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Always Sunny: Rob McElhenney Shares Look at Season 17 Writers' Room

The Season 17 writers' room for FXX's It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia is officially open - with Rob McElhenney sharing a look at the team.


We got the heads-up earlier this month that the writers' room for the 17th season of FXX's Rob McElhenney, Charlie Day, Glenn Howerton, Kaitlin Olson & Danny DeVito– starring It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia would be officially opening this month. And that news came from a pretty reliable source – directly from Day (with Olson adding that they were eyeing an October filming start). Now, we're getting a look at McElhenney, Day, David Hornsby, Javi Scott, Nina Pedrad, Keyonna Taylor, and more (including Howerton via painting) posing for an official picture of the Season 17 writer's room – meaning the creative juices are already flowing for another round of madness.

always sunny
IT'S ALWAYS SUNNY IN PHILADELPHIA — "Thunder Gun 4: Maximum Cool" – Season 14, Episode 2 (Airs October 2, 10:00 pm e/p) Pictured: (l-r) Charlie Day as Charlie, Rob McElhenney as Mac, Glenn Howerton as Dennis, Kaitlin Olson as Dee, Danny DeVito as Frank. CR: Patrick McElhenney/FXX

Here's a look at McElhenney's social media posts from earlier today – with "Live from the writers' room. Sunny Season 17!" captioning his Instagram post:

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Kaitlin Olson on Emmy Snub

At the Emmy Awards earlier this year, The Gang got the band back together to present the award for Outstanding Talk Series (Trevor Noah & The Daily Show would take top honors) – and to take a moment to address their topic of the show being ignored by Emmy voters. "Have you guys been doing this every year without us?" Day asked toward the opening of their segment. "I feel like we're getting the full Marvel treatment here."

To make matters even a little more insulting, this year also marked the first time that The Gang was invited to attend the biggest awards ceremony in television. DeVito really drove the point home when he reminded them that he had already won an Emmy for his work on Taxi – which would run for five seasons, picking up 34 nominations and 18 wins. "34 nominations in five years vs. zero nominations in 16 years? That math is bad!" Olson observed – before DeVito added, "Rhea [Perlman] won four for 'Cheers.'"

As fun as that was to watch, the point can't be ignored. How can a show that's run for 16 seasons (and counting) be as ignored as "Always Sunny" has been over the course of its run? "We talk about that a lot," Olson shared during an interview with Vanity Fair. "I think there are some shows where it's just decided, 'Oh, this is the hit show of the season,' and people will give it a shot. And then there are just some shows that are just like, 'No, this isn't an Emmy show.' And if you jumped in and saw a clip of our show and didn't quite understand it, you'd think this show is raunchy and gross—not appropriate and not classy and lowbrow. And the truth is, that's true. And if you really watch a full episode, it's so smart. We're making lots of statements. We are making fun of extremists. It's a lot more intelligent than people think."

Olson added, "It just became a thing where it was like, 'Oh, that show again.' People are looking at new shows. The truth is we are getting a lot of validation every single day. We have fans that will cry and shake if they take a picture [with us]. We're doing what we want to do, making a show that we're proud of and making people happy. I really am truly good. But will I take an Emmy? Yeah, I'll take an Emmy."


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Ray FlookAbout Ray Flook

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought onto the core BC team in 2017.
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