FX, Disney Pull in Record Emmy Haul as HBO Stumbles

Even before the Emmys began Sunday, there wasn’t much question about which media conglomerate would end the night with the most awards. Led by 14 Creative Arts wins for Shogun, Disney had essentially an insurmountable lead in terms of awards won. The only question was how much the Mouse House would run up the [...]

featured-image

Even before the began Sunday, there wasn’t much question about which media conglomerate would end the night with . Led by 14 Creative Arts wins for , Disney had essentially an insurmountable lead in terms of won. The only question was how much the Mouse House would run up the score.

The answer: Quite a bit. Led by and — which each won four awards at Sunday’s awards and set records for wins by a drama (18) and comedy (11) in a single year — -produced programs led all platforms with 36 wins at the 76th . By itself, FX would have put Disney into first place among media conglomerates, but the company also took home 24 other awards for a record-breaking total of 60.



Netflix finished a distant second with 24 total wins across Sunday’s ceremony and last week’s Creative Arts awards — two more than at the 75th Emmys. HBO/Max took home 14 Emmys — the lowest total for the Warner Bros. Discovery outlets (who submit as one entity for the Emmys) in more than a quarter century (HBO had 14 wins in 1998, well before the streaming era began).

Two other companies, Apple and NBCUniversal, also reached double digits. While and did the heavy lifting for Disney, several other programs won multiple awards as well: Disney+’s documentary won five Emmys, the Oscars telecast landed four wins, and Hulu’s and FX’s had three each. Hulu’s comedy , which was canceled after its second season, took home two awards, for multicamera cinematography and picture editing.

HBO and Max did have some bright spots Sunday, including three wins for Max’s (best comedy series, writing for a comedy and lead actress jean Smart). won two Emmys, and took home best writing for a variety special (and featured one of Sunday’s most heartfelt acceptance speeches as Edelman paid tribute to the live stage show’s director, Adam Brace, who died in 2023). The down year for HBO/Max is likely a result of timing and a depleted post-strikes inventory more than anything else.

had its last ride at the Emmys a year ago, and shows like and didn’t air any new episodes during this Emmy year after combining for 13 awards — just one shy of the entire HBO/Max total this year — in 2023. Both of those shows are likely to premiere in time to be considered for the 2025 Emmys, as will (one Emmy win for its first season). That’s the future.

In the present, the 2024 Emmys belonged to Disney, and FX specifically. A breakdown of wins by outlet, media company and program is below. FX (including shows produced for Hulu): 36 Netflix: 24 HBO/Max: 14 Apple TV+: 10 ABC: 7 Disney+: 7 Hulu (excluding FX): 7 NBC: 7 CBS: 5 Prime Video: 4 Peacock: 3 Comedy Central: 2 Nat Geo: 2 Disney: 60 Netflix: 24 Warner Bros: Discovery: 14 Apple: 10 NBCUniversal: 10 Paramount: 7 Amazon: 4 : 18 : 11 : 6 : 6 : 5 : 4 : 4 : 4 : 3 : 3 : 3 : 3 : 3 : 3 : 2 : 2 : 2 : 2 : 2 : 2 : 2 THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day More from The Hollywood Reporter.