‘Last of Us,’ ‘White Lotus’ explainer shows get Emmy love too
In an age of changing media consumption (and work-from-home) habits, the phrase βwatercooler televisionβ may be something of an anachronism. But as anyone following shows like βThe White Lotusβ can tell you, discussing, dissecting and debating hit series never goes out of style.
And of all networks, HBO knows how best to capitalize on such buzzed-about moments: The networkβs βInside the Episodeβ programs have long offered viewers the chance to process shocking plot twists and jaw-dropping deaths. Thatβs where viewers of Season 3 got to hear creator Mike White break down everything from Saxon and Lochlanβs drunken exploits to Chelsea and Rickβs doomed ending.
βShows like this are the new watercooler moment,β says Emmy nominee Natalia Echeverria, a creative director at HBO and an executive producer of βThe White Lotus: Unpacking The Episode.β βWe try to anticipate what beats from the episode people will be talking about and then we dive in, giving audiences an inside peek only we can provide.β
Owing a debt to post-episode talk shows like βThe Talking Deadβ and podcasts like βPrivate Joke: The Official How I Met Your Mother Podcastβ and βThe Good Place: The Podcast,β such companion series, now commonplace across platforms, have risen in popularity in the last decade. This year, in fact, they make up the entirety of the short form nonfiction or reality series Emmy category.
Projects like βMaking of: The Last of Usβ and βAdolescence: The Making of Adolescenceβ (also nominated) necessarily straddle the line between creative and marketing. Theyβre meant to bridge the gap between a show and its fandom. But, in borrowing the familiar format of making-of documentaries, DVD bonus featurettes, even episodic reviews or recaps, they insist on a vision of television as an art worthy of discussion and dissection.
βI think of these pieces like the movie theater parking lot after a film,β says Badger Denehy, an Emmy-nominated executive producer of βMaking of: The Last Of Usβ and an HBO creative director. βThey remind me of that moment when you turn to your friend and dive into all the biggest moments you just watched. Itβs my favorite type of project because we get to create something for fans as huge fans of the programming ourselves.β
For Shannon Ryan, president of marketing for Disney Entertainment Television and an Emmy nominee for βOnly Murders in the Building: Unlocking the Mystery,β the decision to produce the show was driven by a desire to better serve fans of the hit Hulu comedy.
βThese short-form series offer fans a peek behind the curtain to hear directly from the talented people that bring the show to life,β she says. βAnd for our creators, this is a meaningful way to share more with the fans, give insight into their work, share some entertaining β and often hilarious β behind-the-scenes stories, and also spotlight some of the critical crew members that make every episode of the show so special.β
To βThe Last of Usβ viewers, there was likely no bigger moment this season than βThrough the Valley,β the jaw-dropping second episode. Fans looking for insights on how that action-packed tragic set piece was orchestrated had to look no further than βInside Episode 2,β where director Mark Mylod, co-creator Craig Mazin and star Pedro Pascal spoke about shooting Joelβs untimely and quite gruesome death.
Boasting more than 710,000 views on YouTube alone, that featurette showcased both the artistry behind such a high-octane hour of television (with talk of prosthetics and wintry shooting conditions) and candid reflections from cast members about the emotional fallout the episode would undoubtedly create.
The history of this Emmy category alone tracks the increased investment from streamers and networks in this kind of programming. Past nominees have included behind-the-scenes series tied to everything from β30 Rockβ and βAmerican Horror Storyβ to βRuPaulβs Drag Raceβ and βPose.β And the last two winners (βSuccession: Controlling the Narrativeβ and βShΕgun β The Making of ShΕgunβ) prove that the industry is similarly invested in (and impressed with) them, in turn.
John Wilhelmy, Emmy-nominated creative director of βHacks: Bit by Bit,β notes that short-form projects now must be produced so they can exist across different platforms. βCertain stories within the conversation lend themselves well to TikTok and [Instagram] Reels, so weβll pick those out and optimize them editorially,β he says. βTheyβre often funny outtakes or quick stories that weβll post on those platforms alongside the full-length episodes hitting HBO Max and YouTube.β
In an era where fan-driven episode recaps, YouTube reaction videos and TikTok explainers contribute greatly to a showβs success in an increasingly fractured media ecosystem, these projects suggest a way to positively harness that engagement in a way that still puts TV creators front and center.
Echeverria puts it more simply: βFan-made content has a huge place, but thereβs nothing like seeing how the sauce is made from the chefs themselves.β