Itâs ⦠a ⦠wonderful time for Oscar, as well as a special Academy Awards-themed edition of Buffering. This weekâs newsletter is all about Hollywoodâs big night, and particularly which two streamers have the most on the line at Sundayâs show. Iâve also got some thoughts on what to expect in terms of ratings for the telecast, and why even if they go up (a very likely scenario), that wonât automatically be cause for celebration at ABC. And if you want to hear me opine more about whatâs at stake for awards shows and TV, Iâm on the March 24 episode of âThe Town,â Matt Belloniâs new Ringer podcast over at Spotify. (It should drop around noon today PDT.) Also, if you havenât already, do make sure to check out this fascinating Q&A with the showrunner of the canceled Netflix series The Baby-Sitterâs Club from my colleague Katherine VanArendonk, which contains a slew of insights about what itâs like to work for The Platform. As always, thanks for reading. âJoe Adalian |
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| | Photo-Illustration: Vulture. Photos: Apple; Netflix | |
Itâs been five years since Prime Videoâs Manchester by the Sea became the first made-for-streaming movie to snag an Academy Awards nomination for Best Picture â and yet so far, no streamer has managed to go all the way and capture Hollywoodâs highest honor. If you believe most Oscars forecasters, that will almost surely change this weekend, with either Apple TV+âs CODA or Netflixâs The Power of the Dog now considered the prohibitive favorites to be the last film standing when the final winner is announced. But while execs from both streamers desperately hope their movie comes out on top, Apple is the only platform guaranteed to emerge as a clear winner of awards season no matter what happens Sunday. |
The reason the tech giant need not sweat the outcome of the Best Picture race is in part a simple matter of expectations. Netflix has spent a half-decade and upward of a billion dollars trying to disrupt the Oscars the way it reinvented television, and after several close calls with titles such as Roma and The Irishman, Jane Campionâs instant classic (at least in the eyes of many critics) looked until recently to be the film that finally toppled that last big awards barrier separating movies made for theaters and those for streaming. And it still very well might! But losing out to a small film from a much younger platform would be a crushing (though, letâs be real, not fatal) blow to the collective Netflix ego. And as my colleague Nate Jones told me this week when we chatted on Slack, a loss would likely prompt some serious soul-searching at the highest levels of the company. âI think it could be the end of their âLetâs give a blank check to a major director and hope to win an Oscarâ strategyâ,â he told me. In other words, the stakes for Netflix are incredibly high, and the ramifications of a âdefeatâ are likely to be widespread within the company. |
By contrast, consider what Apple has already accomplished with its decision to spend $25 million to acquire CODA back at Sundance last year: |
â½ Between end-of-year top-ten lists and the steady drumbeat of awards nominations and wins, the last four months have generated a massive amount of free, almost universally positive PR for CODA, and by default, Apple TV+. Obviously most ordinary consumers arenât paying close attention to the ups and downs of the Oscars race, but these wins have yielded hundreds of feature stories and TV appearances, plus the expected amount of social-media buzz reacting to the victories. And while journalists and marketing execs might not love the never-ending awards season, the fact that it goes on (and on and on and on) works to Appleâs benefit: All this earned media has been rolling out since the holidays rather than in one concentrated burst. The $25 million Apple spent to buy CODA is the rough equivalent of four Super Bowl ads, but unlike the marketing high generated by advertising on the big game, the Oscar season buzz doesnât disappear after a few days. Plus, Apple has wisely made sure consumers checking out the platform for CODA have plenty of other title to keep them in the ecosystem: The pace of new series premieres has picked up since the start of the year, with big new shows (Severance, The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey, Pachinko) rolling out every two to three weeks.) The old slam against Apple TV+ ââThereâs hardly anything to watchâ â just isnât true anymore. |
â½ Apple makes Netflix look chatty when it comes to sharing audience metrics, so we have zero idea how much the awards love for CODA has led to a spike in subscribers or increased viewing of the actual movie. But Iâd be willing to bet it has mattered quite a bit. CODA is a very accessible crowd-pleaser of a movie and boasts a well-known co-star in Marlee Matlin; the attention around it isnât a case of media elites talking about something while the rest of America snoozes. Early social-media love for Ted Lasso ultimately translated into increased audience demand, and Iâd be shocked if the same wonât hold true for CODA, particularly after Sunday. |
â½ CODA has proven Apple can play with the big kids when it comes to marketing and distributing an awards season movie. To be sure, this isnât quite as big a deal as it was five years ago, when Netflix and Amazonâs Prime Video pioneered streaming movies as awards contenders. Apple also isnât some tiny underdog desperate to get noticed: It can clearly spend what it takes to hire top-notch awards sherpas. Iâll leave it to experts, such as my colleague Nate, to assess just how much of CODAâs kudos success can be chalked up to the skills of Appleâs awards team versus voters simply finding the movie and loving it. But how such campaigns are run does matter, as do results. And while most agents and talent are primarily interested in how big a check platforms are willing to write, knowing their movie will get a proper push (among both viewers and awards voters) counts, too. Apple hasnât had a problem getting A-list talent to commit to film projects up until now, but if CODA results in a few more sought-after projects landing at the streamer, then thatâs another win for the service. |
I donât want to overhype CODAâs awards success thus far or Appleâs awards track record in general â particularly compared to Netflix. Power of the Dog landed more noms than any other movie this year (12), and Netflixâs 27 noms led all studios and platforms. Apple, of course, had far fewer original movies in 2021 than Netflix, and CODA was never going to rack up a massive nom tally (nobody is giving it awards for costumes, visual effects, or makeup). But one good movie does not mean Appleâs fledgling film division is suddenly on par with Netflix or even Amazonâs Prime Video, at least not yet. For all the slow-building success of CODA, itâs worth noting the streamer hasnât really gotten much attention for pics such as Cherry, Finch, or Swan Song, despite some big stars and often positive reviews. And while there was a lot of critical and awards love (including three Oscars noms) for Denzel Washingtonâs The Tragedy of Macbeth, it hasnât had nearly the breakout success of CODA (or POTD). In other words, for all its success, Appleâs entry into moviemaking has not been without bumps. |
And once again, the fact that Apple is scoring big wins with CODA does not mean that Netflix is somehow on track to be a âloserâ this awards season. Even if it doesnât get the top prize, POTD still delivered every bit as much positive PR for Netflix as CODA did for Apple, and it was much more successful dominating the cultural Zeitgeist in recent weeks (thank you, Sam Elliott). Whatâs more, while its overall nomination tally was down from last year (when it landed 36 noms), the fact that Netflix still led all studios in overall nominations reaffirmed what weâve known for five years, which is that the streaming giant is capable of delivering Oscar-caliber movies that resonate. If POTD and the other big Netflix contenders (Donât Look Up; The Mitchells vs. the Machines; Tick, Tick ⦠Boom!) have a good night Sunday, Netflixâs triumph will easily outshine the success Apple has had to date. I can absolutely envision a scenario where the story of this yearâs Oscars is that of an ascendant Netflix, with CODA becoming a mere, well, coda. |
But if itâs a night of upsets and POTD doesnât take Best Picture, there could be repercussions of the sort we wonât see if Apple goes home empty-handed. As Jones noted, a bad showing could prompt Netflix to stop throwing cash at directors in hopes of chasing Oscar gold. It might instead opt to funnel even more money into making popcorn fare such as The Adam Project or Red Notice, or it might redirect the monies it spends on prestige films to low-budget titles more efficient at delivering big viewing tallies. Or Netflix could decide to further expand its already impressive international production pipeline and make more movies in territories outside the U.S. and Europe in places where thereâs more potential to generate subscriber growth. (Weâre already seeing evidence of this shift away from the U.S. on the series side.) While several Netflix international titles have done well in the U.S. and Europe, Iâm sure Ted Sarandos would love to find the feature film equivalent of Squid Game. World cinema might be a better investment for Netflix than writing blank checks to Hollywood royalty. |
In any case, whatever transpires on Oscar Sunday â whichever streamers gets tagged a âwinnerâ or âloserâ by obsessively analytical types like yours truly â keep this in mind: The final results are unlikely to move the needle in the overall streaming wars much more than a few millimeters. A few hours after the last after-parties wrap up, execs at both platforms, along with their counterparts at the other streamers, will go back to work in the content factories, where the job will remain the same as it was the day before: spending insane amounts of cash on movies and TV shows in the hope of attracting more subscribers and capturing more viewing time. |
The actual Oscar race has been overshadowed somewhat in recent weeks by the (completely predictable) backlash against the changes being made to the show by ABC and the Academy. Iâll reserve judgment on the wisdom of these adjustments until I see how they actually play out and whether the assurance that most folks wonât be able to notice them turns out to be accurate. But this much I do know: A lot is riding on how this yearâs Oscarcast performs in the ratings. The 2021 show barely made it to 10 million viewers (down from 23.6 million in 2020) and was easily the least-watched televised Academy Awards ever. But it was also a COVID-era anomaly â without a massive studio audience and very little of the joy and energy of a usual Oscars. The ratings collapse was shocking but not entirely surprising. |
Sundayâs broadcast will basically be a return to normalcy, with big musical numbers (including Beyoncé) and all the usual glitz and glamour. If it somehow comes in below last yearâs Nielsen benchmark, well ⦠letâs just say there will be many emergency meetings among ABC and Academy execs. Odds are there wonât be another decline; a ratings spike of at least a few million more viewers seems far more likely. An Oscars that ends up averaging 12 or 13 million viewers would hardly be a triumph, however. The showâs 2020 audience marked a record low, so coming in at barely half that level two years later would still be pretty awful, even in this era of perpetual ratings declines. Best-case scenario? The show lands at around 17 to 18 million viewers, putting it in the same ballpark as Oprahâs interview with Harry and Meghan last March. I am not about to offer a prediction on where the numbers will end up, but I do think a surprise on the upside is more likely than further erosion, even if that still leaves Oscar a shadow of its former self. Maybe ânot a total disasterâ is the best anyone in network TV can hope for these days. |
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