Sunday 7 August 2011

Tca award 2011



As a new NBC series, Friday Night Lights won Outstanding New Program at the Television Critics Association's awards in 2007. Four years later, as a departing DirecTV show, Friday Night Lights tonight won the top TCA award, Program of the Year. HBO's Game of Thrones was named outstanding new program during the non-televised ceremony hosted by Parks and Recreation co-star Nick Offerman at the Beverly Hilton. Oprah Winfrey got a career achievement TCA award to go with her recently awarded Oscar "for her influence through 25 seasons of The Oprah Winfrey Show," while Offerman received an Individual Achievement in Comedy Award to make up for the Emmy-nomination snub last month. CBS' The Amazing Race, whose best series Emmy-winning streak was broken last year, is starting a new one at the TCA Awards, winning the first award in newly established reality program category. Here is the list of the winners in 12 categories voted by the members of TCA, a media organization comprised of more than 200 professional TV critics and journalists from the U.S. and Canada:
                                         
Saturday is my last day at TCA TV critics' press tour in LA (my colleagues will have to soldier on without me for ABC's final presentation), and the network of the day was FX, which updated us as to what's going on in the worlds of tortured male antiheroes and raunchy comedy. Some of the highlights:
* In the last year, FX was the bearer of bad news in canceling first-season shows like Lights Out and critical favorite Terriers. Today, FX president John Landgraf got to play good cop, with plenty of happy news for fans of existing FX shows. Happiest for TV land, Louie is getting picked up for a third season--great news, but not surprising given that (1) the show's ratings are dramatically up, (2) it's getting awards nominations and insane critical love and (3) it costs about as much as five seconds of CGI dragon on Game of Thrones.

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