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Stay golden, Golden Globes

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"Ugly Betty" also won best TV comedy, and even more surprisingly, "Grey's Anatomy" beat out "24," "Lost," "Big Love" and "Heroes" for best TV drama. "Grey's Anatomy" is a solid show, but with such strong competition, not to mention neglected dramas like "Battlestar Galactica" and "Friday Night Lights," the oft-repeated words of Ellen Pompeo's Meredith Grey came to mind: "Seriously? I mean, seriously?" Series creator Shonda Rhimes humbly echoed those words upon accepting her award.

Of course, such bashful remarks didn't erase every last tiresome Hollywood tic. At least, instead of thanking their agents by name, most winners thanked "my team" (a catchall category that presumably includes agents, managers, stylists, personal trainers and Reiki healers). But when Kyra Sedgwick won best actress in a TV drama for her lead role in TNT's "The Closer," she came across -- as so many actresses do -- as both affected and caught off guard. (Are those affectations so deeply ingrained that they're around even when an actress is being spontaneous, or is that pseudo spontaneity just another affectation?) Sedgwick also skipped the "team" catchall and thanked her publicist and her lawyer by name. Yawn. Why not haul them all up onstage while you're at it, so a whole crowd of professionals can cheer at the flawless inhuman human being they've created?

There were plenty of odd moments onstage, though, starting with the confusion and long silence that followed Justin Timberlake's announcement that Prince had won a Golden Globe for best original song for "The Song of the Heart," which he wrote for "Happy Feet." Timberlake looked around for several moments, clearly expecting Prince to come up to the stage, but when he never showed, Timberlake said, "I guess Prince couldn't be here, so uh ...," and then, bending down so that he was about a foot shorter, "I'd like to accept this award on his behalf!"

At the one-hour mark, there was Prince, at the table right behind Eddie Murphy. Was His Highness late, or in the bathroom getting high? Hugh Grant cleared up the mystery, announcing that Prince had been stuck in traffic, and added, "Very easy to get caught in your car in this town!" Ahem. There were a few titters, but not the rousing laughter you'd expect. I guess Hollywood Boulevard prostitutes are no longer the fashionable accessories they once were.

Second only to older women and women of color among the honorees were British men, who can always be relied on to abandon the formal thank-you speech and get a little weird. Hugh Laurie won the award for best actor in a TV drama, and after thanking the "wonderful crew" on "House," he digressed entertainingly: "I know that everyone says they have a wonderful crew but logically that can't be the case, they can't all be wonderful. Somebody somewhere is working with a crew of drunken thieves, but it's not me. They are truly a wonderful collection of people, and I am privileged to spend my days in their company, and they smell of newly mown grass."

Then there was Bill Nighy, who, after winning best actor in a TV miniseries or movie, remarked, "I used to think that prizes were damaging and divisive until I got one. And now they seem sort of meaningful and real."

But the most bizarre comments of the night came, not surprisingly, from Sacha Baron Cohen, who took home best actor in a comedy or musical for "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan":

"I saw some dark parts of America, an ugly side of America, a side of America that rarely sees the light of day. I refer, of course, to the anus and testicles of my costar, Ken Davitian ... And then when my 300-pound costar decided to sit on my face and squeeze the oxygen from my lungs, I was faced with a choice: death, or to breathe in the air that had been trapped in a small pocket between his buttocks for 30 years. Kenneth, if it was not for that rancid bubble, I would not be here today."

Tom Hanks also veered into off-color territory in presenting Warren Beatty with the Cecil B. DeMille award for lifetime achievement. After marveling that Beatty won "Most Promising Newcomer" back in 1962, he went on to rave about Beatty's "balls" ("and by balls, I mean artistic vision") over and over again, nine times by my count. The running joke not only didn't get much of a laugh but even seemed to make the unflappable Beatty slightly uncomfortable.

Upon accepting his award, Beatty expressed envy over Eastwood's career. "Clint, please, are we not friendly? I don't understand. First you do one great movie right after another movie, then you've gotta go do two more movies that are just as great as the first two movies, but you've gotta do them at the same time, no less, and you've gotta do the score? How do you think that makes me feel?" Beatty wrapped it up by snatching the "most touching speech" honor straight out of Ferrera's hands, addressing his wife, Annette Bening: "Thank you for our life together, and for making me feel that I am always your most promising newcomer." Aww. Wait, was he trying to be dirty?

Since this year's proceedings were all about balls and rancid bubbles, the only vaguely political comments came at the very end of the night, when California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger presented "Babel" with the best picture award. Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu took the statuette and quipped, "I swear I have my papers in order, governor, I swear!"

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About the writer

Heather Havrilesky is Salon's TV critic. She also maintains the rabbit blog. You can find more of her columns in the I Like To Watch directory.

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