By Steve Pond
Voting for the Academy Awards ended Tuesday – which means that at the Oscars, as well as in politics, election day falls on Tuesday.
But why can't what happens next be more like politics?
See photos: Oscars 2015: The Nominees (Photos)
Sure, we've seen lengthy, expensive campaigns run by sought-after professionals, favorites who've flamed out in the primaries (i.e., the guild awards), frontrunners who've missed no opportunity to charm the electorate and even politicians mouthing off about "American Sniper" and "Selma." In that way, the Oscars are a lot like a political race already.
But now, as the polls close and the votes are counted, we get a curtain of silence, and a lot of unanswered questions, several of which I'd like to ask here.
Mind you, I don't really want the Oscars to be more like politics — they're too political already. But it'd be fun to know some of these answers, most of which are only known to a couple of people who work for PricewaterhouseCoopers.