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Taylor Sheridan’s massive television empire was shut out of the 2026 Emmy Awards, continuing a long-running trend from the Television Academy.
Earlier this week, the 2026 Emmy nominations were released and out of every category, Sheridan’s TV universe received a single stunt coordination nod for “Tulsa King,” despite the popularity of his other shows: “Landman” and “The Madison.”
Fox News contributor Raymond Arroyo, who hosts “Arroyo Grande with Raymond Arroyo,” weighed in on yet another snub from the Television Academy.

Taylor Sheridan’s “Landman” and “The Madison” were completely ignored by the Television Academy ahead of the 2026 Emmys. (David Becker/Getty Images for Paramount+/Eamonn M. McCormack / Stringer)
“Despite rave reviews for ‘Landman’ and ‘Madison,’ the Emmys have once again totally shut these Taylor Sheridan shows out of any contention. Remember, these are industry awards — insiders lauding awards upon each other. What we are seeing is the industry seeking to protect its own,” Arroyo told Fox News Digital.
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“Sheridan is an outlaw — a guy who charted his own course and who obviously has his finger on the pulse of American audiences. They are outraged that his shows have such huge viewership and that they are for the most part non-political enterprises,” he continued. “In some ways, Sheridan’s work is a throwback to the ‘Dallas’ and ‘Dynasty’ days, when audiences tuned in to watch great actors thrash about in the melodrama of the week.”
“Others might ‘win’ Emmy’s and other acknowledgments, but Sheridan is the six-time champion of television.”
Arroyo called the “Landman,” “Tulsa King” and previous “Yellowstone” snubs “absurd.”
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“There is one exception; ‘Tulsa King’ was nominated for an Emmy this year… for Stunts! The biggest stunt is that no Sheridan show has even won best series, actor, or ensemble,” Arroyo concluded.
President of Interdependence, Sarah Schmidt, doesn’t necessarily see this year’s Emmy nominations as a snub to Sheridan.

Taylor Sheridan attends the black carpet during “Yellowstone” Season 5 Fort Worth Premiere at Hotel Drover on November 13, 2022 in Fort Worth, Texas. (Omar Vega/Getty Images)
“Is it a snub? I guess that depends on how you define it. This move really is not surprising when you look at what Sheridan has built and how he talks about it, and specifically The Academy. He went on a podcast a week before nominations and clearly said that he is not trying to win Emmys and called the executives and critics who influence the awards just about every name in the book,” Schmidt told Fox News Digital.
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She continued, “The Academy is made of industry peers, and you cannot spend years telling the world that you have no respect for it and then expect them to hand you a trophy. That’s not how it works. He essentially opted out, and they took him up on it.”

Taylor Sheridan created the Kevin Costner-led series, “Yellowstone.” (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Network)
Schmidt also pointed out that the Television Academy historically honors shows that are “more moody, ambiguous, and amateur-driven.”
“Sheridan creates big, broad, and emotionally direct shows for Middle America. He makes a lot of them quickly. That is a commercial machine, not an awards play. Voters have never really rewarded popularity on its own,” she said.
Regardless, Schmidt only sees Sheridan’s hit shows being left off the nomination list as a win for him.
“Big picture, this snub doesn’t hurt Sheridan. It actually helps him. His entire brand is built on being an outsider who beat Hollywood and lives and works in the fray. Getting shut out by the institution he mocks only proves his point,” she said. “Him not being nominated only further underscores his brand.”

Michelle Pfeiffer as Stacy Clyburn in “The Madison.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)
Schmidt explained that the people who are hurting from being snubbed are the actors and the crew. Michelle Pfeiffer received a nomination this year, just not for her work on “The Madison.”
“Sheridan can afford not to care about the Emmys. The people working in service of his scripts, however, deserve a second look. That is the storyline worth paying attention to here,” she concluded.
Doug Eldridge, founder of Achilles PR, made a sports comparison when discussing Sheridan with Fox News Digital.
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“In many ways, Sheridan’s ongoing Emmy snub has become almost akin to Jordan compared to LeBron. Jordan wanted one thing, rings, and he retired as a six-time NBA champion, who was undefeated in the finals. By contrast, LeBron has often been accused of chasing stats and building a brand, rather than having the singular focus that made Jordan the greatest of all-time,” Eldridge began.

Taylor Sheridan has addressed the Emmy snubs in the past. (David Becker/Getty Images for Paramount+)
“Point being, Sheridan has never chased the vanity metrics or subjective industry awards; he has pursued the one thing that matters most: competition-crushing viewership across every show he’s ever created. Others might ‘win’ Emmy’s and other acknowledgments, but Sheridan is the six-time champion of television,” he concluded.
Steve Honig told Fox News Digital that Sheridan’s snub is a reflection on the industry, not on the creator’s work.
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“It is a reminder that awards and influence are not always closely aligned. From a public relations perspective, there is a tendency to treat industry recognition as the ultimate measure of success. It isn’t. Awards certainly matter; they provide third-party validation, generate headlines and can elevate show’s reputation. But audience loyalty, cultural relevance and ratings often tell a far more meaningful story,” Honig said.

Dana Delany, Max Casella, Sylvester Stallone, Andrea Savage, Garrett Hedlund and Annabella Sciorra and Sylvester Stallone at the premiere of “Tulsa King” in 2022. (Photo by Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)
He continued, “Sheridan has built one of the most successful franchises in television by understanding exactly who his audience is and consistently delivering for them. Whether Emmy voters embrace his work is almost beside the point. Millions of viewers already have. The Emmy nominations may shape the industry’s conversation for a week. Sheridan’s audience will determine his legacy for years. From a public relations standpoint, that is the audience whose opinion carries the most weight.”
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Fox News Digital’s Larry Fink contributed to this report.
