TV animators are mad as hell about Community getting an animation Emmy nomination

When the Emmy nominations came out recently, there was one seemingly out of place entry, for Community, for best animated series. Only Community isn’t an animated series, but because they did one animated episode, they were eligible. Only animated series are only eligible for the animated series nomination, not for anything like best actor, best drama, best comedy, etc. And a bunch of TV animators are quite pissed.
Al Jean from the Simpsons, Seth McFarlane, Matt Groening, David X. Cohen and 45 other animators sent the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences a very angrily worded letter expressing their disgust:
To Whom It May Concern:
Television Academy
We the undersigned animation showrunners and writers desire to address what we have regarded as a pernicious and unfair ruling by the Academy for the past 20 years, which we believe now, more than ever, should be redressed.
We have been told that animated program writers could not also submit their work for writing Emmys, for reasons we never understood, but supposedly pertaining to the purity of the branches.
This is why no one was more startled than we when last year “Community” was able to submit for comedy series, writing, and animated program, in the face of everything we had been told for two decades. We were told that for some reason, a one-time waiver was granted.
Imagine our surprise when this year we see “Community” once again eligible for comedy series, writing, animated program, and short-form animated program. This letter is in no way intended to be a slight on the terrific show “Community” but a request from us to enjoy the very same rights they now do. Clearly the Academy’s ban on submitting in multiple categories is being enforced in an arbitrary and unfair manner. We therefore request that we also be able to submit our programs for both animation and comedy series as well as in the writing category.
Respectfully,
Richard Appel, Mike Barker, Kit Boss, James L. Brooks, Stewart Burns, Steve Callaghan, Brett Cawley, Joe Chandler, David X. Cohen, Joel Cohen, Jim Dautrieve, John Frink, Tom Gammill, Valentina Garza, Stephanie Gillis, David A. Goodman, Dan Greaney, Matt Groening, Michael Henry, Mark Hentemann, Eric Horsted, Al Jean, Artie Johann, Stephen Kane, Ken Keeler, Brian Kelley, Jon Kern, Rob LaZebnik, Tim Long, Robert Maitia, Seth MacFarlane, Steve Marmel, Ian Maxtone-Graham, Patrick Meighan, Wendy Molyneux, Bill Odenkirk, Carolyn Omine, Don Payne, Michael Price, Eric Rogers, Michael Rowe, Jon Schroeder, Brian Scully, Mike Scully, Matt Selman, Rick Singer, Patric M. Verrone, Ali Waller, Josh Weinstein, Matt Weitzman, Jeff Westbrook, Marc Wilmore.
The Academy then responded, that because programs submit one episode per category, and animated shows are submitted as a team, Community is eligible within its rules:
It is a general rule of the Emmy competition that producers, writers and directors enter separately in their own program or individual achievement categories, e.g., comedy series writers enter the Writing for a Comedy Series category, drama series directors enter the Directing for a Drama Series category, etc.
Eligibility in animation programming is an exception to this general rule, because the animation producers, writers and directors enter the Animated Program category together as a team. There is no separate category for the individual achievements of animation writing and directing. (However, if an animated series opts to enter in Comedy Series rather than Animated Program category, then the individual achievement categories are open to them, e.g., writers can enter Writing for a Comedy Series category.)
“Community” is a Comedy Series that for the last two years has included an animated “special episode.” The competition includes a rule that a special episode can enter as a stand-alone special, “if it involved a significant and substantive format change throughout e.g. from whole-episode live action to whole-episode animation.” The “Community” producers followed that rule when they entered the producer-writer-director team for the animated episode in the Animation category and the regular, live-action episodes in the Comedy Series program and Comedy Series individual achievement categories.
Essentially, this is always how the Emmy process has worked. Producers don’t submit an entire season for a category, they only submit a single episode. They’ll submit a single episode for best drama or comedy, another single episode for a certain actor for relevant best actor categories, etc. So because Community did a single animated episode, it then can submit that one episode for the best animated series category.
It is bullshit that animated shows are pegged into that one category, and it’s the double-edged sword animated films deal with at the Oscars. It’s nice to have recognition for animation by itself, but an animation category means that animated features can’t also be nominated for Best Picture.
15 notes
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clintronics likes this
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hammer-harder reblogged this from iheartchaos
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iwasslicingupanavocado likes this
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egg-sandwich reblogged this from iheartchaos and added:
It’s because it’s the greatest thing ever.
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tennis-stars likes this
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shelley0s likes this
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randomlyhaphazard reblogged this from iheartchaos and added:
underrated, as proved by Japan several decades ago. America
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madblackgirl likes this
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freakthink likes this
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ringoosu reblogged this from iheartchaos and added:
Fuck the animators, aren’t they all outsourced Koreans anyway?
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i-gotta-go-good-day-pusscake reblogged this from iheartchaos
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iheartchaos posted this

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