Diane Haithman contributes to Deadline’s TV coverage.
If critical acclaim carries weight at Emmy time, then Showtime’s Homeland, developed by Howard Gordon and Alex Gansa — also producers of Fox’s Emmy-winning drama 24 — is sure to make a showing when the 2012 Emmy nominations are
announced on July 19th. The conspiracy thriller stars Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison, a bipolar CIA agent with suspicions bordering on paranoia about the loyalties of a Marine returning home from eight years as an Iraq POW (Damian Lewis as Sgt. Nicholas Brody). Among the reviews that earned it a sterling 91 score (out of 100) on metacritic.com was this New York Times review: “Carrie is hard to like, but Homeland is almost impossible to resist.”
And if the show were to win the Emmy for best dramatic series, it would be the first ever drama or comedy series win for Showtime, confirms David Nevins, entertainment president for the pay cable channel. “We’ve had nominations, but we
haven’t had a win,” Nevins says, referring to such series nominees as the multi-year drama nominee Dexter and the comedies Nurse Jackie and Weeds. “It would be a breakthrough for the network. It’s nice to be nominated, but a win marks a new threshold.”
That being said, Nevins insists that he didn’t have Emmy® in mind when Gordon and Gansa – who based the series on Gideon Raff’s Israeli series Hatufim (Prisoner of War) and remain part of the series’ team of executive producers – brought the project to him.
“They showed me a draft of the script in my first week and a half at Showtime,” says the executive, who joined Showtime in July 2010 from Imagine Television, which produced 24 for Fox. “They had been developing this on spec, probably leaning towards a broadcast network when they got here,” he adds. Homeland had been shopped at Fox and NBC before Nevins snagged it for Showtime.
Nevins said that Showtime pressed for more character complexity than might have worked for Homeland had it been picked up by a broadcast network. “You don’t always know if Carrie is right,” Nevins says. “I always knew it would be an interesting television show. Do you know if it’s going to be a big hit? You don’t. It connected in the right places. I think very early on it got fans in high places, in that little triangle between Washington, New York and Los Angeles, and spread from there.”
But a question remained whether Gordon and Gansa could make it different from 24. Nevins observes that the 10th anniversary of 9/11 made a good press peg for Homeland’s 2011 debut, but it also served to remind fans of the Emmy-winning 24’s eight seasons (2002-2010) on Fox, with Kiefer Sutherland’s Jack Bauer protecting America from terrorism in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. Also ripe for comparison is Showtime’s Sleeper Cell (2005-2006), Emmy-nominated in the
miniseries category. Both Gordon and Gansa believe Homeland brings a fresh eye to the subject.
“It’s a different time – Sleeper Cell was a lot closer to the events of the towers coming down,” Gordon says. “Ten or 11 years later, the country has a chance to be a little more objective.” Gansa adds that they decided “this was very much not going to be a polemic; we are going to take advantage of the complexities that are now apparent to us as writers and as people, 10 years after the fact.”
In spite of their best efforts to present an apolitical view, there were plenty of people who saw 24 as propaganda for some of the policies of the George W. Bush administration, including torture, Gordon acknowledges. And Jack Bauer became “the poster child for what was happening in the real world,” he adds. Because of this, the producers say some in the media interpret Homeland’s moral and political ambiguities as an apology for 24’s perceived sins. Not. “There is no agenda behind Homeland,” Gansa insists. “We are just creating characters and telling a story. People are just conflating current events and timing into an apology for something.”
Gansa and Gordon do assert that they were shooting for a different tone with Homeland — or rather, not shooting. “We didn’t want to repeat the same tropes that Howard spent eight years and I spent two years working on,” Gansa says. “You don’t see Carrie Mathison picking up a gun very often, if at all. You don’t see any real coercive interrogation techniques. Part of that is a function of, we just didn’t think it would work. It was in the been-there, done that category.”
For their part, Gordon and Gansa say they’re not “counting their chickens” for Emmy. “For us to be able to bring Showtime an award that this network has not won yet would be significant for me, because of the incredibly long relationship we’ve had with David [Nevins],” Gordon says. Adds Gansa, “We’re going to be wearing our lucky tuxedos.”


One of, if not the, best show on television. It was exciting, well-acted, expertly written, and built to the finale in a very thrilling manner. If the series doesn’t win then at the very least Claire should.
Agreed. I’m not sure if it should win for Best Series, but if Claire Danes doesn’t win it will be a travesty.
Agreed. Fantastic show. Couldn’t find a single thing wrong with it. Although it will be interesting to see if they can pull off an equally compelling second season.
Fingers crossed for everyone involved.
I loved Homeland until they failed the last 10 minutes of the show. This program should have only been set for a season. If it ended correctly- this could have been one of the greatest series ever and truly memorable. Art.
The desire to just continue it in perpetuity like just another series ruined the show. I doubt that I will watch any more of it, the ending was just such a turn off.
Welcome to American TV.
A thousand times this. I have not watched an episode of ‘Homeland’ because immediately upon hearing the premise I thought ‘How are they going to drag this out beyond one season?’ (and correct me if I am wrong but on Israeli TV this was a one season show?).
That user doesn’t know what he’s talking about. There’s enough content for one more season. Check it out for yourself.
The race should be between Homeland and Breaking Bad this year. Mad Men is a heavy handed overrated soap opera.
And Game of Thrones.
Season 2 of GoT has dragged at times, and hasn’t been up to the pace of the first season. I don’t really blame the writers – apparently the second book was the slowest of the series. Hopefully next season of TV GoT will improve if the book it’s based on is more suitable for adaptation.
Judging the series by it’s totality, including the monster payoff in episode 9, GoT deserves strong consideration for the top spot.
I thought Mad Men was weaker than last year. Breaking Bad arguably better than last year. Claire Daines was perfect as lead actress and Homeland is an overall great series.
But my top two would have to be Breaking Bad and Game of Thrones, with perhaps the slight edge to Breaking Bad. BB arguably deserves it a slight more simply due to the fact that while Bryan Cranston deserves the monster praise he received, recognition for the entire team behind the show is warranted. On the other hand, GoT had the single best hour of TV, which deserves some recognition.
Critical praise does not nessarily translate…see The Wire. Emmy completely ignored.
Oh come on. The best show on TV? It’s a decent show but doesn’t come close to Mad Men or Breaking Bad. It’s all just a PR push.
I could see the argument for BB, as it’s one of my favorite shows. Mad Men? Please. That show is so overhyped. And, to say that it, “doesn’t come close” when it is right up there with the best is ridiculous.
When several shows are at the top…they’re all close.
Have you watched more than 2 episodes?
mad Men is ALL hype, no substance.
Big mistake not making the first season available on DVD. This would have been a great way to gather additional support from persons who wanted to see it but had no recourse. A really stupid move.
Clare Danes, best performance of year last year. Would have trumped anyone in the best actress category at oscars. fact.
Well The Wire had a lot of black people, so there’s that. Something like Homeland is easier for Emmy voters to swallow
And no mention of Mandy Patinkin for chrisakes? Without him, the show would not work. He’s the Spencer Tracy, Everyman on the show.