Thursday, April 3, 2025

The 2021 Carol Awards Voting is Now Open

Share This Post

After an unexpected, though unavoidable hiatus in 2020, the Daytime Carol Awards triumphantly returns, just in time for the holidays! Simply click on the voting form below to log your votes. Voting closes on November 30th at 11:59 pm PST.

The Golden Carols will be handed out next month!

Categories

Based on YOUR nominations, we’ve broken down the voting into six categories:

  • Worst Series Finale
  • Worst Costuming
  • Worst Plot Armor
  • Worst Reboot Idea
  • Worst Nepotism Casting (TV or Film)
  • Worst Hollywood Business Decision

Plus, be sure to check out the official awards post next month to find out who is the inaugural recipient of the Johnny Cardboard Lifetime Achievement Award!

To vote, click here, and then sit back and wait for the magic to happen in December!

Have strong thoughts about this piece you need to share? Or maybe there’s something else on your mind you’re wanting to talk about with fellow Fandomentals? Head on over to our Community server to join in the conversation!!

Author

  • Kori is an entertainment writer and Managing Editor at the Fandomentals. In her spare time, she is a fragrance and watch enthusiast, lover of Eurovision, and Yanni devotee. Find her on Instagram at @fmkori

    View all posts

Latest Posts

First Preview Of Jonathan Hickman’s Imperial Promise Big Changes For Cosmic Marvel

A new comic series launching this June that’s set...

Deadpool And Wolverine Bring Their Daughters To Work In New Limited Series Out This July

Wolverine and Deadpool are teaming up again this July...

The Feet Talk in ‘Unbound’ Gets Inside Your Head

If you are like me, you spend your life...

Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men Adds Mutant Mayhem To Roxley’s Epic Dice Throwing Combat

Cue the guitar riffs and angsty monologues, the X-Men...

Yellowjackets Is Not a Show About Heroes and Villains

Yellowjackets is uninterested in pitting its characters against each other. The characters aren't moralized, rather explored, inviting us not to judge them but to humanize them.