The 5 best TV moments you won’t see awarded at the 2025 Emmys

This yearโs Emmy Awards, airing Sept. 14 on CBS, are set to shine a spotlight on 25 different categories in the main broadcast. This undertaking could take over three hours. But it would take much, much longer to honor every great scene, performance and quirky coincidence to appear on TV in the last year. There are so many shows and so many ways to be compelled (and sometimes repelled) by their content.
And so, cue the trumpets! Here, The Envelope presents its own, deeply subjective awards honoring the greatest moments in television during the 2024-25 season โ at least those that wonโt get their proper recognition at the big show. Welcome to the 2025 Envy Awards!
Most Cracking Use of an Easter Egg: โThe Gorgeโ

Anya Taylor-Joy and Miles Teller in โThe Gorge.โ
(Laura Radford / Apple TV+)
A hidden in-joke in a movie or TV series is one thing; burying two slickly executed Easter eggs from your starsโ previous hits takes things to another level. In the Emmy-nominated โThe Gorgeโ (Apple TV+), Anya Taylor-Joy and Miles Teller play assassins slowly getting to know each other remotely, and spend time sharing their hobbies in a montage that might spark some dรฉjร vu in fans of the actors. First, theyโre shown playing chess across an abyss โ a clear shoutout to Taylor-Joyโs Emmy-winning 2020 limited series โThe Queenโs Gambit.โ Seconds later theyโre banging makeshift drums at each other โ an equally clear nod to Tellerโs Oscar-winning 2014 film, โWhiplash.โ Coincidence? We think not โ this one was executed as smoothly as a hit manโs bullet fired into a mutant monster.
Most Thrilling Use of a Weapon in an Elevator: โSquid Gameโ

Park Gyu-young in โSquid Game.โ
(Dong-won Han / No Ju-han/ Netflix)
Who knew guns with hair triggers could be so shockingly lethal in elevators? OK, maybe everyone. But there was tough competition this year in this category. In Apple TV+โs Emmy-nominated โSeverance,โ Mark (Adam Scott) holds a gun on Mr. Drummond (รlafur Darri รlafsson) โ and then whoops! it discharges when he shifts between outie and innie, killing the menacing supervisor. But in โSquid Gameโ (Netflix), No-eul (Park Gyu-young) draws out the tension while crawling toward an overlooked firearm left in an executive elevator โ and her final shots save her life. That extended moment of suspense gives her the killing edge in this category.
Outstanding Use of Misdirection in a New Series: โDept. Qโ

Matthew Goode in โDept. Q.โ
(Justin Downing / Netflix)
It can be hard to surprise TV audiences these days, but the Emmy-nominated โDept. Qโ (Netflix) shocked audiences twice in its pilot through clever editing. In the opening moments, a shooter springs upon authorities surveying a crime scene with almost supernatural speed, catching not just the police but also the audience off guard. But the real surprise involves Merritt (Chloe Pirrie), a prickly prosecutor who seems primed to team up with the surly, wounded Det. Morck (Matthew Goode) to solve crimes. But โ spoiler alert โ Merrittโs scenes are actually flashbacks, and sheโs the seriesโ victim, missing for four years. Thatโs not just a twist in the tale, thatโs a twist in the whole genre.
Best Solution Featuring a Math Savant Spy: โShetlandโ

Jacob Ferguson, left, and Sarah MacGillivray in โShetland.โ
(BritBox)
Nerdy math types multiplied in this yearโs lineup, though no character exactly fit the stereotypical image of a poindexter. Apple TV+โs โPrime Targetโ features Edward (Leo Woodall), a handsome university student who wonโt look you in the eye but discovers that a head for figures can land you in an international conspiracy โ and put your life in danger. Meanwhile, the overlooked-but-fantastic BritBox series โShetlandโ also combined a math genius and an international spy ring with the murder of Annie Bett (Sarah MacGillivray). Both deserve credit for elevating the geek in us all, but โShetlandโ takes the win by showing Bett passing on her numbers know-how to her son, calming him while theyโre in the middle of a secret nighttime investigation.
Ickiest Relationship: โAmerican Horror Storiesโ

Victor Garber in โAmerican Horror Stories.โ
(FX)
Blame โGame of Thronesโ (HBO), which took the taboo of incest to highbrow, Emmy-winning TV a few years ago and opened the door to many more WTF moments around the dial. This year, not only did โThronesโ prequel โHouse of the Dragonโ continue the theme with an episode where Daemon (Matthew Smith) dreams of having sex with his mom, but the Emmy-winning โThe White Lotusโ keeps things in the family as Saxon (Patrick Schwarzenegger) discovers just how much of a people pleaser his younger bro, Lochlan (Sam Nivola), is. FXโs โAmerican Horror Storiesโ went one icky step further, though, as David (Victor Garber) is turned on by his own clone. The pair round the bases together and bring new meaning to โself-love.โ