Emmy ratings hit rock bottom despite praise for winners
CGTN

The Emmy Awards have plummeted to an all-time ratings low, with grand farewells for "Game of Thrones" and "Veep" and a night of surprise winners failing to entice viewers. 

The show was watched by just 6.9 million US viewers on Sunday, broadcaster Fox said ⁠— lower than the record-low 10.2 million who tuned in last year.

Adam DeVine performs at the 71st Emmy Awards in Los Angeles, California. /VCG Photo

Adam DeVine performs at the 71st Emmy Awards in Los Angeles, California. /VCG Photo

Viewers watching the Emmys, television's answer to the Oscars, have halved since 2014. 

The show rotates between four major US networks. Fox, Sunday's broadcaster, hoped to emulate the Oscars' ratings bump by also going without a host this year, in a bid to streamline the ceremony. 

But it could not reverse the trend of successive years of new lows, as fragmented audiences increasingly shun awards shows. 

Variety slammed the show as a "wildly confusing mess of conflicting ideas," which proved that "skipping out on a host doesn't automatically make for a sleeker broadcast."

Cast and crew of 'Game of Thrones' pose with awards for Outstanding Drama Series in the press room during the 71st Emmy Awards at Microsoft Theater. /VCG Photo

Cast and crew of 'Game of Thrones' pose with awards for Outstanding Drama Series in the press room during the 71st Emmy Awards at Microsoft Theater. /VCG Photo

"In an age of tired and ratings-declining awards shows, the Emmys needed to slay on Fox tonight. Instead ... the whole thing came tumbling down," wrote Deadline. 

The show, shifting from Monday last year to Sunday, also suffered from competing with a primetime NFL clash. 

However, there was widespread praise for the Television Academy's chosen winners on the night, with "Fleabag" and its creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge springing the biggest of several warmly-received surprises. 

Jodie Comer unexpectedly beat "Killing Eve" co-star Sandra Oh for best drama actress, and 21-year-old Jharrel Jerome bested a number of Hollywood heavyweights for best limited series actor with "When They See Us." 

The LA Times praised voters for making "interesting, deserving choices." 

"This year, Emmy voters went off script, often in shocking ways... Voters went with the best," said the LA Times in a review that declared: "The Emmys have never been so damn good." 

"Considering that 'Fleabag 'is a feminist and female-centric show, it is a sign of progress that it did so well with the largely male voting body," wrote The Hollywood Reporter's Scott Feinberg.

(Cover image via VCG)

Source(s): AFP