Oscar Fashionwrecks at Their Finest

While there were no debacles of epic proportions like Bjork or Cher, Hollywood's biggest night was still full of fashion frights! Thank you, Tilda Swinton.

Take a look at the best of the worst in our gallery.

Diablo Cody Will Be a Whore for No One

Oscar winning screenwriter Diablo Cody will not pimp out a product-- not even if that product are diamond crusted million dollar shoes from Stuart Weitzman!

As we reported this weekend, Cody agreed to waltz down the red carpet in the pricey kicks. What she didn't agree to was having her name used as a publicity stunt for the shoe company -- as if! She honest to blogged about the whole thing and, true to her word, rocked a pair of gold flats at last night's event.

At a press conference last night Diablo said, "If I had a million dollars I would help people."

Suck it Stuart!

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J-Hud Gives Up on Chi-town

Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson learned the hard way that Beyoncé and Anika Noni Rose make for better singing partners than random fans in Chicago.

Hudson was in her hometown yesterday as Mayor Richard Daley proclaimed it Jennifer Hudson Day. When Hudson broke into song, she looked to the crowd to sing along with her. "Y'all want to help me out?" she asked. Apparently the answer was "No."

She held out the mic and when no one piped up, Hudson asked, "Where y'all at, Chicago?" Again met with silence, Hudson ended her number with a simple, "Well, that's enough."

Anna Nicole -- Dissed in Death?

With her killer resume packed with hit movies like "Naked Gun 33 1/3," "To the Limit" and of course, the cult classic "Wasabi Tuna," it was a complete shock when the late Anna Nicole Smith turned up missing from Oscar's annual morgue montage.

According to reps from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, a final version of the deceased reel is cut and approved by Febuary 1, and there's only room for about 25 people (last year, more than 130 bought tickets to the big movie theatre in the sky). But what if, god forbid, Tom Hanks or Steven Spielberg had kicked the bucket last week -- would they have made the clip reel?

Guess we'll have to tune in again next year to see if Anna makes the cut!

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Cameron All Wet Before Oscars

Looks like Cameron's supertanned Oscar skin wasn't from an L.A. tanning salon, but from the Hawaiian sun itself.

The hotbod actress spent a few days in her bathing suit, prancing around paradise pre-awards night with pal Drew Barrymore to celebrate Drew's 32nd Birthday.

She should have worn this bikini to the Oscars instead of what she did wear -- that unraveling roll of origami toilet paper from the Shanghai Hilton.

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Hudson Joins Diss Chorus for 'Idol'

You would think someone plucked from obscurity by a TV show would be quicker to sing its praises.

Jennifer Hudson, who finished in seventh place during the third season of "Idol," found better success at last night's Oscars when she took home the award for Best Supporting Actress. But if Simon Cowell was expecting some kind of shoutout, he'd have to go to Oscar.com to get it.

Hudson didn't thank "Idol" during the telecast, but did manage to squeeze in a nod on the Oscar website's "Thank You Cam," and then only after being reminded by someone off camera. Jennifer said, "Who else? Who else? Who else?" as she tried to remember who she forgot to thank, when an unseen woman mentioned "Idol."

"You know what? For every trial, and every tribulation, yes, 'Idol' is included in that." Hudson said in a seemingly begrudged afterthought.

Jennifer isn't the only "Idol" to diss the call-in-your-vote amateur hour. At last year's Grammy Awards, season one winner Kelly Clarkson took home two Grammys but failed to thank the show. How quickly they forget.

Sweet Oscar Swag

With Oscar night just around the corner, there's only one other thing on the minds of nominees -- the swanky swag they're gonna nab on awards night! Win or lose, the evening will be sweetened by a plush one of a kind leather duffel bag from designer Gina Alexander.

Alexander, famous for putting the stars' faces on the bags they carry, was commisioned to create the swanky bag for the nominees -- and it's emblazoned with images from the most memorable movies of the year.

The sack retails for a colossal $2500! Whatever the Oscar outcome, this is still a nice prize.

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Daughtry -- Is It Over Yet?

How's Chris Daughtry doing since his album release? --Sara

Chris Daughtry and his band are seeing nothing but success since their record hit stores last November. In fact, Sara, their self-titled album shot to number one last week, selling nearly 1.3 million copies. A lot of those sales can be attributed to their hit single, "It's Not Over." The band's concerts are sold out all of next week, but if you're on the West coast, click here to see some more Daughtry dates mid-February.

For the latest on "American Idol," check this out.

Liza Goes Skater, Dude

Liza Minnelli has an Oscar, a Tony and an Emmy -- now she wants to add a Gold Medal from the X Games to her mantle.

The normally hyper-eyelashed icon looked like she was ditching the cabaret stage for a skatepark when she showed up at LAX on Wednesday, sans makeup and showing off her skater gear. Rad.

It looks like Liza has made the full transition into skate culture by getting tattooed ... eyebrows.

This Week's Biggest Losers 09/08/06

For many around the country, this week was all about back-to-school. But in the Zone, where reading, writing and arithmetic take a backseat to autograph signing, it was more along the lines of back-to-DUIs, back-to-skeletons-in-the-closet and back-to-New-York, Jon.

Jon Stewart:
There's nothing quite like the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences running away from its most recent previous Oscar show host, as fast as it possibly can. It happened with Chris Rock, and now it's happened again in the wake of The Daily Show host's stint on The Yearly Show. By rushing out the news of Ellen De Generes' selection as the next MC, a full four months on the calendar before Stewart was announced as savior in 2005, AMPAS is treating him like an Emmy loser rather than the winner that he is. There was no mention of Stewart in the press release that went out to the media late Thursday, just backhanded jabs such as this quote from producer Laura Ziskin: "the show requires someone who can keep the show alive and fresh and moving, as well as someone who is a flat-out great entertainer." Oh well, if early Internet petitioners have their way, Stewart will be in the running in the fall of 2008 for a much bigger MC-ing gig, one that will probably require the adoption of a middle initial.

Ellen DeGeneres To Host Oscars

Ellen DeGeneres is getting called up to the big leagues.

The popular daytime talk show host will host the 79th Annual Academy Awards, it was announced today. DeGeneres has previously hosted the Grammys twice and the Emmys twice.

The two-time Daytime Emmy winner for Outstanding Talk Show Host will follow in the footsteps of Jon Stewart, Chris Rock, Billy Crystal, Steve Martin and Whoopi Goldberg -- the last five Oscar hosts.

The 2007 Academy Awards will be presented on February 25, 2007 from the Kodak Theater in Hollywood and broadcast on ABC.

Crashing the Oscars Could Land You in Jail!

Ultimate party crasher says he's been threatened
By TMZ.COM STAFF

(Mar. 6, 12:30PM ET) -- Alex Deighton has never been invited to the Oscars, but now he's been officially UN-invited. TMZ has obtained a letter threatening Deighton with arrest and prosecution if he dares enter where they say he shouldn't.

TMZ first introduced you to Alex Deighton a few months back. You see, Alex is a party crasher... a gate crasher... an uninvited guest. He has made his way into dozens of A-list events -- like the Academy Awards -- without an invite and under the radar. Now it seems TMZ's story caught the Academy's eye as well.

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Oscar Ratings Drop 8 Percent From 2005

38.8 million people see 'Crash' take top honors

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
(Mar. 6) -- ABC is in for a "Crash" landing in the Oscar ratings.

An estimated 38.8 million people watched the Academy Awards Sunday, down 8 percent from last year and the worst since 2003, according to Nielsen Media Research. Except for the 2003 count of 33 million viewers when "Chicago" took the best-picture award the Oscars hadn't dipped below 40 million viewers since 1987, Nielsen said.

The ceremony, where "Crash" won a surprise best picture trophy, drew a 27.1 rating and a 40 share. Each rating point is equivalent to 1.1 million homes, while the share indicates that 40 percent of the TVs in use last night were tuned to the awards.

Last year's metered markets had a 30.1 rating and 43 share, Nielsen said.

The ceremony's central lesson: Play a real person enmeshed in wrenching drama, win an Academy Award.

It worked last year for Jamie Foxx in "Ray" and this time around for Reese Witherspoon's portrayal of June Carter Cash in "Walk the Line" and Philip Seymour Hoffman as the glory-hungry writer in "Capote."

Sunday's Oscars were anything but predictable, however, as the explosive race drama "Crash" denied "Brokeback Mountain" the best-picture Oscar despite the gay Western love story's front-runner status and its best-director award for Ang Lee.

With six different films dividing up the top six Oscars, the ceremony hosted by first-timer Jon Stewart denied anyone unmitigated bragging rights.

Witherspoon, who joined co-star Joaquin Phoenix as country legend Johnny Cash in singing in the film, gave credit for her performance to her mother and grandmother.

"They taught me a lot and a lot of characteristics that a woman should have in life, and how tough women are and how strong we are," she said backstage. "And I feel like it really helped my performance with June, because I sort of came in with an innate knowledge of who she was as a woman."

Hoffman's performance captured Capote's charm and the author's self-serving style as he gathered material for his groundbreaking book, "In Cold Blood."

Asked what the late author would have thought of his portrayal, Hoffman said backstage: "He's a pretty elusive guy, so I don't know. I don't know. It depends on if he liked me or not and I don't know if he would."

"Crash," featuring an ensemble cast in intersecting story lines over a violent, disturbing 36-hour period in Los Angeles, was lifted by a late surge of praise that carried it over "Brokeback Mountain," which had won most other key Hollywood honors.

"We are humbled by the other nominees in this category. You have made this year one of the most breathtaking and stunning maverick years in American cinema," said "Crash" producer Cathy Schulman.

The film was also honored for original screenplay by the film's director, Paul Haggis, and Bobby Moresco, and film editing. "Brokeback Mountain" captured best adapted screenplay for Larry McMurtry ("Lonesome Dove") and Diana Ossana, and musical score for Gustavo Santaolalla.

"I'm so proud of the movie," Lee said backstage, where he was asked if he was disappointed that "Brokeback Mountain" lost best picture and what might have kept it from winning. "Why they didn't go for it I don't know. You're asking a question that I don't know the answer. ... Congratulations to the 'Crash' filmmakers."

Front-runners usually prevail, but there have been some notable dark-horse winners at past Oscars. Underdogs that came away with best picture include "An American in Paris," "The Greatest Show on Earth" and "Oliver!"

Supporting-performer Oscars on Sunday went to George Clooney in "Syriana" and Rachel Weisz in "The Constant Gardener."

Clooney's win capped an exceptional year in which he made Oscar history by becoming the first person nominated for acting in one movie and directing another. (The Edward R. Murrow tale "Good Night, and Good Luck" earned him directing and writing nominations.)

"Crash," an Oscar rarity that was shot outside the studio system on a meager $6.5 million budget, became a solid box-office hit, grossing $55 million domestically.

The cast of "Crash" includes supporting-actor nominee Matt Dillon, Don Cheadle, Sandra Bullock, Brendan Fraser, Terrence Howard, Thandie Newton, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, Jennifer Esposito and Ryan Phillippe.

Although Comedy Central's Stewart proved a relatively tame host, the ceremony was given a jolt of life by the raucous hip-hop tune "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" from "Hustle & Flow." The song, with expletive-laden lyrics edited for the ceremony, won the prize for best song. The song was written by the rap group Three 6 Mafia, consisting of Jordan Houston, Cedric Coleman and Paul Beauregard.

"You know what? I think it just got a little easier out here for a pimp," Stewart joked after the performance.

The stop-motion family tale "Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit" won the Oscar for best animated feature film. The Antarctic nature tale "March of the Penguins," a surprise smash at the box office, was honored as best documentary.

"King Kong," from "Lord of the Rings" creator Peter Jackson, won three Oscars, for visual effects, sound mixing and sound editing. The Japan drama "Memoirs of a Geisha" also earned three, for cinematography, costume design and art direction, while the fantasy epic "The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" was picked for best makeup.

South Africa's drama "Tsotsi," based on Athol Fugard's novel about a young hoodlum reclaiming his own humanity, won for foreign-language film, beating the controversial Palestinian terrorism saga, "Paradise Now."

Small Films Could Mean Small Ratings for Oscars

Lack of blockbusters could diminish interest

By DAVID GERMAIN, AP MOVIE WRITER

(Mar. 4) -- No matter who wins Sunday, Hollywood can both brag about an unusually daring crop of Academy Awards films and hang its head in embarrassment that hardly any came from the studios that dominate the movie business.

The Oscars are as establishment as it gets in the entertainment world. So it's a triumph of art over commerce that low-budget, fierce dramas such as the cowboy romance "Brokeback Mountain," the ensemble tale "Crash," the Truman Capote story "Capote" and the Edward R. Murrow saga "Good Night, and Good Luck" are the awards darlings this time over the escapist blockbusters that often rule.

"It doesn't have anything to do with the budget of the film. It has to do with the scope and scale of ambition, and the skill that people brought to it to realize that ambition," said James Schamus, a producer of best-picture front-runner "Brokeback Mountain."

"None of these films is small in what they're trying to accomplish," he said.

Those films -- along with their fellow best-picture nominee, the assassination thriller "Munich" -- had rung up $230 million in domestic grosses as of a week before the Oscars. Last year's best-picture nominees tallied $315 million and together drew the smallest audiences among key Oscar contenders in 20 years.

What the Oscars signal this time is dissatisfaction with the big movies into which the studios pour most of their money. In the eyes of the 5,800 industry professionals who vote on the Oscars, dark character stories were more deserving than the usual studio crowd-pleasers.

Oscar attention always draws more people to see nominated films, and that has been especially helpful for this year's best-picture contenders, most of which have not had the benefit of huge marketing budgets.

"Munich" was the only best-picture nominee to emerge from a big studio. The others were independently produced or came out of studio-aligned arthouse banners such as Focus Features and Sony Pictures Classics.

The beauty of the academy "is it points to things that aren't necessarily something that audiences would generally go to," said George Clooney, a triple nominee as supporting actor in the oil-industry thriller "Syriana" and for directing and co-writing "Good Night, and Good Luck."

Artistic triumph though they may be, the Oscars themselves may suffer for it, at least in TV ratings. Generally, the fewer people who have seen the key nominees, the fewer who tune in to watch the Oscars.

With last year's modest box-office lineup at the Oscars, 42.1 million people caught the show, down 1.4 million from the previous year, when "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" was the big Oscar draw. The biggest Oscars audience was 55.2 million the year king of blockbusters "Titanic" ruled the ceremony.

As of last weekend, 36.4 million people had seen this year's five best-picture nominees in theaters, compared to 173.8 million the year of "Titanic." "Crash" already is out on home video, adding millions more viewers to this year's best-picture field, but still leaves the ceremony at risk of becoming a ratings dud.

Tom O'Neil of the awards Web site, theenvelope.com says this year's Oscar show will probably be the lowest rated ever, but it shouldn't matter.

"If we judge the success of the Oscars by the number of people who watch them, then we're as guilty as Hollywood studios who judge the success of movies by how many people see them," he said.

Still, ABC and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are trying to maximize the show's appeal, loading up on A-list celebrities as Oscar presenters, including Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Lopez, Nicole Kidman and Tom Hanks.

The marquee players provide name recognition for an Oscar show whose acting nominees are heavy on less-familiar performers such as David Strathairn of "Good Night, and Good Luck" and Amy Adams of "Junebug."

Academy president Sid Ganis said first-time host Jon Stewart should help lure viewers, as well as the cultural phenomenon over the gay love affair in "Brokeback Mountain."

The Oscar drama itself also may entice movie fans to tune in. There are acknowledged favorites in most key categories, including "Brokeback Mountain" director Ang Lee, "Capote" star Philip Seymour Hoffman as best actor and Reese Witherspoon as country singer June Carter in "Walk the Line" as best actress.

But none of the front-runners look like slam-dunks, and dark horse winners could walk away with any of the top Oscars.

Some awards watchers feel "Crash" could pull an upset over "Brokeback Mountain" for best picture. The best-actor lineup is particularly strong, with any of the other four nominees a potential spoiler for Hoffman. For best actress, Witherspoon faces serious competition from Felicity Huffman as a transsexual preparing for a sex change in "Transamerica."

Win or lose, a number of top nominees will be on stage as presenters, including Clooney. It will be the first trip to the Oscars for Clooney, who turned down invitations to present awards in the past because he only wanted to show up if he were nominated.

"I didn't want to feel like I was trying to force my way into the film community," he said. But now that he's been nominated, Clooney joked: "I'll show up at every awards show."

Stars to Arrive at Oscars in Green Cars

25 VIPs expected to arrive in the fuel-efficient cars

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

(Mar. 4) -- Oscar nominees Joaquin Phoenix, Jake Gyllenhaal and Frances McDormand are among those expected to step out of green vehicles and onto the red carpet at the Academy Awards ceremony Sunday.

In all, 25 VIPs are participating in the fourth annual "Red Carpet, Green Cars" event sponsored by Toyota Motor Corp. and the environmental organization Global Green USA. McDormand, Phoenix, Gyllenhaal, Jennifer Aniston and George Clooney are all expected to arrive at the Oscars in Toyota or Lexus hybrids, including the Toyota Prius, Lexus RX crossover and a hybrid version of the Toyota Camry, which goes on sale in May.

Event spokeswoman Kathy Kniss said the program began with just four participants in 2002, but interest in fuel-efficient vehicles has grown exponentially since then.

"There's a huge, huge following. People are flocking to the hybrids," Kniss said.

Other automakers are also getting into the act. Ford Motor Co. said Cathy Schulman, the producer of best-picture nominee "Crash," plans to arrive in a hybrid Mercury Mariner, while best-supporting-actor nominee Gyllenhaal's entourage is scheduled to show up in a Ford Excursion powered by clean-burning biodiesel.

General Motors Corp. also will be bringing VIPs to the ceremony, but its focus will be on luxury rather than fuel efficiency. GM spokeswoman Ryndee Carney said a fleet of 50 Cadillacs mostly 2007 Escalade SUVs will be used to pick up and drop off celebrities. Carney said the automaker also will run ads during the broadcast featuring GM's two other luxury brands, Hummer and Saab.

Oscar Director Spills Secrets

Jack is great -- Julia, not so much

By TMZ STAFF

(Mar. 3, 6:20PM ET) -- When the stars gather for the Academy Awards, there's often one other thing on their minds besides how they look or what they're going to say on stage. Where can they find a private bathroom?

What millions of people don't see on camera is that many of the celebs at the Oscars dread going into the lobby to use the public restrooms. Instead, the stars take refuge in the office of longtime Oscar telecast director Louis J. Horvitz.

The Emmy Award-winning Horvitz returns this year for another Oscar show, which ABC will broadcast live March 5 from the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles. In an exclusive interview with TMZ, Horvitz reveals what goes on behind the scenes and what some stars are really like off camera.

The secret room at the Oscars where the stars love to gather is Horvitz's on-location office, which also doubles as a unofficial dressing room during the show.

Horvitz explains, "It leads right to the stage in the main hallway. There's a little bathroom in here too. There are only a few private bathrooms backstage without having to go out in the lobby. Almost all the stars at the Oscars have come through this room at one time. The basic line is, 'Do you mind if I use your bathroom?' Everybody does it: men and women. It's a unisex room."

Horvitz adds with a laugh, "I should've stood out there and presented them with hand towels and gone for tips."

Jack Nicholson is one of the stars who likes to use the private room the most. Horvitz reveals, "On show nights, Jack Nicholson is always asking, 'Where's the director's room?' Jack hangs out to watch the show on the monitors before he goes on stage. He has his feet up on the desk and enjoys himself. It gives me a good feeling because he has a safe harbor there."

Horvitz says that Nicholson is one of the best stars to work with at the Oscars. "He's such a cool guy. He doesn't like to rob the spotlight from anybody." Horvitz also had high praise for many other celebs, such as Clint Eastwood, Denzel Washington, Steven Spielberg, Morgan Freeman, Sandra Bullock, Meryl Streep, Will Smith and Nicole Kidman.

Other stars, Horvitz says, are bit more challenging. He says that Barbra Streisand has exact demands on how she wants to be lit and photographed on stage.

As for Julia Roberts, Horvitz says: "Julia is Julia. It's going to be her way or no way at all. She's no-nonsense. I learned through the years that she never wants to do entrances on stairs. One year, somebody said Julia wanted to do a stair entrance. We had a great stair entrance planned for her. Ten minutes into the segment, she's backstage saying, 'I'm not entering on the stairs. Change the entrance.' The reality is that leopards don't change their spots."

Horvitz says that Queen Latifah, an Oscar presenter this year, also has her own difficult ways. "I've been many places with her. You can never pin her down, and it's a nice thing that she's coming to the Oscars this year. Frankly, I wouldn't go out of my way to count on her to do the things I need. Can you get her to show up? It's hard to get her to commit to do many things."

The Oscars have their share of celebrities being unpredictable. But Horvitz says there's one star who's the biggest loose cannon of them all: Robin Williams. "If Robin comes anywhere near where I'm shooting," Horvitz says, "I've got a basic zone to get ready to follow Robin. He's so spontaneous, it's unbelievable. You've got to really work hard to keep up with him."

Horvitz and Oscar show producer Gil Cates decide whether or not to cut off people's acceptance speeches if they run over the allotted speech time of 45 seconds. Horvitz admits that whether or not to cut off a speech is a subjective judgment call, and it depends mainly on how good the speech is. Horvitz names Oscar speeches given by Roberto Benigni and Cuba Gooding Jr. as two of his all-time favorite Oscar moments. Their speeches were allowed to go on longer than usual, Horvitz says, because they were so joyfully spontaneous. The biggest turnoff? Speeches that are long lists.

On a live show like the Oscars, almost anything can happen. But one thing the stars should remember, Horvitz says jokingly: "It's not nice to upset a live television director."

Related Links
Official 2006 Oscars website
TMZ's 2006 Oscar spotlight
Pick the Oscars and win a flat screen TV
Give back your Oscar quiz
AOL's 2006 Oscar spotlight