By Thomas Madison

“The movie industry is like the Rocky Mountains, the higher you get, the whiter it gets,” claims Little Al Sharpton, race baiter supreme, hereinafter referred to as the Master Baiter. So irate is the Master Baiter at the Academy Awards that he has called for an emergency meeting of his Diversity Task Force, which I am presuming is a racist hate whitey conclave, complete with 40-ounce Colt 45s, over the movie “Selma” receiving only one Oscar nomination.

Argued the Master Baiter: “The lack of diversity in today’s Oscar nominations is appalling and while it is good that Selma was nominated for ‘Best Picture,’ it’s ironic that they nominated a story about the racial shutout around voting while there is a racial shutout around the Oscar nominations.”

“I have called an emergency meeting,” warned the Master Baiter, “early next week in Hollywood with the task force to discuss possible action around the Academy Awards.”

It is apparently beyond the Master Baiter’s ability to reason that perhaps the performances in Selma were just not that good. The movie has been nominated for Best Picture. Not good enough, according to Sharpton. No actors nominated? That is criminal! Doesn’t the Academy Award Nominating Committee understand that you MUST nominate blacks for other reason than them being black? Quality of performance is apparently not a nominating criteria when the actor or actress is black.

Only the second time in 25 years the Oscar nominations include no black actors or actresses. Sounds racist to me!

Last year the movie “12 Years a Slave” won Best Picture, black actress Lupita N’yongo won Best Supporting Actress, and black actor Chiwetel Ejiofor was nominated for Best Actor. These facts did not find their way to  the Master Baiter’s microphone. Lack of shakedown revenue potential is the presumed cause.

 

From Chuck Ross, The Daily Caller

MSNBC host and civil rights activist Al Sharpton is calling for an emergency meeting of his eight-member diversity task force to discuss action against the Academy Awards after the movie “Selma” received only one Oscars nomination.

“The movie industry is like the Rocky Mountains, the higher you get, the whiter it gets,” Sharpton said with usual flair in a statement released Thursday after the announcement of Oscar nominations.

Many, including Sharpton, were outraged that none of the actors in “Selma,” a movie about the 1965 Voting Rights Act, were nominated for the golden statues.

David Oyelowo, who portrayed Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the movie, did not receive a nomination. Nor did director Ava DuVernay.

This was the second time since 2000 that no black actors or actresses were nominated for an Oscar.

“The lack of diversity in today’s Oscar nominations is appalling and while it is good that Selma was nominated for ‘Best Picture,’ it’s ironic that they nominated a story about the racial shutout around voting while there is a racial shutout around the Oscar nominations,” Sharpton continued in his statement.

“I have called an emergency meeting early next week in Hollywood with the task force to discuss possible action around the Academy Awards.”

Sharpton formed the task force last month after the hack and release of racially-themed emails sent between Sony Pictures executives. Sharpton called on Sony head Amy Pascal to address the issue of Hollywood’s lack of diversity.

“In the time of Staten Island and Ferguson, to have one of the most shutout Oscar nights in recent memory is something that is incongruous,” Sharpton told The New York Daily News on Thursday.

Sharpton’s outrage comes a year after the success of “12 Years a Slave,” which was based on the autobiography of Solomon Northup, a free black man who was captured and sold into slavery in the 1840s. The movie won Best Picture, and actress Lupita N’yongo won the award for Best Supporting Actress. Steve McQueen and Chiwetel Ejiofor were nominated for Best Director and Best Actor, respectively.