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Final evening, Jimmy Kimmel presided over a surprisingly regular Academy Awards present. This system ran easily with no true upsets. Oppenheimer took dwelling a predicted haul, Ryan Gosling introduced down the home along with his efficiency of Barbie’s “I’m Simply Ken,” and Kimmel made some principally good-natured ribs about his fellow stars within the room. I spoke with my colleague Shirley Li, who covers Hollywood, about why internet hosting is a tricky job, how Kimmel pulled it off, and what objective the Oscars serve in 2024.
First, listed below are three new tales from The Atlantic:
Regular and Earnest
Lora Kelley: You’ve written about how internet hosting an awards present generally is a fairly thankless job. What makes the duty so exhausting?
Shirley Li: The individuals within the room at these Hollywood awards exhibits are highly effective: They’re A-list celebrities and the individuals who will green-light the following movies. A number is meant to be entertaining them but additionally making gentle ribs, as a result of that’s what they need.
On the similar time, a number is attempting to enchantment to the fully totally different viewers of customers tuning in from dwelling. The host has to take action a lot glad-handing whereas additionally taking all of the blame in the event that they don’t preserve issues shifting. It’s numerous consideration paid to at least one one who, on the finish of the evening, doesn’t ever stroll away with a trophy.
Lora: So why do individuals comply with do it?
Shirley: The publicity to Hollywood’s energy gamers is big, and it’s a uncommon alternative for lots of comics. They could really feel that the publicity outweighs the stress—although, as somebody who has watched numerous awards exhibits over time and seen how a lot blame will get foisted upon these hosts, I feel the stress outweighs the publicity. I’m not shocked the Oscars turned to somebody who had hosted a number of instances earlier than.
Lora: How do you assume Jimmy Kimmel did final evening?
Shirley: He was a strong host. His monologue was punchier than the earlier 3 times he’s hosted. I believed the way in which that he ended the monologue, by mentioning the crew members backstage whereas additionally speaking about final yr’s Hollywood strikes, was a wise transfer. He did an excellent job of constructing jokes that appealed to the individuals within the room whereas additionally reminding the viewers at dwelling about why what’s occurring in Hollywood issues.
Kimmel is extra of a late-night host than a stand-up comedian. He has some wiggle room: He’s associates with the individuals within the viewers; they’re inclined to applaud him and associate with bits, even when they’re a bit on the insulting aspect. I used to be form of shocked that he made a joke about Robert Downey Jr.’s previous substance abuse. However Downey appeared prepared to play alongside; they’ve recognized one another lengthy sufficient that Kimmel was capable of get some laughs and preserve issues shifting. Kimmel can be somebody who is understood to individuals at dwelling. There was—I hate to place it this fashion—numerous Kimmel-core. You most likely loved that you probably have watched his present, or have been uncovered to his work prior to now.
Lora: Who has been, in your thoughts, the perfect host? The author Fran Hoepfner wrote on our website over the weekend that Billy Crystal is her perfect. Who’s your Billy Crystal?
Shirley: Billy Crystal is my Billy Crystal too. I really like that piece as a result of the author and I are the identical technology. Crystal is the Oscars host I grew up with. It’s form of like my view on Saturday Evening Reside: The forged that you simply grew up watching is your favourite forged of all time.
Crystal was a improbable host as a result of he appealed to the individuals within the room but additionally made issues actually digestible for individuals watching at dwelling. Whoopi Goldberg was a improbable host, too, as a result of she could possibly be self-effacing whereas additionally ribbing the movies themselves. I bear in mind seeing numerous film stars laughing along with her. She had a method of constructing jokes in regards to the movies being feted that didn’t make anyone within the room uncomfortable.
Lora: Had been there any surprises final evening? What large moments stood out?
Shirley: This has been a protracted awards season. There are such a lot of extra awards exhibits than there have to be. So, going into the night, I feel individuals may fairly simply predict who was going to win.
Emma Stone’s win for Greatest Actress, for Poor Issues, could possibly be thought of a shock, although she and Lily Gladstone, who starred in Killers of the Flower Moon, have been neck and neck all through awards season. The consensus was that it could possible be Emma or Lily. Nonetheless, Stone did appear flabbergasted, as my colleague David Sims put it in his recap of the night. It was a gentle shock that Poor Issues obtained the identical quantity of affection within the manufacturing classes as Oppenheimer—although Oppenheimer nonetheless took dwelling seven Oscars.
It was a well-run, well-produced present. That’s truly form of shocking given all of the stunning moments on the Oscars within the earlier decade. No one slapped anyone. At this level you count on one thing to go unsuitable, and nothing actually went unsuitable.
Final evening, the present introduced again, for the primary time since 2009, the format of earlier class winners monologuing in regards to the classes’ nominees. I personally love that format as a result of it’s heartfelt, and it’s earnest.
Folks usually ask: What’s the purpose of honoring and being so lovey-dovey about filmmaking, of watching these A-listers clap each other on the again? In our social-media age, we are inclined to need issues to be ironic and cynical and contrarian. However the Oscars are a reminder that there’s numerous love and creativity that’s put into artwork regardless of how you are feeling in regards to the nominated films. There’s a lot care put into this work.
Associated:
At present’s Information
- President Joe Biden launched his $7.3 trillion finances proposal for the 2025 fiscal yr. Amongst different measures, the finances seeks 12 weeks of paid household and medical go away, common pre-Ok for 4-year-olds, and an enlargement of $35-a-month insulin into the business market.
- Representatives within the Home will vote this week on a invoice that might result in a nationwide ban of TikTok if the corporate’s Chinese language homeowners don’t divest the app’s U.S. operations.
- Housing and City Improvement Secretary Marcia Fudge introduced that she would resign from her Cupboard put up this month, citing a want to spend extra time along with her household.
Night Learn
Fruit Chaos Is Coming
By Zoë Schlanger
Summer season, to me, is all about stone fruit: dark-purple plums, peaches you possibly can scent from three toes away. However final summer time, I struggled to search out peaches on the farmers’ markets in New York Metropolis. A freak deep freeze in February had taken them out throughout New York State and different elements of the Northeast, buds shriveling on the department as temperatures plummeted beneath zero and a brutally chilly, dry wind swept by way of the area.
The loss was extreme.
Extra From The Atlantic
Tradition Break
Watch. Final evening, Da’Vine Pleasure Randolph gained the Greatest Supporting Actress Oscar. In her acceptance speech, she voiced her hope that she would “get to do that greater than as soon as.”
Learn. David Toomey’s newest e book, Kingdom of Play, probes a query that has lengthy befuddled scientists: Why do animals play?
Stephanie Bai contributed to this article.
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