Posted on 01/12/2006 12:43:04 PM PST by SirLinksalot
Why I'm skipping the Oscars this year
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© 2006 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Every year since I was old enough to stay up late, I've watched the Academy Awards. This year, however, I have absolutely zero desire to watch the Oscars. In recent years, lack of quality from Hollywood has turned the Academy Awards into a special-interest-group get-together. If you're crazy, gay, have a disability or are a member of a minority race, you'll likely be nominated for an Oscar. If your film tackles a "deep social issue" (normally an issue dear to the hearts of Hollywood's liberal glitterati), you'll have an excellent shot at grabbing a gold statuette.
The combination of declining product quality and rising Hollywood disdain for mainstream America has opened the door to the agenda-film crowd. It began with the 1994 Oscars. "Schindler's List," "The Fugitive" and "In the Name of the Father" all received Best Picture nominations; other excellent films of 1993 included "What's Eating Gilbert Grape?" "Searching for Bobby Fischer," "Shadowlands," "Fearless" and "In the Line of Fire."
Still, Hollywood had to take a shot at mainstream America, and they found their vehicle in "Philadelphia," throwing their honorary liberal activism award to Tom Hanks for his weak performance as a dying AIDS-stricken gay lawyer in "Philadelphia." Unbelievably, Hanks' cheesy hospital-bed routine beat out Liam Neeson in "Schindler's List" and Daniel Day Lewis in "In the Name of the Father." "Philadelphia" is, clinically speaking, a maudlin, ham-handed attempt at social commentary.
The remaining 1990s were filled with weak movies and weak performances. On average, high-school audio-visual clubs make better movies than Hollywood put together in the late 1990s.
Then, our illustrious decade: With great films scarce and politically mainstream Academy voters even scarcer, 2000 featured the victory of repulsive anti-suburbia and pro-homosexuality hit piece "American Beauty." Of course, it beat out a film lionizing an abortionist ("The Cider House Rules") and another attacking the tobacco industry ("The Insider"). Most disturbingly, the Academy handed Hilary Swank a Best Actress Oscar for playing a transgendered biological girl murdered by a bunch of hicks. And 2002 was the year of the African-American honorary Oscars, when Denzel Washington took home Best Actor for his decent if overrated performance in "Training Day" and Halle Berry took home Best Actress for her highly touted simulated orgasms in "Monster's Ball." In 2003, homosexual agenda films like "The Hours," "Frida" and "Far From Heaven" grabbed the largest share of nominations. In 2004, Hollywood couldn't hold off "Lord of the Rings" any longer, but Charlize Theron, playing an ugly lesbian serial killer in "Monster," won Best Actress. And last year, the Best Picture was forgettable pro-euthanasia film "Million Dollar Baby."
And then there's this year. "Brokeback Mountain," the stomach-churning story of two 1963 cowboys who get cozy while bunking down in Wyoming and then carry on their affair over the course of decades, is likely to grab Best Picture honors. The critics love it, mostly because critics love anything that pushes homosexuality as normal behavior. The New York Times raves about it, mostly because the Times has always wanted to carry a ridiculous story proclaiming that "there has always lurked a suspicion that the fastidious Eastern dude of Owen Wister's 'The Virginian' harbored stronger than proper feelings for his rough Western compadres, and that the Red River crowd may have gotten up to more than yarning by the campfire whenever Joanne Dru was not around." Maybe that's what Pinch Sulzberger thinks about when he watches John Wayne on screen, but the Times should be more careful when speaking for the rest of us. By the way, don't believe the "hit movie" hype this supposed blockbuster has netted a grand total of $8 million. "Hostel," last week's No. 1 movie, a cheap horror film, has already netted almost $15 million.
Best Actor honors are likely to go to Philip Seymour Hoffman for his performance in "Capote" this would mark the first time that an actor in a gay role has actually deserved his Oscar. Best Actress will probably fall to Reese Witherspoon in "Walk the Line," but supporters of Felicity Huffman's transgendered father-mother in "TransAmerica" could push her over the top.
Aside from pimping for GLAAD, the Oscars will provide a platform for other leftist talking points. "Good Night, and Good Luck," George Clooney's blatant attempt to bash the Bush administration through the mouth of Edward R. Murrow, and "Munich," Steven Spielberg's attempt to equate Arab terrorism with Israeli self-defense, will likely garner nominations. And to top it off, Comedy Central partisan hack Jon Stewart (who is less and less funny each day) hosts this self-congratulatory leftist feting.
I won't be watching. Neither will most Americans.
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Benjamin Shapiro is a recent graduate of UCLA and is currently enrolled at Harvard Law School. In "Porn Generation," he explains how mainstream acceptance of pornography is destroying his generation ... and our nation. Ben also shows how students are duped into becoming socialists, atheists, race-baiters and narcissists in "Brainwashed: How Universities Indoctrinate America's Youth."
Who cares about the agenda, it's 4 1/2 hours of the most boring TV ever invented. All award shows are boring, skip them because looking at the wall counting lumps in the texture paint is more interesting.
It's not just the Oscars, proudly, I have not been to a Hollywood movie in six years.
Hollywood's going hard ultra-Left in the last few years because they and their lefty buddies are out of power. Unfortunately for them, they're doing this in an atmosphere where the audience (comprimised by the public that took them out of power with thier votes) have more entertainment choices, and can even get their latest (but inferior) fare as bootlegs in only a few hours over a broadband connection. They're diddling themselves while Rome burns, and if they keep it up long enough, their house of cards is going to collapse on top of them.
I may tune in to the live thread on FR ... there were great pictures of all the clothes last year.
What's an Oscar?
A bad year for the OScar telecast is assured-- if people aren't going to see the movies, and they aren't, why would they watch the movie award show?
FR's the only way to enjoy that freak show.
Absolutely. The "red-carpet" part of it is the best, anyway ... "Who is THAT, and WHAT is she wearing?"
I stopped watching the Oscars long ago. Even before they started to blatently promote their liberal and disgusting agenda, I thought the Oscars was about a bunch of vulgar, badly dressed pimps.
Way ahead of you, Ben. I have been skipping them my whole life.
I don't get why they hand out awards anyway. Its just acting. We don't hand out trophies to monkeys in the zoo.
Chris Rock wasn't invited back because he had the temerity to poke fun at some of the 'artistes', notably Jude Law. But really, what do actors do? They stand in front of a camera and recite words. They tell a story through words and pictures. We have always had storytellers, from cave-painters to Homer to the present day. It's only in the last hundred years or so that we have elevated these people to some vaunted status. A movie is supposed to be entertaining, to tell a good story. That's it.
As for the awards themselves, they are nothing but a grandiose high school homecoming queen election contest!
Yup - and a little bit of "what was she thinking?"!!
Now why d'you suppose those two ladies sprang to mind?
It is a type of tropical fish, isn't it?
That, too. "Whoever told her she should wear that HATES her!" Remember Natalie Portman from last year? YUCK!
They still have that thing on TV? Last time I saw it, Bob Hope was MC.
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