Author: dmitriy.vasyura@gmail.com

  • The Oscars’ largest controversies, scandals, and WTF moments (together with some you might have forgotten)

    The Oscars’ largest controversies, scandals, and WTF moments (together with some you might have forgotten)

    Will Smith (right) slaps Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Academy Awards; Karla Sofía Gascón as Emilia Pérez in 'Emilia Pérez'; Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty speak onstage during the 89th Academy Awards Will Smith (right) slaps Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Academy Awards; Karla Sofía Gascón as Emilia Pérez in 'Emilia Pérez'; Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty speak onstage during the 89th Academy Awards
    Will Smith (proper) slaps Chris Rock onstage throughout the 94th Academy Awards; Karla Sofía Gascón as Emilia Pérez in 'Emilia Pérez'; Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty communicate onstage throughout the 89th Academy Awards. Credit score:

    Neilson Barnard/Getty; Shanna Besson/Web page 114 – Why Not Productions; Kevin Winter/Getty

    The Academy Awards are just like the Tremendous Bowl for film nerds, a time of celebration the place one of the best and brightest stars and filmmakers are honored for his or her laborious work. However as any loyal Oscars viewer will inform you, they don't at all times go off with no hitch.

    Oscar controversies have plagued the Academy for the reason that starting, from shady marketing campaign shenanigans to awkward stay TV moments. These scandals vary in severity, from class displays that diverge from the norm (who may overlook Envelopegate) to inappropriate statements or actions that offend viewers.

    Forward, we're taking a stroll by means of Oscar historical past, highlighting the largest controversies and scandals that stick in our minds greater than a few of the winners.

    01 of 19

    Maugham's the phrase

    Reginald Denny as Harry Griffiths, Leslie Howard as Philip Carey, Bette Davis as Mildred Rogers, and Tempe Pigott as Agnes Hollet in 'Of Human Bondage'
    Reginald Denny as Harry Griffiths, Leslie Howard as Philip Carey, Bette Davis as Mildred Rogers, and Tempe Pigott as Agnes Hollet in 'Of Human Bondage'. John Springer Assortment/CORBIS/Getty

    As soon as upon a time, Academy voters may write in nominees. That observe began with Bette Davis turning within the then-performance of the century in 1934's Of Human Bondage. Davis, who had fought for meatier roles to sink her enamel into, burned a gap within the display as doomed cockney waitress Mildred on this in any other case meh adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's epic novel.

    When she didn’t nab an Oscar nomination, Hollywood went into an excellent old school uproar, forcing the hand of the Academy to permit write-in votes. Davis misplaced, however when write-in nominee Hal Mohr received for his cinematography in A Midsummer Night time's Dream the next 12 months, the observe was discontinued perpetually. —Lester Fabian Brathwaite

    02 of 19

    That Oscar's gone…with the wind?

    Hattie McDaniel performs on her CBS radio program 'The Beulah Show' on Nov. 11, 1947, in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Hattie McDaniel performs on her CBS radio program 'The Beulah Present' on Nov. 11, 1947, in Los Angeles, Calif. Everett Assortment

    Hattie McDaniel made historical past as the primary Black Oscar winner for her lauded, however controversial (even on the time), efficiency as Mammy in 1939's Gone With the Wind. For the reason that resort the place the Oscars have been held had a strict "no Blacks" segregation coverage, McDaniel was pressured to sit down at a separate desk away from everybody else. McDaniel received a plaque as a substitute of a trophy, as was the customized for all supporting appearing winners till 1943.

    When she died in 1952, McDaniel willed her Oscar to Howard College, and after a mysterious, circuitous journey, it will definitely received there…in 1961. However, a decade later, it went lacking.

    In 2023, the Academy introduced it might change the plaque — presenting it to the Howard College Chadwick A. Boseman Faculty of Effective Arts, the place McDaniel had initially bequeathed her award. Her Oscar continues to be lacking. Then once more, in spite of everything that plaque has been by means of, it could not need to be discovered. —L.F.B.

    03 of 19

    A zero Chill marketing campaign

    Chill Wills in a promotional photo for 'The Alamo'
    Chill Wills in a promotional picture for 'The Alamo'. Everett

    Actors have been implementing questionable ways when campaigning for an Oscar for the reason that starting, however Chill Wills nonetheless takes the cake. Wills was nominated for Finest Supporting Actor for the John Wayne-directed The Alamo in 1961. A veteran actor and buddy of Wayne, Wills employed a publicity agent to assist him snag the gold. Not a nasty concept, however the agent was W.S. "Bow-Wow" Wojciechowicz. And Bow-Wow wagged Wills' tail throughout Hollywood, taking out one For Your Consideration advert through which each Academy member's identify seems, in alphabetical order, alongside an image of Wills with the really terrible quote, "Win, lose or draw, you're all my cousins and I like you all."

    Bow-Wow shoulda stop whereas he was behind, however the subsequent FYC advert put Chill's Oscar hopes on ice. The advert featured pictures of everybody within the Alamo forged, surrounding good ole Chill, and pissed lots of people off with this quote: "We of the Alamo forged are praying more durable — than the actual Texans prayed for his or her lives within the Alamo — for Chill Wills to win the Oscar as finest supporting actor. Cousin Chill's appearing was nice. Your Alamo cousins." Spartacus' Peter Ustinov received Finest Supporting Actor that 12 months. —L.F.B.

    04 of 19

    Hepburn, Babs, and the Oscar tie

    Katharine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine in 'The Lion in Winter'; Barbra Streisand winning her Oscar for 'Funny Girl' in 1969
    Katharine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine in 'The Lion in Winter'; Barbra Streisand profitable her Oscar for 'Humorous Woman' in 1969. Bettmann Archive; Disney Normal Leisure Content material by way of Getty Pictures

    Katharine Hepburn received 4 Oscars and by no means bothered to point out up even as soon as to select them up. It was no totally different in 1969, when Hepburn, nominated for The Lion in Winter, received her third Finest Actress Oscar, and second consecutive award after 1968's absentee win for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. However as a substitute of presenter Ingrid Bergman accepting the Oscar on Hepburn's behalf, she introduced the winners as Hepburn and Barbra Streisand.

    It was the primary and final precise tie in an appearing class — Fredric March had crushed Wallace Beery by one vote in 1932 however in accordance with the foundations on the time, that was shut sufficient to a tie they usually each obtained Oscars, to the chagrin of the only real different nominee, Alfred Lunt. With Hepburn being too cool for varsity, Babs and her sheer, sequined sailor pantsuit had the second all to herself. And it was "attractive." —L.F.B.

    05 of 19

    An Oscar he can refuse

    Sacheen Littlefeather at the 1973 Oscars
    Sacheen Littlefeather on the 1973 Oscars. Bettmann Archive/Getty Pictures

    Marlon Brando received his second Finest Actor Oscar for The Godfather, however when his identify was referred to as on the 1973 ceremony, actress and activist Sacheen Littlefeather made her method to the stage and alerted the bewildered viewers that Brando wouldn’t be accepting the award as a consequence of Hollywood's depiction of Native People and in mild of the protests at Wounded Knee in South Dakota. Littlefeather was greeted with boos and mock from the viewers, and he or she later claimed John Wayne needed to be bodily restrained from making an attempt to take away her from the stage.

    The Academy issued an apology to Littlefeather for her mistreatment on the ceremony in 2022, lower than two months earlier than she died at age 75. After her dying, nonetheless, Littlefeather's sister stated she had been mendacity about her indigenous heritage, maybe complicating an already difficult incident. —L.F.B.

    06 of 19

    Win, lose, or streak

    Robert Opel at the 1974 Academy Awards
    Robert Opel on the 1974 Academy Awards. Bettmann Archive

    America used to have an actual massive streaking drawback, notably in 1974, amid the peak of the sexual revolution and an obvious dearth in safety guards. Enter Robert Opel, operating, bare because the day he was born, on stage on the '74 Oscars, with unflappable host David Niven remarking, "Isn't it fascinating to assume that most likely the one giggle that man will ever get in his life is by stripping off and displaying his shortcomings?"

    Opel's shortcomings may need really been deliberate, together with Niven's comment, which might clarify how a unadorned man snuck backstage at one of the closely guarded occasions of any given 12 months. Opel's story was instructed in 2011 by his nephew within the documentary Uncle Bob, which revealed him to be a efficiency artist and homosexual rights activist who was fatally shot in 1979. —L.F.B.

    07 of 19

    The longest 11 minutes in historical past

    Rob Lowe in the 61st Academy Awards press room, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, Calif., on March 29, 1989
    Rob Lowe within the 61st Academy Awards press room, on the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, Calif., on March 29, 1989.

    Vinnie Zuffante/Getty

    Should you assume awards present opening musical numbers are unhealthy now — Ariana DeBose rapping about Angela Bassett and the factor she did however — strap in. It's 1989, Rob Lowe seems the identical. There's no host (a transfer the Oscars has revisited repeatedly), and to fill time as a result of the Oscars by no means go on lengthy sufficient, Grease producer Allan Carr devised a few musical numbers.

    The worst, amongst a smorgasbord of terrible, featured Lowe alongside poor, never-gonna-work-in-this-town once more newcomer Eileen Bowman as Snow White, Merv Griffin, and a harmful rendition of "Proud Mary" that went on for ELEVEN MINUTES. On the finish of all of it, Lily Tomlin strolled out, and the Oscars, sadly, had simply begun. —L.F.B.

    08 of 19

    Tomei?! No approach!

    Marisa Tomei holding her Oscar at the 65th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Marisa Tomei holding her Oscar on the sixty fifth Academy Awards in Los Angeles, Calif. Steve Starr/CORBIS/Getty

    Let's simply be clear: This author believes Marisa Tomei as Mona Lisa Vito in My Cousin Vinny is likely one of the nice comedic performances in cinematic historical past and it's aged like a superb wine. Tomei's Finest Supporting Actress win, nonetheless, got here as a shock and a rumor continued for years that it was really a mistake. As a result of the Oscars hate comedy.

    And in addition as a result of a 12 months after her win, The Hollywood Reporter ran a narrative citing a rumor that Tomei had been awarded the trophy by confused presenter Jack Palance, and in 1997, movie critic Rex Reed picked up the rumor, claiming Palance was drunk or stoned when he introduced Tomei over the closely favored Vanessa Redgrave in Howards Finish.

    After all, these accountants from Value Waterhouse Coopers are at all times stationed within the wings (since 1953) in case the mistaken winner is known as, as we'll quickly see. Tomei, understandably, discovered the rumors hurtful, however she would have the final giggle, incomes two extra Oscar nominations for 2001's Within the Bed room and 2008's The Wrestler. Mona Lisa could be proud. —L.F.B.

    09 of 19

    There's kissing cousins after which there's this…

    Angelina Jolie and James Haven at the 2000 Academy Awards
    Angelina Jolie and James Haven on the 2000 Academy Awards. Mediapunch/Shutterstock

    Angelina Jolie was wild, children. Positive, as of late she's higher referred to as a mom, reclusive star, and humanitarian, however throughout her '90s ascent to film stardom, we have been having enjoyable. The Hackers/Gia/Woman, Interrupted Jolie was on the Golden Globes leaping right into a pool along with her robe nonetheless on. She was carrying Billy Bob Thornton's blood round her neck. Along with her flip in 1999's Woman, Interrupted, Jolie would win her first Oscar and go on to star in Tomb Raider, and the remainder is herstory.

    When she received her Finest Supporting Actress trophy, Jolie thanked her brother James Haven, saying she was "so in love" with him. After the ceremony, she demonstrated that love with a short kiss on the lips, which went the 2000 model of viral. Jolie denied the kiss was something apart from "cohesion"; in the meantime, she and Haven stay shut. In 2013, Jolie received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Oscar as a girl nobody would dare interrupt. —L.F.B.

    Who has won the most Oscars? See record-holders in major categories (Original Caption) Portrait of MGM film actor Katharine Hepburn, wearing a sequined dress. Undated publicity photo.HOLLYWOOD, CA - FEBRUARY 24: Actor Daniel Day-Lewis, winner of the Best Actor award for "Lincoln," poses in the press room during the Oscars held at Loews Hollywood Hotel on February 24, 2013 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)Film maker Walt Disney holding his four Oscars, for four different films, at the 26th Academy Awards, March 25th 1954. (Photo by Archive Photos/Getty Images) 25 actors who have shockingly never won an Oscar, from Glenn Close to Tom Cruise Amy Adams at the 91st Academy Awards in 2019; Glenn Close at the 86th Academy Awards in 2014; Tom Cruise at the 84th Academy Awards in 2012 10 of 19

    Blame LSD!

    Trey Parker and Matt Stone at the 2000 Academy Awards
    Trey Parker and Matt Stone on the 2000 Academy Awards. Steve Granitz/WireImage

    Rather a lot was taking place on the 2000 Oscars. Other than Angelina Jolie being in love along with her brother, we had South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone excessive on LSD on the crimson carpet, carrying derelict copies of Jennifer Lopez's immediately iconic plunging Versace Grammys costume and Gwyneth Paltrow's pale pink Ralph Lauren Oscars costume. Parker was nominated, together with Marc Shaiman, for "Blame Canada" from the South Park film, Larger, Longer, and Uncut. Parker introduced Stone as his date, they dropped acid, and hit the busiest crimson carpet in human existence.

    Earlier than that terrible determination, they determined they might not handle their attire…in any respect. As a substitute, when requested about them, they might merely say, "It's a magical night time tonight." A few of the different Oscar nominees didn't take the duo's flippant angle too properly, however, like, it's the dudes from South Park. What have been they anticipating, reverence? What's worse, for Parker at the least, was dropping to private nemesis Phil Collins. —L.F.B.

    11 of 19

    Preserve that Pianist in your pants, Brody

    Adrien Brody kissing Halle Berry at the 2003 Academy Awards
    Adrien Brody kissing Halle Berry on the 2003 Academy Awards. Brian Vander Brug/Los Angeles Instances by way of Getty

    There have been a number of brow-raising moments on the 2003 Oscars, and practically all of them needed to do with The Pianist. Gingerly side-stepping the truth that Roman Polanski received Finest Director for the movie however couldn’t attend the ceremony since he'd been in self-imposed exile from America since being accused of drugging and raping a 13-year-old lady in 1978…what the movie's star, Adrien Brody, did after profitable the Finest Actor Oscar appears much less surprising. However then once more, you weren't Halle Berry.

    Brody turned the youngest Finest Actor winner at 29 and, swept up within the second, grabbed presenter Berry (who had received Finest Actress the 12 months earlier than), and planted a giant kiss on her lips. In a 2017 look on Watch What Occurs Dwell, Berry revealed what was occurring in her head in the meanwhile, specifically, "What the f— is occurring proper now?" However having been swept up within the second, Berry knew "the sensation of being out of your physique" and "simply f—ing went with it." —L.F.B.

    12 of 19

    How many individuals let this occur?

    Billy Crystal hosting the 2012 Academy Awards
    Billy Crystal internet hosting the 2012 Academy Awards. Mark Davis/WireImage

    In 2012, nationwide treasure Billy Crystal hosted the Oscars for the ninth time and it went easily, for essentially the most half. Besides the Blackface. Billy Crystal popularized his Sammy Davis Jr. impersonation within the '80s on Saturday Night Live. It was a unique time, as they are saying, however 2012 was not that way back.

    So, Crystal does his well-known bit the place he walks by means of the nominated footage by way of CGI, and he dusts off Sammy for a Midnight in Paris bit with Justin Bieber. The criticism was swift, however maybe comic Paul Scheer stated it finest when Octavia Spencer received Finest Supporting Actress for The Assist later within the ceremony. "Octavia Spencer's win reveals simply how far we've come since Billy Crystal carried out in Blackface." —L.F.B.

    13 of 19

    Alone, but…no, simply alone

    Bruce Broughton serving as guest conductor at the 'Holiday POPS Spectacular' on Dec. 20, 2014, in San Pedro, Calif.
    Bruce Broughton serving as visitor conductor on the 'Vacation POPS Spectacular' on Dec. 20, 2014, in San Pedro, Calif. Earl Gibson III/Getty

    The identify Bruce Broughton will lengthy stay in Academy Awards infamy. In 2014, Broughton was nominated for Finest Unique Track for "Alone But Not Alone," from the movie of the identical identify — a $7 million "Christian captivity narrative historic drama" that didn't even clear one million on the field workplace, however someway managed to attain an Oscar nod. Huh.

    Seems Broughton, a former Academy governor, had, as an govt committee member of the Academy's music department, made improper contact with different department members about his sadly titled track. Broughton instructed EW he merely "wrote some individuals and stated, 'May you simply have a look.' That was actually the extent of the campaigning." However the Academy determined it was much less harmless than that and revoked Broughton's nomination, a transfer it's made solely a handful of occasions earlier than. Christian captivity narrative historic dramas have by no means been the identical. —L.F.B.

    14 of 19

    And the Twitter goes to…

    Luise Rainer as O-Lan in 'The Good Earth'; Halle Berry with her Oscar for 'Monster's Ball' in 2022; Michelle Yeoh as Evelyn Wang in 'Everything Everywhere All at Once'
    Luise Rainer as O-Lan in 'The Good Earth'; Halle Berry along with her Oscar for 'Monster's Ball' in 2022; Michelle Yeoh as Evelyn Wang in 'The whole lot In all places All at As soon as'.

    Donaldson Assortment; Frank Micelotta/Getty; Allyson Riggs/A24

    Billy Crystal's Blackface wasn't the tip of the Oscars' race drawback: In 2015, all appearing nominations went to white actors and Twitter (now X) consumer April Reign coined the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite. In fact, the Oscars have at all times been so white, even when it got here to elements for non-white actors. Luise Rainer, a white lady, (in)famously received Finest Actress in 1938 for The Good Earth for enjoying a Chinese language farmer. And it took 74 years for Halle Berry to grow to be the primary Black lady to win Finest Actress — and he or she's nonetheless the one one.

    However the hashtag introduced renewed consideration to the Oscars' lengthy historical past of exclusion, ultimately upsetting the Academy of Movement Image Arts and Sciences to diversify its membership. Michelle Yeoh made historical past in 2023 as the primary Asian actress to win the Oscar for Finest Actress. Take that, ghost of Luise Rainer! —L.F.B.

    15 of 19

    Bonnie and Clyde strike once more

    Jordan Horowitz holds up the winner card reading actual Best Picture winner 'Moonlight' at the 2017 Academy Awards
    Jordan Horowitz holds up the winner card studying precise Finest Image winner 'Moonlight' on the 2017 Academy Awards. Kevin Winter/Getty

    Everybody simply depart Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty alone. Between them, they've given us a few of the best cinema of the twentieth century, very a lot together with Mommie Dearest. To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their landmark movie Bonnie and Clyde, the Academy invited Beatty and Dunaway to announce the Finest Image winner. Alongside the best way, somebody tousled and gave the appearing legends the mistaken envelope, for Finest Actress, which had gone to Emma Stone for La La Land. A confused Beatty confirmed Dunaway, who, being Faye Dunaway, simply ran with it, asserting La La Land because the Finest Image winner.

    We have been properly into some heartfelt acceptance speeches when these Value Waterhouse Coopers people stormed the stage, resulting in La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz dropping a bomb on the ceremony: "There's been a mistake. Moonlight, you guys received Finest Image. This isn’t a joke." It wasn't, however when you seen a bemused Ryan Gosling watching all of it unfold from the facet of the stage, you'd be excused for considering it was. Till the 2022 ceremony, this was simply essentially the most WTF second on the Oscars. However then… —L.F.B.

    16 of 19

    Between a Rock and a nasty joke

    Will Smith (right) slapping Chris Rock at the 2022 Academy Awards
    Will Smith (proper) slapping Chris Rock on the 2022 Academy Awards.

    Robyn Beck/AFP by way of Getty Pictures

    Will Smith was poised to have the best second of his appearing profession. Along with his third Finest Actor nomination, for King Richard, the erstwhile Contemporary Prince was closely favored to win. However then the West Philadelphian (born and raised) walked as much as the stage and slapped Chris Rock after the comic made a dusty G.I. Jane joke about Smith's spouse, Jada, who had not too long ago gone public along with her battle with alopecia. Smith received that night time. And misplaced. In a giant approach. The slap and his "Preserve my spouse's identify out your f—ing mouth!" exclamation rapidly turned essentially the most talked-about second of 2022.

    And we're nonetheless speaking about it. Rock debuted a stand-up particular in March 2023, a 12 months after the incident, through which he went in on the Smiths; Will Smith, banned from the ceremony for 10 years, went on an apology tour, and kinda made mild of it; and 2023 host Jimmy Kimmel promised an unslappable present. The Oscars are sometimes boring and predictable, and even take themselves slightly too critically — whereas they want a jolt of power, the slap wasn't the best way anybody wished to see the ceremony's highlight shine brighter. It'll be fascinating to see how it will all play out in 2032 as soon as Smith's ban is over — barring every other incidents, in fact. —L.F.B.

    17 of 19

    Who Leslie?

    Andrea Riseborough as Leslie Rowland in 'To Leslie'
    Andrea Riseborough as Leslie Rowland in 'To Leslie'. Everett Assortment

    Andrea Riseborough discovered herself on the middle of controversy after her shock nomination for To Leslie, a little-seen movie that benefited from a celeb-heavy grassroots advocacy marketing campaign on social media and at small occasions round Hollywood. Whereas Riseborough earned raves as a Texas lady who received the lottery years in the past solely to squander her winnings and battle with alcoholism, barely anybody noticed the movie.

    Then, some distinguished Academy-friendly names got here to Riseborough's facet, championing her efficiency: Cate Blanchett, Gwyneth Paltrow, Edward Norton, Charlize Theron, Amy Adams, Kate Winslet, and Jane Fonda amongst them. The Academy launched an investigation into the marketing campaign, and although Riseborough didn't get Broughton'd, they concluded the social media marketing campaign's ways "triggered concern."

    In the meantime, Riseborough's nomination over Black actresses Viola Davis (The Girl King) and Danielle Deadwyler (Until) revived the #OscarsSoWhite debate, as there have been no Black actors nominated within the lead classes regardless of ample highly effective performances that season. "The movie trade is abhorrently unequal when it comes to alternative," Riseborough told The Hollywood Reporter in February 2023. "I'm aware to not communicate for the expertise of different individuals as a result of they’re higher positioned to talk, and I need to hear." —L.F.B.

    18 of 19

    Animation isn't only for children

    Lily James, Halle Bailey, and Naomi Scott presenting at the 94th Academy Awards
    Lily James, Halle Bailey, and Naomi Scott presenting on the 94th Academy Awards.

    ABC by way of Getty

    As many working within the trade will inform you, animation is cinema. It's not simply a simple distraction on your children, regardless of what sure Oscar presenters could recommend. Sure feedback made on the 2022 Oscars by Halle Bailey, Lily James, and Naomi Scott — presenters of the Finest Animated Function class, and all stars of live-action variations of animated Disney classics — rankled some animators specifically. "Animated movies make up a few of our most formative film experiences as children," Bailey began. Honest sufficient, however then James added, "So many children watch these films time and again," to which Bailey comically added a number of extra "over"s. Then Scott quipped, "I see some mother and father on the market know precisely what we're speaking about."

    With the writers behind the Oscars chargeable for this presenter banter, some within the animation trade took offense to the Academy's messaging that animation is barely children' stuff. "Tremendous cool to place animation as one thing that children watch and adults must endure," wrote Phil Lord on Twitter, who received an Oscar for 2018's Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse; he and collaborator Christopher Miller penned a response to the presentation in Variety shortly after. The disrespect continued on the 2024 ceremony when host Jimmy Kimmel joked, "Please increase your hand when you let your child fill out this a part of the poll." —Kevin Jacobsen

    19 of 19

    Karla Sofía Gascón makes historical past…then loses all goodwill

    Karla Sofía Gascón attending a lunch reception for 'Emilia Pérez' at the River Cafe Restaurant on Dec. 6, 2024, in London
    Karla Sofía Gascón attending a lunch reception for 'Emilia Pérez' on the River Cafe Restaurant on Dec. 6, 2024, in London.

    Jed Cullen/Dave Benett/Getty

    In 2025, Jacques Audiard's genre-bending crime musical Emilia Pérez earned a whopping 13 Oscar nominations, essentially the most for a non-English-language movie in Academy historical past. Its star, Karla Sofía Gascón, turned the primary brazenly transgender particular person to be nominated for an appearing Oscar — and within the lead actress class, at that. Regardless of the movie's divisive reception on-line, this type of acknowledgment confirmed that it had much more lovers than haters within the trade.

    A lot of that goodwill disappeared mere weeks after the nominations when enterprising X customers dug up a few of Gascón's previous tweets which revealed a sample of bigoted viewpoints, with disparaging feedback about Islam among the many most egregious. After numerous trades began reporting on the posts, Gascón issued a sequence of statements over a number of days, asserting she was not a racist, apologizing to those that felt offended, and referencing cancel tradition.

    Gascón deactivated her X account and didn’t attend numerous deliberate awards occasions within the weeks that adopted, and, according to Variety, some Academy members felt hesitant to vote for the movie amid its storm of unfavourable buzz. —Okay.J.

    Shut

  • Ukrainian intelligence strikes two Russian army vessels – picture

    Ukrainian intelligence strikes two Russian army vessels – picture

    Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) carried out strikes on two army vessels belonging to Russia on the evening of 13-14 March.

    Supply: Defence Intelligence of Ukraine

    Particulars: DIU reported that the operation has disabled the Russian railway ferry Slavyanin and broken the vessel Avangard.

    The second of the strike. Picture: Defence Intelligence of Ukraine

    Quote: "These vessels have been key parts of the so-called Kerch Strait ferry line and performed an vital position within the aggressor's naval army logistics, significantly the transport of weapons, army gear and ammunition.

    As a part of the operation, DIU particular forces, working with different models from Ukraine's defence forces, additionally carried out strikes on infrastructure on the port of Kavkaz in Russia's Krasnodar Krai, which Russia makes use of to wage struggle in opposition to our state."

    Background: The Maykop air base in Russia's Republic of Adygea in addition to the Afipsky plant and the port of Kavkaz in Krasnodar Krai have been additionally attacked on 14 March.

    Assist Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

  • Billionaire Says Stablecoins May Energy World Funds in 10–15 Years

    Billionaire Says Stablecoins May Energy World Funds in 10–15 Years

    Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller believes stablecoins and blockchain-based tokens might kind the spine of the worldwide funds system throughout the subsequent decade, at the same time as he stays skeptical about cryptocurrencies functioning as long-term shops of worth.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Stanley Druckenmiller says stablecoins might energy the worldwide funds system inside 10–15 years.
    • He argues blockchain-based tokens provide sooner and cheaper settlement than conventional fee rails.
    • Regardless of backing stablecoins, Druckenmiller stays skeptical of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin as shops of worth.

    Talking in an interview with Morgan Stanley recorded on Jan. 30 and launched Friday, the previous hedge fund supervisor stated blockchain expertise provides clear productiveness beneficial properties in funds, notably when utilized to stablecoins.

    “Blockchain and using stablecoins, if you wish to throw crypto into that, tokens, extremely helpful when it comes to productiveness,” Druckenmiller stated.

    Druckenmiller Says Stablecoins May Change Conventional Cost Rails

    Druckenmiller predicted that digital tokens might regularly change present fee rails utilized by banks and monetary establishments.

    “I assume our complete fee techniques can be stablecoins in 10 or 15 years,” he stated, including that the expertise provides sooner and cheaper settlement in contrast with conventional fee infrastructure.

    Druckenmiller constructed his popularity on Wall Avenue after founding Duquesne Capital Administration in 1981.

    The agency produced a mean annual return of roughly 30% earlier than closing in 2010 and famously by no means recorded a shedding yr throughout its run.

    His views on blockchain adoption echo earlier feedback he made in 2021, when he instructed {that a} decentralized fee system might finally problem the monetary networks supporting the US greenback.

    On the time, Druckenmiller argued that declining belief in central banks had created a gap for different techniques. “Effectively, the issue has been clearly recognized.

    It’s Jerome Powell and the remainder of the world, central bankers,” he stated throughout a CNBC interview. “There’s an absence of belief.”

    Stablecoins have gained momentum lately as regulators and conventional monetary firms discover digital asset settlement techniques.

    Cost companies together with Western Union, MoneyGram and Zelle have mentioned stablecoin-based settlement initiatives following regulatory developments in the USA.

    GENIUS Act Boosts Stablecoin Adoption as Druckenmiller Doubts Bitcoin’s Function

    Final yr, the passage of the GENIUS Act, a stablecoin-focused legislation geared toward establishing clearer guidelines for digital fee providers, inspired monetary firms to discover blockchain-based settlement infrastructure.

    Regardless of his optimism concerning the expertise behind stablecoins, Druckenmiller stays unconvinced that cryptocurrencies comparable to Bitcoin serve a significant goal as shops of worth.

    “It’s an answer searching for an issue. I’m very unhappy that it ever occurred,” he stated.

    Whereas acknowledging that Bitcoin has developed a loyal following, Druckenmiller stated he nonetheless prefers gold, describing it as a “5,000-year-old model.”

    He added that though he at present doesn’t personal Bitcoin, he most likely ought to.

    World stablecoin transaction worth reached $33 trillion in 2025, marking a 72% improve from the earlier yr, in line with Bloomberg information compiled by Artemis Analytics.

    USDC emerged because the most-used stablecoin by transaction quantity, processing $18.3 trillion, whereas Tether’s USDT dealt with $13.3 trillion, regardless of sustaining its lead by market capitalization at $187 billion.

    The publish Billionaire Says Stablecoins May Energy World Funds in 10–15 Years appeared first on Cryptonews.

  • Common Workers confirms injury to "Maikop" airfield in Adygea, Afipsky oil refinery and infrastructure of "Kavkaz" port in Russia

    Common Workers confirms injury to "Maikop" airfield in Adygea, Afipsky oil refinery and infrastructure of "Kavkaz" port in Russia

    Common Workers confirms injury to "Maikop" airfield in Adygea, Afipsky oil refinery and infrastructure of "Kavkaz" port in Russia<p>Protection Forces hit the airfield, Afipsky oil refinery and Kavkaz port. Manufacturing of microchips for missiles on the Kremniy El plant has been halted for half a yr.</p>

  • Ukraine’s Normal Workers reported strike on airfield in Russia’s Adygea

    Ukraine’s Normal Workers reported strike on airfield in Russia’s Adygea

    Ukraine's Normal Workers has reported that the Maykop airfield within the Republic of Adygea in Russia was hit on 14 March.

    Supply: Normal Workers of the Armed Forces of Ukraine

    Particulars: Early info signifies there have been hits on airfield infrastructure amenities.

    As well as, the outcomes of a strike on the Kremniy El plant in Bryansk belonging to Russia's military-industrial advanced had been confirmed.

    The Normal Workers reported the principle manufacturing constructing was hit, the place built-in circuits for varied sorts of ballistic, cruise and anti-aircraft missiles are produced.

    The strike precipitated a hearth masking an space of about 1,000 sq m with subsequent injury to the constructing's roof.

    A storage facility for elements utilized in microchip manufacturing was additionally hit. The hearth coated an space of about 400 sq m. Manufacturing on the plant has been halted for about six months.

    As well as, the Normal Workers confirmed info reported by Russians a few strike on the Afipsky plant in Krasnodar Krai.

    The port infrastructure on the Kavkaz port within the Chushka space of the identical area was additionally hit.

    Background: On 14 March, Russian sources reported a hearth at an oil refinery and in a port after a drone assault.

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  • Custodia Financial institution Loses Closing Courtroom Enchantment Over Federal Reserve Grasp Account

    Custodia Financial institution Loses Closing Courtroom Enchantment Over Federal Reserve Grasp Account

    A US federal appeals court docket has rejected Custodia Financial institution’s last try and problem the Federal Reserve’s authority over granting grasp accounts, bringing an finish to the crypto-focused financial institution’s five-year authorized battle for direct entry to the central financial institution’s fee infrastructure.

    Key Takeaways:

    • A US appeals court docket refused to listen to Custodia Financial institution’s last attraction, ending its five-year battle for a Federal Reserve grasp account.
    • Courts dominated the Federal Reserve has discretion to resolve which establishments can entry its fee system.
    • The case comes as extra fintech and crypto corporations pursue US financial institution charters and direct entry to the banking system.

    The US Courtroom of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit mentioned in a submitting on Friday that it might not hear Custodia’s last attraction in a 7–3 vote, successfully closing the case and reinforcing the Federal Reserve’s discretion over who can entry its banking providers.

    Custodia Argued Fed Should Grant Grasp Account to State-Chartered Banks

    Custodia first utilized for a Federal Reserve grasp account in October 2020.

    Such accounts permit monetary establishments to carry reserves instantly on the central financial institution and hook up with its fee rails, enabling banks to settle transactions with out counting on middleman establishments.

    After its utility was denied, Custodia took the dispute to court docket, arguing that the Financial Management Act requires the Fed to supply providers to state-chartered banks and subsequently entitles it to a grasp account.

    The financial institution maintained that entry to the central financial institution’s fee system was vital to its operations as a digital asset-focused establishment.

    Nevertheless, courts reviewing the case repeatedly sided with the Federal Reserve, concluding that the central financial institution retains discretion when deciding whether or not to grant grasp accounts.

    denial of @custodiabank’s fed membership & grasp account on considerations of “security and soundness” seems a bit absurd proper now
    custodia was to be a non-lending absolutely reserved depository with its money in a fed account. no asset-liability mismatch, no period danger 🤔 @CaitlinLong_

    — Alex Thorn (@intangiblecoins) March 10, 2023

    The choice arrives shortly after crypto change Kraken secured a restricted type of direct entry to the Federal Reserve system.

    On March 4, Kraken grew to become the primary crypto platform to acquire a grasp account from the Federal Reserve Financial institution of Kansas Metropolis.

    Kraken’s account permits the agency to hook up with the Fedwire funds community, although it doesn’t grant the total suite of providers usually obtainable to conventional banks.

    The event sparked hypothesis that US regulators would possibly take into account issuing “skinny” or restricted grasp accounts to crypto corporations searching for nearer integration with the banking system.

    Regardless of the ruling towards Custodia, one decide supplied a forceful dissent. Choose Timothy Tymkovich argued that entry to a grasp account is “indispensable” for banks and mentioned denying one is “akin to a demise sentence.”

    Tymkovich famous that shortly after Custodia submitted its utility in 2020, the Federal Reserve initially indicated that the proposal had “no showstoppers.”

    He added that he disagreed with the bulk’s view that reserve banks have broad discretion over such purposes.

    Revolut Recordsdata Second Bid for US Financial institution Constitution to Develop Nationwide

    Fintech firm Revolut has filed a brand new utility for a US nationwide financial institution constitution, marking its second try and acquire a banking license within the nation.

    The London-based agency submitted the appliance to the Workplace of the Comptroller of the Foreign money (OCC) and the Federal Deposit Insurance coverage Company (FDIC) to ascertain “Revolut Financial institution US, N.A.”

    If permitted, the constitution would permit Revolut to function underneath a single federal regulatory framework throughout all 50 US states.

    Revolut’s transfer comes as extra fintech and crypto corporations search US financial institution charters by means of the OCC.

    Latest candidates for nationwide financial institution charters embody Nubank, Crypto.com, Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Constancy Digital Property and Paxos, signaling rising curiosity amongst fintech and digital asset corporations in gaining direct entry to the US banking system.

    The put up Custodia Financial institution Loses Closing Courtroom Enchantment Over Federal Reserve Grasp Account appeared first on Cryptonews.

  • Man Utd ‘extraordinary summer season signing’ is code-named ‘Elite Model’ as INEOS wish to shock world

    Man Utd are hoping to ‘wake the soccer world’ with a surprising summer season signing which has a code title, in accordance with stories.

  • Zelenskyy assessed the participation of Russians and the successes of Ukrainians within the 2026 Paralympics

    Zelenskyy assessed the participation of Russians and the successes of Ukrainians within the 2026 Paralympics<p>The President known as Russia's admission an try and keep away from isolation and urged allies to stress the IOC. Ukrainian Paralympians have already topped the general medal standings.</p>

  • Meta plans large-scale layoffs amid rising AI prices – Reuters

    Meta plans large-scale layoffs amid rising AI prices – Reuters

    Meta plans large-scale layoffs amid rising AI prices – Reuters<p>The corporate plans to chop employees to offset investments in synthetic intelligence infrastructure. Meta at present employs about 79,000 folks.</p>

  • Russian troops are making ready items for a attainable offensive within the Sloviansk route – Airborne Assault Forces

    Russian troops are making ready items for a attainable offensive within the Sloviansk route – Airborne Assault Forces

    Russian troops are making ready items for a attainable offensive within the Sloviansk route – Airborne Assault Forces<p>The occupiers are accumulating forces for an assault and utilizing anti-thermal imaging cloaks at evening. The enemy is massively utilizing drones on fiber optics and Krylo reconnaissance.</p>