The new rules reflect back on where the 'To Leslie' campaign may have overstepped
The Academy has announced new rules for the upcoming Oscars season, including restrictions on campaigning in the wake of the To Leslie campaign controversy earlier this year.
The Academy Board met in the last week of April to finalize the changes. The changes include limits on the number of hosted screenings before nominations, the complete elimination of them post-nominations, and the elimination of physical outreach as campaigns go more virtual.
The new rules also specify what Academy members can and cannot
say when speaking to voters, and there is now a clear process for reporting
campaign violations.
“The Academy has revised these promotional
regulations for the 96th Oscars to bring clarity, fairness, and transparency
to how motion picture companies and individuals directly associated with
awards-eligible motion pictures may promote such motion pictures,” reads the
statement from the Academy.
The new rules reflect back on where the To Leslie campaign may
have overstepped. Social media outreach is also now more limited, and
members cannot use social media to “encourage or discourage members to vote
for any motion picture, performance, or achievement”.
The To Leslie nomination led to allegations that the grassroots
campaign for the film had violated guidelines set by the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts & Sciences, which forbid reaching out to Academy members
directly to advertise a movie during the Oscars voting phase.
The
penalties for violating any of these rules have been clarified, along with
the process to file a complaint, and include revoking voting privileges,
rescinding an Oscar nomination, and expelling a member from the
Academy.