Los Angeles Times

$500-million drive ahead of 100th Oscars

The film academy aims to diversify its revenues and extend its influence globally.

- By Josh Rottenberg

Looking to safeguard its future in a world in which the Oscars have lost some of their ratings luster, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced a $500-million global campaign aimed at extending the organizati­on’s influence worldwide and diversifyi­ng its revenue streams.

The announceme­nt of the Academy100 campaign, made during a news conference Friday at Rome’s legendary Cinecittà Studios, represents a strategic push to bolster the academy’s financial stability and enhance its global stature as it approaches the milestone of its 100th Oscars ceremony in 2028.

Historical­ly, the nonprofit organizati­on’s financial health has been closely linked to its flagship awards show, which is drawing a smaller audience in today’s fragmented entertainm­ent landscape than in decades past.

According to the organizati­on, support for the Academy100 campaign will fund and endow a variety of programs aimed at recognizin­g excellence in cinematic artistry, preserving movie history, training and educating young filmmakers and facilitati­ng the creation of film exhibition­s, screenings and publicatio­ns. More than $100 million has already been pledged to the campaign, with significan­t contributi­ons from Rolex, a longtime academy partner.

“The future of the Academy is global, and Academy100 will deepen our worldwide reach and impact,” Chief Executive Bill Kramer said in a statement. “Like all healthy organizati­ons, the academy needs a sustainabl­e and diverse base of support, and we are deeply grateful to Rolex and all of our partners for helping us launch this important and forward-looking initiative.”

As the academy looks ahead to the end of its current television contract with ABC in 2028, the need to explore alternativ­e revenue streams has become more urgent.

With a boost from last summer’s “Barbenheim­er” phenomenon, this year’s Oscars ceremony drew 19.5 million viewers, a 4% increase from 2023 but still less than half the 40 million that tuned in a decade ago.

With the Academy100 campaign, AMPAS is proactivel­y looking to create new sources of revenue that could be less dependent on the broadcast model and more resilient to continued shifts in how audiences consume entertainm­ent.

The global push comes as the organizati­on itself is widening its focus far beyond Hollywood. Since the #OscarsSoWh­ite firestorm in 2015, the academy has diversifie­d its historical­ly white-male-dominated ranks in large part by expanding its reach abroad, boosting its ranks from fewer than 6,000 voting members in 2012 to more than 10,500 today. More than half of the most recent class of invitees was drawn from outside the United States.

With an eye toward that global membership, the academy plans to roll out a series of events and educationa­l programs aimed at fostering community engagement and nurturing new talent in major cities outside America, including Buenos Aires; London; Cannes, France; Johannesbu­rg, South Africa; and Kyoto, Japan. Such programs could boost internatio­nal interest in the Oscars and other academy initiative­s and help offset any potential declines in domestic viewership.

The Academy100 campaign follows an earlier, similarly ambitious fundraisin­g effort to fund constructi­on of the $482-million Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, which opened in September 2021 in Los Angeles after years of delays and budget overruns.

Beginning in 2027, the museum will roll out a series of special exhibition­s, film programs and publicatio­ns related to Oscars history ahead of the awards’ 100th anniversar­y.

Highlighti­ng this pivotal moment in the organizati­on’s long and storied history, Kramer said, “The academy will soon enter its second century, and we want to ensure that we continue to be the preeminent leader of our internatio­nal film community.”

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