This Year Oscars Draws Lower Audience In 8 Years

This Year Oscars Draws Lower Audience In 8 Years
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Highlights

Did the polemical misrepresentation of competing black actors and the lack of diversity in Hollywood lead to this ? 88th ceremony drew the lowest audience rates in eight years.

Did the polemical misrepresentation of competing black actors and the lack of diversity in Hollywood lead to this ? 88th ceremony drew the lowest audience rates in eight years.

Despite headlines generated by a race row embroiling the 88th Academy Awards, the audience was six percent down on last year's 36.6 million in the same day "fast nationals" rating.

Civil rights leader Al Sharpton, who had called for viewers to "tune out" after no ethnic minority nominees were announced in the acting categories for the second year running, said the drop was "heartening."

"This is a significant decline and should send a message to the Academy and to movie studio heads," Sharpton, who led a small protest in Hollywood on Sunday, said in a statement.


The show itself, though controversial, received generally favorable reviews from the critics, who reserved their most fulsome praise for host Chris Rock, who targeted the Academy with a series of caustic jokes about the Oscars' lack of racial diversity.

"Whether or not it was intentional, the show had a unifying theme, and every Chris Rock joke was a perfect riff on that theme," he said.

Rick Kissell, of film industry magazine Variety, attributed the lower numbers in part to best picture nominees not appealing to older audiences, and 2015's three biggest blockbusters, "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," "Jurassic World" and "The Avengers: Age of Ultron" being largely absent from the nominations.

The viewership for half of the last 16 Oscars shows since 2000 has dipped below 40 million, with the Ellen DeGeneres-hosted 2014 edition attracting the largest audience of 43.7 million.

Jon Stewart's 2008 show, when the Coen brothers' "No Country For Old Men" took best picture, remains a low point at 32 million, while Chris Rock's last outing in 2005 managed an impressive 42.1 million.

The most tweeted about minute came as Leonardo DiCaprio's accepted his first ever Oscar, best actor for survival epic "The Revenant," prompting 175,148 messages on Twitter.

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