On Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 10:56 AM, M-D November <[email protected]> wrote:

> For me, nothing spoke to how poorly designed last night's telecast was
> than this:
>
> In the first hour alone, there were no fewer than three montages about how
> awesome the movies are, the Christopher Guest day players doing the 'test
> screening' bit, and Cirque. And yet somehow there wasn't time for live
> performances of the TWO "Best Original Song" nominees. I would have rather
> seen Jason Segal perform "Man or Muppet" 10 times than have to sit through
> that Cirque du Soliel crap.  They'd have had the time if they'd just cut
> down on a) Billy's vamping, and b) some of the more ridiculous presenter
> moments (RDJ & Paltrow, Emma Stone & Ben Stiller, Will Ferrell & Zach
> "Shaved Yeti" Galafanakis).
>
> But at least Bret won his category, so there's something to be said for
> that.
>
>

I had read in advance of the telecast that the omiited the songs not
because of time, but to avoid drawing attention to the fact that they only
found 2 songs to nominate.

I read a lot of griping last night about the montages - these did not
bother me. I liked the reels of actors talking a bit about the movies, and
I never mind a montage or two of great movie moments. The Oscars are
nothing after all if not one giant commerical for movies (which made the
whole Sasha Cohen thing a giant joke). I could have used less Billy - but
then, if you go out and make a big deal of getting him, you might as well
use him. I guess we are all getting old, but he really has begun to come
off like Bob Hope.

I don't think the focus on going out to the movies was funereal, or new
this year, or even particularly underlined this year. For a few years they
have been using the Oscars to try to make the point that films are best
seen in the theatre, not on televisions, computers, iPads, or phones. This
is also something of a joke, since most of the academy members probably saw
most of the films they voted on (or rather, most of the films they actually
saw at all) outside of a theatre, but that is something else. They are
coming off of a down box office year, so I guess they might have been a
little more desperate than usual. I enjoy going out to the movies, so I am
not irritated by this message. I do wish they would spent more time
convincing exhibitors that they need to recreate that classic old time
ambiance that they tried to fabricate during the show.

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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