Hi B.!
I'm sorry this is so long, but I really hope it helps!
My 11 month old daughter also throws mild tantrums when she doesn't get her way. As others have said below, I tend to sit and quietly watch her, and her tears usually finish within a minute or so. Then she gets right back up and goes back to what got her in trouble in the first place, and repeats the cycle about 4 times before I move her. I do NOT move her in the middle of a tantrum, only once she's wound down, and then I catch her quickly before she can return to getting in trouble. (I hope that makes sense.)
Also, I would talk to your son. I know the words sound silly, but he'll eventually catch on. As each tantrum winds down, say something like "I know you're upset because you can't have the remote, and it's okay to express anger/frustration/sadness (by crying? - whatever IS acceptable to you), but it's not okay to scream like that (or beat your fists...whatever the bad behavior is)". I think it's important to express through words what is and is not accpetable behavior in your house. Later, as the tantrums calm down overall, you can talk him through them sooner ("Remember, we don't beat our fists, but you may stand there and cry"), and eventually he will know what's acceptable and what isn't.
Thirdly, my husband deals with our daughter's tantrums differently. He puts her in time out in her crib. I don't know that he follows through with this next part, but I feel it's critical. (He just doesn't want to deal with her while she cries, and I don't think he's really teaching her anything.) If you choose to use this method (and there's NOTHING wrong with it!!), I encourage you to stay very close, but not within sight. Listen carefully to your son's tantrum, and as SOON as it winds down, go to him with a big smile, pick him up and hug him, and tell him he's a good boy for calming himself down. He's too young to be left alone for any extended period of time after a tantrum - he'll start another one for being left alone in the crib, so I feel it's very important to reward him immediately when he calms down, at least the first several times that it's necessary to put him alone like that. Perhaps this could be a last resort for you, when he's too violent to be allowed to stay where the tantrum started.
Lastly, you didn't mention how your husband deals with these tantrums (if he ever sees them...). I just want to encourage you to not worry if he reacts differently than you. If you are each consistent in addressing the same behavior, and you each react with your own consistent methods, your son will learn the difference between parents, and that while you have different ways of dealing with him, tantrums are unacceptable to both of you.
I wish you the best of luck, and as I said before, I hope at least something I said was helpful!