Daily Times (Primos, PA)

PR firms: Golden Globes must reform or stars will boycott

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NEW YORK » More than 100 Hollywood publicity firms that collective­ly represent the majority of stars in film and television said they will advise their clients to skip the Golden Globes if the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n does not commit to “transforma­tional change.”

In a letter sent late Monday to the HFPA, the PR companies said the press associatio­n, which puts on the Globes, must reform or many of the industry’s most prominent actors will boycott its events.

“We call on the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. to swiftly manifest profound and lasting change to eradicate the longstandi­ng exclusiona­ry ethos and pervasive practice of discrimina­tory behavior, unprofessi­onalism, ethical impropriet­y and alleged financial corruption endemic to the HFPA, funded by Dick Clark Production­s, MRC, NBC-Universal and Comcast,” the publicists wrote. “To reflect how urgent and necessary we feel this work is, we cannot advocate for our clients to participat­e in HFPA events or interviews as we await your explicit plans and time line for transforma­tional change.”

The message was the latest salvo in an ongoing scandal for the embattled Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n. In the days before last month’s Globes, the Los

Angeles Times reported that the group’s 87 voting members doesn’t include one Black person. Reports have also raised questions on the conduct and ethics of the HFPA, a group of largely lesser-known internatio­nal writers who profit from the annual NBC telecast.

Pressure on the HFPA has continued, even if awards season has moved on to the Oscars. Time’s Up, the advocacy organizati­on that first debuted at the all-black 2018 Globes red carpet, has pressed the HFPA for more than statements.

“We need to see specific details, timetables for change, and firm commitment­s,” the group earlier said.

On Monday, Time’s Up reiterated that position and endorsed the publicity firms’ letter.

“We agree that anything less than transparen­t, meaningful change will no longer be acceptable,” wrote Tina Tchen, president and chief executive of Time’s Up. “The entire world is watching.”

HFPA members pledged the organizati­on would reform during February’s broadcast. In response to the publicity firms’ letter, the press associatio­n responded with an outline of various initiative­s it’s taking while accepting it had work to do.

 ??  ?? Event signage appears above the red carpet at the 77th annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 5, 2020.
Event signage appears above the red carpet at the 77th annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 5, 2020.

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