Disney Exec On That Oscar Speech Cut Off

Netflix

On the presentation front, this year’s Oscars found itself hit with a few technical difficulties from a stumbling cameraman to some awkwardness related to the intros and speeches.

But the most egregious problem came when the songwriters of “Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters” were accepting their award and found their speech cut short.

Singer and songwriter EJAE, who helped write and compose the song and features as the main vocalist, managed to give a short speech and was then handing over the microphone to one of the others when they were effectively played off – all were left on the stage for an awkward amount of time before walking off.

Earlier in the broadcast, when the same film won Best Animated Feature, Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans delivered remarks before producer Michelle Wong took the microphone. The music started playing to cut her off but then was stopped, allowing her to finish her speech. That reprieve didn’t happen with the song award.

Speaking with Variety for a post-mortem Oscars piece, Walt Disney Television’s Rob Mills was asked about that moment and how they intend to address that problem in the future:

“One thing, as we post mortem for next year, will be to look at how we’re handling speeches. You win the Oscar, you know you go on stage, it could be one person, it could be five or six. Immediately you’ll see the sort of allotted time we have for them.

Do we need to look at it and say, okay, designate one person to speak. Maybe you continue it backstage, and we have a feed on social or something like that. We look at everything and figure out what is the most elegant solution, because it is difficult, especially when you’re cutting somebody off and it’s their one moment.

We talk about it at the award luncheon, that you have this designated time to speak, and it’s difficult. I don’t know what the most elegant solution is, but it’s obviously something we should look really, really long and hard at.”

“Two People Exchanging Saliva” short filmmaker Alexandre Singh also found his speech cut short as the microphone started to lower down into the stage just as he approached it.