A funny thing happened en route to the Oscars’ move toward cultural irrelevance. OK, let’s not go crazy.
This Sunday evening, we will still have to endure the stilted banter and
embarrassing production numbers endemic to the broadcast, regardless of the host, as well as the head-scratching pacing. So glacial that the show won’t deliver its major winners until after 11
p.m. on the East Coast.
But there is a fundamental difference this year. The Academy actually deserves an Oscar for its pivot on diversity.
For the past two years, the hashtag
#Oscarssowhite decried the problem. In those two years, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences took serious action, diversifying its leadership base and opening up its voting membership,
which previously resembled the elder “wax works” that Norma Desmond assembled for her parties in “Sunset Boulevard.”
As a result of a changing of the guard, plus social
media crusading and the undeniable bounty of black-produced, directed, written and acted films this year, the new Oscar slate includes nominations for six black actors and actresses—a
record.
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Three films with predominantly black casts — “Fences,” “Moonlight” and “Hidden Figures” — are contenders for Best Picture — also a
record. Barry Jenkins was nominated for Best Director for “Moonlight.” And four documentaries with black directors and subjects are up for awards.
This influx, and
recognition, of black talent to a previously closed white system is another cultural indicator at odds with the increasingly conservative values of the Trump administration. No doubt there will be
speeches about subjects closer to home to the celeb award-winners, like the travel ban, cuts to the arts, and a growing political environment that feels newly threatening to the LGBT and immigrant
communities.
Still, much as we have to brace for actors’ speeches, and the eye-rolling possibilities that some of these very privileged folk are being a bit hypocritical, these are
dangerous waters for advertisers to wade in.
At this point, politics feels more emotionally charged and polarized than at any time in the last 50 years.
As was shown at the Super Bowl,
there can be push-back and much ugliness online in response to kindly stories about the contributions of immigrants to business and culture, as well as the need to show girls that they deserve equal
pay.
And yet, a whole new crop of advertisers will use the Oscars as a platform for their own new social statements, hoping politically connected themes will resonate with viewers.
One
that stunned me was the new Cadillac spot, which begins with a monumental aim: to heal the divisions in the country.
That’s a
mighty elevated issue to take on for a luxury car company, with no direct connection to the brand. Meanwhile, it’s pretty obvious why TheNew York Times, which rarely uses TV
advertising, would pony up and run its new spot “Truth” at this time.
It is a response to a crisis in journalism, and the direct and regular criticism from President Trump who, in
his spoken words and tweets, often calls out the paper as a disseminator of “fake news.” (At press time, the Times was one of several media outlets the White House had banned from
an afternoon press conference).
It’s also understandable that Hyatt Hotels would break its first ad on the Oscars with “For a World of Understanding,” showing a message of
inclusion and diversity. The set-up on the train, with a blonde woman confronting a woman in a hijab, feels a little obvious. But still, Hyatt is a global brand, with a demographic that includes all
skin colors, religions and ethnicities.
So, while I give the Cadillac team kudos for going for such an ambitious, sweeping, contemporary message, (that “we are one”)
it’s an impossible task for this advertiser to carry off.
One of the problems is that it’s built around the Cadillac tag line “Dare Greatly,” which I dare say is
one of the greatest misses in history. What does it even mean? “Great Daring” would actually be more specific and less clunky.
The spot starts very dramatically, showing old news
footage of a civil rights demonstration from the 1960s, as the announcer says, “We are a nation divided.” That certainly is heart-stopping and attention-getting, a sock in the
gut.
I like the music, and the ad is beautifully produced. I love the middle part, created around actual archival Cadillac photos. “We’ve had the privilege to carry a century of
humanity—lovers [Marilyn Monroe] fighters, [Muhammad Ali] leaders [Eisenhower].”
I wish the entire commercial consisted of such photos. That would have set up an engagingly
nostalgic feeling about the importance of the brand in the culture that could have carried forward. (Historically, the president’s car has been a Cadillac, and that also goes for Trump, who
tools around in the vehicle known as “The Beast.” )
By the end of the spot, when the voiceover guy says: “But maybe what we carry isn’t just people. It’s an idea.
We can be one. And all it takes is a willingness to dare,” I actually felt sorry for the copywriter, considering the idiomatic hoops that person had to jump through to get the whole thing to
come back to, and hinge on, the word “dare.”
It’s a lovely sentiment, to be sure. But are they really suggesting that all it takes to unify the country is the purchase of a
Cadillac?
Attempting to carry the nation on its back is a case of overreach — especially for a major purchase that gains from bailouts and tariffs, two of the issues charging us up.
Hard to believe, but this year, for great daring in creating change, the award goes to the Academy itself.