AEW Dynamite is a very good show. Sure, it has its detractors, some more vocal than others, but the promotion's flagship program consistently racks in a ton of viewers each week and often ranks near the top of the 18-49 key demo.

The show has a little bit of everything; high flying matches, hard-hitting bouts, and enough outside interference to get at least twice as many wrestlers on the show each week than are booked for matches, but is All Elite Wrestling's flagship program worthy of an Emmy?

Well, Tony Khan sure happens to think so. That's right, according to Dave Meltzer, Khan intends to submit his weekly wrestling show to the Emmy's for Outstanding Structured Reality Program, an award most recently won by Netflix's Queer Eye. Now granted, as Meltzer pointed out himself, the chances of AEW winning the award are rather slim; wrestling shows have been submitted for the award in the past, most notably WWE's RAW, and yet the award has never ended up in the hands of Vince McMahon or any other promoter advantageous enough to give it a shot.

So why, you may ask, would AEW go through the trouble if it is unlikely to result in even a nomination?

Two words: Free press.

While Khan would certainly love to add some gold to his trophy case, without having to book any weird promoter as champion angles, the prospects of legitimizing his program, especially as it becomes more of a focal point of Warner Brothers Discovery's offerings, is certainly worth the application process and an admittedly long-shot “For your Consideration” campaign.

Considering the history of wrestling shows and the Emmy's, it would truly be an honor just to be nominated.