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There were so many snubs, surprises and mistakes. So, so many mistakes this year!!!

Emmys: The Biggest Snubs and Surprises

Although HBO juggernaut series “Game of Thrones” and “Veep” both came to an end this year and therefore were seeing their final chances to be celebrated at the Emmys, the voting members of the Television Academy did not just tick all of the boxes for those two behemoths and call it a night. In fact, far from it.

At Sunday’s ceremony, “Game of Thrones” won the drama series trophy and supporting drama actor for Peter Dinklage, while “Veep” was shut out.

There were some other repeat names called this year, including lead comedy actor winner Bill Hader (“Barry”) and supporting comedy actress winner Alex Borstein (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”), but the 71st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards were chock-full of new names accepting onstage at the Microsoft Theater at L.A. Live — including first-ever Emmy winners Jodie Comer (“Killing Eve”), Craig Mazin (“Chernobyl”), triple-winner Phoebe Waller-Bridge (“Fleabag”) and Jharrel Jerome (“When They See Us”).

Here are the biggest snubs and surprises of the 71st Primetime Emmy Awards.

SNUB: Julia Louis-Dreyfus
The titular star of HBO’s “Veep” who beat cancer last year was a frontrunner going into nominations at this year’s Emmys — but at the end of the day she didn’t get enough votes to win her seventh statue for the role. If she had won she also would have become the most-decorated performer by the Television Academy.

SURPRISE: Jodie Comer
The “Killing Eve” star topped some tough competition in the lead drama actress category, including her own costar Sandra Oh, who had been nominated last year and was seen as a frontrunner this year. But Comer’s seductive assassin Villanelle proved too good to pass up for Academy members, giving Jodie Comer her first-ever Emmy.

SNUB: Ava DuVernay
The Oscar nominee and previous Emmy winner (“13th”) wrote and directed all four episodes of “When They See Us,” the dramatized telling of the real-life 1989 Central Park jogger case that saw five teenage boys wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for an assault. It was an emotional tale that had everyone talking when it dropped on Netflix, but ultimately she lost the limited series/TV movie writing and directing awards to players from HBO’s limited series, “Chernobyl.”

SURPRISE: Phoebe Waller-Bridge and “Fleabag”
Many pundits were anticipating the “Fleabag” auteur would take the comedy writing trophy (and she did), but she also won the lead comedy actress Emmy — over long-time favorite Julia Louis-Dreyfus (who was nominated for the last time for her titular role on HBO’s “Veep”), as well as last year’s incumbent winner Rachel Brosnahan (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”), to name a few — and the coveted comedy series trophy.

SNUB: “Schitt’s Creek”
The little Canadian comedy that could pushed onto the Emmy ballot with four total noms this year, including comedy series and lead comedy actor and actress, proving the voters didn’t mind being a little late to celebrate a long-running series. But not even the star power of Catherine O’Hara and Eugene Levy was enough to topple “Fleabag.”

SURPRISE: Jharrel Jerome
The young actor who played the real-life Korey Wise during both parts of his story (in his teenage years when he was first falsely arrested in the 1989 Central Park jogger case and then more than a decade later as he literally grew up in prison) was the youngest in his category and also the freshest face when it came to his resume, but the power of his performance in “When They See Us” prevailed over the bigger names.

SURPRISE: Julia Garner
Garner won her first-ever Emmy for the second season of “Ozark” after being on the ballot alongside four powerful players from “Game of Thrones” and Fiona Shaw of “Killing Eve.”

SURPRISE: Jason Bateman
The “Ozark” actor-producer-director took the drama directing trophy in a tightly-packed category that included multiple entries from the final season of “Game of Thrones.”

SURPRISE: Jesse Armstrong
The second season of “Succession” has been lighting up social media, and that added buzz undoubtedly helped scribe Jesse Armstrong go all the way for the win for drama writing over the series finale of “Game of Thrones,” as well as a hanging second season episode of “The Handmaid’s Tale” and the fourth season finale of “Better Call Saul,” among others.