Robert Irwin and Sam Pang will go head-to-head in the Gold Logie race, with the pair among the six personalities nominated for the Gold Logie on Monday morning, along with Ally Langdon, Julia Morris, Lisa Millar, Poh Ling Yeow – who were all nominated last year – and Todd Woodbridge.
It is the second time that Irwin, who will host the ceremony on Sunday, August 16, has been nominated for a Gold Logie, while it marks the first Logie nomination full stop for Pang, who has hosted the Logies for the past three years but declined to return this year.
The Gold nomination will be bittersweet for Irwin as well as Morris, who has been nominated for the fifth time, as their hit reality show I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! has been “rested” by Network 10 and is now looking for a new home. The pair have also been nominated for most popular presenter, along with Amanda Keller, Hamish Blake, Larry Emdur and Millar.
The ABC and Prime Video dominated the 66th Logie Award nominations, with the public broadcaster receiving 33 nods across the “best” categories, while Prime Video’s moving World War II drama The Narrow Road to the Deep North was the most nominated show overall.
Hollywood star and Oscar nominee Jacob Elordi was nominated best lead actor for his role in the WWII drama, which picked up six nominations, including best miniseries or telemovie, as well as best lead actress in a drama for Odessa Young, best supporting actress for Heather Mitchell and best supporting actor for Simon Baker and Thomas Weatherall.
The nominations were announced at The Star casino in Sydney on Monday morning and provided a reasonably balanced snapshot of the Australian TV industry, with a mix of familiar faces (Sam Neill, Claudia Karvan, Brooke Satchwell), new stars (Elordi, Yerin Ha, Aisha Dee) familiar shows (Home and Away, Have You Been Paying Attention?) and new dramas (The Family Next Door) and comedies (Dog Park) in the mix.
TV sporting legend Bruce McAvaney was also recognised with a new award for most popular sports presenter named in his honour, an award for which he was also nominated for his work commentating on the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo for SBS.
The ABC was recognised across the full spread of “best” categories, with nominations in drama, comedy, children, news, reality, lifestyle, factual and entertainment. It also received three nominations in the most popular new talent category, with classical pianist Andrea Lam (The Piano) and actors Eloise Hart (Goolagong and Mystery Road: Origin) and Lila McGuire (Goolagong) all recognised.
In what was possibly the oddest nomination, 39-year-old former English cricket captain Stuart Broad was also named in the popular new talent category, after his despair in the Seven commentary box during the Ashes tour went viral. Also nominated in that category were actors Rowan Witt and Tamala, who starred in the Paramount+ comedy Ghosts: Australia.
Prime Video, meanwhile, overtook Netflix for the first time to become the most nominated streamer, picking up 11 nods, including six for The Narrow Road to the Deep North and four for season two of Deadloch, including best actress in a comedy for its leads Kate Box and Madeleine Sami.
It wasn’t all bad news for Netflix, as its Tasmanian murder mystery The Survivors was the second-most nominated drama, with five nods, including best miniseries or telemovie and best lead actress for Bridgerton star Yerin Ha. It was followed by the ABC’s Mystery Road: Origin, which received four nominations, including best drama and best lead actor and actress for Mark Coles Smith and Tuuli Narkle.
The ABC also led the comedy pack, with Dog Park and Austin receiving three nominations each, including acting nods for Leon Ford and Celia Pacquola in Dog Park and for Ben Miller and Michael Theo in Austin.
Disney+ received its only nomination in that same scripted comedy category, with the playful Victorian-era rom-com The Artful Dodger recognised.
Network 10, the ABC and Seven divided up the best comedy entertainment category, with nods for Gruen Nation (ABC), Guy Montgomery’s Guy Mont Spelling Bee (ABC), Hard Quiz (ABC), Have You Been Paying Attention? (Network 10), The Cheap Seats (Network 10) and The Front Bar (Seven Network).
The news, factual and sports categories were dominated by Nine and Seven, while the ABC ruled the best children’s program list, with five of the six nominations. SBS, meanwhile, received seven nominations overall, including two nods in the best factual or documentary program category for The People vs Robodebt and The Secret DNA Of Us.
The Ray Martin Award for most popular news or public affairs presenter ticked off the big guns of news – Ally Langdon (9Network), David Speers (ABC), Karl Stefanovic (9Network), Michael Usher (Seven Network), Sarah Abo (9Network) and Sarah Ferguson (ABC) – and shut out Ten and SBS again.
After some grumblings over the new voting system introduced in 2024 – where “best” awards were decided by a combined score comprising a judging panel (30 per cent), audience data (20 per cent) and public votes (50 per cent) – this year’s Logies have been rejigged again. Each judge now provides a score out of 30 (for assessment criteria) and a score out of 10 for audience engagement. Those scores will then be combined and weighted to make up 50 per cent of the score, with the public vote comprising the remaining 50 per cent.
The change will no doubt please many of the streamers, who felt disadvantaged by the scoring, as they were unwilling to provide concrete ratings data, which meant they lost an automatic 20 per cent of the vote.
The 66th TV Week Logie Awards will be broadcast on Sunday, August 16, on Seven.
*Stan is owned by Nine, the publisher of this masthead.
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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au



