Entertainment
Conan O’Brien mocks Timothée Chalamet and others at Oscars 2026
Conan O’Brien wasted no time getting to the good stuff at the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday, 15 March, delivering a monologue that took well-aimed swipes at some of Hollywood’s most talked-about targets, with Timothée Chalamet’s ballet and opera controversy firmly in his sights.
O’Brien opened with a mock security warning.
“Security is very tight tonight,” he told the Dolby Theatre crowd.
“There’s concerns about attacks from the ballet and opera communities.” He then turned directly to Chalamet with a deadpan kicker: “They’re just mad you left out jazz.”
It was one of the sharpest lines of the night, landing cleanly given how extensively Chalamet’s February remarks had been dissected across the industry in the weeks leading up to the ceremony.
O’Brien also took a swing at the increasingly tense relationship between Hollywood and politics, warning the room that things could get uncomfortable. His solution?
“There’s an alternate Oscars being hosted by Kid Rock. It’s at the Dave & Buster’s down the street.”
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos didn’t escape wounded either.
O’Brien played up the irony of a streaming executive sitting in a cinema, riffing on what Sarandos might be thinking as he watched an audience enjoy a film together.
“Why are they all together enjoying themselves? They should be home alone, where I can monetise it,” O’Brien said, doing his best Sarandos impression.
The monologue followed a pre-taped cold open in which O’Brien appeared in full make-up as Amy Madigan’s character Aunt Gladys from Weapons, crashing scenes from this year’s Best Picture nominees while being pursued by the horror film’s killer children.
The sequence ended with a stuntman being chased live into the Dolby Theatre itself, at which point O’Brien emerged from the chaos in a tuxedo, composed as ever.
It was his second time hosting the Oscars, having taken on the role for the first time just last year, and by the looks of it, he’s settling in comfortably.
Entertainment
Oscars winners list for 2026: Live updates
What to know about the 2026 Oscars
- “Sinners” is looking to make history, coming into the night with 16 nominations. It’s the most nominations for a single film ever, with the Ryan Coogler-helmed vampire spectacle earning nods for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and a nomination for the newly created Best Casting award.
- “One Battle After Another” earned the second most nominations, 13, and is going up against “Sinners” in big categories like Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress and Best Director.
- Best Casting is the first new category in a quarter century, after the Academy added Best Animated Feature to the ceremony in 2001.
- Former late-night TV staple Conan O’Brien returns to host the show for a second year in a row. Matt Berry of “The IT Crowd” and “What We Do in the Shadows” fame will handle announcing duties.
- The Oscars are taking place at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles and are airing live on ABC and streaming on Hulu.
See the full list of winners and nominees in each category below as they are announced.
Entertainment
A tribute to documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman
A few weeks ago, we lost a giant in the world of filmmaking. Celebrated documentarian Frederick Wiseman died February 16 at age 96, leaving behind a truly extraordinary body of work. David Pogue spoke with Wiseman last year about his life and legacy:
A Frederick Wiseman documentary doesn’t have a film score. There’s no narration. No text identifying the people or places. No re-enactments. Not even interviews! They often depict meetings, phone calls, and conversations. And these movies are up to six hours long.
Not the ingredients you might expect for masterpieces. At a retrospective last year at New York’s Film at Lincoln Center, one moviegoer, Ainsley, characterized the appeal of Wiseman’s films this way: “He got out of the way and just let things happen as they are.”
In 2016, Wiseman was awarded an honorary Oscar. In accepting his honor, he said, “It’s as important to document kindness, civility, and generosity of spirit as it is to show cruelty, banality, and indifference.”
Wiseman told us last year he didn’t like the term “documentaries” very much: “No. I like ‘movies’ better. It’s simpler. Maybe because when I grew up, documentaries were supposed to be good for you. And I thought what used to be called a documentary could be as funny, as sad, as tragic as a fiction film.”
In his 96 years, he made 44 documentaries without ever telling you who’s speaking, what you’re seeing, or how to feel about it. “You have to answer it yourself,” he said. “My job as an editor is to provide you with enough information in the context of the film so that you’re stimulated to pose that question, and you can answer it yourself.”
Wiseman grew up in Boston, and went to Williams College and Yale Law School. Then in 1966, he filmed an inside look at a state prison for the criminally insane. He called his movie “Titicut Follies.” It caused a sensation — and changed his life.
He filmed prisoners – some half naked – and guards being pretty abusive. And no one told Wiseman to turn off the cameras. “No,” he said. “Once they gave me permission, I had access to everything.”
But “Titicut Follies” was so shocking, and politically embarrassing, that a Massachusetts court banned it.
Years passed. “And then in the mid-’80s, I saw an article that said, ‘Titicut Follies Judge Dead.’ I don’t say that I was displeased with that news!” Wiseman laughed. “I brought a new action in front of a new judge. And ultimately it was cleared.”
Wiseman’s movies go behind the scenes of institutions: a high school, a hospital, a police department, a welfare office, a domestic-abuse shelter. Four of his early films Wiseman described as some of the most depressing films ever made. “There are aspects of some of the early movies that are depressing,” he said. “There are also aspects that are extremely funny, in my view. I mean, if you have a sick sense of humor!”
Zipporah Films
For all his movies, Wiseman served as his own soundman. He also did no research before filming. “Shooting the movie is all chance,” he said. “You never know what people are gonna say and do, which is one of the reasons I have to shoot a lot of film. And for most of films it’s 100-150 hours.”
Does the presence of a film crew subtly affect the way people behave? “Well, that’s the eternal question,” he said. “I don’t think people are good enough actors to suddenly change their behavior.”
After shooting those 150 hours of footage, Wiseman would spend eight to ten months alone in the editing room where, as he freely admitted, he shaped the story. “The notion that these movies are ‘The Truth’ is completely phony,” he said. “It’s one person’s version. It’s my version of a welfare center. Somebody else spending any time in a welfare center would make a completely different movie.”
Zipporah Films
Over the years, Wiseman was occasionally asked to make a trim or two, and he always refused. He said, “It may be pretentious of me, but I think when I find a form for the material, that’s the movie. They’re not isolated sequences.”
In 1971, “60 Minutes” wanted to air his film “Basic Training” – if he’d cut out 30 minutes to fit the time slot. “And I said no, because it wouldn’t be the same movie,” he said. “So, it wasn’t shown.”
What does he think his reputation is with these people? “I hope they’d say, ‘He’s a very nice guy, but he protects his movies,'” Wiseman said.
Wiseman’s movies were never what you’d call theatrical blockbusters. They might play in 60 ot 70 theaters. But they did play on television. “PBS has shown everything,” he said. “PBS has helped me in every single film I made.”
But did they ever say, “Come on, Fred, six hours is too long for this one”? “Well, they said it once or twice, but I said, ‘No.’ And I won!” Wiseman said.
Over the decades, his movies seemed to become more optimistic. For example, his 2020 movie “City Hall” showed how hard the staff of Boston’s mayor worked to improve city life. But Wiseman wouldn’t admit to any kind of shift – no trendline from darker to brighter. “It’s totally random,” he said. “When I’m looking for subjects, you know, it’s a question of what interests me at the moment.”
His last movie, “Menus-Plaisirs – Les Troisgros,” about a fine-dining restaurant in the French countryside, came out in 2023. You can watch all of his movies, for free, on Kanopy.com; you just need a library card.
Meanwhile, they still teach Wiseman in film schools; they still put on Wiseman festivals; and when we visited his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his shelves were lined with awards.
“I mean, I obviously like the fact that the films were recognized, and that I get awards, or critics write intelligent reviews,” he said. “But the satisfaction is not that; the satisfaction is the work. I love working. And I love making movies. And I never get tired of sitting in front of the editing machine.”
For more info:
Story produced by Robert Marston. Editor: Emanuele Secci.
Entertainment
King Charles and Camilla congratulate Team GB on Winter Paralympic triumphs
King Charles and Queen Camilla sent a heartfelt message congratulating Team GB and athletes across the Commonwealth after the Winter Paralympic Games wrapped up in Milano Cortina, Italy.
Sharing the note on Instagram this Sunday, His Majesty praised the incredible achievements of medal-winners from Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
“As the Winter Paralympic Games come to a close, my wife and I send our most heartfelt congratulations to all the medal-winners,” the King wrote.
He praised the athletes’ extraordinary determination, commitment, and the tireless dedication of their support teams.
The message also recognised all participants from across the Commonwealth, many of whom competed despite facing significant personal challenges.
Duchess Sophie was on the ground supporting the athletes alongside her husband, Prince Edward, Patron of the British Paralympic Association.
A dedicated supporter of Team GB and ParalympicsGB, the Duchess frequently attends major sporting events to encourage British competitors.
Princess Anne also sent her best wishes to the team, reinforcing that royal backing for British Paralympians runs deep across the family.
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