The Atlantic

The Shadow of Trump at the Oscars

Despite being 3,000 miles away, the president loomed larger in the Dolby Theatre than the Academy itself.
Source: Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

President Donald Trump was 3,000 miles away from the Academy Awards on Sunday night, but his presence loomed larger in the Dolby Theatre than anyone else in the room. From Jimmy Kimmel’s opening monologue to acceptance speeches to the ads punctuating the ceremony, it felt at times like the Oscars were more focused on delivering an extremely public rebuke to Trump than they were on celebrating the art of filmmaking.

The question is how effective such forms of protest are, in a media environment in which more than half of Americans think of the current president. Kimmel was one of the few personalities in the room who mentioned. While jabs about the president and his Twitter fixation made for easy punchlines, the most cutting and memorable moments of the night were the ones that elected to show, not tell—to reveal how Trump’s policies stand in direct opposition to the spirit of art in general and film in particular.

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