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Harris, who moved the show along with good-natured humor, started the evening on a lively note, performing "Don't Touch That Remote," a custom-made tune from Broadway composers Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman of "Hairspray" fame. Harris implored viewers to stay glued to the show and called attention to some of the stars in the house. "I see legends galore, Lange, Barrymore," Harris sang to Jessica Lange and Drew Barrymore, later adding, "But like next season on `Idol' I'm not seeing Paula Abdul." Meanwhile, the camera panned to an empty seat at the Nokia Theatre. Harris' winning turn as host was lauded onstage by many, including Jeff Probst, honored as best reality show host for CBS' "Survivor." Probst was one of the five reality hosts who emceed the Emmys last year and received scathing reviews. "Neil Patrick Harris, THIS is how you host the Emmys. Nice job," Probst said, pointing his Emmy toward him. An exception to the upbeat mood came in clips from animated series "Family Guy," which showed the dog character Brian beaten bloody, followed by a reality show snippet with barely concealed swearing. The TV academy, meanwhile, hoped to avoid an unwanted rerun of last year: paltry viewership. The 2008 ceremony was the least-watched ever with an audience of 12.3 million. Acclaimed but low-rated series like "Mad Men" are seen as one reason viewers bypassed the awards, so major categories were expanded this year to increase the odds for more popular fare. There were as many as seven nominees per category, compared with the traditional five (the Oscars have made a similar play this year, expanding the best-picture category from five nominees to 10). Harris and Emmy executive producer Don Mischer promised to keep the scheduled three-hour ceremony snappy, but they had less room to maneuver than planned. A TV academy proposal to pre-tape some acceptances and show them in a truncated version
-- gaining time for something more entertaining than speeches -- was quashed by industry opposition. HBO went into the ceremony as the awards leader after last weekend's Creative Arts Primetime Emmys ceremony for technical and other achievements. The channel earned 16 trophies, followed by NBC with 11 and Fox and ABC with eight awards each. CBS, PBS and Cartoon Network had six each. After Sunday, HBO emerged with a leading 21, followed by NBC with 16, ABC with 11 and Fox with 10. CBS and PBS had nine each. ___ On the Net: Emmys: http://www.emmys.org/
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