USA TODAY International Edition

We debate whether the show is worth it

- Barbara VanDenburg­h and Rasha Ali

The Oscars are at a crisis point. The opulent awards ceremony, now in its 94th year, is flailing. This year, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced it was eliminatin­g eight categories from the live telecast, including film editing, makeup and hairstylin­g, while adding an Oscars Fan Favorite category voted via Twitter in what reads as a desperate bid to get more popular films such as “SpiderMan: No Way Home” into the mix.

The show has experiment­ed with different formats to try to halt a decline in viewership.

Yet the show keeps bleeding viewers. Last year, when “Nomadland” took best picture, only 10.4 million people watched, while 2014’ s show with “12 Years a Slave” drew a record 43.7 million.

Did the pandemic plunge viewership to a record low? Were the wrong movies nominated? Have streaming services changed viewing habits so much that must- see TV events are no longer so must- see?

Or is it that after 94 years, the Oscars are just ... done?

That question prompted fierce debate among the USA TODAY Life and Entertainm­ent staff, particular­ly between Rasha Ali and Barbara VanDenburg­h. Rasha thinks the Oscars are out of touch and painstakin­gly boring, while Barbara thinks the ceremony, while flawed, often is an entertaini­ng and sometimes life- affirming escape.

Rasha’s opening argument: I used to love the Oscars. I loved watching celebs get glammed up and seeing Brad Pitt on the carpet and being like, “Hi, can you marry me?” It felt so fantastica­l, so surreal. As I got older, especially within the last few years, you just realize it’s all BS. I would rather catch it on Twitter the next day, because watching a three- to five- hour show is legit like sitting through someone’s graduation … and everybody hates graduation­s.

Barbara’s opening argument: The Oscars is the Super Bowl of pop culture. For just this one night, I get to convene

with other pop- culture junkies to talk about the art of cinema. Even when the Oscars are bad – when the host doesn’t work, when the wrong movies win and glass ceilings remain – I still get my popculture fix. Even complainin­g about the Oscars is its own form of entertainm­ent.

Rasha: I’m watching it from a Black woman’s perspectiv­e, so for me, it’s not our pop culture. We barely get recognitio­n from the Oscars, and when we do it’s crumbs.

Barbara: I can’t argue that. As a white person, I see myself represente­d at the Oscars a lot more than you you do. As a woman, I can relate to the crumbs. The category I’m most excited about this year is cinematogr­aphy. Ari Wegner, who shot “The Power of the Dog,” is only the second woman in the history of the Oscars to be nominated for cinematogr­aphy, and no woman has won. That’s indefensib­le. But I can’t pretend I won’t be over- the- moon excited if Wegner wins.

Rasha: OK, true, but isn’t that sad? It’s been like a million years since the Oscars started, and we’re still crowning firsts. It does feel good to see those wins – when Daniel Kaluuya won, I was so proud. But then it kind of still makes me mad. Why am I so excited over a Black man winning? Not that I shouldn’t be excited for him, but a Black man winning an Oscar should be normal by now.

Barbara: Again, you’re right. And it sucks. But the Oscars still has the power to move the needle in positive ways. Take Regina King, for example. She put in decades of hard, underappre­ciated work and finally got her flowers for “If Beale Street Could Talk.” Since then, she has won an Emmy for HBO’s “Watchmen,” directed her first feature, “One Night in Miami ...” , and she’s producing. It’s the result of her hard work and talent, but I have to think her Oscar win got her some green lights.

Rasha: I LOVE REGINA KING! But it took her working so hard to finally be recognized, and even that doesn’t happen for most actors of color. For the most part, once Black actors win an Oscar, they’re not everywhere. A career bump doesn’t happen for most of them. So I think, why should we be making such a big deal about the Oscars? There’s the Critics Choice Awards, and then Screen Actors Guild Awards and Golden Globes and the Emmys and it’s just a lot. Are these not all the same people voting for the same things?

Barbara: Awards season is definitely too long, but the Oscars is still king. It brings together the biggest personalit­ies to experience the biggest emotions on the biggest stage, and that can make for really good television. Sometimes when I’m sad I’ll cue up Olivia Colman’s acceptance speech when she won best actress in an upset over Glenn Close. Or Spike Lee finally winning a best adapted screenplay Oscar for “BlacKkKlan­sman.” He’s so excited, he jumps into Samuel L. Jackson’s arms, and it’s electric! You know Spike Lee knows the Oscars are BS. You know he knows he should have won decades ago. And he still turned into a child when he won, he’s so excited.

Rasha: I wish there were more relatable moments like that. There’s a whole pandemic, a World War III pending. And then you see these people looking so poised and it’s just so much perfection. If it was more relaxed and celebritie­s were able to say what they wanted to and just acted like real people, I feel like it would be more entertaini­ng.

Barbara: Yes, seeing a bunch of rich people pat themselves on the back three years into a pandemic while the world is falling apart is wearying when I’m sitting in the corner of my tiny rented house with my laptop propped on a plastic TV tray. But the world has always been a trash fire of inequality, which is why I need the escapist glamor of pretty people in sparkly dresses. By all means, let’s eat the rich. But after they’ve given their acceptance speeches. What would need to win this year for the Oscars to win you over?

Rasha: “King Richard.” And Will Smith. OK, so this is a secret between you and me ( and everyone else reading this), but I haven’t seen the movie yet. But like Issa Rae, I, too, am rooting for everybody Black.

Final verdict

Barbara and Rasha have found commonalit­ies in their love and hatred of the Oscars. While Barbara understand­s she’s enjoying the Academy Awards from a privileged position, she believes the Oscars still has the power to spark joy and change lives when it gets things right. And that makes it worth fighting for. Rasha will never forgive the Oscars for making “Gone With the Wind’s” Hattie McDaniel sit at a table away from her co- stars but can be won over by receiving tickets to next year’s show … just to see if Barbara’s points check out.

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/ USA TODAY ?? Spike Lee celebrates with Samuel L. Jackson as Lee accepts the Oscar for adapted screenplay for “BlacKkKlan­sman” in 2019.
ROBERT DEUTSCH/ USA TODAY Spike Lee celebrates with Samuel L. Jackson as Lee accepts the Oscar for adapted screenplay for “BlacKkKlan­sman” in 2019.

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