<p>Sunday’s Primetime Emmy winners will take home shiny trophies and bask in congratulations, but their biggest payoff could come in a call from Netflix Inc or Amazon.<br /><br />In recent months, the two streaming networks have lured the makers of pioneering shows from broadcast and cable networks with big cash offers and promises of creative freedom.<br /><br />“Netflix, Amazon, Hulu and the like are really putting their money where their mouth is,” said Melissa Rosenberg, a former writer on Showtime’s “Dexter” who moved to Netflix to create the dark superhero show “Jessica Jones.”<br /><br />“They’re paying creators, extraordinary actors, and for the budgets of shows equal or better than basic cable or network TV,” she said.<br /><br />Some of television’s biggest names have deserted network and cable for streaming.<br /><br />Netflix enticed Shonda Rhimes away from her longtime home on Walt Disney Co’s ABC, where she developed hits like “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal.”<br /><br />It also landed filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen for a western anthology series after their success with a TV spinoff of their movie “Fargo” on FX.<br /><br />Amazon lured Matthew Weiner, who put AMC on the map with his Emmy award-winning “Mad Men,” to develop an anthology series called “The Romanoffs.”<br /><br />It also has brought on Robert Kirkman, the man behind the basic cable network’s current most-watched show, “The Walking Dead,” to create new shows.<br /><br />Netflix, which received 91 Emmy nominations this year, has a shot at winning its first best drama series award with supernatural mystery “Stranger Things” or British royal saga “The Crown,” whose reported $130 million budget is the most expensive TV production ever.<br /><br />Hulu’s critically acclaimed “The Handmaid’s Tale” could bring the joint venture streaming platform its first major Emmys.<br /><br />Still in the race<br /><br />Cable and traditional television are still forces to be reckoned with, though. “Traditional media companies are scrambling, saying: ‘How do we beat back so much money being thrown at TV?’” said Peter Csathy, chairman of media and technology advisory firm CREATV Media.<br /><br />“The challenge is about compelling storytelling and keeping talent amid those forces,” he added.<br /><br />NBC’s family drama “This Is Us” could clinch the first best drama series Emmy for one of the four big US broadcasters since 2006, and the Comcast-owned network’s “Saturday Night Live” is expected to take home an armful of trophies.<br /><br />HBO, which led the Emmy nominations with 111 nods, and FX have capitalized on the limited-series format that streaming platforms prefer, with shorter seasons, cinematic-style storytelling and A-list talent.<br /><br />HBO’s “Big Little Lies,” starring Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman, is a front-runner in this category, as is FX’s “Feud,” which pits Susan Sarandon opposite Jessica Lange.<br /><br />HBO’s “The Wizard of Lies” lured Robert De Niro to his first major TV role and Emmy nomination for playing disgraced financier Bernie Madoff.<br /><br />One big attraction for broadcast television defectors is the creative freedom offered by streaming.<br /><br />“Network (TV) is limited by what it can put on air, and it answers to advertisers, so there are a lot of limitations as to how far you can go, whether a character is likeable, edgy, racy,” said “Jessica Jones” creator Rosenberg.<br /><br />Rat race for GoT<br /><br />And all the networks are chasing the next “Game of Thrones,” HBO’s popular Emmy-winning medieval fantasy series, which has become the pinnacle of prestige TV.<br /><br />“Everyone is looking for a tent-pole show so that they can scream loud and proud to bring audiences and keep them there,” CREATV’s Csathy said.<br /><br />“’Game of Thrones’ is a poster child for breaking the rules in terms of storytelling and killing off lead characters with reckless abandon,” he said. “That’s something we traditionally have not seen in television.”<br /><br /><br /></p>
<p>Sunday’s Primetime Emmy winners will take home shiny trophies and bask in congratulations, but their biggest payoff could come in a call from Netflix Inc or Amazon.<br /><br />In recent months, the two streaming networks have lured the makers of pioneering shows from broadcast and cable networks with big cash offers and promises of creative freedom.<br /><br />“Netflix, Amazon, Hulu and the like are really putting their money where their mouth is,” said Melissa Rosenberg, a former writer on Showtime’s “Dexter” who moved to Netflix to create the dark superhero show “Jessica Jones.”<br /><br />“They’re paying creators, extraordinary actors, and for the budgets of shows equal or better than basic cable or network TV,” she said.<br /><br />Some of television’s biggest names have deserted network and cable for streaming.<br /><br />Netflix enticed Shonda Rhimes away from her longtime home on Walt Disney Co’s ABC, where she developed hits like “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal.”<br /><br />It also landed filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen for a western anthology series after their success with a TV spinoff of their movie “Fargo” on FX.<br /><br />Amazon lured Matthew Weiner, who put AMC on the map with his Emmy award-winning “Mad Men,” to develop an anthology series called “The Romanoffs.”<br /><br />It also has brought on Robert Kirkman, the man behind the basic cable network’s current most-watched show, “The Walking Dead,” to create new shows.<br /><br />Netflix, which received 91 Emmy nominations this year, has a shot at winning its first best drama series award with supernatural mystery “Stranger Things” or British royal saga “The Crown,” whose reported $130 million budget is the most expensive TV production ever.<br /><br />Hulu’s critically acclaimed “The Handmaid’s Tale” could bring the joint venture streaming platform its first major Emmys.<br /><br />Still in the race<br /><br />Cable and traditional television are still forces to be reckoned with, though. “Traditional media companies are scrambling, saying: ‘How do we beat back so much money being thrown at TV?’” said Peter Csathy, chairman of media and technology advisory firm CREATV Media.<br /><br />“The challenge is about compelling storytelling and keeping talent amid those forces,” he added.<br /><br />NBC’s family drama “This Is Us” could clinch the first best drama series Emmy for one of the four big US broadcasters since 2006, and the Comcast-owned network’s “Saturday Night Live” is expected to take home an armful of trophies.<br /><br />HBO, which led the Emmy nominations with 111 nods, and FX have capitalized on the limited-series format that streaming platforms prefer, with shorter seasons, cinematic-style storytelling and A-list talent.<br /><br />HBO’s “Big Little Lies,” starring Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman, is a front-runner in this category, as is FX’s “Feud,” which pits Susan Sarandon opposite Jessica Lange.<br /><br />HBO’s “The Wizard of Lies” lured Robert De Niro to his first major TV role and Emmy nomination for playing disgraced financier Bernie Madoff.<br /><br />One big attraction for broadcast television defectors is the creative freedom offered by streaming.<br /><br />“Network (TV) is limited by what it can put on air, and it answers to advertisers, so there are a lot of limitations as to how far you can go, whether a character is likeable, edgy, racy,” said “Jessica Jones” creator Rosenberg.<br /><br />Rat race for GoT<br /><br />And all the networks are chasing the next “Game of Thrones,” HBO’s popular Emmy-winning medieval fantasy series, which has become the pinnacle of prestige TV.<br /><br />“Everyone is looking for a tent-pole show so that they can scream loud and proud to bring audiences and keep them there,” CREATV’s Csathy said.<br /><br />“’Game of Thrones’ is a poster child for breaking the rules in terms of storytelling and killing off lead characters with reckless abandon,” he said. “That’s something we traditionally have not seen in television.”<br /><br /><br /></p>