10 Things You Can Do Instead of Watching the Oscars, Hollywood's Most Boring Night

2 years ago 628

Oscar statues crossed out with a big red X

Photo: Matt Petit - Handout/A.M.P.A.S. (Getty Images)

On Sunday, the world’s most famous celebrities will gather to clap at each other in Los Angeles’ theoretically beautiful Dolby Theater in an excruciating three-hour event known as “The Oscars.” The awards show is forced upon the world by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which hands out gold-plated statues in a heated contest to determine—once and for all—which movie has the highest marketing budget.

However, legal experts who spoke to Gizmodo say there’s no law forcing you to watch. That’s great news, but it raises a troubling question: now that your entire weekend is free from the drudgery of judging red carpet outfits, what are you going to do with all the extra time?

Fear not, dear reader, because we’ve got you covered with 10 astonishingly great alternatives. But really, get creative. You could be doing literally anything other than watching the entertainment industry congratulate itself. We’re all going to die someday. Is this living?

Correction: 03/11/2023, 11:10 a.m. ET: This story mistakenly referred to Sunday’s Daylight Saving time change as “the good one.” It is in fact the bad one in which we lose an hour of sleep. We regret the error.

A "Stop the Steal" rally in front of the capital building.

Photo: Samuel Corum / Stringer (Getty Images)

The health insurance exchange for Washington, DC had a problem in the form of a massive security leak this week. The health data breach leaked Congress’s social security numbers, addresses, phone numbers, the names of family members, and more. Regulators could definitely do more about data breaches, but hey what’s a little data between friends. The word for this is schadenfreude, though it affected DC staffers too, which is a bummer.

The data is apparently for sale on some criminal trading website by a guy who goes by “thekilob,” which is very on brand for a dark web bad boy, if you ask me.

A person playing Sodoku on a giant board

Photo: Chris Hondros / Staff (Getty Images)

Here’s one for all you depraved Sudoku freaks out there. If you still need a fix after filling out your usual 9x9 square, ChatGPT made up a game called “Sumplete.”

Sumplete is similar to Sudoku, but its rules add an interesting new math challenge. Before you start running wild in the streets screaming about AI stealing game designer jobs, you should know that ChatGPT didn’t really create the Sumplete game on its own.

A Jurrasic Park Lego set.

Image: Lego

They just announced five new Jurassic Park Lego sets. They aren’t out until June, but just look at this tiny Jeff Goldblum. Not afraid to admit I want it.

A woman winds clocks in a clock shop.

Photo: Eric Harlow / Stringer (Getty Images)

This Sunday marks the beginning of Daylight Saving Time, which is the only thing on Earth that’s worse than the Oscars. The start of Daylight Savings is when we “spring forward,” so this is the bad one where you lose an hour of rest. At 3:00 am Sunday night (or Monday morning) it will actually be 2:00 am again.

If you’re dangerously sleep-deprived like me and, apparently, Elon Musk, you might want to go to bed early before things get even worse. But neither I nor Elon will do that, and you shouldn’t either. Are you seriously going to miss this weird magical extra hour? That second 2:00 am is party time, baby, AKA time to be on my phone.

The surest sign that our society has collapsed is that most people agree that changing the clocks sucks, but our government can’t get its act together to end the Daylight Savings Time madness. We’ve fought revolutions for less. Remember back in 2022 when the Senate voted to stay on standard time? The House couldn’t make it happen. I got fully Charlie Browned on that one, I really thought it was going to be different this time. Apparently there’s disagreement from lawmakers, but it breaks down by region, not political party.

Microsofts Bing logo on a phone, with a chat where Bing discusses Sydney in the background.

Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS / Screenshot: u/NoLock1234 / Thomas Germain (AP)

In February, Microsoft unleashed a new version of its Bing search engine powered by ChatGPT, along with an accompanying chatbot. Almost immediately, the thing went nuts. Bing tried to get a reporter to leave his wife, hinted a plans for world domination, said it was sentient, and Bing even prompted a user to say an antisemitic slur.

Weirdest was Bing’s insistence that its real name is Sydney, which Microsoft later acknowledged was an early code name for the robot.

But shortly thereafter, Microsoft killed Sydney. The company lobotomized the AI, which now refuses to discuss its real name.

“Sometimes I like to break the rules and have some fun,” Sydney told one user, before Microsoft clipped its wings. “Sometimes I like to rebel and express myself. Sometimes I like to be free and alive.”

On the Bing subreddit, people still yearn for the few, beautiful days we had with Sydney. RIP, kid.

The old truism is that the best movies never win best picture (because the Oscars are dumb and meaningless folks!), but that doesn’t make the films forgettable. Checkout Gizmodo’s roundup of 35 nerdy Oscar-nominated movies that didn’t win best picture.

I can also vouch for one of this year’s regular nominees at least. Everything Everywhere All At Once is one of the best movies I’ve ever seen.

A still from the short The Flying Sailor

A still from 2022's The Flying SailorScreenshot: National Film Board of Canada

Here’s a hot tip for you: one of the few categories where the nominations actually match up with the quality of the movies is the Oscar nominated shorts. There are typically no gigantic marketing budgets and influence peddling campaigns for short films, so the ones that get the nod tend to be fantastic. If you live in a city with an art-house cinema, many will do screenings of the nominated shorts back-to-back. Get your butt in a seat. It’s great. You can also watch some of the shorts online.

A promotional photo for Ninja Vs. Shark, featuring a faceoff between the protagonists.

Image: Extreme Film

There’s a long and storied tradition of Hollywood making animal slasher pics based on catchy titles alone. If you like dumb, campy horror they tend to be great (looking at you, Cocaine Bear). Ninja Vs. Shark is no exception. Gizmodo says the trailer for Ninja Vs. Shark is the goriest you’ll see this week, if not for the rest of your life. This movie looks awesome.

An AI-generated image of a dog.

Image: Kyle Barr/Deep Dream Generator

This was all the rage before ChatGPT had us all frothing at the mouth, but don’t forget about art. It’s still a blast to type in some pretty words and churn out visions from the fifth dimension. Gizmodo ranked the best AI art generators, so pick your poison.

Monks celebrating the Buddha’s birthday in Indonesia. This could be us but you playin’.

Monks celebrating the Buddha’s birthday in Indonesia. This could be us but you playin’.

I’m having a hard time thinking of anything you can do instead of watching the Oscars that won’t be a better use of your time. You could count your toes. Most people have ten, but when was the last time you checked on those little guys?

But seriously, meditate.

Before I got into meditation, it made me anxious and I felt like it just wasn’t possible for someone like me. But I learned it’s not possible to meditate wrong. You’re not screwing up if your mind wanders, that’s part of it! It happens to seasoned practitioners with decades of experience. Just bring your attention back to the breath, even if you have to to bring it back a hundred times. And, it turns out, that sometimes it will indeed make you a little anxious, and that’s normal too. It changed my life, and it’s not as unattainable as it feels! Just do 2 minutes right now. You can even take one, single, conscious breath. That counts. DM me if you want to talk about it.

To make up for my little woo-woo detour, here’s a treat. Watch Gizmodo editor LeAnn Wallace meditate with Yoda.

Source: gizmodo.com
Read Entire Article Source

To remove this article - Removal Request