On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 12:13 PM, Diner <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> On Monday, December 16, 2013 1:48:57 PM UTC-5, Mark Jeffries wrote:
>>
>> Jay Leno and Rupert Murdoch are probably the most contentious names on
>> this year's honoree list, although there is at least one person on this
>> forum who would object to David E. Kelley being inducted--the other
>> inductees are Julia Louis-Dreyfus, former ABC exec Brandon Stoddard (who I
>> believe created "The Movie of the Week," which made the made-for-TV film a
>> standard part of the schedule) and the late Ray Dolby of the famous sound
>> company--the untelevised induction ceremony is Mar. 11 in LA:
>>
>> http://www.thewrap.com/jay-leno-julia-louis-dreyfus-
>> rupert-murdoch-ray-dolby-television-academy-hall-of-fame
>>
>
>
> When I saw the headline, the only Rupert I could think of was Rupert Jee
> from the Hello Deli.
>
> At first, I was put off by Louis-Dreyfus' inclusion - for what, "Watching
> Ellie"? Sure, she's won 4 Emmys, but John Larroquette's won five, and no
> one's put him in the hall. But I see from Wikipedia that she's surpassed
> Lucille Ball's record for most nominations for a comedic actress. And there
> are no other women being inducted this year. So I'll let her slide.
>

By my count there have been 14 women primetime performers inducted into the
TV HOF. I omit from this list Oprah, who is not really a performer, but
include Dinah Shore, since she had both a talk show and prime time shows
(see:http://www.emmys.tv/awards/hall-fame/hall-fame-archives-honorees).

   1984(1st) Lucille Ball  1985 (2nd) Carol Burnett  1986 (3rd) Mary Tyler
Moore  1988 (4th) Gracie Allen (with George Burns)  1991 (8th) Dinah
Shore  1995
(11th) Betty White  1996 (12th) Angela Lansbury  2002 (15th) Jean
Stapleton  2008
(18th) Bea Arthur  2010 (19th) Candice Bergen  2011 (20th) Diahann
Carroll  2011
(20th) Cloris Leachman  2012 (21st) Vivian Vance (with William Frawley)  2014
(23rd) Julia Louis-Dreyfus

According to the wikis, the induction criteria is: "persons who have made
outstanding contributions in the arts, sciences or management of
television, based upon either cumulative contributions and achievements or
a singular contribution or achievement." Given that JLD has those three
Emmy wins for three different sitcoms, plus is a nominated producer for
Veep and has the SNL connection, and her name looks like it belongs on this
list.

But the omissions from the list (men and women) raise serious questions
about the credibility of this HOF.

I don't have a problem with Leno being in the HOF, but the obvious problem
is that David Letterman is not yet in, and it is hard to imagine any
plausible argument that would justify that. Dave's Late Night truly was a
groundbreaking and lasting innovation in television programming, and he is
the one who really brought Leno to TV. Dave has been on network television
longer, and has been recognized as having done a better job (using Emmy
nominations and critical notices as the indicator here). Leno has had
better ratings, but if that is the criteria for the HOF then it has some
real problems. Carson and Allen are both in the TV HOF, but Paar is not.
Regis is (17th Class, 2007).

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