CBS airs the Kennedy Center Honors the week between Christmas and New Year's, when they'd otherwise be showing reruns. Costs are surely low to produce that show.How about the Kennedy Center Honors?
CBS airs the Kennedy Center Honors the week between Christmas and New Year's, when they'd otherwise be showing reruns. Costs are surely low to produce that show.How about the Kennedy Center Honors?
CBS airs the Kennedy Center Honors the week between Christmas and New Year's, when they'd otherwise be showing reruns. Costs are surely low to produce that show.
Oh they botched it by not having best picture at the end.Ratings down 50 percent from last year. The Pandemic and changing times are the reason. It just seems to belong to a different era. The Oscars have always been bloated, but the best years usually had a compelling host and magical qualities.
Anthony Hopkins is a great actor. It sounds like some people are upset that Chadwick Boseman didn't win posthumously. I didn't see either film, but his tragic death shouldn't be the deciding factor for Best Actor. At least they didn't botch the ending like 2017 when they announced the wrong winner...
I still don't get why CBS hangs on to the Tonys. It's pretty much a niche audience show that get very few viewers in places outside the big cities. Better suited for streaming or linear cable.
And while total numbers may be low, there is money out there when the audience is especially desirable.
Like most of the country, I am indifferent to the Oscars this year. Time to start thinking about getting back to normal in ‘22.
Blockbusters usually don’t win major awards.most viewers will be indifferent if they continue to nominate movies no one has seen, blockbusters aren't made for film snobs
You might want to learn a bit about country music.how much were ads during the CMAs where viewers are likely to be older, rural, and poorer? Oscars and Grammys might also get goods demos
Ads are generally based on cost per point, meaning that the rate is based on ratings points. The CMA awards will get about the same CPP as the Oscars and other awards shows.how much were ads during the CMAs where viewers are likely to be older, rural, and poorer? Oscars and Grammys might also get goods demos
And that is why generally don't go to see or order online any of the Oscar-winning films. In the last decade or so, every film that got a good Oscar response (nomination or win for best film, best screenplay, etc) I hated it. Rare enough exceptions that I had to be otherwise convinced... or find it for less than the $50 or more going to a theater costs. I'll take a $20 or less pay view and if it's dreadful, I just stop it.Blockbusters usually don’t win major awards.
Yeah, I was surprised. He did get the award on other shows. I haven't seen the last 15 minutes yet, by the way, so I'm just commenting on what I read.Anthony Hopkins is a great actor. It sounds like some people are upset that Chadwick Boseman didn't win posthumously. I didn't see either film, but his tragic death shouldn't be the deciding factor for Best Actor. At least they didn't botch the ending like 2017 when they announced the wrong winner...
Andra Day earned the first censored moment of Oscar night.
When told that “Purple Rain” was not nominated for best song in 1985, Day proclaimed, “That’s some bullshit.” Viewers didn’t hear that, however, as the ABC censors managed to hit the button.
Ending the Oscars with best actor was a gamble that didn’t pay off, but came as part of a larger shuffle of how this year’s categories were ordered.
“It wasn’t just the final categories, the whole show was mixed up,” Mills said. “Screenplay, that usually comes in Act 5 or 6, one of the later acts. And best director was also very early. I think the point was, sometimes you watch the show and you feel like, ‘Gosh, I’ve seen this every year.’ So, it really was the ‘Wow, I really don’t know what’s coming next.'”
“It was not meant to end on somebody who was not present,” Mills said. “It was a calculated risk, that I think still paid off because everybody was talking about it. Similarly, nobody wants the wrong envelope to happen, like it did three years ago, but everyone was talking about it. I think some people thought maybe they missed some awards. ‘Why is best picture early?’ or, ‘What’s happening, this is crazy,’ almost like, ‘How can this possibly happen? Best picture has to end it!’ Some people were upset, some people loved it and that was really the point that there was no apathy.”
This is not a sustainable business model, and taking a loss just to attract more eyeballs than regular programming and perhaps promote your other offerings along the way just isn't going to be worth the added expense in the long run.
I wonder how much time network TV has left before the audience is gone.I wonder if the longstanding relationship between ABC and the Oscars will come under strain. Eventually advertisers are going to rebel against paying more and more to reach fewer and fewer viewers. This is not a sustainable business model, and taking a loss just to attract more eyeballs than regular programming and perhaps promote your other offerings along the way just isn't going to be worth the added expense in the long run.