The Oscars has always been an exercise in Hollywood A-listers giving each other awards congratulating each other for being good liberals. Often, brilliant performances have been shutout while actors who are making a political statement steal a statue.
The Academy Awards isn't so much about performances and excellence in film-making as it is about marketing. Harvey Weinstein was able to market his film "The King's Speech" to an Oscar nod over a better film "The Social Network".
CBS anchor Charlie Rose recently told Weinstein if you took a poll of 100 people in Hollywood, all 100 would pick him as the most effective Oscar campaigner.
So, in the past, the best way to get an Oscar is send all of the voters a DVD copy of the film along with a bag full of swag and chances are they'll vote for you. To be honest, it's rare when one film is head and shoulders better than another film. Irregardless, many times the best performances are ignored because of subject-matter. The chances of a film about George Bush being a great president getting anything but scorn are pretty slim. It was a miracle that Lincoln got any recognition. Liberals just said that those evil Democrats that attempted to stop Republicans from freeing slaves switched parties and are now Republicans, so the picture received recognition, even though it wasn't that good of a film.
Selma won't be so lucky, unless some arm-twisting behind the scenes takes place. If Selma wins best picture then political-correctness has taken over Hollywood to the point that their white guilt overrules their judgment. I'm afraid the Gay movement is stronger in Hollywood than the race-baiting movement:
This year Weinstein’s aggressively urging the Oscar voters to strike a blow for “justice” for homosexuals by voting for his film The Imitation Game. The film focuses on Alan Turing, the English math genius who cracked the Nazi code in World War II, but was later arrested and subjected to chemical castration for his homosexuality.
On January 24, the Weinstein Company placed newspaper ads quoting Chad Griffin, president of the gay left advocacy group the Human Rights Campaign, bestowing its blessing on The Imitation Game. They’re also using testimonials from Internet moguls at Netflix, Google, and YouTube, not to mention former government officials like recent Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
''Honor this movie. Honor this man. And honor the movement to bring justice to the other 49,000 [punished homosexuals],'' proclaimed Weinstein’s ad, above a picture of actor Benedict Cumberbatch, who stars as Turing. The film was also named last week as a nominee for best picture at the GLAAD Media Awards, from the most powerful gay lobby in Hollywood.
''Honor this movie. Honor this man. And honor the movement to bring justice to the other 49,000 [punished homosexuals],'' proclaimed Weinstein’s ad, above a picture of actor Benedict Cumberbatch, who stars as Turing. The film was also named last week as a nominee for best picture at the GLAAD Media Awards, from the most powerful gay lobby in Hollywood.
Link
Bozell Graham Column Harvey Weinstein s P.C. Oscar Campaign