Judge Judy’s granddaughter is helping her understand Gen Z

It’s the court of ‘ma — grandma.

Sarah Rose, the 26-year-old granddaughter of Judge Judy Sheindlin, is taking on a bigger role on her famous granny’s TV show, “Judy Justice.”

“I’m another truth meter – not that she needs it,” Rose told The Post. 

The program’s third season premieres Monday on Amazon Freevee and Prime Video, and it finds Rose, a newly minted lawyer, clerking for 81-year-old Sheindlin and helping her navigate emoji evidence and Zillenial slang, such as “love bombing.”

“Young people might lose interest in her show, or her as a judge, if she’s unable to relate to or understand them,” Rose said.

“The underlying nuances of emojis have been a fun one. She has a really hard time with the laughing-crying face emoji – I try to explain to her that it means someone said something funny, that they’re not crying,” she continued. “She’s like ‘okay whatever.’ I’ve gotten her to use a few emojis in her off time now.” 

Sarah Rose, the 26-year-old granddaughter of Judge Judy Sheindlin, is taking on a bigger role on this season of “Judy Justice.” Satin camisole by Vince $195; Azzurra tweed double breasted blazer by French Connection $94.80; Azzurra tweed mini skirt by French Connection $73.50; Nudiscurve ankle strap sandal by Stuart Weitzman $475; rings by David Yurman (price available upon request); necklace by Monica Rich Kosann (price available upon request) Roger Kisby for NY Post

At one point in the new season, Rose eloquently explains to Sheindlin what “love bombing” is after a plaintiff uses the term to describe her narcissistic ex’s behavior. “[It’s] when your partner shows you affection or gifts in the first two or three weeks [but has ulterior motives],” she says.

Sheindlin is thrilled to be working with Rose.

“This smart, sassy, young woman is the perfect law clerk for me. That she is ‘easy on the eyes’ is a bonus,” she told The Post. “Sarah helps make the ‘Judy Justice’ adventure even more special.”

Rose got her diploma from New York Law School in 2022, the third generation in her family to do so.

Sheindlin told The Post her granddaughter is “the perfect law clerk for me.” James Dimmock/Amazon Freevee

“One of my most cherished moments was handing Sarah her law degree,” Sheindlin said of Rose graduating from her alma mater.

Growing up, it wasn’t uncommon to hear the words “Double Jeopardy,” at the dinner table. Rose’s father and Sheindlin’s son is Adam Levy, the former Putnam County District Attorney.

“A cross examination was basically my whole upbringing. My childhood was one big cross examination,” Rose said. “Now that I know how to do it back, they don’t like it as much.”

As a kid, she recalls seeing her grandmother and her primetime show “Judge Judy” on practically every small screen she encountered.

Growing up, Sarah Rose remembers seeing her grandmother’s hit courtroom show “Judge Judy” on TVs everywhere.
When Sarah Rose was around age 10, she recalls meeting Miley Cyrus when her grandmother organized a meet and greet. “I remember meeting Miley Cyrus in the height of her ‘Hannah Montana’ era. They were filming on the same set or close by that day and my grandmother mentioned in passing that I was a big fan and if she could stop by the dressing room to do a quick picture,” Rose recalled.  ©Disney Channel/courtesy Everett / Everett Collection

“We’d be at the nail salon, or in the doctor’s office and she’d be on the TV. You’d walk into a deli and you get a sandwich and you see her on TV. When we saw her out in public [on TV] it was a reminder that maybe we owed her a call or a visit,” Rose said. 

Despite Sheindlin’s stardom, Rose said she was “well sheltered” from Hollywood. She didn’t understand the reach of her grandmother’s fame until she was 10 years old.

“I remember meeting Miley Cyrus in the height of her ‘Hannah Montana’ era. They were filming on the same set or close by that day and my grandmother mentioned in passing that I was a big fan and if she could stop by the dressing room to do a quick picture,” Rose recalled. 

“For me that was a big deal. The fact that Miley Cyrus was willing to meet my grandmother to do a little meet and greet for me was like, ‘oh my gosh. My grandmother must be a big deal.’ To us, she was just nana.”

Sarah Rose is helping her grandmother appeal to a younger audience — from explaining the nuances of emojis to Zillennial slang like “love bombing.” “Young people might lose interest in her show, or her as a judge, if she’s unable to relate to or understand them,” Rose said. Sally dress by Hobbs London $192; pumps by Michael Kors $125; ring by David Yurman (price available upon request); necklace by Monica Rich Kosann (price available upon request) Roger Kisby for NY Post

At its height, “Judge Judy,” which premiered in 1996, was the No. 1 program in first-run syndication, averaging 10 million daily viewers.

In 2015, Sheindlin was named the longest-serving judge in courtroom programming history, setting the Guinness World Record.

In 2019, she won the Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement.

The award show’s former executive producer David Michaels praised her for “propelling the genre to new heights.”

Sheindlin left daytime TV for streaming in 2021, joining Amazon’s ad-backed Freevee to star in “Judy Justice” where it became the No. 1 original show on the platform.

In 2023, she debuted another show, “Tribunal Justice,” which features son Levy.

“If you told me when I was the D.A. of Putnam County and Sarah was growing up that we both would be on TV one day, I would have thought you were nuts,” Levy, who is now one of three judges on “Tribunal Justice,” told The Post. “Mom is a force of nature.”

Sheindlin left daytime TV for streaming in 2021, joining Amazon’s ad-backed Freevee to star in “Judy Justice” where it became the No. 1 original show on the platform. In 2023, she debuted another show, “Tribunal Justice,” which features son Adam Levy. Sarah Rose is pictured to the left of Sheindlin here. Michael Becker/Amazon Freevee

Rose relishes her grandmother’s mentorship, particularly how unfiltered she is. 

“[She says] what needs to be said without being fearful of cancel culture. We’re losing that today,” the proud granddaughter said. “People are so scared of the perception of themselves as opposed to the bigger picture. She’s more of a big picture gal.”

Sheindlin, who earlier this month endorsed Nikki Haley for president, has helped Rose to be more outspoken and less worried about what some might think of her.

Rose relishes mentorship from Sheindlin, particular her tell-it-like-it-is persona she says has rubbed off on her in the court room. “I’m a little bit quick-tongued, then that’s ok.” Sally dress by Hobbs London $192; pumps by Michael Kors $125; ring by David Yurman (price available upon request); necklace by Monica Rich Kosann (price available upon request) Roger Kisby for NY Post
“Judy Justice” premieres Monday on Amazon Freevee and Prime Video, and it finds Rose, a newly minted lawyer, clerking for 81-year-old Sheindlin. Here, Sarah Rose is pictured with court stenographer Whitney Kumar and bailiff Kevin Rasco. Michael Becker/IMDb TV

“Sometimes I’ll have a little one liner or quick thing like, ‘I hated that guy. He was such a jerk. He had no idea what he was even talking about and [grandma is] like, ‘You should say that because that’s probably what a lot of people are thinking,” she said. “If that means I have to give up a little bit about how people view me, and I’m a little bit quick-tongued, then that’s ok.”

Rose passed the bar exam in October 2022, the same day that Sheindlin turned 80.

“I got in my car in my pajamas with my slippers on, drove up the road to my grandmother’s and ran into her house and told her I passed. She had planned a huge 80th birthday celebration at her house. It felt like a great celebration of the passing,” she said.

Despite her grandmother’s fame, Sarah Rose says she was “well sheltered” from Hollywood growing up in Putnam County, New York. “To us, she was just nana,” she told The Post.

While she can’t disclose the new cases featured on Season 3, she helps choose the ones with the most impact.

“I’m really looking for those cases where you can tell the plaintiffs are at their wits end – they’ve tried so hard – whether that’s [paying] rent, a car they made payments on and the person pulled the rug out form under them and never gave them the title. Things like that where you can tell someone was so clearly wronged and was trying to do the right thing,” she said.

“I’m really looking for the ones where people are trying to get the help that they deserve.”

Outside the courtroom, Rose said seeing fans flock to her grandmother on the street never gets old.

Sarah Rose passed the bar exam in October 2022, the same day that Sheindlin turned 80. Courtesy of Sarah Rose

“I’ve been with her when women – young or older – have said, ‘You are the reason I’m in law school. I wrote my entire entrance essay on you and why you inspired me to go to law school,” she said.

“I think that’s huge.”

Photographer: Roger Kisby; Stylist: Star Burleigh; Stylist Assistant: Amana-Re Brown; Makeup: Michelle Carriker; Hair: Patricia Lansingh; Location: The Kingsley House, LA

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Emmy Awards Full Winners’ List: The Bear and Succession Take Home Most Wins

The best of television was celebrated in California’s lavish Peacock Theatre on January 15 during the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards. The glitzy evening dished out trophies in various categories in acting, writing, direction, and overall best shows on TV, among others. FX’s comedy-drama The Bear — about a young fine-dining chef who leaves behind his illustrious New York career and comes home to Chicago to run his family sandwich shop — won the maximum number of awards including Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series and Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series.

Jesse Armstrong’s satirical comedy-drama Succession — which revolves around a global media and entertainment conglomerate owned by the Roy Family — enjoyed the highest number of nominations in multiple categories. The series is now also the first ever to receive three nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.

In terms of limited series, Korean director Lee Sung Jin’s Beef emerged as an undisputed winner. There was something for video game enthusiasts as well! HBO’s Last of Us became the first live-action video game adaptation to be nominated in major Emmy categories.

Other winning programmes include Abbott Elementary, The White Lotus, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

Repeating the roaring success at the Critics’ Choice Awards, HBO/Max dominated the nominations at the Emmys as well and became the first network with four Outstanding Drama Series nominees since NBC at the 1992 ceremony.

Here is the complete list of all the winners at the 75th edition of Primetime Emmy Awards.

Series Awards

Outstanding Comedy Series

The Bear – WINNER

Abbott Elementary

Barry

Jury Duty

Only Murders in the Building

Ted Lasso

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Wednesday

Outstanding Drama Series

Succession – WINNER

Andor

Better Call Saul

House of the Dragon

The Crown

The Last of Us

The White Lotus

Yellowjackets

Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series

Beef – WINNER

Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story

Daisy Jones & the Six

Fleishman Is in Trouble

Obi-Wan Kenobi

Outstanding Reality Competition Program

RuPaul’s Drag Race – WINNER

Survivor

The Amazing Race

The Voice

Top Chef

Outstanding Talk Series

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah – WINNER

Jimmy Kimmel Live!

Late Night with Seth Meyers

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

The Problem with Jon Stewart

Outstanding Scripted Variety Series

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver – WINNER

A Black Lady Sketch Show

Saturday Night Live

Outstanding Variety Special

Elton John Live: Farewell from Dodger Stadium – WINNER

75th Annual Tony Awards

Chris Rock: Selective Outrage

The Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show Starring Rihanna

The Oscars

Acting Awards

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series

Jeremy Allen White, The Bear – WINNER

Bill Hader, Barry

Jason Segel, Shrinking

Jason Sudeikis, Ted Lasso

Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series

Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary – WINNER

Christina Applegate, Dead to Me

Jenna Ortega, Wednesday

Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face

Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

Kieran Culkin, Succession – WINNER

Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul

Brian Cox, Succession

Jeff Bridges, The Old Man

Jeremy Strong, Succession

Pedro Pascal, The Last of Us

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

Sarah Snook, Succession – WINNER

Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us

Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale

Keri Russell, The Diplomat

Melanie Lynskey, Yellowjacket

Sharon Horgan, Bad Sisters

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Steven Yeun, Beef – WINNER

Daniel Radcliffe, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

Evan Peters, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story

Kumail Nanjiani, Welcome to Chippendales

Michael Shannon, George & Tammy

Taron Egerton, Black Bird

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Ali Wong, Beef – WINNER

Dominique Fishback, Swarm

Jessica Chastain, George & Tammy

Kathryn Hahn, Tiny Beautiful Things

Lizzy Caplan, Fleishman Is in Trouble

Riley Keough, Daisy Jones & the Six

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear – WINNER

Anthony Carrigan, Barry

Brett Goldstein, Ted Lasso

Henry Winkler, Barry

James Marsden, Jury Duty

Phil Dunster, Ted Lasso

Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

Ayo Edebiri, The Bear – WINNER

Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso

Janelle James, Abbott Elementary

Jessica Williams, Shrinking

Juno Temple, Ted Lasso

Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

Matthew Macfadyen, Succession – WINNER

Alan Ruck, Succession

Alexander Skarsgård, Succession

F. Murray Abraham, The White Lotus

Michael Imperioli, The White Lotus

Nicholas Braun, Succession

Theo James, The White Lotus

Will Sharpe, The White Lotus

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus – WINNER

Aubrey Plaza, The White Lotus

Elizabeth Debicki, The Crown

J. Smith-Cameron, Succession

Meghann Fahy, The White Lotus

Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul

Sabrina Impacciatore, The White Lotus

Simona Tabasco, The White Lotus

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Paul Walter Hauser, Black Bird – WINNER

Jesse Plemons, Love & Death

Joseph Lee, Beef

Murray Bartlett, Welcome to Chippendales

Ray Liotta, Black Bird

Richard Jenkins, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story

Young Mazino, Beef

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Niecy Nash-Betts, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story – WINNER

Annaleigh Ashford, Welcome to Chippendales

Camila Morrone, Daisy Jones & the Six

Claire Danes, Fleishman Is in Trouble

Juliette Lewis, Welcome to Chippendales

Maria Bello, Beef

Merritt Wever, Tiny Beautiful Things

Directing Awards

Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series

The Bear: “Review” – Christopher Storer – WINNER

Barry: “wow” – Bill Hader

Ted Lasso: “So Long, Farewell” – Declan Lowney

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: “Four Minutes” – Amy Sherman-Palladino

The Ms. Pat Show: “Don’t Touch My Hair” – Mary Lou Belli

Wednesday: “Wednesday’s Child Is Full of Woe” – Tim Burton

Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series

Succession: “Connor’s Wedding” – Mark Mylod – WINNER

Andor: “Rix Road” – Benjamin Caron

Bad Sisters: “The Prick” – Dearbhla Walsh

Succession: “America Decides” – Andrij Parekh

Succession: “Living+” – Lorene Scafaria

The Last of Us: “Long, Long Time” – Peter Hoar

The White Lotus: “Arrivederci” – Mike White

Outstanding Directing for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Beef: “Figures of Light” – Lee Sung Jin – WINNER

Beef: “The Great Fabricator” – Jake Schreier

Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: “Bad Meat” – Carl Franklin

Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story: “Silenced” – Paris Barclay

Fleishman Is in Trouble: “Me-Time” – Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris

Prey – Dan Trachtenberg

Writing Awards

Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series

The Bear: “System” – Christopher Storer – WINNER

Barry: “wow” – Bill Hader

Jury Duty: “Ineffective Assistance” – Mekki Leeper

Only Murders in the Building: “I Know Who Did It” – John Hoffman, Matteo Borghese, and Rob Turbovsky

Ted Lasso: “So Long, Farewell” – Brendan Hunt, Joe Kelly, and Jason Sudeikis

The Other Two: “Cary & Brooke Go to an AIDS Play” – Chris Kelly and Sarah Schneider

Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series

Succession: “Connor’s Wedding” – Jesse Armstrong – WINNER

Andor: “One Way Out” – Beau Willimon

Bad Sisters: “The Prick” – Sharon Horgan, Dave Finkel, and Brett Baer

Better Call Saul: “Point and Shoot” – Gordon Smith

Better Call Saul: “Saul Gone” – Peter Gould

The Last of Us: “Long, Long Time” – Craig Mazin

The White Lotus: “Arrivederci” – Mike White

Outstanding Writing for a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Beef: “The Birds Don’t Sing, They Screech in Pain” – Lee Sung Jin – WINNER

Fire Island – Joel Kim Booster

Fleishman Is in Trouble: “Me-Time” – Taffy Brodesser-Akner

Prey – Patrick Aison and Dan Trachtenberg

Swarm: “Stung” – Janine Nabers and Donald Glover

Weird: The Al Yankovic Story – Al Yankovic and Eric Appel

Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver – WINNER

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Saturday Night Live

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

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Emmy Awards 2023 Delayed to January Due to Hollywood Actors and Writers Strikes

Emmy Awards 2023 have been officially delayed to next year. After months of dialogue between the Television Academy and new broadcaster Fox, the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards will now be held on January 16 at 6:30am IST in India/ January 15 at 5pm PT in the US. This marks the first time in two decades that the Emmys are being postponed — the first being in 2001, after the September 11 attacks. This latest delay is owing to the ongoing actors’ and writers’ strikes in Hollywood, which have halted several major film and TV productions. Nominees were revealed back in July, with Succession leading the pack, and a host will be decided upon once the strikes end.

Without the actors/ nominees, the awards show would look rather empty, and with no writers pulling the strings in the background with a proper script or jokes, the show was headed with no vision. As per The Hollywood Reporter, there was a scenario in which the show would’ve been telecasted without writers, but the lack of star power caused the delay unavoidable. You see, members of SAG-AFTRA (Hollywood actors union) are not allowed to star in or promote any film or TV projects they’re in, in addition to accepting awards for struck work until the union meets a fair agreement with major studios. It’s also the reason why several big-budget movies — boasting starry cast lineups — are getting delayed.

The 2023 Emmys were originally slated for September and now see a nearly four-month delay, during which the studios hope the strikes will subside. However, the new date also places it in an already busy awards season. As usual, the telecast also includes the Creative Emmys, which rewards excellence in technical elements in television and some other minor acts — a two-night event scheduled for January 6 and January 7. However, the second night coincides with the Golden Globe 2024 event, which celebrates both movies and TV series, essentially dampening the achievements of the already underappreciated creative department. What I’m trying to say is that all eyes would be on the bigger awards show.

Not to mention, there’s also the 2024 Critics Choice Awards on January 14 (Jan 15 for India), which falls exactly a day before the newly-set date for the Primetime Emmy Awards. So, these are back-to-back awards shows, with the former featuring television alongside film categories. For now, the other award broadcasters aren’t confirmed to be shuffling dates around. As noted before, the Emmy nominees have already been decided and the final voting timeline for Academy members stays the same — August 17–28. Even SAG-AFTRA and the DGA (Directors Guild of America) have their award ceremonies set for the month of February, in the run-up to the Oscars season.

It’s not clear whether the writers’ and actors’ union will be able to reach a fair agreement by January since a Deadline report from July revealed the statement made by an unnamed executive. “The endgame is to allow things to drag on until union members start losing their apartments and losing their houses,” they said. Another person deemed it a ‘cruel but necessary evil.’

The 75th annual Emmys are set to stream live from the Peacock Theater, Los Angeles, on early Tuesday, January 16 at 6:30am IST/ January 15 at 5pm PT in the US. In India, it will be available to stream on Lionsgate Play.


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‘Murphy Brown’ actor Charles Kimbrough dies at 86

Tony and Emmy-nominated actor Charles Kimbrough has died at the age of 86.

The beloved actor died in Culver City in California on January 11, which was confirmed by his son, Jim Kimbrough, according to Deadline.

Kimbrough was known for playing “uptight” characters such as Harry in Stephen Sondheim’s musical “Company” which would earn him a Tony nomination for Best Featured Actor.

The actor rocketed into the mainstream in 1988 when he starred in the CBS sitcom “Murphy Brown” as news anchor Jim Dial. Kimbrough stayed with the show for 10 seasons and returned for three episodes when the show was rebooted in 2018.

The actor was nominated for a 1990 Emmy award for his role.


The former actor rocketed into the mainstream in 1988 when he starred in the CBS sitcom “Murphy Brown” as news anchor Jim Dial.
CBS via Getty Images

Kimbrough was known for playing “uptight” characters such as Harry in Stephen Sondheim’s musical “Company” which would earn him a Tony nomination for Best Featured Actor.
CBS via Getty Images

Kimbrough also appeared as the gargoyle named Victor in Disney’s 1996 animated adaptation of “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame” and reprised his role for the films’ sequel and several video game adaptations.

The cause of death has not been announced. No funeral plans have been announced.

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Emmy Winners 2022: The White Lotus Leads the Pack With 5 Major Awards, Ted Lasso in Close Second

The White Lotus won big at the 74th Primetime Emmy Awards, held early Tuesday. The Mike White-helmed comedy-drama anthology netted five awards in HBO’s favour, out of the 20 nominations it earned for the main event. The series bagged trophies for best anthology series, best supporting actor (Murray Bartlett), best supporting actress (Jennifer Coolidge), and individual honours for best directing and best writing in a limited series (Mike White). The upbeat series got renewed for season 2 back in August, and so it does not qualify for the latter two prizes in the next awards season.

Following in close second is the Jason Sudeikis-led sports comedy, Ted Lasso, which tied for 20 nominations with the aforementioned The White Lotus. The AppleTV+ show scored four awards, including a second straight Outstanding Comedy Series, alongside acting awards for Sudeikis and Brett Goldstein. The series also bagged an award for best directing in a comedy series. On the other hand, Succession, a clear Emmy favourite with 25 nominations, claimed trophies in three categories: best drama series (second time), best supporting actor (Matthew Macfayden), and best writing (Jesse Armstrong).

If you consider the Creative Arts Emmys — held last week — The White Lotus has managed to win 10 awards, helping HBO/ HBO Max pick up 38 awards from the entire show. The studio took home 19 trophies last year, marking double the achievement this year. Other notable moments include Zendaya winning best actress for Euphoria, making her the youngest actress to ever win two Emmys in the category — first award in 2020. On the other end, Squid Game’s Lee Jung-jae became the first Asian actor to win lead actor in a drama series, for Netflix. The studio came second with 26 total Emmys — far down from the 46 they picked up last year, thanks to The Crown and the Anya Taylor-Joy-led chess miniseries, The Queen’s Gambit.

Emmys winners 2022

Best Drama Series

Better Call Saul
Euphoria
Ozark
Severance
Squid Game
Stranger Things
Succession — WINNER
Yellowjackets

Best Actress in a Drama Series

Jodie Comer, Killing Eve
Laura Linney, Ozark
Melanie Lynskey, Yellowjackets
Sandra Oh, Killing Eve
Reese Witherspoon, The Morning Show
Zendaya, Euphoria — WINNER

Best Actor in a Drama Series

Jason Bateman, Ozark
Brian Cox, Succession
Lee Jung-jae, Squid Game — WINNER
Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul
Adam Scott, Severance
Jeremy Strong, Succession

Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

Patricia Arquette, Severance
Julia Garner, Ozark — WINNER
Jung Ho-yeon, Squid Game
Christina Ricci, Yellowjackets
Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul
J. Smith-Cameron, Succession
Sarah Snook, Succession
Sydney Sweeney, Euphoria

Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

Nicholas Braun, Succession
Billy Crudup , The Morning Show
Kieran Culkin, Succession
Park Hae-soo, Squid Game
Matthew Macfadyen, Succession — WINNER
John Turturro, Severance
Christopher Walken, Severance
Oh Yeong-soo, Squid Game

Best Comedy Series

Abbott Elementary
Barry
Curb Your Enthusiasm
Hacks
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Only Murders in the Building
Ted Lasso — WINNER
What We Do in the Shadows

Best Actress in a Comedy Series

Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
Kaley Cuoco, The Flight Attendant
Elle Fanning, The Great
Issa Rae, Insecure
Jean Smart, Hacks — WINNER

Best Actor in a Comedy Series

Donald Glover, Atlanta
Bill Hader, Barry
Nicholas Hoult, The Great
Steve Martin, Only Murders in the Building
Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building
Jason Sudeikis, Ted Lasso — WINNER

Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Hannah Einbinder, Hacks
Janelle James, Abbott Elementary
Kate McKinnon, Saturday Night Live
Sarah Niles, Ted Lasso
Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary — WINNER
Juno Temple, Ted Lasso
Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso

Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

Anthony Carrigan, Barry
Brett Goldstein, Ted Lasso — WINNER
Toheeb Jimoh, Ted Lasso
Nick Mohammed, Ted Lasso
Tony Shalhoub, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary
Henry Winkler, Barry
Bowen Yang, Saturday Night Live

Best Limited or Anthology Series

Dopesick
The Dropout
Inventing Anna
Pam & Tommy
The White Lotus — WINNER

Best Actress in a Limited Series, Movie or Anthology

Toni Collette, The Staircase
Julia Garner, Inventing Anna
Lily James, Pam & Tommy
Sarah Paulson, Impeachment: American Crime Story
Margaret Qualley, Maid
Amanda Seyfried, The Dropout — WINNER

###Best Actor in a Limited Series, Movie or Anthology

Colin Firth, The Staircase
Andrew Garfield, Under the Banner of Heaven
Oscar Isaac, Scenes From a Marriage
Michael Keaton, Dopesick — WINNER
Himesh Patel, Station Eleven
Sebastian Stan, Pam & Tommy

Best Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Connie Britton, The White Lotus
Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus — WINNER
Alexandra Daddario, The White Lotus
Kaitlyn Dever, Dopesick
Natasha Rothwell, The White Lotus
Sydney Sweeney, The White Lotus
Mare Winningham, Dopesick

Best Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie

Murray Bartlett, The White Lotus — WINNER
Jake Lacy, The White Lotus
Will Poulter, Dopesick
Seth Rogen, Pam & Tommy
Peter Sarsgaard, Dopesick
Michael Stuhlbarg, Dopesick
Steve Zahn, The White Lotus

Best Television Movie

Chip ‘n’ Dale: Rescue Rangers — WINNER
Ray Donovan: The Movie
Reno 911!: The Hunt for QAnon
The Survivor
Zoey’s Extraordinary Christmas

Best Variety Talk Series

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver — WINNER
Late Night With Seth Meyers
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

Best Variety Sketch Series

A Black Lady Sketch Show
Saturday Night Live — WINNER

Best Variety Special (Live)

The 64th Annual Grammy Awards
Live in Front of a Studio Audience: The Facts of Life and Diff’rent Strokes
The Oscars
Pepsi Super Bowl LVI Halftime Show Starring Dr Dre, Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige, Eminem, Kendrick Lamar and 50 Cent — WINNER
Tony Awards Presents: Broadway’s Back!

Best Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)

Adele: One Night Only — WINNER
Dave Chappelle: The Closer
Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts
Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special
One Last Time: An Evening With Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga

Best Hosted Nonfiction Series or Special

My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman
The Problem With Jon Stewart
Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy — WINNER
VICE
The World According to Jeff Goldblum

Best Reality Competition Program

The Amazing Race
Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls — WINNER
Nailed It!
RuPaul’s Drag Race
Top Chef
The Voice

Best Host for a Reality or Competition Program

Bobby Berk, Karamo Brown, Tan France, Antoni Porowski, Jonathan Van Ness, Queer Eye Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman, Making It
Nicole Byer, Nailed It!
Barbara Corcoran, Mark Cuban, Lori Greiner, Robert Herjavec, Daymond John, Kevin O’Leary, Shark Tank
Padma Lakshmi, Top Chef
RuPaul, RuPaul’s Drag Race — WINNER

Best Guest Actress in a Drama Series

Hope Davis, Succession
Marcia Gay Harden, The Morning Show
Martha Kelly, Euphoria
Sanaa Lathan, Succession
Harriet Walter, Succession
Lee You-mi, Squid Game — WINNER

Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series

Adrien Brody, Succession
James Cromwell, Succession
Colman Domingo, Euphoria — WINNER
Arian Moayed, Succession
Tom Pelphrey, Ozark
Alexander Skarsgard, Succession

Best Guest Actress in a Comedy Series

Jane Adams, Hacks
Harriet Sansom Harris, Hacks
Jane Lynch, Only Murders in the Building
Laurie Metcalf, Hacks — WINNER
Kaitlin Olson, Hacks
Harriet Walter, Ted Lasso

Best Guest Actor in a Comedy Series

Jerrod Carmichael, Saturday Night Live
Bill Hader, Curb Your Enthusiasm
James Lance, Ted Lasso
Nathan Lane, Only Murders in the Building — WINNER
Christopher McDonald, Hacks
Sam Richardson, Ted Lasso


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