Loading...

In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched.

Loading...
In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched. - Hallo friend WELCOME TO AMERICA, In the article you read this time with the title In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched., we have prepared well for this article you read and download the information therein. hopefully fill posts Article AMERICA, Article CULTURAL, Article ECONOMIC, Article POLITICAL, Article SECURITY, Article SOCCER, Article SOCIAL, we write this you can understand. Well, happy reading.

Title : In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched.
link : In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched.

see also


In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched.

In 1998, The Hill tells us: "The great Billy Crystal served as host of the show," but this year

There was no movie anyone was buzzing about. No household-name stars were nominated unless Anthony Hopkins – who won his last Oscar 30 years ago – counts. There wasn't even a host for the show, because the Academy thought it was a great idea to eliminate the position for reasons unclear when a raw, unfiltered talent such as Ricky Gervais would have been just the person to lift our spirits.

Oh, come on. If they'd picked anybody to host, that person would have been skewered for one thing or another. Billy Crystal is still alive, but I'll bet he wouldn't even want to be invited back. It's better for him to be remembered as the great Oscars host of his time than to be set up as a target. Not only would people say why him and not a person of color, he's vulnerable to cancellation for having boldly and repeatedly performed in blackface:

 

That wasn't at the Oscars, of course. Remember when Whoopi Goldberg hosted the Oscars in whiteface?

  

Those were simpler times. More racist times? 

ADDED: I'm just kidding about "simpler times." I think those were more complex times. We're simpler now. And it's not a compliment.

Loading...

In 1998, The Hill tells us: "The great Billy Crystal served as host of the show," but this year

There was no movie anyone was buzzing about. No household-name stars were nominated unless Anthony Hopkins – who won his last Oscar 30 years ago – counts. There wasn't even a host for the show, because the Academy thought it was a great idea to eliminate the position for reasons unclear when a raw, unfiltered talent such as Ricky Gervais would have been just the person to lift our spirits.

Oh, come on. If they'd picked anybody to host, that person would have been skewered for one thing or another. Billy Crystal is still alive, but I'll bet he wouldn't even want to be invited back. It's better for him to be remembered as the great Oscars host of his time than to be set up as a target. Not only would people say why him and not a person of color, he's vulnerable to cancellation for having boldly and repeatedly performed in blackface:

 

That wasn't at the Oscars, of course. Remember when Whoopi Goldberg hosted the Oscars in whiteface?

  

Those were simpler times. More racist times? 

ADDED: I'm just kidding about "simpler times." I think those were more complex times. We're simpler now. And it's not a compliment.



Thus articles In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched.

that is all articles In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched. This time, hopefully can provide benefits to all of you. Okay, see you in another article posting.

You now read the article In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched. with the link address https://welcometoamerican.blogspot.com/2021/04/in-1998-year-of-titanic-57-million.html

Subscribe to receive free email updates:

0 Response to "In 1998 — the year of "Titanic" — 57 million people watched the Oscars. This year, only 9.85 million watched."

Post a Comment

Loading...