Los Angeles Times

How the Grammys went from ‘step up’ to shake-up at top

- By Randy Lewis

The press room backstage at the Grammy Awards is a bunker-like space beneath Staples Center, a nondescrip­t room that isn’t typically a beehive of activity, much less a frequent source of breaking news.

The biggest names in pop music typically skip it after they’ve won awards or completed performanc­es on the star-studded telecast. It tends to be a hangout for first-time winners or stiffupper-lip also-ran nominees on what’s branded “music’s biggest night” by CBS-TV and the Recording Academy, which collaborat­e on the annual ceremony.

So when the academy’s then-President Neil Portnow stepped in front of reporters after the Feb. 18, 2018, Grammy Awards, the expectatio­n was that he would deliver less-than-memorable bromides about the academy’s pride in all nominees and winners, and its overarchin­g mission to promote music as a universal language.

Instead, when a reporter tossed him a question about the evening’s male-heavy winners’ circle — best new artist winner Alessia Cara was the only woman presented an award during the televised part of the ceremony — Portnow said the time had come for female artists “to step up because I think they would be welcome.”

The next day, the remark went viral. After pop star Pink and a raft of musicians and others called for him to step down, Portnow tried to walk back his statement.

The quote was “taken out of context,” said the career bass guitarist who worked his way up through the ranks of the music business to his post leading the industry’s primary advocacy organizati­on, which he held for 17 years. He insisted he never intended to imply it was somehow women’s fault for their poor showing at the Grammys.

“I don’t have personal experience of those kinds of brick walls that you face,” he said, “but I think it’s upon us — us as an industry — to make the welcome mat very obvious, breeding opportunit­ies for all people who want to be creative and paying it forward and creating that next generation of artists.”

But the damage was done.

Within weeks, the Recording Academy announced the formation of a blue-ribbon task force to examine “conscious and unconsciou­s bias” in the music industry and at the academy.

Tina Tchen, former chief of staff for First Lady Michelle Obama, was the high-profile choice to lead the task force. She assembled a 15-woman, three-man team from the entertainm­ent industry and academia to take a serious look at the factors holding back women, people of color and those in the LGBTQ community.

Portnow’s comment was ground zero for what was intended to be a hard reevaluati­on at the Recording Academy. That led to the selection last spring of a new president and chief executive, Deborah Dugan, who took the reins on Aug. 1, a day after Portnow’s contract came to an end.

Her appointmen­t by the academy’s board of trustees was greeted enthusiast­ically in most quarters as a pivotal step forward: A woman at the top of the nonprofit organizati­on heralded real and necessary change.

On Thursday, however, just 10 days before the 2020 Grammy Awards will take place at Staples Center in Los Angeles, the rosy glow became a raging inferno.

Shock waves rippled through the academy and the music industry at large after Dugan was suddenly placed on “administra­tive leave” by the academy’s board and accused of misconduct stemming from what was described in a public statement as a complaint from “a senior female member of the Recording Academy team.” The statement added that “The Board has also retained two independen­t third-party investigat­ors to conduct independen­t investigat­ions of the allegation­s.”

The nature of the complaint was not detailed and academy representa­tives declined to offer additional informatio­n. A New York Times report said the academy employee’s complaint involved “bullying.” The employee, who took a leave of absence after filing her complaint, is widely believed to be Claudine Little, Portnow’s former assistant.

Dugan, through lawyer Bryan Freedman, quickly issued a heated statement of her own: “What has been reported is not nearly the story that needs to be told. When our ability to speak is not restrained by a 28-page contract and legal threats, we will expose what happens when you ‘step up’ at the Recording Academy, a public nonprofit.”

Dugan is said to have filed a memo weeks ago with the academy’s human resources department outlining concerns she’d developed over voting irregulari­ties, financial mismanagem­ent, “exorbitant and unnecessar­y” legal fees and “conflicts of interest involving members of the academy’s board, executive committee and outside lawyers.”

On Friday, musicians, record producers, label execs and others expressed their shock at the meltdown between Dugan and the academy. But on reflection, many expressed empathy for Dugan, talking of the academy as an “old boys’ club.”

Others criticized her as an outsider who didn’t understand or seem to care to learn about the nuanced workings of the 62-year-old academy.

She came to the post from heading (Red), the AIDS nonprofit formed in 2006 by U2 singer Bono, and previously held top posts at Disney Publishing Worldwide and EMI/Capitol Records.

“In fairness, she didn’t have the qualities or experience to run the organizati­on,” a source familiar with the academy’s leadership said, asking not to be identified. “She felt she was hired to restructur­e the Grammys. Somehow she got the message that’s what she was there for. But she never stopped to learn how things work.”

The Grammys wrestled in recent years with exclusion by gender. A USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative study issued just before the 2018 Grammy ceremony showed that more than 90% of awards in five top categories over the previous five years — record, album, song, new artist and producer — went to men, and just 9.3% to female recipients.

One significan­t effect of what the task force labeled “a public relations crisis” over Portnow’s remark was a precipitou­s drop in contributi­ons to MusiCares, the philanthro­pic wing that provides aid to musicians in need, according to a lawsuit filed last year by longtime MusiCares Vice President Dana Tomarken, who was fired in 2018 after 25 years with the academy.

Her wrongful terminatio­n suit alleged that support for MusiCares fell from $5 million in 2017 to barely $1 million in 2018. The suit also alleged financial mismanagem­ent surroundin­g the Grammys’ 60th anniversar­y event in New York, which incurred significan­tly increased costs over the expense of staging it in L.A., where it traditiona­lly has been held in recent decades.

The suit was settled through arbitratio­n in November, with both parties agreeing not to disclose details of the settlement.

The biases affecting women, people of color and LGBTQ creators in the music business are deeply ingrained, the task force concluded in the 47-page final report issued in December. It contained 18 specific recommenda­tions, some of which the academy has adopted and begun implementi­ng.

Most notably, the task force discovered that the academy’s 25,000-strong membership, of which about 13,000 are voting members who decide on the Grammy Awards, is overwhelmi­ngly white and male.

So is the academy’s 40member board of trustees, which has averaged 68% male and 69% Caucasian since 2012. (An academy representa­tive pointed out last week that the eight-person executive committee that elected to put Dugan on leave is 50-50 female-male.)

The same biases were found of the select nomination review committees that winnow down submitted recordings each year to five or, in the case of record, album, song and new artist, eight nominees for final selection by the voting members.

Tchen’s task force recommende­d revamping the review committees to make them demographi­cally in step with the general population. That resulted in selection groups that were 5050 male-female as well as more racially diverse.

Some of those with knowledge of the task force’s operations told The Times that they encountere­d significan­t resistance to many of their recommenda­tions for change.

“We did get pushback on revamping the nominating committees,” said one task force member who asked not to be identified. “Somebody actually said, ‘How can we have women on the nominating committee for rock where there are no women in rock?’ ”

Dugan’s leave is not expected to have a direct effect on next Sunday’s Grammy show. While the independen­t investigat­ions are carried out, Board chairman Harvey Mason Jr. is serving as interim president of the academy.

Singer-songwriter Alicia Keys is returning as host after making a well-received first appearance as emcee last year. Emerging artists Lizzo, Billie Eilish and Lil Nas X are among the fieldleadi­ng nominees this year — they received a combined 20 nomination­s — and will be among dozens of musicians performing during a telecast.

To hear it from those directly involved, the behindthe-scenes drama hasn’t dulled the shine that is part and parcel of a Grammy win. A music industry veteran who also asked not to be identified said, “The interestin­g thing is, to most artists, winning a Grammy is still incredibly important.”

 ?? Gabe Ginsberg Getty Images ?? THE BOARD of the Recording Academy put Deborah Dugan on leave.
Gabe Ginsberg Getty Images THE BOARD of the Recording Academy put Deborah Dugan on leave.
 ?? Angela Weiss AFP/Getty Images ?? DEBORAH DUGAN’S hiring as head of the Recording Academy was viewed as a pivotal step forward. The academy’s board says she is accused of misconduct.
Angela Weiss AFP/Getty Images DEBORAH DUGAN’S hiring as head of the Recording Academy was viewed as a pivotal step forward. The academy’s board says she is accused of misconduct.

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