But the Oscars, of course, is more than the official broadcast from within the Kodak Theater. The online chatter starts with the red carpet pre-show, making it more accurate to compare the number of tweets during the five hours of the Super Bowl
So even though the Oscars telecast was deemed something of a snoozefest and trying too hard to court millennials, it was a comparable Twitter hit as a bigger spectacle (and fashion's biggest night in the public arena).
As Twitter
While both super-events share audience engagement as the penultimate, the tweet currency for Super Bowl was the advertising, while for the Oscars it was the nominees (and what they wore) that generated the most chatter on Twitter
For Best Supporting Actress winner Melissa Leo, the twitter
The source of the backlash may have been the two ads Leo took out in Variety, before she was nominated, asking voters to "Consider Melissa." And, she chose to wear fur in the ads… which couldn’t have helped.
“The 50-year old actress was initially very vocal about why the ads were made and said that she paid for them herself as a way to fight back against the ageism in Hollywood that keeps 50-year-old women off magazine covers," writes the Los Angeles Times.
Despite the win, Leo’s campaigning tactics may have negatively affected her popularity. She also made Oscar history for the first televised f-bomb in an acceptance speech — bleeped just in time by the censors, but placing her alongside the streaker who interrupted David Niven
In terms of brand winners, Doritos
Social media
Moving the needle takes on a whole new meaning in a world of 140 characters.
Sheila Shayon/brandchannel
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