one great tech noir flick that came out at the height of the cyberpunk craze -- and then all but disappeared. Maybe that's partly because of its title. I'd wanted to rewatch Strange Days for a long time, but I kept forgetting because, honestly, I couldn't remember what it was called. Then I finally rediscovered the sci-fi thriller on Hulu. After my most recent viewing, I can't stop thinking about it. Though Strange Days was released back in 1995, it looks and feels like it could've come out yesterday. It's one of those rare old movies that imagined the technology of virtual reality without turning it into a gimmick. Strange Days takes place in 1999 Los Angeles during the last 48 hours of the millennium. Lenny Nero, played by Ralph Fiennes, is a former cop who now peddles an illegal virtual reality experience called Playback. Nero's friend and bodyguard, Mace (Angela Basset), tries to keep him rooted in reality and away from trouble. Together, they work to track down a brutal rapist and murderer -- a man who uses VR Playback discs to record his crimes from his own point of view. The movie wasted no time dropping me into its jarring setting: The opening scene is an armed robbery filmed in first-person perspective, with the robber running from cops and jumping from one rooftop to another. A couple of scenes later, I saw tanks on the streets of LA and heard radio callers declaring that the world would end at the stroke of midnight on Jan. 1, 2000. Strange Days reminds me of the best Black Mirror episodes -- both deeply disturbing and uncomfortably close to home. Director Kathryn Bigelow was influenced by the 1992 LA riots and incorporated those elements of racial tension and police violence into her work. The result is a movie that's sometimes difficult to watch but impossible to look away from. At the same time, Strange Days is grounded by emotion. Nero (Fiennes) spends a good portion of the movie reliving memories of his failed relationship with the singer Faith (played by actress-turned-rocker Juliette Lewis). Lying in bed while he plays back footage of happier days, he can trick himself into believing he's roller skating with Faith again -- until the disc stops spinning and he opens his eyes, back in the lonely present day. "This is not 'like TV only better,'" says Nero, as he introduces the VR Playback tech to one of his clients. "This is life." But Bassett's character, Mace, believes otherwise, at one point confronting Nero over his attachment to his "used emotions." "This is your life!" says Mace. "Right here! Right now! It's real time, you hear me? Real time, time to get real, not Playback!" As I watched Strange Days in 2025, I couldn't help thinking of the virtual reality devices that exist today. VR headsets like the Meta Quest 3 and Google's upcoming AR glasses are bringing us closer than ever to the Playback tech in the film. And the immersive spatial videos for the Apple Vision Pro can make you feel like you're really reliving a three-dimensional recorded memory. As I considered the similarities between our current tech and Strange Days' Playback discs, I wondered if the future wants to be haunted by the past. Despite being 30 years old, Strange Days' special effects hold up incredibly well. Where other 1995 sci-fi flicks like Hackers and Johnny Mnemonic experimented with early computer-generated imagery, Strange Days went for a more practical approach: Characters shift in and out of the Playback footage with a simple analog distortion effect, just like you'd find while watching home videos on VHS tapes. The point-of-view shots were carefully choreographed, and the resulting footage looks like you're viewing it through the recorder's eyes. Strange Days also features standout musical acts. Juliette Lewis, in character as Faith, belts out two PJ Harvey tracks in on-screen performances that recall the best of '90s grunge. Rapper Jeriko One (played by Glenn Plummer) delivers biting social commentary in his music video. And contemporary artists Aphex Twin, Deee-Lite and Skunk Anansie perform during the movie's bombastic final act, a New Year's Eve rave in downtown LA. (It was a real-life concert with 10,000 attendees.) Strange Days is both a thrilling action movie and a mind-bending exploration of technology and memory. I'm surprised it was a box-office flop in 1995, and I wish it had received the recognition it deserved then. Still, I'm glad this sci-fi masterpiece is available to stream today. Though Strange Days isn't the easiest title to remember, the movie itself is unforgettable.


CNET
28 minutes ago
- CNET
Every Piece of Pixel Hardware Announced at Made by Google 2025
Even though the Pixel 10 leaks and rumors felt as if they arrived in a steady firehose before today's Made by Google event -- compelling the company to release a teaser video pre-announcing the new phone's existence a month ago -- Google still delivered details it somehow managed to keep private until it was ready to share. And that delivery was refreshingly fun for a tech event. The Tonight Show host Jimmy Kimmel led the proceedings in a very late-night talk show format, bringing on several special guests from media, sports and yes, Google's own experts to show off the products and features they've been working on for today's announcements. Watch this: Everything Announced at Made by Google 2025 in 7 Minutes 06:58 Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro XL are real Surprise, Google announced new phones! OK, this was the least surprising part of the event, but it still feels good to finally know what exists and when it's coming. Preorders for the Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro XL begin today and will be in stores and shipping starting August 28. Joseph Maldonado/CNET Pixel 10 Pro Fold opens the next chapter of foldables Folding phones so far have shared an Achilles Hinge: small particulates like sand can get inside the case and really mess things up. The Pixel 10 Pro Fold is one of the first to have an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance, meaning you can take it to the beach. Pixel Watch 4 talks to Gemini and is your new health coach The Pixel Watch 4 includes new fitness options like real-time guidance while exercising. And if you forgot to start a workout, the watch (with AI help) can detect the activity in the background and remind you of it later, giving you credit for the effort you made. It's also the only smartwatch that can detect a loss of pulse and call emergency services automatically. The Pixel Watch 4 has a familiar design with an upgraded domed screen that's 50% brighter than the Pixel Watch 3, with a 3,000-nit peak. Joseph Maldonado/CNET Pixel Buds 2a are more affordable earbuds Joining the Pixel Buds 2 Pro in the market are Pixel Buds 2a, an affordable ($130) pair of wireless earbuds that feature active noise cancellation, a smaller and lighter for all, and a twist-to-adjust stabilizer feature for setting a comfortable fit. Joseph Maldonado/CNET Pixel Buds Pro 2 owners will see new features Coming in a software update next month, Pixel Buds Pro 2 owners will be able to answer calls or send them to voicemail with a nod or shake of the head. You'll be able to talk to Gemini live in noisy locations, and benefit from adaptive audio that applies noise cancellation while letting important sounds come through. At the other end, a new feature will protect your hearing from very loud sounds. Magic Cue is a Gemini assistant that pulls data from your correspondence In the rollout of all the various AI technologies in the industry, the current stretch goal is "agentic" interactions with software: Having an AI that knows all sorts of details about you and can act to get the important stuff in front of you when needed. (And do it in a privacy-first way, one would hope.) Magic Cue is Google's implementation. It's a new Gemini-based feature that can look through your earlier messages, emails and photos to pull details about things like restaurant reservations and flight times. Magic Cue runs on the Pixel device itself, so sensitive data stays private and not shared to the cloud. The Pixel 10 Pro and 10 Pro XL can zoom to 100x with AI help Pro Res Zoom on the Pixel 10 Pro phones pushes zooming far beyond what would seem to be possible with typical small cameras. Usually when you zoom beyond the optical limits of the cameras, details get fuzzy as the software upscales the image. With Pro Res Zoom, when you go beyond 30x zoom, it uses generative AI to build a sharper version. CNET's Andrew Lanxon got both impressive and head-scratching results while making photos in Paris using the Pixel 10 Pro XL. The original zoomed image (left) and the Pro Res Zoom version (right). Andrew Lanxon/CNET At 100x zoom, the Pro Res Zoom feature's generative AI turned the plane (left) into an odd bundle of sticks (right). Andrew Lanxon/CNET Camera Coach uses AI to encourage better photos Smartphone cameras have employed AI for several years, such as identifying subjects in order to blur the background for Portrait modes or quickly snapping several shots at multiple exposures and blending them together to create well-balanced lighting throughout. Now Google is using AI to help you take better photos. Camera Coach is a new feature in the Pixel Camera app that looks at the scene in front of the lens and generates multiple suggestions for how to improve the photo before it's captured. To show this off, podcaster Alex Cooper brought Fallon out to be her model and sat him down on a couch. When she activated the feature, Camera Coach suggested that she move the camera closer to the subject, position his head in the upper portion of the frame, lower the camera to eye level and turn on Portrait mode. "To all the girls that are watching, I personally know how hard it is to train your boyfriend or your husband to get that perfect shot," said Cooper. "And now Camera Coach can just train all the boys for us." The Camera Coach feature helped better frame Jimmy Fallon for a portrait photo. Google/Screenshot by Viva Tung/CNET Pixel 10 supports Qi2 magnetic charging The Qi2 spec includes not just faster charging but also an array of magnets on the back for connecting to accessories. Sound familiar? The presenters mentioned Apple's MagSafe system, then paused with the realization that they probably shouldn't have name-checked it during the Google event. On the Pixel 10 phones, it's called Pixelsnap and should work with accessories made for Apple's ecosystem too. Pixel 10 will be available in Mexico In an impressive segment demonstrating Gemini live translation during a phone call, musician Karen Polinesia, who speaks Spanish, announced that for the first time, the Pixel 10 will be available for sale in Mexico. This article is being updated; stay tuned for more.