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January 29, 2017 | Tolly Wright | Vulture
Study Finds Women Underrepresented in 2017 Non-Acting Oscars Nominations

While there were some bright spots in the study — including Ava DuVernay’s nomination for best documentary feature for 13th, and Jackie composer Mica Levi becoming the first female in her category since 2000 — the report highlighted the ways women are underrepresented behind the camera. “We have a saying: ‘If you can see it, you can be it,’” Julie Burton, president of the Women’s Media Center told EW, “but in the crucial behind-the-scenes non-acting roles, our investigation shows that what you see is 80 percent of all nominees are men. Four out of five nominees are men — meaning male voices and perspectives are largely responsible for what we see onscreen.”


 
January 29, 2017 | Brian Moylan | Vice
Women Working Behind-The-Scenes Are Still Getting Shafted At The Oscars

"In the crucial behind-the-scenes, non-acting roles, our investigation shows that what you see is 80 percent of all nominees are men," Julie Burton, president of the Women's Media Center, said in a press release. "Four out of five nominees are men—meaning male voices and perspectives are largely responsible for what we see on screen."


 
January 29, 2017 | Rebecca Keegan | Vanity Fair
Dudes, Where’s My Oscar?

For all the talk of inclusion in this year’s Oscar nominations, the Women’s Media Center released this eyebrow-raising statistic in a report out today: 80 percent of this year’s Oscar nominees are men. For the seventh year in a row, in the feature-directing category, all nominees are men.


 
January 29, 2017 | De Elizabeth | Teen Vogue
Study Shows 2017 Academy Awards is Lacking in Gender Representation

This year, the number of female nominees for the non-acting categories was pretty much abysmal. In a study conducted by the Women's Media Center (WMC), it was determined that 80% of the behind-the-camera nominations went to men. Out of the 189 total non-acting nominees, just 37 of them were women.


 
January 29, 2017 | Suzannah Weiss | Refinery29
This Year’s Oscar Nominations are Woefully Male-Dominated

The Oscars aren't just so white — they're also so male, according to a new Women's Media Center study. This imbalance in recognition is especially evident when you look at the people behind the camera. The analysis found that within the 19 non-acting categories, 80% of nominees are men, Variety reports. Every single nominee for Best Director is male.


 
January 29, 2017 | Lotte Phillipsen | Knack (Netherlands)
80% of Oscar Nominees are Male

Achter de schermen zijn het bovendien nog steeds mannen die de plak zwaaien. Van regisseurs tot scenaristen, het overgrote merendeel is van het mannelijke geslacht. Het Women's Media Center, opgericht door Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan en Gloria Steinem, analyseerde het aantal vrouwelijke aanwezigen in de lijstjes van de Oscarnominaties. Dit jaar werd er weer geen enkele vrouwelijke regisseur genomineerd in de categorie Best Picture en slechts één vrouwelijke scenarist, Allison Schroeder, kreeg erkenning voor haar werk. De documentaire 13th is wel in de running voor de prijs voor Best Documentary, maar regisseur Ava DuVernay kan geen prijs bemachtigen. Voor de prijs van Music (Original Score) is de enige vrouw die een prijs kan wegkapen Mica Levy voor haar composities voor Jackie. Levy is de eerste vrouw in deze categorie sinds 2000.


 
January 29, 2017 | Alim Kheraj | Hello Giggles
Women Are Still Underrepresented At The Oscars, And Guys, C’mon!

In data compiled by the Women’s Media Center, an organization co-founded by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem, it was revealed that women represent only 20 per cent of the non-acting categories in the 89th annual Academy Award nominations.


 
January 29, 2017 | Pranshu Rathi | International Business Times
Will Women’s Marach Oppose Oscars 2017? 89th Academy Award Nominations Have Only 20% Women in Non-Acting Categories, Report Says

Only 20 percent of the non-acting categories in the 89th Academy Award nominations comprise women and most major categories such as best director and best writer woefully underrepresented women, according to a Women’s Media Center report, released Monday.


 
January 29, 2017 | Sara Boboltz | Huffington Post
Outside Acting Categories, Report Finds Four Out of Five Oscar Nominees are Men

A study by the Women’s Media Center found that only 20 percent of Academy Award nominations in categories from writing to editing to directing went to women this year. That’s in spite of the Academy inviting nearly 700 new voting members in mid-2016, including many women and people of color.


 
January 29, 2017 | Beatrice Veerhoeven | The Wrap
Oscars 2017: Women Claim Just 20 Percent of Non-Acting Nominations, Study Finds

According to a Women’s Media Center analysis, female Oscar nominees dropped 2 percentage points from last year’s nominations although hundreds of new members were invited to the Academy over the past year. The last time a woman was nominated for Best Director was Kathryn Bigelow in 2009 for “The Hurt Locker.”


 
January 29, 2017 | Nicole Sterling | Entertainment Weekly
Women Still Woefully Underrepresented In Oscar Nominations, Study Finds

Despite a slew of films such as Jackie, 20th Century Women, Arrival, and La La Land featuring strong, complex women front-and-center, the number of female Oscar nominees for behind-the-scenes roles dropped at the 89th annual Academy Award nominations, announced Tuesday. In fact, according to an analysis by the Women’s Media Center, cofounded by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem, only 20 percent of the non-acting categories featured women, dipping 2 percentage points from last year’s nominations


 
January 29, 2017 | Rachel West | Entertainment Tonight Canada
New Study Says Women are Underrepresented at Oscars, Men Make Up 80% of the Nominees

A new study finds the number of females nominated behind the scenes dropped by 2 per cent this year, despite a number of movies that featured strong women on-screen nabbing nominations, including “20th Century Women”, “La La land”, and “Arrival”. According to a report by the Women’s Media Center – co-founded by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan and Gloria Steinem – only 20 per cent of the non-acting categories featured women.


 
January 29, 2017 | El Pais
Las Mujeres Siguen Siendo Las Grandes Ausentes En Los Oscar

¿Puede colgarse ya la institución la medalla de lo políticamente correcto? Ni por asomo: un análisis de la ONG Women’s Media Center señala que la representación femenina en los Premios de la Academia sigue dejando mucho que desear. Fundado por la actriz Jane Fonda y las activistas Robin Morgan y Gloria Steinem, el Women’s Media Center se ha apartado de las categorías dramáticas (donde las actrices tienen reservadas sus propios lugares donde destacar) para fijarse en los premios técnicos y en los correspondientes a dirección y producción. Sus conclusiones: sólo un 20 por ciento de las categorías no dramáticas cuentan con mujeres nominadas, lo cual se queda muy por debajo de la proporción real entre géneros en la industria de Hollywood. Y no sólo eso, sino que también desciende un 2 por ciento sobre la cuota de 2016.


 
January 29, 2017 | Francesca Bacardi | E News
Study Finds Women Underrepresented in Non-Acting 2017 Oscar Nominations

A study by the Women's Media Center found that women only made up 20 percent of the nominees in non-acting categories, which is down 2 percent from last year. This year also failed to see a woman nominated in the Best Director category, and it's also the 89th year in which a woman hasn't been included in the cinematographer category. Eighty-nine also happens to be the entire history of the iconic award show.


 
January 29, 2017 | Peggy Truong | Cosmopolitan
Women Shut Out of Non-Acting Oscar Nominees with Just 20 Percent Represented, Study Finds

A study from the Women’s Media Center, a non-profit organization founded by Jane Fonda, Gloria Steinem, and writer Robin Morgan, has released a new report tracking the number of women nominated for non-acting Oscars this year. No female directors were nominated, the study points out (via Variety), while one female screenwriter, stories three times as often as women


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