NBC cancels 2022 Golden Globes after outcry against lack of diversity - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 03:53 AM | Calgary | -1.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

NBC cancels 2022 Golden Globes after outcry against lack of diversity

U.S. television network NBCsaid on Monday it will not air Hollywood's Golden Globesceremony in 2022 following complaints about ethical lapses andlack of diversity among the group that hands out the annualawards for film and television.

Tom Cruise returns three Golden Globe trophies to protest Hollywood Foreign Press Association

NBC will not broadcast the Golden Globes in 2022, the broadcaster announced on Monday. The decision follows complaints about a lack of diversity at the awards. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

U.S. television network NBCsaid on Monday it will not air Hollywood's Golden Globesceremony in 2022 following complaints about ethical lapses andlack of diversity among the group that hands out the annualawards for film and television.

The primary subject of those complaints is the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that administrates the Golden Globes. Those complaints came to a head earlier this year, when the Los Angeles Times published an investigation into the HFPA, which noted that there were no Black people currently registered as members of the organization.

The newspaper also raised longstanding ethical questionsover the close relationships between the HFPA and movie studiosthat may influence the choice of Golden Globe nominees andwinners.

Following that story, the organization's membership approved widespread changes designed to diversify itsranks and address ethics complaints.

The steps include hiring a chief diversity officer, emphasizingrecruitment of Black journalistsand widening the pool ofpotential applicants for the group of foreign entertainmentjournalists.

A demonstrator holds a sign in support of the 'Time's Up Globes' movement outside the Beverly Hilton Hotel where the Golden Globes took place on Feb. 28 in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Valerie Macon/AFP/Getty Images)

The new rules alsorequired that HFPA members stop acceptingpromotional items from film and TV studios, and that the grouppost a public list of members with links to their work.

But just two months after that announcement, the group once again found itself embroiled in controversy. Its former president, Philip Berk, was ousted from the group in February for sending an email that criticizedBlack Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors.

The South African-born Berk had shared an article that called Black Lives Matter a "racist hate movement" and described Cullors as a "self-proclaimed trained Marxist," according to a report from the Los Angeles Times.

NBC condemned Berk's actions and called for his "immediate expulsion" after the email became public knowledge. The newly hired diversity adviser, Shaun Harper, also condemned Berk's actions and resigned.

In hisresignation letter, Harper saidthat he was initially optimistic when he joined the organizationbut felt compelled to step down after learning about the group's "deep systemic and reputational challenges."

"I no longer have confidence in our ability to collaboratively deliver the transformational change that the industry and people in it whom I deeply respect are demanding of you," said Harper, who is a professor of racial, gender and LGBTQ issues at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business.

Threats to boycott

Last week, Netflix also cast doubt on its future involvement with the HFPA.

"We don't believe these proposed new policies particularly around the size and speed of membership growth will tackle the HFPA's systemic diversity and inclusion challenges, or the lack of clear standards for how your members should operate," co-chief executive Ted Sarandos wrote in a letter to the group.

And earlier Monday, Warner Bros. said it would cease holding screenings and other events for the HFPA until it made more substantial changes.

NBC released its ownstatement shortly after it announced the cancellation of the Globes.

In it, the network's leaders saidthey "believe they believethat theHFPAis committed to meaningful reform," but the organization still needs more time to do so."

Late Monday, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association responded to NBC's decision, but did not directly address the 2022 telecast.Instead, board members laid out a schedule for reforms that would ultimately lead to a revamped membership and board by early August, as well as numerous other policy changes.

"Regardless of the next air date of the Golden Globes, implementing transformational changes as quickly and as thoughtfully as possible remains the top priority for our organization," the group said in a statement. "We invite our partners in the industry to the table to work with us on the systemic reform that is long overdue, both in our organization as well as within the industry at large."

Actor Tom Cruise holds best actor award for his role in Jerry Maguire, Jan. 19, 1997. Cruise has since returned the award, along with two others. (Kim Kulish/AFP/Getty Images)

The group faces an uphill battle to repair relationships with production companies, distributors and audiences.Shortly after NBC's announcement on Monday, Deadline reportedthatTom Cruise joined other actors in protesting the awards by returningthe three Golden Globe trophies he's won.

Prior to NBC's announcement, Scarlett Johansson,Mark Ruffalo and other starshad urged members of the entertainment industry to distance themselvesfrom the HFPA.

"We've been fighting for this kind of inclusion and equity for a really long time, andI think this last year it's been at warp speed," L.A.-based, Canadian actor Tonya Williams told CBC News. "The fact that the entire industry has really stood up and pushed against this massive organization really is telling."

Williams who in 2020 launched Access Reelworld, Canada's largest database for hiring racially diverse talent said that the HFPA has been an outlier when it comes to a widespread push for diversity in the entertainment industry.

WATCH | NBC cancels 2022 Golden Globes after complaints of lack of diversity, ethical lapses:

Diversity, ethics outcry leads to cancellation of 2022 Golden Globes broadcast

3 years ago
Duration 2:08
NBC says it wont broadcast the Golden Globes next year after the organization behind the awards was repeatedly called out for bias and a lack of representation.

The HFPA'smembership is largely based in Europe. Williams said its members didn't understand the significance of movements battling systemic racism that swept North America in the past year.

For that reason, she said, they did not change as much, or as quickly, as was necessary. And now they're in danger of being left behind.

"I believe it's going to be adapt or die," Williams said."I think it's going to be that serious."

HFPA's$60-million deal

In 2018, NBC and Dick ClarkProductions, the show's producer, signed an eight-year deal to continue broadcasting the Globes, which they have done since 1996.In that deal, NBC agreed to increase the amount itpaid the HFPA from $21 million US to $60 million US.

That deal was made largely off the the awards show's solidratings, which hadmostly held strong since 2009, while other awards shows such asthe Grammys and Emmys saw precipitous falls.

But this yearthe Golden Globes also saw a drastic ratings drop. The awards show dropped from 18.7 million viewers in 2020 to 6.9 million in 2021, according to Nielsen Media Research.

David Poland, editor of Hollywood periodical Movie City News, told CBCNewsthat the HFPA's deal with NBCgave them an "enormous amount of power and prestige," while keeping their membership low allowed them to take advantage of lavish gifts and other financial opportunities.

Host Ricky Gervais speaks during the 77th Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on Jan. 5, 2020, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Paul Drinkwater/NBC Universal Media/Getty Images)

Whereas groups like the Oscars have thousands of voting members, the HFPAhas less than 90. With so few members, Poland said, productions areincentivizedto make expensive offerings in order to solicit votes.

"I've estimated over the years that the package that you get annually as a member of HFPA is worth $200,000 to $300,000a year in trade whether it's hotels, or travel, or food or anything else," he said.

Those practices most recently came under fire when it was revealed producers for Netflix'sEmily In Parisflew over 30 HFPA members to France. Emily in Parislater received two nominations for the Globes, despite one of the show's writers stating in an op-ed that another show Michaela Coel'sI May Destroy You, which received no nominationsdeserved the honour more.

Poland said that the only way for the HFPA to survive past this controversy"is for them to basically give up the ghost of what it's been for them." They must give up the perks they've been receiving, grow their ranks to at least 300 members and convince legitimate journalistto continue to associate themselves with the awards.

Whetherthat will happen is not certain, he said.

WATCH | Access Reelworld aims to create diversity and inclusion in Canada's entertainment industry:

Access Reelworld aims to create diversity and inclusion in Canadas entertainment industry

4 years ago
Duration 4:12
The new database was launched just a few weeks ago by Reelworld Film Festival founder Tonya Williams. As Talia Ricci explains in this segment for Our Toronto, Williams has been advocating for change in the entertainment industry for decades.

With files from Eli Glasner, Reuters and The Associated Press