Current:Home > ScamsLet's celebrate the mistakes the Oscars didn't make -Mastery Money Tools
Let's celebrate the mistakes the Oscars didn't make
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:31:02
If you've ever worked on an annual project of any kind – maybe it's an event, maybe it's a report, maybe it's the Academy Awards – you've probably been part of a debriefing process, wherein various stakeholders gather to discuss what went right, what went wrong and what went really wrong. Maybe, for example, your best actress winner gave a lovely speech, but your best actor winner got up on stage and slapped a famous comedian across the face. It happens.
These debriefing sessions are bound to look different depending on the circumstances, of course. But their general shape is usually the same: positives, negatives, notes for next year, maybe a few shoutouts for jobs well done. What sometimes gets missed is an unsexy-but-crucial rundown of the mistakes that got avoided. Because, as anyone who's been involved in an annual project for many years can tell you, bad ideas have a way of sneakily reintroducing themselves once you've avoided them long enough.
So consider this one last word about the 2023 Academy Awards, which wrapped up Sunday night in a manner largely free of catastrophic embarrassment. I'll leave out the obvious stuff – "No one was physically attacked on stage," for example, or "No one announced the wrong best picture winner" – in favor of the mistakes that might get reintroduced one day, should we be foolish enough to let our collective guard down.
They gave out all the awards during the telecast.
It's easy to forget that, just last year, the Oscars elected to give out several awards in previously taped segments, with the ostensible purpose of speeding up the show. This was a terrible idea for basic reasons of decency and watchability – yes, people actually do care to see people pick up awards for, say, cinematography – while also making viewers seethe at the filler that made the cut. It also robbed the Oscars telecast of a strength: It's harder for a show to lag when you're constantly returning to the official business of handing out trophies. There was certainly filler in last Sunday's telecast (ahem, Little Mermaid promo), but the pace felt noticeably quicker than usual.
They cut the little things.
As Glen Weldon noted at the time in NPR's Oscars live blog, this year's Oscars cut way back on intros – particularly when it came to clips of the 10 films nominated for best picture. "Consider: They're introducing tonight's best picture nominees with an offscreen announcer," Glen wrote. "In years past, that job has been done by presenters. Actors who walk out, pause, engage in stiff presenter banter, and then introduce the best picture nominees. It seems like a small tweak but it's easily shaving, what, at least 10 minutes off this broadcast?" This was a small tweak with a legitimately massive payoff. Imagine if, every time you took a four-hour drive, you had to pull over to the side of the road on 10 separate occasions and wait for 60 seconds each time. Then, imagine taking the same drive without those stops. Streamlining the process of screening clips didn't seem like much on Oscar night, but it represented a huge, hidden quality-of-life improvement.
They showed clips! They showed clips! They showed clips!
On occasion in recent years, Oscar producers have tried to shave time by skipping clips of the nominated performances – sometimes by simply listing names, sometimes by having a presenter gas on about each nominee's greatness. You'd think the Academy Awards would know the value of showing rather than telling, but this mistake keeps seeping back to the surface every few years. Showing clips reaffirms the value of the nominated work, gives unfamiliar audiences an idea of the movies they might yet want to see, and, perhaps most relevant to the Oscars' interests, celebrates the awesome power of the movies better than a million "A Salute To... The Movies!" montages ever could.
They killed the audience mics during the "In Memoriam" segment.
Whenever you've got a musician playing a song as names of the recently departed scroll by, you run the risk of the event turning into a tasteless workout of the Applause-O-Meter. You could hear the occasional bit of applause this year – presumably picked up by Lenny Kravitz's mic – but it was easy to miss. Here's to an avoidable catastrophe, successfully avoided!
Naturally, these Oscars still made other mistakes, including inconsistent uses of the orchestra to play people off stage and the Academy's insistence on nominating a Diane Warren song yet again. But this year still felt like progress.
This piece first appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Ukraine war effort aided by arrival of U.S. tanks as doubts raised over killing of Russian fleet commander
- What would a government shutdown mean for me? SNAP, student loans and travel impacts, explained
- How did the Maui fire spread so quickly? Overgrown gully may be key to the investigation
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Biden on UAW picket line, judge rules Trump defrauded, writers' strike: 5 Things podcast
- Quincy Jones is State Department’s first Peace Through Music Award as part of new diplomacy push
- See Scumbag Tom Sandoval Willingly Get Annihilated By His Haters and Celebrity Critics
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Former Spain women’s national team coach Jorge Vilda added to probe into Rubiales’ kissing a player
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Is Ringling Bros. still the 'Greatest Show on Earth' without lions, tigers or clowns?
- Bipartisan Ohio commission unanimously approves new maps that favor Republican state legislators
- A history of nurses: They once had the respect they're now trying to win
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Ukraine war effort aided by arrival of U.S. tanks as doubts raised over killing of Russian fleet commander
- Azerbaijan says 192 of its troops were killed in last week’s offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh
- Mariners pitcher George Kirby struck by baseball thrown by fan from stands
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
6 bodies and 1 survivor found in Mexico, in the search for 7 kidnapped youths
Long COVID has affected nearly 7% of American adults, CDC survey data finds
Giant panda Fan Xing leaves a Dutch zoo for her home country China
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Former Tennessee lawmaker Brian Kelsey can stay out of prison while challenging sentencing
Aaron Rodgers sends subtle jab to Joe Namath, tells Jets offense to 'grow up a little bit'
Chris Kaba shooting case drives London police to consider army backup as officers hand in gun licenses