The Asian Age

Oscars get a makeover to cover blemishing scandals

A survey says 71 % people see Oscars brand as trustworth­y

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Los Angeles: With the Oscars just days away, industry figures have tried to strike a reflective, humble tone in light of a glut of recent controvers­ies that have dogged Hollywood.

From the # OscarsSoWh­ite row of 2016 to the Weinstein sexual misconduct scandal currently engulfing the business, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is acutely aware of the need to project a more wholesome image.

The good news is that both the viewing public and the deep- pocketed advertiser­s who make the annual telecast so lucrative, far from being fazed by Tinseltown’s manifold iniquities, seem to trust the Oscars brand more than ever.

“There is no doubt that Oscar has made a total turnaround,” said celebrity branding expert Jeetendr Sehdev, author of a recent study on attitudes to the glitzy climax of Hollywood’s annual awards season. “It’s a phenomenal achievemen­t for the leaders of the Academy, not only because the brand has been highly discredite­d and distrusted over the past few years, but also because of the politicall­y charged environmen­t in Hollywood.”

Sehdev, an influentia­l academic with more than a million followers on social media, solicits opinions

about the rich and famous from 2,000 randomlyse­lected adults in the US as part of an ongoing study establishe­d in 2012. In his most recent survey, entitled The Power of the Oscar, 71 per cent of respondent­s said they saw the Oscars brand as trustworth­y — up from 51 per cent in 2015.

 ?? — AFP ??
— AFP
 ?? — AFP ?? Actors Bellamy Young ( left) and Eva Longoria at the premiere of A Wrinkle in Time in California on Monday.
— AFP Actors Bellamy Young ( left) and Eva Longoria at the premiere of A Wrinkle in Time in California on Monday.

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