Dacey wrote:The best hosts are the ones who play to their strengths, and I love how people "complained" about how MacFarlane hosted the show when he did exactly what was expected of him, only on a much tamer level (seriously, if any other host had done "We Saw Your Boobs," no one would've claimed to be "offended" by it).
No, MacFarlane was only hired because of the Mystery of Ted (why did it make so much money?...He must be
magic!) and it's the ones who LIKED him that defend it with the Boob song--Everyone else complains about the Lincoln joke. They don't even
remember the corny Sally Field, Shatner or Sound of Music bits.
In fact, apart from Billy Crystal, I'd say he was the best host in recent memory. He seemed to be placing real joy and passion into what he was doing. Ellen did "alright" last year, but she played it safe to a fault.
But really, it's time to get over this. There are people who are still complaining about how Anne Hathaway and James Franco hosted the ceremony five years ago, and acting like Franco especially is somehow less talented as a result. And mark my words. Everyone's "agreeing" that Neil Patrick Host is a great choice now, and the day after the ceremony, the press will probably be like "yeah, he was wonderful!". But then a few days later, they'll be like, "Man, he sure was a letdown!"
There's one rule all the "bad" hosts break, and it breaks
them:
Forget the cameras, you're not there to entertain the TV audience--You've nine hundred rich people sitting right there in front of you, make THEM laugh. And make them laugh with actor/industry jokes, the way you'd make insurance salesmen laugh with insurance jokes if you were opening for an insurance convention.
But no, the "Hip" hosts think they have to throw themselves on the mercy of the TV audience, make jokes about how long the ceremony is and how nobody wants to see dance numbers or clip montages, and basically come off like "Who let THIS jerk through security?" If the host doesn't seem to like what he's doing, or isn't accepted by the in-seat audience, there's going to be a little tension in the room...
Hugh Jackman also had Tony-ceremony training under his belt, and was one of the "good" hosts. (In fact, one of the reasons we got the James Franco disaster was that they wanted Jackman back again.) To host the Tonys, you have to be as chummy, huggy and in-jokey with the actor-community audience as possible, introduce as many entertaining on-stage production numbers as possible to entertain them, which ends up making a good show at home, and LET them make the tearful speeches they want to when they win, since that's what their friends sitting in the seats wanted to see...Although, granted, the Tony speeches tend to be
more tearful and huggier.
It's the best training ground there is--They're both supposed to be private functions anyway, it's only been since the 50's or 60's that the rest of us have crashed as voyeurs.
(And besides, Franco & Hathaway may have officially been the LAST ceremony that corny 70's-variety Bruce Villanch, of Star Wars Holiday Special fame, worked on as gagwriter: Billy, Ellen and Seth mostly worked with their own comic material and it fit their element.
Like Rob Lowe & Snow White killed off the Opening Production Number, it may have been Franco in the Marilyn dress that officially killed off Villanch's long-running Oscar career...So no, it
wasn't Franco's own personal fault.)