Golden
Globes group floats changes to address
diversity, ethics complaints
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[May 04, 2021]
By Lisa Richwine
LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) -The board of the Hollywood Foreign
Press Association (HFPA), the group that hands
out the annual Golden Globe awards for
television and film, proposed several changes on
Monday to address criticism over its
membership's diversity and ethics. |
In a letter to members, the
HFPA board suggested several steps to diversify
its roster, including hiring a chief diversity
officer, putting emphasis on recruiting Black
journalists and widening the pool of potential
applicants.
The board also proposed adding at least 20 new
members in 2021 and boosting its ranks by 50%
over the next 18 months. The changes must be
approved by current members and will be
discussed at the group's next meeting, the
letter said.
"We have created a roadmap for transformational
change in our organization," the board said.
The moves follow an investigation published in
February by the Los Angeles Times that noted
there were no Black people among the 87-member
group of foreign entertainment journalists who
make up the HFPA.
The Los Angeles Times also raised long-standing
ethical questions over the close relationships
between the HFPA and movie studios that may
influence the choice of Golden Globe nominees
and winners.
The controversy overshadowed the Golden Globes
ceremony in February, one of the major Hollywood
award shows leading up to the Oscars in April.
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The HFPA board said it
developed the recommendations with input from
outside advisers and inclusion experts as well
as media partners. Comcast Corp's NBC network
broadcasts the Golden Globes ceremony each year
and welcomed the plan as "an encouraging step in
the right direction."
"It outlines the thorough reforms that are
critical for our continued relationship," NBC
said.
Among other proposals, the board urged that HFPA
members stop accepting promotional items from
film and TV studios and that the group post a
public list of members with links to their work.
"We want to be clear – these outlined changes
are just the first steps in the long journey
ahead," the letter said. "We also know that in
this existential moment for our association,
change is difficult and sometimes scary."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Karishma
Singh)
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