<p>Netflix's take on the British royal family, <em>The Crown</em>, reigned over the television categories at the Golden Globes on Sunday, winning four prizes including best drama, while S<em>chitt's Creek</em> earned another victory lap after its final season.</p>.<p>It was a meta night for television as the largely remote ceremony rolled out over video chat -- small screens within small screens that took viewers repeatedly into the homes of the actors and producers behind the top shows.</p>.<p>Emma Corrin snagged the best television drama actress prize for her buzzed-about role in the show's fourth season as the late Princess Diana, while Josh O'Connor won the best actor award for playing Prince Charles.</p>.<p>And Gillian Anderson nabbed the supporting actress prize for her portrayal of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher.</p>.<p>Canada's beloved comedy "Schitt's Creek," which recently wrapped its sixth season, won for best comedy series and best actress for Catherine O'Hara.</p>.<p>She did her best to capture the chaotic energy of an in-person ceremony with a bizarre gag that included her husband playing fake applause with his phone -- a bit that fell slightly flat and left social media confused -- as she accepted the award.</p>.<p>Netflix's <em>The Queen's Gambit</em> -- about an orphaned female chess prodigy -- also did well, taking the Globe for best TV limited series.</p>.<p>Its star Anya Taylor-Joy won best limited series actress for playing the tragically glam chess player with addiction issues.</p>.<p>John Boyega won best supporting actor in a TV series for his role in Steve McQueen's ambitious<em> Small Axe</em> anthology series, which tells the lives of West Indian immigrants to London from the 1960s to the 1980s.</p>.<p>Jason Sudeikis embraced the gala-from-home reality, appearing on video chat in a tie-dye hoodie to accept the award for best television comedy show actor for<em> Ted Lasso</em>.</p>.<p>And in an impassioned speech, Mark Ruffalo called to "turn the page on the cruel past of this nation" as he accepted the award for best actor in a limited series for his role in "I Know This Much Is True."</p>.<p>Netflix was TV's big winner, with the streaming giant taking six awards.</p>.<p>But its love-to-hate-it, critically panned series <em>Emily In Paris </em>-- which received two Globe nominations, igniting the ire of social media -- went home empty-handed.</p>.<p>But not before hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler roasted the show about a naive American who moves to France to work at a marketing firm, gallivanting around Paris in a near-constant cliche.</p>.<p>"Emily in Paris is nominated for best TV series, musical or comedy, and I for one can't wait to find out which it is," Fey quipped.</p>
<p>Netflix's take on the British royal family, <em>The Crown</em>, reigned over the television categories at the Golden Globes on Sunday, winning four prizes including best drama, while S<em>chitt's Creek</em> earned another victory lap after its final season.</p>.<p>It was a meta night for television as the largely remote ceremony rolled out over video chat -- small screens within small screens that took viewers repeatedly into the homes of the actors and producers behind the top shows.</p>.<p>Emma Corrin snagged the best television drama actress prize for her buzzed-about role in the show's fourth season as the late Princess Diana, while Josh O'Connor won the best actor award for playing Prince Charles.</p>.<p>And Gillian Anderson nabbed the supporting actress prize for her portrayal of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher.</p>.<p>Canada's beloved comedy "Schitt's Creek," which recently wrapped its sixth season, won for best comedy series and best actress for Catherine O'Hara.</p>.<p>She did her best to capture the chaotic energy of an in-person ceremony with a bizarre gag that included her husband playing fake applause with his phone -- a bit that fell slightly flat and left social media confused -- as she accepted the award.</p>.<p>Netflix's <em>The Queen's Gambit</em> -- about an orphaned female chess prodigy -- also did well, taking the Globe for best TV limited series.</p>.<p>Its star Anya Taylor-Joy won best limited series actress for playing the tragically glam chess player with addiction issues.</p>.<p>John Boyega won best supporting actor in a TV series for his role in Steve McQueen's ambitious<em> Small Axe</em> anthology series, which tells the lives of West Indian immigrants to London from the 1960s to the 1980s.</p>.<p>Jason Sudeikis embraced the gala-from-home reality, appearing on video chat in a tie-dye hoodie to accept the award for best television comedy show actor for<em> Ted Lasso</em>.</p>.<p>And in an impassioned speech, Mark Ruffalo called to "turn the page on the cruel past of this nation" as he accepted the award for best actor in a limited series for his role in "I Know This Much Is True."</p>.<p>Netflix was TV's big winner, with the streaming giant taking six awards.</p>.<p>But its love-to-hate-it, critically panned series <em>Emily In Paris </em>-- which received two Globe nominations, igniting the ire of social media -- went home empty-handed.</p>.<p>But not before hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler roasted the show about a naive American who moves to France to work at a marketing firm, gallivanting around Paris in a near-constant cliche.</p>.<p>"Emily in Paris is nominated for best TV series, musical or comedy, and I for one can't wait to find out which it is," Fey quipped.</p>