Written by Jon Williams
If you watched the Golden Globe awards ceremony on Sunday night—or even if you just perused the list of winners on Monday morning—you may have noticed something a little odd on the television side. Despite garnering a fair number of nominations, the major over-the-air networks (ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC) did not take home a single award. Instead, the shows celebrated for their excellence were all from non-traditional, premium cable, or streaming services.
Non-network
stations did quite well for themselves. In fact, the CW, jointly operated by
CBS and Time Warner, was the closest thing to a major network to come away with
the win. The channel, which is generally aimed at a young adult audience, earned
its first major award nomination and win, with Gina
Rodriguez taking home Best Actress in a TV Comedy for her portrayal of the
title character on Jane the Virgin
(which is not yet available on DVD/Blu-ray). Also winning awards were Downton
Abbey (Best Supporting Actress Joanne
Froggatt) and The
Honourable Woman (Best Actress in a Miniseries Maggie
Gyllenhaal); both were produced for British television and aired on this
side of the pond via PBS and SundanceTV, respectively. Finally, FX’s television
reboot of Fargo
won two awards: Best Miniseries and Best Actor in a Miniseries Billy
Bob Thornton.
The
streaming services also won big on the night. Kevin
Spacey, star of Netflix’s powerhouse political show House
of Cards, won the Golden Globe for Best Drama Actor just ahead of the
release of Season 3 on February 27. Following in Netflix’s footsteps of
developing original programming, Amazon had a winner on its hands this year
with Transparent (not yet available),
which took two awards: Best TV Comedy and Best Actor Jeffrey
Tambor. The show’s full first season was made available to users in
September, and it was recently renewed for a second season that will be
released later this year.
The premium
cable outlets also came away with three awards. With fifteen nominations, it
seemed like something of an upset for HBO to end the evening with just one win,
but that’s the way it went down. Their award was for Matt
Bomer’s Best Supporting Actor turn in The
Normal Heart. Also in something of a surprise, the award for Best TV Drama
went to Showtime’s The Affair (not
yet available), which also featured the night’s Best Drama Actress, Ruth
Wilson.
This shift
in where the best shows call home is indicative of a shift in the way viewers
watch television. Fading are the days of being in front of a television at a
certain time on a certain day to catch the latest episode of a favourite show.
More and more, it seems that viewers prefer the freedom of watching episodes at
their leisure, or being able to watch multiple episodes at once, as soon as the
season “starts,” and these non-network outlets are capitalizing on that. Along
those lines, this
column on the Huffington Post has an interesting (if non-scientific) note
on most-recommended series for binge watching, including a breakdown along
gender lines (which, apparently, do not diverge as much as you might expect).
The
takeaway? It’s true: non-network shows are the hottest right now. In addition
to this year’s crop of Golden Globe winners, make sure you’re stocking seasons
of shows like Game
of Thrones, Breaking
Bad, Orange
Is the New Black, and The
Wire for your patrons who just can’t get enough, as well as for those
who don’t have access to those channels or services.
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