• Hollywood wokeness hurting the bottom-end?

    From RichA@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 23 22:35:02 2022
    Hollywood was founded by, and for generations run by, pure showmen who
    were fanatically devoted to giving the audience what it wanted. Today Hollywood’s message is, “Let us entertain you! But first, a brief lecture on what’s wrong with you, the audience …”

    Artists and entertainment corporations have always been desperate to be
    taken seriously, hence their need to manufacture respectability via awards given out by high-falutin’, august-sounding institutions such as the
    Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. (Sciences? You guys are
    creating pretty pictures, not curing cancer.)

    The Oscars originally went to box office giants — glossy romantic dramas
    and swaggering historical epics. Then the movie industry divided into
    “awards pictures” and “audience pictures.” In the past few years, even the
    audience pictures have started to fill up with reminders about racism, feminism, immigration, etc. These are important matters, but people go to
    the movies primarily for escape.

    One reason “Top Gun: Maverick” is such a huge success — the biggest movie of Tom Cruise’s career and probably the biggest movie of this year — is that it simply ignores all quarrelsome real-world issues. “TG:M” seeks merely to entertain, not to persuade you that the people who made it are virtuous.

    Meanwhile, Disney’s much-touted “Lightyear” came out and did surprisingly poorly after a lot of week-of-release talk about the lesbian relationship
    in the film. The same-sex marriage is a small part of the story and no one should be bothered by the existence of gay people, even in a kids’ movie,
    but the shocking underperformance must have Disney wondering whether
    people stayed away because they thought (even if mistakenly) that “Lightyear” was a message movie.

    Disney’s decision to spend a couple of minutes of screen time reminding us that it’s a gay-friendly company may well have cost it millions in ticket sales for what was supposed to be its annual Pixar mega-blockbuster.
    Disney has to consider the idea that there might be many Pixar fans who
    have no problem with gay marriage who nevertheless would prefer the matter
    be left out of kids’ movies. Disney also chose a side in the Florida
    dispute about teaching sexual orientation to little kids, and it may have damaged one of the world’s most valuable brands.

    James Patterson — the quintessence of a popular writer who doesn’t care about sending a message — was swamped with criticism when he suggested
    white male writers in Hollywood are victims of “just another form of racism.” That sounds dumb on the surface, but every producer in Hollywood
    is loudly proclaiming his commitment to inclusivity, which is another way
    of saying he is desperate to hire people other than non-handicapped
    straight white males. TV networks are proudly announcing new requirements
    that (at, for instance, CBS) at least 50% of staff writers be members of minority groups. Once hired, such staffers often push for stories about pressing social problems.

    Result? A British TV survey found that 62% of viewers think political correctness has gone too far.

    “I’m in a lot of meetings now, where people tell me, ‘This will never get on because it’s not woke enough,’” observes Egyptian-born British comedy writer-producer Ash Atalla. Polling shows TV producers are much more
    interested in foregrounding issues such as transgender rights than the
    British public (which is notably more PC than we Americans are). In the
    US, a poll focusing on the entertainment industry found that 65% agree
    that corporate wokeness has gone too far.

    It’s amusing that members of the entertainment industry often refer to it
    as “the industry,” as though they have forgotten the most important word. With the collapse in Netflix’s stock price, Disney’s box office headache and the revival of “Top Gun,” Hollywood execs must be wondering whether their progressive politics have amounted to a kind of self-imposed woke
    tax.

    Kyle Smith is critic-at-large for National Review.

    https://nypost.com/2022/06/25/lightyear-flop-audiences-are-weary-of- hollywood-wokeness/

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