Bright and early this morning the 57th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards nominations were announced. Like the red-headed stepchild of the Oscars, the Emmys are a chance for Hollywood's lesser starlets and stars to participate in their own self congratulatory fest. ABC's campy but fun Desperate Housewives leads this year with 15 nominations. Viewers can look forward to a three way cat-fight between housewives Marcia Cross, Teri Hatcher, and Felicity Huffman for Best Actress in a...
Emmy Nominations Announced
Real Poll for a Fake President
Ever wonder what pollster John Zogby is doing now that the elections are over? Zogby, famous for getting it totally wrong during the past presidential election, has enough free time these days to poll real people on who they think will win the presidential race on "The West Wing". Um, has anyone told this guy it's just a TV show? The Zogby website trumpets the following results:
Santos Favored over Vinick; Fictional Democrat Would Beat Fictional Republican, 44%-28%; Vinick Plagued by Gender Gap, Weak Showing Among GOPers, New Zogby Poll RevealsYeah, we know, it sounds like a fake headline from The Onion, right? The Canadian Press, of all people, alerted us to this story, showing us that even the Canadians care more about the "West Wing" than people here. The Zogby poll revels that Democratic Congressman Matthew Santos, played by dreamy Jimmy Smits, has a commanding lead when it comes to women over his Republican counterpart Sen. Arnold Vinick, played by the equally dreamy Alan Alda. With women, Santos/Smits outpolls Vinick/Alda by 53% to 22%. We're not surprised, really. Did you all see the last episode? Santos even thawed out Donna's frigid heart. Who would you like to see become the next president?
When the Local News Attacks! ... During Sweeps
A chill is in the air and DCist's thoughts turn to November sweeps. For those readers that don't spend every waking minute of their free time reviewing and updating their DVR recording schedules, sweeps is the period when broadcast networks set their advertising rates for the next quarter based on how many eyeballs they can glue to their programs. Generally, networks pull out all the stops to attract as many viewers as possible.

