Tag: jada-pinkett-smith

  • Will Smith Apologizes for Oscar Night Slapping Incident

    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role
    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    The story of Will Smith vs. Chris Rock at Sunday night’s Oscars continues to rumble on. And now Smith, who, after taking offense to a joke Rock made about his wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, walked onto the stage and slapped him, has formally apologized to the actor/comedian for his actions.

    Taking to Instagram, Smith wrote,

    Violence in all of its forms is poisonous and destructive. My behavior at last night’s Academy Awards was unacceptable and inexcusable. Jokes at my expense are a part of the job, but a joke about Jada’s medical condition was too much for me to bear and I reacted emotionally.

    I would like to publicly apologize to you, Chris. I was out of line and I was wrong. I am embarrassed and my actions were not indicative of the man I want to be. There is no place for violence in a world of love and kindness.

    I would also like to apologize to the Academy, the producers of the show, all the attendees and everyone watching around the world. I would like to apologize to the Williams Family and my King Richard Family. I deeply regret that my behavior has stained what has been an otherwise gorgeous journey for all of us.

    I am a work in progress.

    Yet all the apologies in the world are unlikely to stave off responses from the likes of the Academy, which has opened an inquiry into the incident, kicking off with a formal statement. “The Academy condemns the actions of Mr. Smith at last night’s show. We have officially started a formal review around the incident and will explore further action and consequences in accordance with our Bylaws, Standards of Conduct and California law.”

    Chris Rock at the Oscars
    Chris Rock presents the Oscar® for Documentary Feature during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    Though it appears unlikely that the Academy will revoke his Best Actor Oscar for ‘King Richard’, there is always the chance he may be suspended from attending events, voting in future Oscars, or, at worse, kicked out of the organization.

    And that’s not his only concern at this point – his acting union SAG-AFTRA, went further with its own statement. “As the union representing presenters and other performers working on the Oscars, SAG-AFTRA is focused on ensuring our members always work in a safe environment,” it said. “Violence or physical abuse in the workplace is never appropriate and the union condemns any such conduct.

    “The incident involving Will Smith and Chris Rock at last night’s Academy Awards was unacceptable. We have been in contact with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and ABC about this incident and will work to ensure this behavior is appropriately addressed. SAG-AFTRA does not comment on any pending member disciplinary process.”

    Smith’s next movie to arrive is the Antoine Fuqua directed ‘Emancipation’, which chronicles the true story of Gordon, or “Whipped Peter,” a slave who escaped to the North and whose scarred back became a rallying cry for the abolitionist movement. Apple TV+ had been looking at it as a potential awards contender next year following its success with ‘CODA’, though it’s unknown what impact the incident will have on those plans.

    Rock, meanwhile, besides his shocked onstage reaction to the slap, has yet to make a statement about Sunday night.

    Will Smith slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards.
    Will Smith slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards. Photo via Twitter.
  • Hollywood Reacts to Will Smith/Chris Rock Oscar Incident

    Chris Rock at the Oscars
    Chris Rock presents the Oscar® for Documentary Feature during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    It was the slap heard around the world – or at least where the Oscars are broadcast. As comedian and presenter Chris Rock joked about Jada Pinkett Smith’s shaved head, her husband Will Smith marched on stage and slapped him.

    “Jada, I love you. ‘G.I. Jane 2’? Can’t wait to see it,” Rock said as part of a short monologue that had previously been drawing laughs in the room. Pinkett Smith, who has recently spoken about her experiences dealing with alopecia, rolled her eyes at the gag. Seeing his wife’s discomfort, Smith took to the stage, walked directly up to Rock, and struck him on the face. “Will Smith just smacked the [expletive] out of me,” Rock remarked as Smith returned to his seat. Once he was sat down again, Smith repeatedly shouted at Rock: “Leave my wife’s name out of your [expletive] mouth.”

    It was a chaotic, uncomfortable moment for an Oscar ceremony that had already been marked by unfortunate moments, including the puzzling decision to shift some categories to a pre-show period and one or two seemingly mismanaged performances, including one of ‘Encanto’s ‘We Don’t Take About Bruno’.

    Smith, a Best Actor nominee for ‘King Richard’ went on to win his category and used his speech to attempt to explain his actions

    “Richard Williams was a fierce defender of his family. In this time in my life, in this moment I am overwhelmed by what God is calling on me to do and be in this world,” Smith said. “Making this film, I got to protect Aunjanue Ellis, who is one of the most strongest, most delicate people I’ve ever met.”

    “I got to protect Saniyya and Demi, the two actresses who played Venus and Serena. I’m being called on in my life to love people and to protect people. And to be a river to my people. And I know to do what we do, we gotta be able to take abuse, you gotta be able to take people talking crazy about you. You gotta smile and pretend like that’s ok.”

    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role
    Will Smith accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Leading Role during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo Credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    Denzel [Washington] said to me a few minutes ago: ‘At your highest moment, be careful – that’s when the devil comes for you.’ It’s like… I wanna be a vessel for love.”

    Smith also took a moment to offer apologies – though not to Rock: “I want to apologize to the Academy. I want to apologize to all my fellow nominees. This is a beautiful moment and I’m not crying for winning an award.

    “It’s not about winning an award for me. It’s about being able to shine a light on all of the people,” he said. Smith ended his speech by saying, “I hope the Academy invites me back.”

    The body itself tweeted about the incident roughly two hours after it happened. “The Academy does not condone violence of any form,” it read. “Tonight we are delighted to celebrate our 94th Academy Awards winners, who deserve this moment of recognition from their peers and movie lovers around the world.”

    And while the assault is considered a misdemeanor in California, Rock has so far declined to file a report. “LAPD investigative entities are aware of an incident between two individuals during the Academy Awards program,” the police said in a statement last night. “The incident involved one individual slapping another,” they added. “The individual involved has declined to file a police report. If the involved party desires a police report at a later date, LAPD will be available to complete an investigative report.”

    Reactions from the industry were mixed between shock and humor. Filmmaking Marshall Herskovitz was unimpressed, tweeting the following:

    The history of on-stage bad blood between Rock and the Smith family goes back a few years at least, especially to time Rock was hosting the 2016 incarnation of the event and made a joke about the couple boycotting the awards over the lack of acting nominations for people of color.

    “Jada [Pinkett Smith] boycotting the Oscars is like me boycotting Rihanna’s panties. I wasn’t invited,” Rock said during his opening monologue. Pinkett Smith later said she was “moving on” from the joke. But feelings clearly boiled over again last night.

    Either way, this is an Oscars no-one is likely to forget for a while. For a full roundup, read our story on the winners.

    Will Smith slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards.
    Will Smith slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards. Photo via Twitter.
  • Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Meatballs

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    Sometimes overlooked in favor of other “slobs vs. snobs” comedy classics from the same era, like Animal House and Caddyshack, this was Bill Murray’s first starring role, and the feature directorial debut for Ivan Reitman. Murray stars as Tripper, head counselor at Camp North Star, a bargain-basement summer camp in Ontario. Murray takes the lonely Rudy (Chris Makepeace) under his wing while still overseeing a group of oddball counselors-in-training as they have their own romances, pull pranks on the camp’s director, and take on wealthy Camp Mohawk in a yearly tournament. It’s ultimately a sweet story, without ever getting quite as crass as some of the era’s other films starring Saturday Night Live alumni. ‘Meatballs’ would turn out to be hugely successful, spawning three mostly unrelated sequels and countless knockoffs.


    Wet Hot American Summer

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    If ‘Meatballs’ saw plenty of lesser imitations, ‘The State’ alumni David Wain and Michael Showalter stepped up with a satirical take on summer camp movies. Although it bombed at the box office, it’s since become a cult classic, spawning two series on Netflix (one prequel and one sequel). There’s an amazing cast here, including Bradley Cooper, Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks, Amy Poehler, Judah Friedlander, Janeane Garofalo, Christopher Meloni, and David Hyde Pierce, plus other alumni from ‘The State,’ such as Ken Marino, Michael Ian Black, and Joe Lo Truglio. There’s a plot here about the camp putting on a talent show, counselors in love, and a falling piece of Skylab that threatens everyone’s lives, but it’s really just an excuse to see some stars and future stars show off some great comic chops.


    Dirty Dancing

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    For those that haven’t gotten around to seeing this classic, it’s easy to write off ‘Dirty Dancing’ as sappy romance. But that would be wrong. It’s an emotionally satisfying coming-of-age story about Frances “Baby” Houseman (Jennifer Grey) and her steamy summer romance with dancer Johnny (Patrick Swayze). The dancing is terrific, Grey and Swayze have terrific chemistry. Written by Eleanor Bergstein and based on her own summer trips to the Catskills, Baby’s adventure starts because she and her family are taking a summer vacation at Kellerman’s a tony resort. Baby sees hints of classism between some of the staff, and she finds herself drawn more to the working class staffers instead of the Ivy League-bound waiters. The film subversively gives Baby agency, letting her pick her own friends and make her own choices in her sex life; she has a summer fling with a sexy dancer and isn’t punished by fate for it. That was fairly groundbreaking in 1987, and is (sadly) might still be considered unusual in some corners even now.


    National Lampoon’s Vacation

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    This is another film that started a franchise, but the original version is still the best. Based on screenwriter John Hughes’ own National Lampoon story about a disastrous road trip, the movie focuses on the Griswold’s drive from Chicago to California for a visit to a thinly-veiled version of Disneyland called “Wally World.” Chevy Chase puts in a legendary turn as Clark, the increasingly obsessive patriarch of the Griswold clan. Clark is going to have a great road trip with his family whether they like it or not, and if he becomes Ahab in a station wagon, then so be it. Beverly D’Angelo hits just the right notes as Clark’s wife Ellen, as does Anthony Michael Hall and Dana Barron as their children Rusty and Audrey. Chase and D’Angelo would return for sequels, and it became a running joke that Rusty and Audrey would be recast in every subsequent film. This first adventure sees car trouble in the desert, an unwanted passenger, a temptress in a Ferrari, and a visit with Cousin Eddy (a reminder of when Randy Quaid was funny). It’s filled with laughs, but it will definitely make you think twice about future family road trips.


    Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

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    Based on the best-selling YA novel by Ann Brashares, this is the story of four teen girls, best friends since childhood, who are about to spend their first summer apart. But before three of them leave town, the quartet go shopping and find a pair of jeans that magically fit each one of them. The four decide that they’ll share the pants for the summer, and while each of them have these mysterious jeans in their possession, their individual summers are upended. Blake Lively, America Ferrara, Alexis Bledel, and Amber Tamblyn play Bridget, Carmen, Lena, and Tibby (respectively). The movie captures the charm of the novel, in no small part because of the charisma and chemistry of the stars, and it’s ultimately a heartwarming tale about female friendships and the bonds young women make that can last a lifetime.


    Girls Trip

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    The annual Essence Music Fest takes place in New Orleans every 4th of July, and that’s the backdrop for Ryan Pierce’s (Regina Hall) attempt to reunite with three of her friends from college. Pierce is a bestselling author and lifestyle guru, poised to be “the next Oprah.” She’s scheduled to speak at the festival, so she invites her college friends to join her, in the hopes of rekindling their friendships. These other three have lives of their own now; Sasha (Queen Latifah) is a celebrity gossip blogger, Lisa (Jada Pinkett Smith) is a working single mother, and Dina (Tiffany Haddish) is still party-girl Dina, all these years later. These four actors are great together, but Tiffany Haddish is a revelation here, stealing the movie and never giving it back. The film isn’t afraid to remind us that women can and do party hard, but it doesn’t lose sight of these friends repairing burned bridges and reaffirming their love for each other.


    Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar

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    One of the casualties of quarantine is that this film didn’t get a proper theatrical release. That’s a shame, because as funny as this movie is, it would have been even more side-splitting with a big audience. Make no mistake, this movie is straight up bananas from beginning to end. Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo wrote the script and star as Star and Barb, two middle-aged best friends that talk a bit too much, they can be both clueless and timid, but once they hit Vista Del Mar, the movie all but explodes into mayhem. To describe too much would be to take away some of the stunningly insane jokes packed wall-to-wall across the entire film. But suffice to say you may never look at Jamie Dornan the same way again.


    The Endless Summer

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    This is one of the first and probably still the best surf movie ever made. Director Bruce Brown follows two surfers, Robert August and Mike Hynson, as they leave Southern California and travel to surf spots around the world, including South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Tahiti, Senegal, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Australia. Brown’s breezy narration is a far cry from the stiffer voices heard in most documentaries at the time, and it lends an inviting tone to the gorgeous cinematography of the both surf action and the local landscapes. This documentary might help non-surfers understand the appeal of surfing more than any other film ever made, and the idea of an “endless summer” means its welcome on any day of the calendar year.

  • ‘Fast’ Money: Tyrese Gibson Says Will Smith Just Gave Him $5 Million ‘to Help Keep Us Afloat’

    Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures' 'Focus' - Red CarpetUPDATE: Will and Jada have yet to weigh in on this themselves, but TMZ claims “sources directly connected to both Will and Jada” say they haven’t given Tyrese $5 million. However, “Will and Jada have been friends with Tyrese for years, and we’re told they’re extremely worried Tyrese is having some sort of a breakdown.” That’s a fair thing to worry about. Tyrese did update this week that he hadn’t received his money from Will Smith yet, but he still seemed to be expecting it.

    Original post:

    There’s nothing like a $5 million bailout from Uncle Will! But was it enough for Tyrese Gibson to forgive The Rock for the “Fast 9” delay?

    Tyrese has been deep in his feelings lately, due to some personal issues with his ex-wife and their custody battle over their daughter. Charges of child abuse against him were dropped, but before that happened, Tyrese posted some emotional videos on Instagram. He also tied the issues to the “Fast and Furious” franchise, lashing out at Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson for pushing his own Hobbs spinoff and delaying “Fast 9.”

    Apparently Tyrese really needed that “Fast 9” money, and interpreted The Rock’s move as selfish and taking away from his family. He posted that he wouldn’t be in “Fast 9” at all if Johnson was still involved. “You mess with family and my daughters survival I mess with yours.” He later cropped The Rock out of a photo with Paul Walker, then said he had a heart-to-heart with one of Johnson’s associates and swore that was his last post on The Rock.

    It seemed like the bottom line was money — legal fees are expensive. Even though Tyrese has been making money for years in the “Fast” and “Transformers” franchises, he didn’t seem to have enough to cover his own bills.

    Since he has a lot of rich and famous friends — even beyond the “Fast” family — you’d think he could just ask them for help. Turns out, he either did, or one just volunteered on his own, because Tyrese said his friends Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith stepped up to bail him out.

    Wouldn’t we all love to have friends who’d give us $5 million to “keep us afloat”?

    LaineyGossip pointed out the greater irony in Tyrese’s post, considering he was asked to step away from the Internet, and said he would, but he’s still posting:

    “So, Will and Jada gave Tyrese FIVE MILLION dollars to keep his business off social media and to get his life together. Then, the first thing he does is post this information on Instagram. Do the Smiths get their millions back?”

    Hopefully Uncle Will’s generous gift will keep Tyrese’s family afloat until “Fast 9” starts filming for its April 2020 release.

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  • How the ‘Girls Trip’ Cast Came Together – and ‘Pushed It!’

    Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Latifah from Girls Trip
    Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Latifah from Girls Trip

    You can’t fake movie chemistry. But the creators of the comedy hit “Girls Trip” knew that if they found the right ingredients, good things could happen.

    So in casting this freewheeling comedy about dancing, drinking, brawling, romancing and sisterhood, producers zeroed in on an actress who would ground the movie: Regina Hall.

    “We knew she was ready to have a movie where she was the anchor where the story and the arc was around her,” producer William Packer tells Made in Hollywood reporter Patrick Stinson. “Then we needed a perfect crew for her.”

    They approached Queen Latifah and Jada Pinkett Smith, who had not worked together on screen since the heist film “Set If Off” in 1996.

    “They both said, ‘Absolutely. We’re in. We’ve been looking for something to work together on,’” recalls Packer. “Then we had to find that fourth member of the Flossy Posse.”

    That led to them to the summer’s breakout star: Tiffany Haddish, who did not hesitate to join this pool of talent.

    “I was not pushed. I jumped right in,” she says. “I can’t wait to be with my new sisters.”

    From the start, the stars decided to abandon all their comic inhibitions.

    “We would just go for it,” says Smith. “So we all came together as a cast and really like pushed it!”

    The result, says Hall, was an experience as enjoyable off-screen as it was on. “It was just fun, like smiles, and just happy, and laughing after takes,” she says. “It just had a special feeling.”

     

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  • ‘Girls Trip’ Has Best R-Rated Comedy Opening in 2 Years

    Moviegoers wanted to get rowdy this weekend — just look the success of “Girls Trip.”

    The funny flick exceeded box office expectations this weekend and ultimately had the best opening for an R-rated comedy since 2015. With Queen Latifah, Jada Pinkett Smith, Regina Hall, and Tiffany Haddish as stars, “Girls Trip” bowed to more than $30.4 million, according to THR. It topped Amy Schumer’s “Trainwreck ($30.1 million) and came close to Mark Wahlberg’s “Ted 2” ($33.5 million), both of which opened in 2015.

    Notably, “Girls Trip” is another example for studios that yes, people will go see female-driven films as well as movies with diverse casts, especially if they are done well. The movie, which centers on long-time friends who head to New Orleans for a crazy weekend, has been getting solid reviews from critics and audiences alike. “Girls Trip” currently has an 88 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes’ “Tomatometer” and a 90 percent audience score.

    We’ll see what kind of momentum the film has, but for now, the movie’s opening has already made a strong showing, surpassing its production budget of $19 million. Universal Pictures certainly can’t complain about that.

    If you’re ready for raunchy, R-rated fun, “Girls Trip” is in theaters now.

    [via: THR]

  • Jada Pinkett Smith Says 2Pac Biopic ‘All Eyez on Me’ is ‘Deeply Hurtful’

    Jada Pinkett SmithJada Pinkett Smith took to Twitter this morning to criticize the new Tupac Shakur biopic “All Eyez On Me,” saying that the way it portrays her relationship with the late rapper is “deeply hurtful.”

    She began with a tweet saying, “Forgive me… my relationship to Pac is too precious to me for the scenes in ‘All Eyez On Me’ to stand as truth.”

    The “Gotham” actress then issued a series of tweets refuting specific incidents in the movie, including Tupac (Demetrius Shipp Jr.) reading her (as played by “The Vampire Diaries” star Kat Graham) a poem and having an argument with her backstage.

    She added, “The reimagining of my relationship to Pac has been deeply hurtful.”

    She didn’t fault the actors, however, saying, “@KatGraham and @Dshippjr this is no fault of yours. Thank you for bringing so much heart and spirit to your roles. You both did a beautiful job with what you were given. Thank you both.”

    She finished by saying, “Happy birthday Pac, you are cradled in my heart for eternity. I love you.”

    Critics weren’t very impressed with the biopic either, calling it “a ploddingly pedestrian dramatization of Tupac Shakur’s brief, tumultuous life” (THR), and “a by-the-numbers biopic that trades on the worst clichés of the hip-hop world” (Globe and Mail).

    “All Eyez on Me” opened today in theaters.

  • Oscars 2016: Why the #OscarsSoWhite Boycott Only Scratches the Surface

    Anyone who thinks the Oscars are trivial, that they’re just about privileged people who live in a bubble giving each other golden trophies, wasn’t paying attention this week.

    The #OscarsSoWhite controversy has only grown more shrill and bitter in the week since the Academy announced its second straight slate of all-white acting nominees. Not only have numerous stars weighed in, but so have politicians, including presidential candidate Donald Trump and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio. So the discussion over the lack of diversity at the Oscars has affected the real world outside the Dolby Theatre — as it should.

    The underlying issue here is bigger than the Oscars, which only represent the end of the process. As many prominent movie folk have noted, from Spike Lee to Viola Davis to George Clooney, the problem is at the beginning of the process — when the studios decide which stories to tell and whom to hire to tell them. Increase diversity there, and you’ll increase it among the movies and individuals in the pool of eligible nominees.
    Why does it even matter? Because black people, like everyone else, want to see people like themselves on screen and hear their own stories told. Because people of color also buy more movie tickets per capita than white people do, so you’d think Hollywood would try to do more to cater to its customer base. Because the success of black stars like Will Smith and Denzel Washington overseas — where most of the box office comes from — should have long ago put a stop to the industry belief that it’s a waste of resources to make films about black people since foreign audiences won’t pay to see them. And because Hollywood movies are not just one of America’s most successful exports, but also represent the face (and faces) that America presents to the world, so why shouldn’t the movies look more like America?

    That’s where the Academy comes in, since the Oscars are Hollywood’s way of presenting its most positive image of itself. Just two years ago, when “12 Years a Slave” and Lupita Nyong’o won big, the message of the Oscars seemed to be: America’s diversity is such a source of strength that it even allows us to take an uncompromising look at the ugliest part of our history. What’s the message this year?

    Right now, at least, it’s one of strife and embarrassment. Jada Pinkett Smith was the first star to suggest a boycott, though she and husband Will are insisting that their non-attendance is about the larger shutout, not Will’s own snub for “Concussion.” Not sure if anyone believes that, especially after the dis from Will’s former “Fresh Prince of Bel Air” co-star Janet Hubert. Whether or not the Smiths are sincere, the spat has made their boycott about ego and celebrity gossip, and less about the underlying issue.

    Ego may also have trumped good intentions in the case of music legend and former Oscar ceremony producer Quincy Jones. While dismissing the effectiveness of a boycott, he also threatened to walk, saying the Academy had asked him to be a presenter this year but that he’ll only do it if he’s allowed to address the diversity issue for five minutes. Let’s hope he meant in private and not onstage; given how long the show runs every year, the Academy is unlikely to allow anyone to do anything for five straight minutes — especially not give a political speech.
    Special chutzpah points go to supporting Actor nominee Mark Ruffalo. First, he suggested that he was mulling the idea of joining the boycott; which performers of color should have been nominated in his place, this year and last, he didn’t say. Then he tweeted that he actually would attend, in support of the sexual abuse victims whose stories he helped tell in “Spotlight.” So he almost got to be the first actual nominee and the first white person to join the boycott, but he also gets to stay and not miss his potential winning moment, with a politically unassailable excuse. No doubt someone will scold him for playing one marginalized group against another, but for now — well played, Ruffalo.

    The outcry has been so loud that even Academy CEO Dawn Hudson and Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs have been forced to make diplomatically worded pronouncements expressing their disappointment over the homogeneity of the nominations and promising institutional changes while taking care not to disparage the achievements of the nominees.

    No doubt the Academy overseers want to stem the talk of a boycott, and maybe they’ve succeeded. So far, the only people who’ve said they aren’t coming are the Smiths, director and Academy documentary board member Michael Moore, and Spike Lee, who has said that, just because he’s not coming doesn’t mean he’s urging anyone else to boycott.
    Lee’s behavior seems paradoxical, and not just because the filmmaker won an honorary Oscar last November for his groundbreaking body of work — meaning that, had he shown up on February 28, there would actually be one black honoree recognized at the ceremony. But also because last year, when questioned about #OscarsSoWhite, he took the long view, citing how posterity had judged his Academy-snubbed 1989 movie “Do the Right Thing” (above) a classic while deeming that year’s winner, “Driving Miss Daisy,” a patronizing trifle. His argument last January was that true validation doesn’t come from an award but from history. But after a second year of #OscarsSoWhite, he seems to have changed his mind.

    In his announcement on Instagram that he would sit out this year’s ceremony, Lee did acknowledge that change needs to happen in Hollywood boardrooms in order for it to happen at the Oscars.

    So how, then, will an Oscar boycott help?
    No one calling for a boycott has been able to explain that; nor has anyone who is calling for host Chris Rock to step down. Even Tyrese Gibson, who’s the most prominent star urging Rock to join the boycott, has expressed reservations. He notes that Leonardo DiCaprio is his friend, and if “The Revenant” star finally wins his first Oscar, as he’s widely expected to do, the award will seem tainted by the controversy.

    Tyrese’s misgivings introduce a rich irony: the sense that any white winner this year will have to wonder whether he or she won based on racial preference, not just merit. That, after all, is the mirror version of the argument many have been making, that the protest is unjustified because maybe there just weren’t enough worthy black performances, this year or last. That argument assumes that all the white nominees did get in on merit alone, that there’s no reverse affirmative action at work.

    Maybe they did, but it’s unlikely because the Oscars have never been entirely about merit. There are always other considerations, including Hollywood politics, money, and the simple fact that there are always more worthy candidates than nomination slots. (That’s why the awards are so hard to handicap.)

    But the argument that snubbed black actors shouldn’t complain because white actors get snubbed too doesn’t hold water. The late Alan Rickman was widely acknowledged to be one of the finest actors in the English language, yet he never got one Academy Award nomination. Who can say why? But at least the reason wasn’t that the Academy didn’t have enough white male members to make sure he wasn’t overlooked, and it wasn’t that Hollywood wasn’t making enough movies with white male characters for him to enjoy a proper showcase for his talents.
    Under Boone Isaacs, the Academy has been working to diversify its membership for the past four years. And on Thursday came the news that the Academy may institute some rule changes, perhaps as soon as next week, that could eventually create a more inclusive slate, such as fixing the number of Best Picture nominees at 10 (instead of a variable number between five and 10) and increasing the number of nominees in the acting categories.

    Of course, there will be complaints at first that this is just watering down the awards by making them less exclusive. But again, the Oscars have never been solely about excellence anyway, and similar complaints made back in 2009 when the Academy first expanded Best Picture beyond five nominees have long since been ignored and forgotten by all.

    The real problem with the proposed rule changes is that they address only the symptom, not the cause. That’s something that Hollywood will have to address far away from the red carpet, and not just during the one time each year when the whole world is paying attention.
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  • ‘Fresh Prince’ Star Janet Hubert Slams Jada Pinkett Smith Over Oscars Boycott

    janet hubert, aunt viv, fresh prince, fresh prince of bel-airEveryone seems to be talking about the #OscarsSoWhite backlash, but one actress is speaking out about the controversy for a different reason.

    Janet Hubert, who was the original actress to portray Aunt Viv on “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” alongside Will Smith, took to YouTube on Monday to aim a message at Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. Pinkett Smith had publicly announced that she would boycott this year’s Academy Awards ceremony in protest of the lack of nominations for any people of color, which happened for the second year in a row. (A situation that caused the Academy to release a rare statement commenting on the controversy.)

    But Hubert found hypocrisy in Pinkett Smith’s comments, and said so in her video, in which she chastised Pinkett Smith for being her husband’s mouthpiece, and accused the actress of boycotting the ceremony simply because Smith didn’t receive a nomination for his role in the NFL drama, “Concussion.”

    “I find it ironic that somebody who has made their living, and has made millions and millions of dollars from the very people that you’re talking about, [is] boycotting just because you didn’t get a nomination, just because you didn’t win,” Hubert said. “That is not the way life works, baby.”

    Hubert also found fault in Pinkett Smith and others (including Spike Lee, who is also boycotting the ceremony) making the Oscars more important than they are, when the African-American community is facing more serious problems. And the actress said that Pinkett Smith’s urging of others to boycott the ceremony, when that’s something that could hurt the careers of actors who are less famous than Smith and Pinkett Smith, was an audacious request.

    “You ain’t Barack and Michelle Obama,” Hubert said, addressing the couple. “And y’all need to get over yourselves. You have a huge production company that you only produce your friends, your family, and yourself. So you are a part of Hollywood, you are part of the system that is unfair to other actors. So get real.”

    In addition to airing her Oscars-related grievances, Hubert also called out Smith over their well-publicized feud, which led to Hubert being fired and replaced on “Fresh Prince” in 1993. Hubert claims that she asked Smith to band together with the rest of the “Fresh Prince” cast to renegotiate their salaries, and the actor brushed her off. Now, she says, karma is catching up to him.

    “It’s not about being bitter, it’s about being right,” Hubert said toward the end of her video. “You know some of us have got mortgages to pay, we got bills to pay, we have bigger s–t to worry about than the Oscars.”

    Check out the entire video message above.

    [h/t The Hollywood Reporter]

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  • Spike Lee Announces Boycott of ‘Lily White’ 2016 Oscars (Update)

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-GOVERNORS-AWARDSUPDATE: Spike Lee clarified his comments in a January 20 interview on “Good Morning America,” saying he’s not calling for a mass Oscars boycott, he was just announcing his own plans to skip the show: “Here’s the thing, I have never used the word boycott. All I said was my beautiful wife Tanya…we’re not coming. That’s it, and I gave the reasons. … February 28th, we’ll be at the world’s most famous arena, Madison Square Garden. I’m going to a Knicks game.” He reiterated that he’s not telling anyone else what to do. “Do you. I’m not going. My wife’s not going. Everyone else can do what they want to do.”

    Original post:

    “Chi-Raq” director Spike Lee announced today — Martin Luther King, Jr. Day — that he and his wife will not be attending the 2016 Oscars, due to the lack of any non-white acting nominees for the second year in a row. Lee started his Instagram post by thanking the Academy for his own honorary Oscar, given just this past November at the Governors Awards, but said it’s time to take a stand.

    The Academy Award nominations were announced on January 14, and immediately revived the #OscarsSoWhite hashtag commenting on the lack of diversity in the nominations.

    Here’s Lee’s full post, which also uses the hashtag:

    #OscarsSoWhite… Again. I Would Like To Thank President Cheryl Boone Isaacs And The Board Of Governors Of The Academy Of Motion Pictures Arts And Sciences For Awarding Me an Honorary Oscar This Past November. I Am Most Appreciative. However My Wife, Mrs. Tonya Lewis Lee And I Will Not Be Attending The Oscar Ceremony This Coming February. We Cannot Support It And Mean No Disrespect To My Friends, Host Chris Rock and Producer Reggie Hudlin, President Isaacs And The Academy. But, How Is It Possible For The 2nd Consecutive Year All 20 Contenders Under The Actor Category Are White? And Let’s Not Even Get Into The Other Branches. 40 White Actors In 2 Years And No Flava At All. We Can’t Act?! WTF!! It’s No Coincidence I’m Writing This As We Celebrate The 30th Anniversary Of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s Birthday. Dr. King Said “There Comes A Time When One Must Take A Position That Is Neither Safe, Nor Politic, Nor Popular But He Must Take It Because Conscience Tells Him It’s Right”. For Too Many Years When The Oscars Nominations Are Revealed, My Office Phone Rings Off The Hook With The Media Asking Me My Opinion About The Lack Of African-Americans And This Year Was No Different. For Once, (Maybe) I Would Like The Media To Ask All The White Nominees And Studio Heads How They Feel About Another All White Ballot. If Someone Has Addressed This And I Missed It Then I Stand Mistaken. As I See It, The Academy Awards Is Not Where The “Real” Battle Is. It’s In The Executive Office Of The Hollywood Studios And TV And Cable Networks. This Is Where The Gate Keepers Decide What Gets Made And What Gets Jettisoned To “Turnaround” Or Scrap Heap. This Is What’s Important. The Gate Keepers. Those With “The Green Light” Vote. As The Great Actor Leslie Odom Jr. Sings And Dances In The Game Changing Broadway Musical HAMILTON, “I WANNA BE IN THE ROOM WHERE IT HAPPENS”. People, The Truth Is We Ain’t In Those Rooms And Until Minorities Are, The Oscar Nominees Will Remain Lilly White. (Cont’d)

    A photo posted by Spike Lee (@officialspikelee) on


    Jada Pinkett Smith, whose husband Will Smith was overlooked for “Concussion,” tweeted her frustration on January 16, and also suggested people of color consider refraining from participating at the Oscars:


    The 88th Academy Awards will air Sunday, February 28 on ABC, hosted by Chris Rock.

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