The TV Academy has decided that TV movies like Behind the Candelabra shouldn’t have to compete with the likes of American Horror Story anymore.

Late on Thursday, officials announced that for the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards in August, separate categories for miniseries and TV movies will be restored. The academy had combined the two categories back in 2011, reasoning that the decline in the network miniseries business had made it unnecessary to hand out two separate awards.

But since then, miniseries have exploded on basic cable networks, with Emmy-nominated hits such as The Bible and Hatfields & McCoys.

“The Television Academy acknowledges the increased programming of both movie and miniseries over the past three years and returned them to their pre-2011 status as separate programme categories,” Emmy officials said in a statement. The academy also bumped up the number of nominees that can be named in the writing, directing and performing categories, from five to six.

It’s a piece of happy news for HBO and other cable networks that do extensive long-form programming, as it roughly doubles their chances of getting a nomination that will burnish the network’s reputation.

Organizers made additional changes as well. Outstanding reality program will now be divided into “structured reality” and “unstructured reality” shows. The academy considers structured reality to be shows such as Mythbusters, which revolves around humorously testing commonly held assumptions each week. An unstructured show would be something like Duck Dynasty or Pawn Stars — although anyone who has seen either series know they have plenty of structure.

The voice-over award will now be split between general narration and character voice-over, while the number of possible nominees in the outstanding drama and comedy categories will be expanded from six to seven.