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THE 68TH EMMY(r) AWARDS - “The 68th Emmy Awards” broadcasts live from The Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, Sunday, September 18 (7:00-11:00 p.m. EDT/4:00-8:00 p.m. PDT), on ABC and is hosted by Jimmy Kimmel MATT DAMON, JIMMY KIMMEL
Emmys 2016: Best and Worst Moments, 'Stranger Things' to Speeches
Emmys 2016: Best and Worst Moments, 'Stranger Things' to Speeches
Emmys 2016: Best and Worst Moments, 'Stranger Things' to Speeches
Emmys 2016: Best and Worst Moments, 'Stranger Things' to Speeches
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IndieWireEmmys

The 68th Primetime Emmy Awards didn’t lure in a larger audience than last year’s record-low viewership number. In fact, the ABC telecast dipped even further. Despite peak TV producing more great television than ever before, viewers haven’t been warming to the Emmys. Blame “too much TV” or a confusing September air date, but even though TV’s biggest night hasn’t been pulling in the same stats as yesteryear, the actual production has been, well, peaking.

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Jimmy Kimmel did a fine job with his monologue. The speeches were on point, and there were plenty of surprise winners to keep everyone in the Microsoft Theater and watching at home on the edge of their seats. These key elements make up the foundation of any great awards show, making the 2016 Emmys a ceremony to remember.

Still, there were a few mistakes.

READ MORE: Emmys Winners and Losers: ‘Game of Thrones’ Broke Records & Amazon is On Fire, But What About ‘Fargo’?

The prerecorded opening segment, in which Jimmy Kimmel struggles to make it to the Emmys on time, was redundant and mostly a miss. Having the “Stranger Things” kids hand out sandwiches to a supposedly hungry crowd also rang false, especially when remember how surprising and authentic it was when Ellen Degeneres delivered pizzas at the Oscars. Oh, and then “Game of Thrones” won far more trophies than it deserved.

IndieWire TV Editor Liz Shannon Miller and TV Critic Ben Travers discuss the good, bad and everything in between on the latest edition of Very Good TV Podcast. Don’t forget to subscribe via Soundcloud or iTunes, and follow IndieWire on Twitter and Facebook for all your pertinent TV news. Check out Liz and Ben’s Twitter feeds for more, more, more. Plus, don’t forget to listen to IndieWire’s other podcastsScreen Talk with Eric Kohn and Anne Thompson, as well as Michael Schneider’s new podcast Turn It On, which spotlights the most important TV of each week.

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