- Seth MacFarlane is given a poor review for execution of his Oscars duties
- Excellence starts with leadership, inspiration and motivation
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Seth MacFarlane was host of The Oscars ceremony last month. His performance was controversial and highly criticized. Some successful moments involved the family Von Trapp and some swoon-worthy crooning on MacFarlane’s part, but these moments were not enough to balance out the offensive weight jokes, race jokes, sexist jokes, religion jokes and a bad Lincoln assassination joke. The only apologetic moment was MacFarlane’s jab and subsequent booze-toss-apology to George Clooney.
Between his stints as Roast Master of three Comedy Central Roasts and his own Sunday night empire of animated comedy series, should anyone be surprised at MacFarlane’s presentation during The Oscars telecast? I think Mike Ryan, of the Huffington Post, wrote it best: “Yes, it’s no secret that MacFarlane likes to go this route, but with the entire world watching, this may have been the night that MacFarlane should have thought to himself, I’m going to try harder.”
“Try harder.” This phrase has never meant more to me than as the parent of a precocious 15-month old boy. Encouraging chants such as “You can do it!” and “You’ve almost got it!” are commonplace in my home, often followed by “Great job!” or “Do it again!” This motivation keeps him going. Without it, I would have a passive toddler who is uninterested in exploring new experiences or ideas. He certainly would not be achieving any new milestones.
Proper motivation may have been the missing element for MacFarlane and the 10 other credited writers of The Oscars. MacFarlane has a juvenile, biting style of humor and that is likely a key reason the producers of The Oscars hired him; in the end, they stated they were happy with MacFarlane’s performance and the outcome. However, to have achieved higher accolades and had more reason to celebrate (with less criticism), perhaps they should have followed this philosophy to better inspire and lead their writers:
“If you want to build a ship, don’t drum up people together to collect wood and don’t assign them tasks and work, but rather teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea.” (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry).