Posts Tagged ‘oscars’

Image

I truly feel the Oscars are in a time-warp. Seriously. Specifically, The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. It’s as if the entire world…Facebook, iPhone, Apps, Twitter, iPad, Skype — and the billions of humans who use them and new technology to watch movies, find movies, rate movies, critique movies, rave about movies and make movies (among everything else in the universe) never happened. None of it exists.

This technology allows innovative producers to put together incredible shows, if they’re allowed to do it.

People asked me if I thought Seth Macfarlane would lead the Oscars out of the usual hum-drum show it’s become. I said, “No.” Here’s why.

I remember chatting with former Oscar hosts Jon Stewart and Chris Rock during their week leading up to the show.

While they didn’t come out and say it, I could tell that the weight of the Oscar mafia was bearing down on them. And I say mafia in only the kindest of terms.

You see, I had seen it before. These very talented individuals are asked, courted at times, to host the Academy Awards. Stewart and Rock are exceptional at what they do. They both do it in the comfortable, well-crafted environment of their world. The Oscar world is an entirely different world.

I could tell when I chatted with Jon Stewart that he was inside the Oscar machine. When creativity and new thoughts run up against “the way it’s always been.”  Chris Rock?  Same thing. I asked Chris on a Thursday before the Sunday show if he was able to be Chris Rock, if the Academy was reigning him in at all? He just shot me a look.

Year after year we start off with hope it will be different and hope gets put through the Academy meat grinder, circa 1978, and it comes out the other end as Oscar Sausage. This is 2013. There are complete gluten-free menus in restaurants these days. Geeeeez!. Now, don’t get me wrong, I LOVE the Oscars. I went to every one from 1999-to-2011. It’s like when you have a relative who you love but who can’t get out of his or her own way.

Pretty soon the Academy will have to get out of it’s own way before late one day an intervention suddenly appears. An intervention because the Academy has continued to ignore the inventions of the day, which will cost them the 20-30-year olds who are embracing the new technology and new ways of doing things, watching things and more.

If the Academy doesn’t embrace the young, who will watch when the 40-50-60 year olds are gone? Apple did a smart thing when it opened up it’s retail stores. Rather than have all the laptops and computers bolted to the counters like every other retail store, they had them all available to pick up and play. More importantly, they had those little computer stations for kids. Suddenly kids were using Macs. Then kids wanted Macs. Then the iPod came out. Kids wanted those. Then kids wanted music and went to iTunes. Then they grew up and went to iPads and iPhones. You get the picture.

What did Microsoft do during this time? Nothing to capture the youth market, the adult buyers of the future. My 19-year-old daughter doesn’t associate anything with Microsoft. She is Apple everything. She rarely watches tv. It’s all second screen, YouTube, etc.

My 8-year-old daughter will never use a PC. She’s Apple wired.

Here’s my point. The Academy is a poor-man’s Microsoft. Teens and those in their 20s are vaguely aware of the Oscars. How will it ever open up the live-show equivalent of the interactive Apple retail store?  Or will it be the pc equivalent of Dell? Once great, but quickly becoming marginal?

So, the wife and I had a short break, 1hr,  while we were in Sedona, Arizona and being so enamored and inspired by all the spirituality and energy everywhere around us, I decided to seek out Sedona’s best when it comes to bringing energy and spirituality together. And that’s how I met Tao Master Banya.

People come from all over the world to visit Tao Master Banya in Sedona at Sedona Story. In fact, a current Oscar Nominated actor made the trek to this spiritual and energentic part of the world to see her. She uses 10,000 year old Chinese tradition to guide people into the future they’ve always wanted…

So, I figured, since the Oscars are around the corner…and she’s privately counseled an Oscar Nominated star…let’s get her to predict the Oscar Winners!!

**hit the Like button below–thanks**

Image

I love the history of things. Towns. People. Movies. Events. Snapshots of a time in history or for history. 

I’ve always loved the Oscar Nominee Luncheon, where all the nominees gather in one place,  The Beverly Hilton off Wilshire Blvd. It is a definitive time in history. Game changers in the world of movies. Icons. Newbies. All in one room together. All incredibly relaxed and having fun, unlike the nerves that will jumble inside them on Oscar Night. 

Image

 

All the years I attended the luncheon, I found the nominees so open and fun. It’s kinda like that first day of college, in your dorm –you’re all kinda in this together and you’re the only ones who knows what it feels like. Every person is in the same boat. All Oscar Nominees. Kinda a cool thing.

The second cool thing is this: Many fans believe that all these stars see each other all the time and know each and hang out. Actually, it’s mostly the opposite. In fact, one of the aspects of the day nominees tell me they like the most is that they get to meet other nominees who they admire, adore and have, in some cases, been an inspiration. 

I’ve watched it personally many times. I remember sitting down with Jeremy Renner when he was first nominated for an Oscar in 2010. He was looking around at all the Oscar Nominees going from interview to interview, giving each other hugs, meeting for the first time and he shook his head. I asked what he was thinking and he said, “Man, it’s just surreal. Just incredible.”

Image

 

I’m sure Ben Affleck had fun yesterday. Ben has talked with me about how he studies his craft intensely. Especially the work of directors both current and those who’ve come before him…back to the 30s n 40s as well.

I can only image how he was yesterday, especially standing in that crowd of his fellow nominees to take the official Oscar picture. I’m pretty sure he may have thought back to 1998 when he and Matt Damon were Oscar Nominated Screenwriters.  What a path those two have traveled, right?

Here’s a quick video from ITV about yesterday’s Oscar Luncheon.