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Monday, March 05, 2018

Oscars - Order reigns at the 90th awards



Order reigns at the 90th awards


Anne Glover and David Beard bring the new and the notable.

If you didn’t stay up to watch all of the Oscars last night, you probably do know after glancing at your smartphone that “The Shape of Water” was the big winner, with four awards. Not everyone was convinced it should have been, however:
Get out

At least there was no mix-up this year, though people clearly still hadn’t forgotten about it when Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway reprised their Best Picture presentation:
Beatty tweet
The 90th edition of the awards were largely orderly and — dare we say it — a bit yawn-inducing as the night wore on. (Apparently no one was serious about winning the personal watercraft being given away for the shortest acceptance speech, though “Phantom Threads” design winner Mark Bridges took it home at the end of the show.)
The most rousing moment of the night came courtesy of Frances McDormand, who set her Oscar on the stage and then asked all of the women nominees of the night to stand in solidarity. She urged action, not talk, and ended her speech with two words: “inclusion rider.” Which of course a lot of people on the room grasped, but not so much people watching:
Inclusion
Here’s a short look at some of the other things that caught our attention throughout the night:
·        Vox noted that the montage devoted to the #MeToo movement was way too polite and missed an opportunity to shine a light on the abuse that’s gone on in Hollywood’s system for so many years.
·        Tiffany Haddish's and Maya Rudolph's take on “white people with clipboards” deserved every bit of love it got on Twitter.
·        A DACA shout-out: ““We’re dreamers. Dreams are the foundation of Hollywood, and dreams are the foundation of America,” Lupita Nyong’o and Kumail Nanjiani said during the introduction of a design award. They added, “to all the dreamers out there, we stand with you.”
·        Host Jimmy Kimmel directly mentioned Harvey Weinstein and urged Hollywood to finally get its act together on workplace harassment. “The world is watching us. We need to set an example. The truth is if we are successful, women will only have to deal with harassment all the time every other place they go.”
·        Who were all of those people standing on stage as Common and Andra Day performed the nominated song “Stand Up for Something” from the movie “Marshall?” The Academy provided the answer:
List
·        The Wrap’s Sharon Waxman says Hollywood’s necessary battles weren’t fought on the red carpet. “Hollywood has deep, serious work to do in changing — but that work must be done at the level of its power structure. Women and people of color need to take their place at the levers of decision-making.”
·        Even before the statuettes, cartoonist Nate Beeler of the Columbus Dispatch figured out why this year was different.
Cartoon

BEHIND THE NEWS: Research skills lead librarian to national reporting for NBC News

Journalism is better off that Brandy Zadrozny wanted to move on from her job at the Burlington (Vermont) Public Library.
BrandyFor the past five years, she’s been a senior reporter and research at The Daily Beast, uncovering facts about Russia’s meddling in America, Eric Trump’s wacky charity, Vice’s rampant harassment, the secret life of a pro-Trump school shooter. Now the Tampa native again is moving on to NBC News as a national reporter, taking her specialized skills to an even bigger audience.
“My mission on the Reference Desk is the same as it is now. To inform the public that is hungry for answers to their questions,” says Zadrozny, just one of many news researchers to play key roles in Trump-era scoops. “At the Reference Desk it was, ‘What is the capital of Montana?’ And now, it’s: ‘Who is this person who is being retweeted by our president?’ … or, ‘Who is the person who runs the Internet Research Agency?’”
Please read here for the entire interview. But first, here are the other media stories you need to know today.
THE CONSEQUENCES OF KILLING JOURNALISTS: The assassination of investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia will “dramatically” affect Malta’s position in the World Press Freedom index, says Reporters Without Borders. “I intend to tell the world more about the worrying climate in Malta, because ultimately it is this climate that allowed Daphne to get murdered and these very serious issues need to be addressed before another journalist gets killed,” says Rebecca Vincent, director of the organization’s London bureau. Malta is currently ranked 47th in the press freedom index, between Romania and Botswana. Ten people have been arrested in the car-bombing in October of Caruana Galizia, who was investigating high-level corruption in the Mediterranean island nation.
BEYOND ALEXA: Voice-activated streaming, already a $2 billion business, could grow 20-fold by 2022, USA Today’s Charisse Jones reports. "We really see this as the next big disruptive play in U.S. retail,’’ Jones quotes John Franklin, associate partner at OC&C, as saying. Franklin’s company surveyed 1,500 smart-speaker owners in December.
PROMOTED: Grant Moise, hired a year ago as general manager of the Dallas Morning News, will become publisher, the newspaper announced. He replaces Jim Moroney, who will continue to serve as board chairman, president and chief executive of parent company A. H. Belo Corporation.

INFOWARS: Alex Jones has been accused of anti-Semitism, racism and sexual harassment in EEOC complaints. One employee, in his complaint, said he was referred to as “The Resident Jew,” and believed Jones was grooming him for homosexual sex. A second employee said he grabbed her butt and said: “Who wouldn’t want to have a black wife?”
ASKING TOO MUCH? Journalists looking for jobs are being asked to take increasingly complex editing tests, sometimes working up to 20 hours on a single application (without pay, no less). Columbia Journalism Review wonders if all of that testing is necessary.
THE SIMPSONS FACTOR: The animated cultural icons are ubiquitous, but this might possibly be the first time we know of that their GIFs have been used to explain steel tariffs.

A LOT OF WORK …: went into this piece of explanatory journalism investigating the dimensions of NPR’s so-called “tiny desk” used in its concert series.  All we’ve got to say is that some people have too much time on their hands.
WHAT TWO PEOPLE CAN DO: Kevin Rothrock and Anna Veduta run some of the best reporting on Russia. Their English-language site, Meduza, a branch of a bigger, Latvian-based Russian-language site, has 100,000 readers monthly. They include academics, students and lawmakers in the United States and Europe, Veduta tells Nieman Lab’s Shan Wang.