"Whoever takes the mantle from 2017–2018 host Jimmy Kimmel will have their work cut out for them," reports Vulture's Chris Lee. "Serving as the most forward face of a broadcast that yielded record-low viewership last year requires a certain amount of cheerleading for the continuing relevance of theatrical moviegoing in an era when Best Picture nominees might have relatively tiny box-office yields or limited mainstream exposure. (Save for early Best Picture front-runners like Power of the Dog, Coda, Don’t Look Up, and Being the Ricardos, which are all currently streaming.) But in the aftermath of 2018’s Kevin Hart hosting debacle — when the stand-up was hired to anchor the 91st Academy Awards show then forced to step down after a series of his homophobic tweets from a decade earlier resurfaced — Oscars producers face an uphill battle, too." Bill Mechanic, a former member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences board of governors, who co-produced the 82nd Academy Awards, tells Lee: "In the process of getting a host, anybody you approach runs away from you before you talk to them because they know what you’re calling about. Being the host of the show is a pincushion job. Everyone out there has their own opinion of things and seems all too ready to hate everything about the Oscars from the winners to the hosts.”
TOPICS: 94th Academy Awards, ABC, Award Shows