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HOLLYWOOD — If “Pushing Daisies” deserves its Golden Globe nominations, it might just be because in the land of TV crime dramas, this ABC comedy stands out.

Fans might shudder to think of Bryan Fuller’s candy-colored romantic fairy tale as a mere procedural, but that’s how the creator pitched his idea. But is it a fairy tale with a procedural bent or a procedural with a fairy tale twist? The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which in past years discovered cable fare such as “The Shield,” “Nip/Tuck” and “Big Love” before the Emmys noticed them, bestowed three important Golden Globe nominations for “Pushing Daisies.”

The series was the only new show that received a nomination alongside its lead actors, Lee Pace and Anna Friel. The awards will be handed out tonight in a news conference format forced by the writers strike (8 p.m., KUSA-Channel 9).

“We all knew it was something special when we got involved with the project, but we didn’t realize other people would recognize it so quickly and so surely,” Friel said. “I think it confirms our belief that it’s inventive and something very special on TV that people haven’t seen before.”

Where else on television do you find a lonely pie maker like Ned (Pace) who can bring things back to life with his touch and who is in love with a dead woman named Chuck (Friel) whom he revived but can never touch again or she will die permanently? Or a pair of aunts (Swoosie Kurtz and Ellen Greene) who were once synchronized swimmers and now seem to be synchronized at life.

“Part of the pitch was that Ned collects reward money by touching dead people and finding out who killed them,” Fuller said.

To be sure, these are no ordinary crime stories. Ned and Emerson Cod (McBride) — and now tagalong Chuck — have encountered deaths by crash test dummies in dandelion-fueled cars, scratch-and-sniff books that combust and a murderer who hides bodies in snowmen.

“It’s a great adventure,” said Pace, who also starred in Fuller’s short-lived Fox series, “Wonderfalls.” “It’s so much fun to play as it gets more complicated. . . . And I am so appreciative of working with someone like Anna.”

For her part, Friel says Pace has become such a dear friend and she would have hated being nominated by herself.

“We’re both perfectionists and we work very hard,” said the British-born Friel, who keeps her American accent all day on set to make it easier on herself. “We concentrate very hard because the dialogue is so poetic and it’s so fast and rhythmic. If you let your concentration slip for 10 minutes, the scene is ruined.”

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