Come Dancing has been dealt a huge blow as the show failed to land a TV nomination,
For the first time in eight years, the programme has been snubbed by the BAFTA Television Awards.
Strictly has been left out of the Entertainment Programme category despite featuring from 2019 and winning in 2024.
The ballroom show has even failed to land a nod for the Memorable Moment gong, despite winning twice previously.
The shock snub follows the departure of hosts and , as well as the ongoing cast bloodbath.
An industry insider said: 'This is a spectacular turn of events for Strictly which was flying high at the Baftas just two years ago, as the show was also celebrating its 20th birthday.
Strictly Come Dancing has been dealt a huge blow as the show failed to land a BAFTA TV nomination, following the brutal cast axings
For the first time in eight years, the BBC programme has been snubbed by the BAFTA Television Awards (Dianne Buswell accepting a TV BAFTA in 2025)
'But since then it’s become mired in scandal and now, of course, two of its greatest assets – Tess and Claudia – are leaving and it feels like there’s less to celebrate about the show', the told The Sun.
Daily Mail has contacted Strictly Come Dancing for comment.
Fans have been left stunned in recent weeks as favourites Karen Hauer, 43, Nadiya Bychkova, 36, Michelle, 30, Luba Mushtuk, 36, and Gorka Marquez, 35, have all been given the boot.
Sources claimed on Monday that bosses have chosen to keep pros with a bigger online following in a desperate bid to draw in younger viewers.
Meanwhile Fleur East and Janette Manrara have also reportedly been axed from Strictly Come Dancing's spin-off It Takes Two.
Adolescence has dominated the Television Awards shortlist - receiving a mammoth eleven nominations including Limited Drama and Leading Actor, including the Craft Awards.
The drama, which made its debut on the streaming site back in March last year, looks to be taking over awards season AGAIN, having already been awarded nine Primetime Awards, four , and a Critics Choice Award.
Now, it will have eleven chances to scoop more gongs as the BAFTAs returns in May -with stars Stephen Graham, Owen Cooper, Ashley Walters, Erin Doherty and Christine Tremarco all up for awards.
The series, which was created by actor Stephen, 52, and writer Jack Thorne, tells the story of British teenager Jamie Miller, who is found guilty of murdering a female classmate after being sucked in by the manosphere online.
Stephen will compete against Lockerbie's , The Death of Bunny Monro's and Smoke's in the Leading Actor catrgory.
While Ashley, 43, will face his co-star Owen, 16, in the Supporting Actor category, alongside Mobland's Paddy Considine, The Death of Bunny Munro's Rafael Mathe, The Gold's Joshua McGuire and Down Cemetery Road's Fehinti Balogun.
While Erin, 33, will be up against The White Lotus' Aimee Lou Wood, co-star Christine, Get Millie Black's Chyna McQueen, Task's Emilia Jones and Rose Ayling-Ellis in Reunion as Leading Actress, the first time she has been nominated in the category.
The shock snub follows the departure of hosts Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman (pictured with TV BAFTA in 2024), as well as the ongoing cast bloodbath
Stephen could also be up for a win in his performance of Disney+ series A Thousand Blows, created by Steven Knight, which is up for seven awards including Drama Series.
While Netflix has a total of 28 nominations, it's the BBC who have the highest number of nominations, with 73 in total - five of which are for The Celebrity Traitors.
The show became the highest-rated show on British TV last year, with host Claudia Winkleman up for a chance at taking home a gong in the best Entertainment Programme section.
While Prime Video's Last One Laughing, which last week returned for its second series, will compete against the all-stars version of the Traitors, with show star Bob Mortimer up for best Entertainment Performance.
The BAFTA Television Awards, which takes place at London's The Southbank Centre's Royal Festival Hall, will take place on May 10, and hosted by comedian Greg Davies.
BAFTA CEO Jane Millchip said: '2025 has been an exceptional year for television, reflected in 124 nominated programmes that highlight the strength and originality of British storytelling.
'From powerful documentaries and standout comedy to homegrown drama and the international series that captured global attention, this year’s nominees demonstrate a medium at its creative peak.'
The BAFTA Television Awards take place on May 10




