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		'Severance' leads Emmy nominees with 27 and 'The Studio' tops comedies 
		as Apple TV+ dominates
		[July 16, 2025] 
		By ANDREW DALTON 
		LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Severance” separated itself from the field with 27 
		Emmy nominations Tuesday, while “The Studio” led comedy nominees with a 
		record-tying 23 in a dominant year for Apple TV+.
 No other dramas came close to the dystopian workplace series 
		“Severance,” which achieved a convergence of acclaim and audience buzz 
		for its second season that brought an expected Emmy bounty.
 
 “It’s been the best kind of morning,” Apple TV+ head of programming Matt 
		Cherniss told The Associated Press.
 
 Lead acting nominations came for “Severance” stars Adam Scott and Britt 
		Lower for what amounted to dual roles as their characters’ “innie” work 
		selves and “outie” home selves. Tramell Tillman got a supporting nod for 
		playing their tone-shifting, pineapple-wielding supervisor. Patricia 
		Arquette was nominated for supporting actress for playing an ousted 
		outcast from the sinister family business at the center of the show. And 
		Ben Stiller got a nomination for directing the Season 2 finale.
 
 Apple’s Hollywood satire “The Studio” was expected to make a significant 
		showing for its first season, but it romped over more established shows 
		like “Hacks,” which got 14, and “The Bear,” which got 13. It tied a 
		comedy record set last year by “The Bear” with 23 nominations.
 
 Seth Rogen, who co-created the series with longtime collaborator Evan 
		Goldberg, personally got three nominations — for acting, writing and 
		directing.
 
 Rogen told the AP that “my ego is in shock” and called the raft of 
		nominations "very validating in a way that I’m not used to being 
		validated.”
 
		
		 
		His show's A-list roster of guest stars brought in a bounty, with 
		nominations for Martin Scorsese, Ron Howard, Bryan Cranston, Anthony 
		Mackie, Dave Franco and Zoë Kravitz. The men made for five of the six 
		nominees in the guest actor in a comedy category.
 “The Penguin,” HBO’s dark drama from the “Batman” universe, was 
		surprisingly dominant in the limited series category with 24 
		nominations, including nods for leads Colin Farrell and Cristin Milioti.
 
 Netflix’s acclaimed “Adolescence” got 13 limited series nominations, 
		including a supporting actor nod for 15-year-old Owen Cooper, who plays 
		a 13-year-old suspected of a killing.
 
 Many expect Cooper to become the youngest Emmy winner in more than 40 
		years, largely because of a breathtaking episode that is one long 
		therapy session inside a juvenile jail. Like all “Adolescence” episodes, 
		it's done in one long shot.
 
 His psychologist scene partner, Erin Doherty, was also nominated, for 
		limited series supporting actress.
 
 “If you just sit and listen, and let someone talk, that is such a 
		gorgeous offering," Doherty told the AP. "I don’t think we do it that 
		often. I’m trying to take that forward.”
 
 “The White Lotus," “The Pitt” and “Matlock” score in acting categories
 HBO’s high-end soap “The White Lotus” got its usual flowering of drama 
		acting nominations for its Thailand-set third season, with four cast 
		members including Carrie Coon getting supporting actress nods, and three 
		including Walton Goggins up for supporting actor. It pulled in 23 
		nominations overall.
 
 “The Pitt,” HBO Max’s prestige medical procedural, got 13 nominations, 
		including best drama and best actor for its star, “ER” veteran Noah 
		Wyle. One of its nurses, Katherine LaNasa, was able to squeeze in among 
		the women of “The White Lotus” for a supporting actress nod.
 
		 
		"I love telling stories about the human condition and I really love 
		acting, and so to suddenly get recognized and sort of applauded for it 
		is just a delightful surprise," LaNasa told the AP. 
		Wyle, who was nominated five times without a win for “ER,” could join 
		Scott to make best actor in a drama a two-man race, with both seeking 
		their first Emmy.
 The broadcast networks have largely become Emmy non-entities in the top 
		categories. Oscar-winner Kathy Bates was a big exception this year. 
		She’s considered a heavy favorite to win best actress in a drama for 
		CBS’ “Matlock.” She's the first person nominated in the category from a 
		network show since 2019, and would be the first to win it since 2015. At 
		77, she's also the oldest ever nominee in the category.
 
 [to top of second column]
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            This image released by Apple TV+. shows Adam Scott, left, and Britt 
			Lower in a scene from "Severance." (Apple TV+ via AP) 
            
			
			 ABC’s “Abbott Elementary,” which has 
			kept hope alive for the networks in recent years, got six 
			nominations including acting and writing nods for creator Quinta 
			Brunson.
 HBO is still king in the overall numbers
 “The Last of Us” brought in 16 nominations in drama categories for 
			HBO to add to its totals run up by “The White Lotus," “The Pitt” and 
			“The Penguin.” Bella Ramsey got a nod for best actress in a drama 
			for “The Last of Us.” Pedro Pascal was nominated for lead actor 
			despite appearing in only about half of the season's episodes.
 HBO with its streaming counterpart HBO Max has been 
			so prolific for decades in Emmy nominations that it almost felt like 
			an off year without it having a “Succession” or a “Game of Thrones” 
			atop the drama category. But it definitely wasn't. It led all 
			outlets with 142 nominations, the most it's ever gotten.
 Netflix followed with 120 nominations overall, including 11 for 
			“Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story” and 10 for “Black 
			Mirror.”
 
 Apple TV+ had 79 nominations overall.
 
 “Shrinking” added to that total with seven in the comedy categories, 
			including acting nominations for Harrison Ford and Jason Segel.
 
 “Andor” represented Disney+ with 14 nominations. The gritty series 
			from the “Star Wars” galaxy is up for best drama series and a slew 
			of technical categories. Forest Whitaker was nominated for best 
			guest actor in a drama.
 
 He's one of several Oscar winners in the guest acting categories 
			along with Scorsese, Howard and Jamie Lee Curtis and Olivia Colman 
			for their performances in “The Bear.”
 
 “Andor” star Diego Luna was surprisingly omitted from best actor in 
			a drama. Other snubs included former Emmy powerhouses “The 
			Handmaid's Tale,” which got just one nomination, and “Squid Game,” 
			which got none.
 
 ‘Severance’ delivers big for Apple TV+
 “Severance” has become a signature show for Apple TV+. The streamer 
			has gotten plenty of Emmy nominations for dramas including “The 
			Morning Show” and “Slow Horses,” and “Ted Lasso” thrived the comedy 
			side.
 
			 But Apple has lacked the kind of breakaway prestige drama that HBO 
			seems to produce perennially. “Severance” became its most-nominated 
			show ever and could easily become its biggest winner when the Emmys 
			are handed out in September, reaching the upper echelons previously 
			enjoyed by “Succession” and “Shogun,” which left room for others by 
			taking this year off.
 Cherniss said Apple TV+, which has been knocked as the streamer with 
			big stars and big budgets for shows that go unnoticed, was rewarded 
			for taking big swings.
 
 “'Severance' is such an ambitious show," he said, adding that “all 
			of the shows that have been nominated took big risks.”
 
 How streaming has changed TV and the Emmys
 
 All the shows are living in the splintered world of the streaming 
			era, and the like the Oscars its most acclaimed nominees rarely have 
			the huge audience they once did. While an impressive average of 10 
			million people per episode watched Wyle on “The Pitt” on HBO Max, 30 
			years ago an average of 30 million watched him on “ER” on NBC.
 
 The broadcast networks rotate on who airs the Emmys. This year is 
			CBS's turn. It will air the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards from the 
			Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Sept. 14. Nate Bargatze is slated 
			to host.
 
 ___
 
 Associated Press Writers writers Ryan Pearson, Liam McEwan and 
			Jocelyn Noveck contributed.
 
			
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