8 Offbeat Facts About Tonight’s Academy Awards

<a href="http://www.oscars.org/academy/posters-books/posters/85awards.html">Oscars.org</a>

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Much like Hanukkah, the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, or North Korea’s annual gymnastics festival, the Oscars come only once a year.

And if you are one of the tens of millions of viewers who decided to forego another rerun of The Mentalist or Betty White’s Off Their Rockers, and instead watch a bloated and self-aggrandizing Oscar telecast, here’s a supplement to tonight’s viewing. This will not be a drinking game, a score card, an Oscar bingo card, a running count of how many awards Meryl Streep has won this evening whether or not she’s been nominated for anything, or my self-indulgent list of predictions or favorite Oscar snubs.

Instead, here are a few things you should know (that you probably didn’t, or had at least forgotten) about the 85th Academy Awards:

1. The state department has taken sides this year.

That’s newly minted Secretary of State John Kerry signing an official departmental tweet the day before the Oscar ceremony. It seems as though the Department of State is not on Team Les Miz or Team Beasts of the Southern Wild.

2. The director of the 2013 Academy Awards is also famous for screaming profanity on CNN.

Speaking of John Kerry…Don Mischer, who is directing the Oscar broadcast for the third time in a row, is one of the most sought-after producers and directors of live television events. His résumé includes Olympic opening ceremonies, Prince‘s Super Bowl halftime show, this Taylor Swift documentary, and We Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.

He is also famous for loudly swearing on live television while producing the 2004 Democratic National Convention. Following candidate Kerry’s acceptance speech, the grand arena balloon drop didn’t go according to plan: As many as 100,000 balloons failed to fall from the ceiling on cue. CNN aired live a long audio clip of Mischer yelling about confetti and balloons, as Van Halen’s “Dreams” blasted on the loudspeakers. This tirade climaxed with a frustrated, “WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU GUYS DOING UP THERE?!?!” which was heard by many of the 4 million viewers watching from home. (The money quote is at the 1:49 mark of the video below.)

The Federal Communications Commission subsequently received at least 25 complaints about Mischer’s loud swearing.

3. The host of this year’s Oscars was nearly killed by Al Qaeda.

Seth MacFarlane, Ted director and Family Guy creator, is hosting the show tonight. Both he and future Ted star (and would-be terrorist-puncher) Mark Wahlberg were scheduled to fly on the American Airlines flight that crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Wahlberg ended up flying on a different flight, and MacFarlane didn’t board on account of his travel agent giving him the wrong departure time (also, he was hungover and overslept).

Here he is discussing this with Larry King:

4. Maggie Simpson, Ayn Rand, and the Academy Awards

The Longest Daycare is one of the films up for this year’s Best Animated Short Film. It stars Maggie Simpson from The Simpsons in a dialogue-free 3D short with music by Oscar-winning German composer Hans Zimmer.

This Oscar-nominated short is only Maggie Simpson’s latest adventure at the Ayn Rand School For Tots, the school named for the ultra-libertarian writer. In the 1992 Simpsons episode “A Streetcar Named Marge,” Maggie is enrolled in the same (fictitious) school. On a related note, Maggie has actually played an Ayn Rand character (a version of The Fountainhead‘s Howard Roark) in the 2009 anthology episode “Four Great Women and a Manicure.” In that episode, the typically mute Maggie is voiced by Jodie Foster while reciting a big, Randian monologue taken from the courtroom scene at the end of The Fountainhead.

Now, watch the The Longest Daycare here. It’s four and a half minutes well spent:

5. Nate Silver has weighed in.

The New York Times statistics big shot and presidential-election prognosticator Nate Silver is yet again trying his hand at predicting the Oscar-night outcomes. He also crunched the data in 2009 and 2011, and has a success rate of 75 percent, which is, in his words, “not bad, but also not good enough to suggest that there is any magic formula for this.”

Here is his Best Picture pick, in convenient bar-chart format courtesy of his FiveThirtyEight blog (click here for Silver’s predictions in other categories):

6. The master chef feeding the rich and famous

Celebrity chef—and “Chef Smurf” from the 2011 film adaptation of The SmurfsWolfgang Puck is cooking for the expected 1,600 attendees at the official Oscar after-party, the Governors Ball. This marks the 19th consecutive time Puck done this. According to Puck, chicken pot pie will indeed be served at the party: “We have several of the Academy members, who have said, ‘I don’t care what George Clooney or Steven Spielberg eats, I want my chicken pot pie,'” Puck told reporters at a menu-preview event. Other culinary delights include chocolate candy molded in the shape of Oscar statues, smoked salmon in the shape of Oscars, and lamb shank.

Here’s video of Puck on The Ellen DeGeneres Show this past week. He treats Ellen to a demonstration of vegan cooking:

7. How much does your average Oscar statuette weigh?

Eight and a half pounds: Just a little more than an eight-week-old Labrador puppy, or, according to Ray in Jerry Maguire, a human head.

Here’s a statuette fact-sheet from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences:

8. The current president of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences goes by the name “Hawk Koch.”

Nothing much else to say here. It’s just an awesome name, that’s all. Also, he used to be a road manager in the 1960s for the Supremes and the Dave Clark Five.

Here’s a photo of the man:

hawk koch

Via IMDB, by Kevin Winter

Check back for some Oscar live-blogging later today. I’ll post my thoughts below, and I pray you get a degree of enjoyment out of them:

8:58 p.m. ET: Christoph Waltz wins Best Supporting Actor for Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained. Fun fact: While he was preparing for his role in the film, the 56-year-old actor injured himself by falling off a horse. The more you know.

9:05: The men of The Avengers reunite onstage to introduce the nominees for cinematography and visual effects. They make awkward jokes, much like pretty much everyone else who presents awards at Oscar ceremonies. Claudio Miranda wins for Ang Lee’s Life of Pi. Here’s a photo of the award-winning Chilean cinematographer:

claudio miranda cinematographer

Via IMDB, by Jeff Kravitz

For visual effects, Life of Pi also wins: The team led by Bill Westenhofer.

9:20: Les Misérables wins its first award of the night: For makeup and hair.

9:22: Halle Berry introduces the James Bond video-clip-and-soundtrack tribute. The James Bond franchise recently celebrated its 50th anniversary. The tribute includes Shirley Bassey coming onstage to bust out the ridiculously catchy Goldfinger theme. Here’s footage of Bassey singing the same song at the 2011 Classic BRIT Awards:

9:49: These films nominated for Best Documentary Features:

  • Searching for Sugar Man
  • How to Survive a Plague
  • The Gatekeepers
  • 5 Broken Cameras
  • The Invisible War

Searching for Sugar Man wins. Here’s the trailer:

 

9:51: Amour wins the award for Best Foreign Language Film. It’s the second movie from Austria to win the award.

9:56: A tribute to Oscar-winning musical films kicks off with Catherine Zeta-Jones reprising her role as showgirl Velma Kelly in the 2002 Oscar winner Chicago. In 2012, Zeta-Jones starred in the film adaptation of the jukebox musical Rock of Ages, in which she also did a kick-ass job belting out tunes.

Next up, Jennifer Hudson singing “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going” from Dreamgirls. Then, the main cast from Les Misérables (including Anne Hathaway, Russell Crowe, Hugh Jackman, etc.) sings “One Day More.” Here’s my favorite “version” of “One Day More,” courtesy of…

10:01: Hologram teddy bear Ted (from host Seth MacFarlane’s Ted from 2012) just presented the award for sound mixing to Les Misérables after making jokes about Hollywood sex parties.

10:17: Wait, THEY DO TIES“!?!?!

Oh, right: They do do this occasionally.

10:25: As a surprise to absolutely no one who saw Les Miz, Anne Hathaway wins Best Supporting Actress, beating out the likes of Sally Field (Lincoln) and Amy Adams (The Master).

10:34: Argo wins for Best Film Editing (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11ONE!!!!!!!!)

10:35: Also, Hawk Koch came onstage!

10:38: Adele singing the theme for Oscar-nominated 2012 James Bond movie Skyfall. Initial reports suggest a good time was had by all.

10:47: Lincoln wins for production design. Even though I really, really, really, really did not like Spielberg’s 2012 Oscar bait, I can sort of agree with this.

10:50: Oscar honoree D. A. Pennebaker’s filmography, which includes the 1973 concert film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.

11:15: Adele wins everything.

11:29: Argo wins Best Adapted Screenplay, and Django Unchained wins Best Original. Here’s footage of Quentin Tarantino accepting another Academy Award for an original screenplay:

11:35: Ang Lee wins Best Director for Life of Pi. With how well Life of Pi  doing tonight, I’m honestly starting to think the Academy is doing this to make up for failing to give Lee’s 2005 Brokeback Mountain the Best Picture award. Stay tuned to see if this carries over to the Best Picture category this time around…

11:45: Jennifer Lawrence wins Best Actress for Silver Linings Playbook. Woot.

11:51: Daniel Day-Lewis wins Best Actor for Lincoln. Dedicates his award to Abraham Lincoln and his mom, among others. Also, DDL cracked some epic jokes about Meryl Streep being Spielberg’s original pick to portray Honest Abe.

11:52: Actor Jack Nicholson and First Lady of the United States Michelle Obama introduced this year’s nominees for Best Picture. Actually. This actually happened. Tonight.

11:57: Michelle Obama declares Argo Best Picture of 2012. That’s the ball game, folks. Footage:

12:00: “I want to thank Canada!”—Ben Affleck, during his victory speech. He also thanks his wife Jennifer Garner and others.

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We’re falling behind our online fundraising goals and we can’t sustain coming up short on donations month after month. Perhaps you’ve heard? It is impossibly hard in the news business right now, with layoffs intensifying and fancy new startups and funding going kaput.

The crisis facing journalism and democracy isn’t going away anytime soon. And neither is Mother Jones, our readers, or our unique way of doing in-depth reporting that exists to bring about change.

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If you can part with even just a few bucks, please help us pick up the pace of donations. We simply can’t afford to keep falling behind on our fundraising targets month after month.

Editor-in-Chief Clara Jeffery said it well to our team recently, and that team 100 percent includes readers like you who make it all possible: “This is a year to prove that we can pull off this merger, grow our audiences and impact, attract more funding and keep growing. More broadly, it’s a year when the very future of both journalism and democracy is on the line. We have to go for every important story, every reader/listener/viewer, and leave it all on the field. I’m very proud of all the hard work that’s gotten us to this moment, and confident that we can meet it.”

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