Penske Media Company was pressured to apologize this week after it was revealed that an awards columnist for The Hollywood Reporter demanded to see upcoming movies forward of his opponents, RadarOnline.com can report.
The stunning scandal first began when it was revealed that THR awards columnist Scott Feinberg despatched out a collection of emails to studios and PR reps through which he demanded precedence entry to approaching movies.
“As you propose the rollout of your movie(s), I want to respectfully ask that you just not present movies to any of my fellow awards pundits earlier than you present them to me, even when that individual represents himself or herself to you as (a) a possible reviewer of it, (b) needing to see the movie with a view to be a part of choices about covers, or (c) actually anything,” Feinberg wrote, based on an e-mail obtained by Vainness Truthful.
Much more stunning was the truth that Feinberg additionally wrote that, if his request was not granted, THR “could take that into consideration through the reserving of roundtables, podcasts and different protection.”
Penske Media Company – which bought THR in 2020 and in addition owns different fashionable publications equivalent to Rolling Stone, Billboard, and Selection – rapidly issued a press release through which they apologized for Feinberg’s e-mail and admitted the request was “inartfully worded.”
“[Feinberg] didn’t in any method imply to indicate that he ought to see movies earlier than others, however simply that every one awards analysts ought to see them on the identical time and never be given preferential remedy,” a spokesperson for PMC mentioned on Tuesday.
“It was [Feinberg’s] understanding that there have been situations the place different awards analysts have gotten early entry to a movie by additionally claiming to be a reviewer and have been in a position to see movies earlier than others,” the apology continued.
“Any suggestion of penalties for not offering early viewing entry to Scott was not the intent.”
Feinberg has since backtracked on his preliminary e-mail and, in a follow-up e-mail, argued that THR was at an “unfair” and “aggressive drawback” when not offered precedence entry to approaching movies.
“We really feel that doing so is plainly unfair to THR, because it places us at a aggressive drawback, particularly at movie fests, the place each second counts,” he wrote in a second e-mail.
“It’s not unreasonable to ask you to insist that somebody is both an awards pundit or a critic/cowl editor, however not each, not less than throughout awards season.”