This 12 months’s Emmy Awards, airing Sept. 14 on CBS, are set to shine a highlight on 25 totally different classes in the primary broadcast. This endeavor might take over three hours. However it might take a lot, for much longer to honor each nice scene, efficiency and quirky coincidence to seem on TV within the final 12 months. There are such a lot of exhibits and so some ways to be compelled (and typically repelled) by their content material.
And so, cue the trumpets! Right here, The Envelope presents its personal, deeply subjective awards honoring the best moments in tv in the course of the 2024-25 season — no less than those who received’t get their correct recognition on the huge present. Welcome to the 2025 Envy Awards!
Most Cracking Use of an Easter Egg: ‘The Gorge’
Anya Taylor-Pleasure and Miles Teller in “The Gorge.”
(Laura Radford / Apple TV+)
A hidden in-joke in a film or TV collection is one factor; burying two slickly executed Easter eggs out of your stars’ earlier hits takes issues to a different degree. Within the Emmy-nominated “The Gorge” (Apple TV+), Anya Taylor-Pleasure and Miles Teller play assassins slowly attending to know one another remotely, and spend time sharing their hobbies in a montage that may spark some déjà vu in followers of the actors. First, they’re proven enjoying chess throughout an abyss — a transparent shoutout to Taylor-Pleasure’s Emmy-winning 2020 restricted collection “The Queen’s Gambit.” Seconds later they’re banging makeshift drums at one another — an equally clear nod to Teller’s Oscar-winning 2014 movie, “Whiplash.” Coincidence? We expect not — this one was executed as easily as successful man’s bullet fired right into a mutant monster.
Most Thrilling Use of a Weapon in an Elevator: ‘Squid Game’
Park Gyu-young in “Squid Game.”
(Dong-won Han / No Ju-han/ Netflix)
Who knew weapons with hair triggers could possibly be so shockingly deadly in elevators? OK, perhaps everybody. However there was robust competitors this 12 months on this class. In Apple TV+’s Emmy-nominated “Severance,” Mark (Adam Scott) holds a gun on Mr. Drummond (Ólafur Darri Ólafsson) — after which whoops! it discharges when he shifts between outie and innie, killing the menacing supervisor. However in “Squid Game” (Netflix), No-eul (Park Gyu-young) attracts out the stress whereas crawling towards an ignored firearm left in an government elevator — and her closing pictures save her life. That prolonged second of suspense provides her the killing edge on this class.
Excellent Use of Misdirection in a New Collection: ‘Dept. Q’
Matthew Goode in “Dept. Q.”
(Justin Downing / Netflix)
It may be onerous to shock TV audiences lately, however the Emmy-nominated “Dept. Q” (Netflix) shocked audiences twice in its pilot by means of intelligent enhancing. Within the opening moments, a shooter springs upon authorities surveying a criminal offense scene with virtually supernatural pace, catching not simply the police but in addition the viewers off guard. However the actual shock includes Merritt (Chloe Pirrie), a prickly prosecutor who appears primed to group up with the surly, wounded Det. Morck (Matthew Goode) to resolve crimes. However — spoiler alert — Merritt’s scenes are literally flashbacks, and he or she’s the collection’ sufferer, lacking for 4 years. That’s not only a twist within the story, that’s a twist in the entire style.
Greatest Resolution That includes a Math Savant Spy: ‘Shetland’
Jacob Ferguson, left, and Sarah MacGillivray in “Shetland.”
(BritBox)
Nerdy math sorts multiplied on this 12 months’s lineup, although no character precisely match the stereotypical picture of a poindexter. Apple TV+’s “Prime Target” options Edward (Leo Woodall), a good-looking college scholar who received’t look you within the eye however discovers {that a} head for figures can land you in a world conspiracy — and put your life at risk. In the meantime, the overlooked-but-fantastic BritBox collection “Shetland” additionally mixed a math genius and a world spy ring with the homicide of Annie Bett (Sarah MacGillivray). Each deserve credit score for elevating the geek in us all, however “Shetland” takes the win by exhibiting Bett passing on her numbers know-how to her son, calming him whereas they’re in the course of a secret nighttime investigation.
Ickiest Relationship: ‘American Horror Stories’
Victor Garber in “American Horror Stories.”
(FX)
Blame “Game of Thrones” (HBO), which took the taboo of incest to intellectual, Emmy-winning TV just a few years in the past and opened the door to many extra WTF moments across the dial. This 12 months, not solely did “Thrones” prequel “House of the Dragon” proceed the theme with an episode the place Daemon (Matthew Smith) goals of getting intercourse together with his mother, however the Emmy-winning “The White Lotus” retains issues within the household as Saxon (Patrick Schwarzenegger) discovers simply how a lot of a individuals pleaser his youthful bro, Lochlan (Sam Nivola), is. FX’s “American Horror Stories” went one icky step additional, although, as David (Victor Garber) is turned on by his personal clone. The pair around the bases collectively and produce new that means to “self-love.”