Bafta TV Awards 2023: This is Going to Hurt and The Responder lead nominations
Ben Whishaw's This Is Going To Hurt and Martin Freeman's The Responder lead the field at his year's Bafta TV Awards, with six nominations each.
Whishaw is up for best actor for playing a doctor in the adaptation of Adam Kay's best-selling memoir.
He will go up against Freeman, who is shortlisted for playing a police officer in his Liverpool-set drama.
Sarah Lancashire, Kate Winslet, Cillian Murphy and Daniel Radcliffe are among the other acting nominees.
But author and former Pointless co-host Richard Osman criticised the daytime category, which sees just three shows nominated, including one - The Repair Shop's royal special - which aired at 20:00.
"Daytime TV punches far above its weight in terms of ratings, cost and popularity," Osman wrote on Twitter. "To have only two daytime shows on this list is a bit of a kick in the teeth for producers.
"If I made Bridge Of Lies, Homes Under The Hammer, Come Dine With Me, Lingo etc. I think I'd feel robbed. Why bother having the category?"
Osman said TV can be a "snobbish industry sometimes", adding: "I love all three of those nominated shows (but the brilliant Repair Shop was on at 8pm)."
A Bafta spokesman told BBC News having three nomination slots is the norm for categories with fewer than 20 submissions, adding The Repair Shop: A Royal Visit "was deemed eligible by Bafta's TV committee because it was originally commissioned by Daytime and for its volume of output as a series".
Other leading shows include Bad Sisters, The Crown, The English and Slow Horses, which have five nominations each.
There are four nominations apiece for Daisy May Cooper's comedy-thriller Am I Being Unreasonable?, as well as three boy-based dramas - Top Boy, Somewhere Boy and Big Boys.
In the acting categories, Lancashire is nominated for her portrayal of US TV chef Julia Child in the HBO drama Julia.
Lancashire also recently starred in Happy Valley, but the latest series of that show was broadcast too recently to be eligible at this year's Baftas.
She is up against Winslet (I Am Ruth), Imelda Staunton (The Crown), Billie Piper (I Hate Suzie Too), Maxine Peake (Anne) and Vicky McClure (Without Sin).
In the leading actor category, Freeman and Whishaw face competition from Murphy (Peaky Blinders), Gary Oldman (Slow Horses), Taron Egerton (Black Bird) and Chaske Spencer (The English).
This Is Going To Hurt author Kay said he was "thrilled" that the screen adaptation had been recognised by Bafta, adding: "This show is a love letter to the NHS and the staff who work there."
Tony Schumacher, the former police officer who wrote The Responder, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme it was "amazing" to be nominated.
"I grew up in one of the worst areas in the country in terms of deprivation," he said. "I got a U in my O-level English. I'd always wanted to be a writer but I thought, I haven't got an O-level so I can't be a writer, and it took me 40 years to realise that I could."
Elsewhere, the live event category sees nominations for both the Queen's Platinum Jubilee last June and her state funeral in September.
The first series of the hit BBC reality show The Traitors has scored nominations for best reality show, as well as best entertainment performance for host Claudia Winkleman.
Winkleman is up against comedian Rosie Jones, who is recognised for her programme Trip Hazard. Jones tweeted: "Erm, so I've just woken up to the BEST NEWS EVER. I'm a Bafta nominee, baby! I'm ringing my mum."
Another nominee in the category, Sue Perkins, tweeted: "Beyond delighted to be nominated for this year's Bafta Awards. Huge congrats to all my fellow nominees. Off to dance around the garden for a bit."
In the scripted comedy category, Am I Being Unreasonable? faces competition from the final series of Derry Girls as well as Big Boys and Ghosts.
Read more about the nominated shows
Radcliffe is nominated for best male comedy performance for his portrayal of Weird Al Yankovic in the biopic of the US musical comedian.
Other nominees in that category include Lenny Rush (Am I Being Unreasonable?) and Stephen Merchant (The Outlaws).
The best female comedy performance shortlist sees nods for Cooper (Am I Being Unreasonable?), Diane Morgan (Cunk on Earth) and Lucy Beaumont (Meet The Richardsons).
Some of the biggest TV hits of the year can be found in the international category, with nominations for Wednesday, The White Lotus, The Bear and Dahmer - Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story.
Joe Lycett vs Beckham: Got Your Back At Xmas - which saw the comedian criticise the former footballer for his links with Qatar - is nominated in the features category.
Who missed out?
There are some notable omissions in this year's list. Murphy is the sole nominee for the final season of Peaky Blinders, while ITV's Trigger Point - which won the National Television Award for best new drama in September - has been shut out entirely.
Last year's Bafta best soap winner Coronation Street has not even been shortlisted this time.
Elsewhere, Netflix hit Heartstopper, about a teenage boy who falls in love with his classmate, and The Tourist, starring Jamie Dornan as a man who wakes up with amnesia following a car crash, only have one craft nomination each.
The winners in the main categories will be announced at a ceremony on 14 May, with the Bafta Craft Awards handed out on 23 April.