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Who will take home Emmys this year? Here are some predictions

TV's top winners will be named Sunday night when the 69th Emmy Awards are presented at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

In the meantime, guesses will have to suffice. With that in mind, a pair of intrepid Associated Press television critics are going public with their picks for who will win - and who should.

Here are their forecasts for seven major Emmy races:

Drama Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: "The Handmaid's Tale." A work of art so revelatory of our time should reign.

Will win: "The Crown." It's not just that Hollywood is filled with Anglophiles, although that's one reason the lavish story of young Queen Elizabeth will win. Emmy voters also adore epic sweep and this has it.

Frazier Moore

Should win: "This Is Us." Is this the gutsiest drama on TV? It dares to confront everyday, ordinary life - and makes it extraordinary. No wonder it touched hearts.

Will win: "The Handmaid's Tale." A classic novel from the past is transformed into a hauntingly up-to-the-minute cautionary tale. No wonder it touched nerves.

"Veep" star Julia Louis-Dreyfus has won outstanding lead actress in a comedy for five years in a row. On Sunday, she could make it six. Courtesy of HBO

Comedy Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: "Atlanta." A tour de force by creator and star Donald Glover epitomizing the small screen's embrace of unexpected and challenging material.

Will win: "Veep." Comedies keep winning streaks going, and with just two Emmys so far, it's far behind the five top comedy trophies each that "Modern Family" and "Frasier" collected.

Frazier Moore

Should win: "Master of None." Moving even beyond the masterful first season, Year Two was a festival of inspired short films, with emotions and ideas supplementing its wit.

Will win: "Veep." Despite a field of bright, new candidates, voters will default to this plenty-rewarded, all-too-seasoned Emmy mainstay.

NBC's "This Is Us" beat back cable and streaming competition for a best drama Emmys nod, and Sterling K. Brown could very well win for best actor. Courtesy of NBC

Actor, Drama Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: Sterling K. Brown ("This Is Us"). First among equals in an excellent cast, with a nuanced vulnerability that always keeps the heartbreak on the right side of soap opera.

Will win: Brown. His winning turn last year as O.J. Simpson prosecutor Christopher Darden shows his versatility. Emmy voters get it.

Frazier Moore

Should win: Matthew Rhys ("The Americans"). He's long overdue after five seasons of intrigue and multiple personas in his role as a Russian spy masquerading as a 1980s American suburban dad.

Will win: "This Is Us" stars Sterling K. Brown and Milo Ventimiglia will cancel out each other in the voting. That leaves lovably shifty Bob Odenkirk the winner after three consecutive nominations as the lead on "Better Call Saul."

Will Elisabeth Moss take home an Emmy for her work in "The Handmaid's Tale"? Courtesy of Hulu

Actress, Drama Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: Elisabeth Moss ("The Handmaid's Tale"). The "Mad Men" curse never lifted for Moss as it did for Jon Hamm, but her subtly fierce portrayal of a woman caught in hell shouldn't be slighted.

Will win: Claire Foy ("The Crown"). A lovely and delicate turn, and playing British queens on the big screen worked for Judi Dench and Helen Mirren, the latter also nabbing an Emmy for the miniseries "Queen Elizabeth I."

Frazier Moore

Should win: Keri Russell ("The Americans"). She's long overdue after five seasons of intrigue and multiple personas in her role as a Russian spy masquerading as a 1980s American suburban mom.

Will win: Elisabeth Moss ("The Handmaid's Tale"), passed over as a nominee seven times in the past for "Mad Men" and other great work. It's her turn.

Donald Glover might just claim a comedy Emmy for his role in "Atlanta." Courtesy of FX

Actor, Comedy Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: Donald Glover ("Atlanta"). An auteur who has the magnetism of a star, but it can take time for voters to warm up to a new voice.

Will win: Jeffrey Tambor ("Transparent"). He's brilliant, he's won twice before and his transgender role makes a deeply affecting statement.

Frazier Moore

Should win: Aziz Ansari. Previously known as a clever comic presence, he went even further with this season's "Master of None."

Will win: Donald Glover ("Atlanta"). A breakout talent with a fresh and deeply felt comic vision - who wouldn't want to give this star an Emmy salute?

Actress, Comedy Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: Tracee Ellis Ross ("black-ish"). Putting the indomitable Julia Louis-Dreyfus aside for argument's sake, doesn't Ross deserve respect for combining the rubber-faced charm of Lucille Ball with a modern woman's spine of steel?

Will win: Louis-Dreyfus ("Veep"). She is undeniably sublime, and it was announced that next season will be the political satire's last. So, no stinting!

Frazier Moore

Should win: So many overlooked funny ladies should be here, including Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer of "Broad City." Julie Klausner of "Difficult People" and Rashida Jones of "Angie Tribeca." Since they aren't, and Ellie Kemper is, why not reward her for the gradually wisening naif she plays so irresistibly on "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt"?

Will win: Julia Louis-Dreyfus ("Veep"). Why would voters stop with five in a row?

"Big Little Lies" with Reese Witherspoon faces tough competition in the Emmy race for outstanding limited series. Courtesy of HBO

Limited Series

Lynn Elber

Should win: "The Night Of." As consuming as a true-crime documentary but with human frailty made indelible in this superb production.

Will win: "Big Little Lies." It's close between Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon's addictive drama versus the juicy "Feud: Bette and Joan," but Kidman and Witherspoon were also hands-on executive producers. Entrepreneurial women win.

Frazier Moore

Should win: Edging out the equally deserving "Big Little Lies" in a photo finish: "The Night Of," a dark and disturbing feast of storytelling, acting, pathos and suspense.

Will win: "Feud: Bette and Joan." Flashy, lavish and blessed with bravura performances by Susan Sarandon and Jessica Lange. Hooray for Hollywood!

The 69th Emmy Awards

Airs at 7 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 17, on CBS

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