Millions watch the winners. Few see the thousand-person operation that puts the show on air. Every major awards ceremony is a feat of live broadcast engineering — dozens of cameras, acres of custom lighting, miles of cable, and crews that have rehearsed for weeks before the nominations are even read. This section goes deep into how the biggest nights in entertainment actually get made.
Deep dives into the production of each major awards show — the people, the gear, and the infrastructure that makes it happen.
The world's most-watched film awards have been broadcast live since 1953. Today's production deploys more than 35 cameras across the Dolby Theatre, a purpose-built lighting rig, and a broadcast infrastructure that sends the show to over 200 territories. Inside the directors, DPs, lighting designers, and engineers who pull it off.
Television's top prize is also one of the most technically complex live productions on air. Shot at venues including the Peacock Theater and Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, the Emmys demands a camera package calibrated for both intimate presenter moments and sweeping audience reaction coverage. We break down every department.
The only major awards show broadcast from a hotel ballroom. 1,300 guests at dinner tables, a 25-foot ceiling, active table service during the live broadcast, and handheld cameras weaving between seats to find the winner before their name is finished being read.
The Royal Festival Hall, BBC One coverage, and a completely different broadcast infrastructure from anything in Hollywood. 25fps, Calrec consoles, no commercial breaks, and a concert-hall acoustic that presents unique challenges for the sound team.
Coming soon — the Shrine Auditorium, peer-voted awards, and one of the few major shows to stream exclusively rather than broadcast on traditional television.
Coming soon — the Crypto.com Arena, live performances integrated throughout, and one of the largest PA systems ever assembled for a live television broadcast.
Coming soon — Radio City Music Hall, Broadway performance numbers staged specifically for television, and the challenge of presenting theatrical spectacle through a broadcast lens.
A major awards show touches almost every discipline in live television. Here's what each crew is responsible for.
The weeks before show night are as intense as the broadcast itself.