Friday, December 4, 2009

Give It Back, Al

The L.A. Times blog doesn't quite know what to make of two showbiz conservatives' demand showbiz  that, in light of recent revelations of scientific fraud, the Academy strip a billionaire of his Oscar (nor, for that matter, does the rag know what to make of showbiz conservatives, a rara avis indeed):
No, it wouldn't do anything for the environment.
But two Hollywood conservatives (yes, there are some) have called upon the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to rescind the prestigious, profitable gold Oscar statuette that it gave ex-Vice President Al Gore two years ago for the environmental movie "An Inconvenient Truth."
Roger L. Simon and Lionel Chetwynd, both Academy members, are among a small, meandering pack of known political conservatives still believed to be on the loose in the liberal bastion of movie-making.
In 2007, Hollywood's Academy sanctified Gore's cinematic message of global warming with its famous statue, enriched his earnings by $100,000 per 85-minute appearance and helped elevate the Tennesseean's profile to win the Nobel Peace Prize despite losing the election battle of 2000 to a Texan and living in a large house with lots of energy-driven appliances.
Chetwynd and Simon were prompted to make their hopeless demand this week by the leak two weeks ago of a blizzard of British academic e-mails purporting to show that scientists at the University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit systematically falsified data to document the appearance of global warming in recent years.
The university is reportedly investigating the claims, which added dry fuel to the never-ending political debate over whether the Earth really is warming as a result of human activity or if it's just normal natural cycles and the debate is what's heated. The demand to withdraw Gore's award provides yet another opportunity to argue.
The startling leak comes at an inconvenient time just before next week's United Nations' climate change meeting that will cause an immense carbon footprint with thousands of people flying up or over to Denmark to talk about saving the environment.
"Inconvenient timing"--you could say that again. As for rescinding Al's prize: it's never going to happen, boys. Hollywood is going to love the Goracle no matter what, and even if Tinsel Towners ever did come to their senses--a longer shot than George W. Bush winning a Nobel Peace Prize--they'd have to pry the Oscar out of Al's cold, dead hand.

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