For Your Consideration: Marketing TV/Movies At Awards Time

see also LoF Marketing; Motion Pictures; Advertising
THANKS to School Library Journal for recommending this site.
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Some early OSCAR contenders for BEST PICTURE

 

NEW  Characteristics of a FYC Promo Ad

This web page is divided into four sections:

1. Background/resources on the use of “For Your Consideration” in advertising
2. Database with links to TV/film studios awards web sites
3. Database of award nomination dates, ceremony dates and broadcast partners
4. Links to news sources about film/TV awards

For Your Consideration is a heading frequently used in advertisements in entertainment trade publications such as Variety and The Hollywood Reporter. They are specifically directed towards members of groups in the entertainment industry, most commonly the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which annually presents the Academy Awards celebrating the best in motion pictures, (or the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which previously sponsored the Golden Globes) or the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences which presents the Primetime Emmy Awards for television. Source: Wikipedia (note: hyperlinks added by media educator Frank Baker)

In the fall of 2016, Lionsgate broke with tradition choosing to use the phrase “Consider This” in ads for its films. Other film studios have subsequently used the word “consider.”

NEW: Read/Study/Analyze Previous FYC Studio Ads Here

Each year, the major movie studios, and to a lesser extent their affiliated television studies and the television networks, spend large sums of money on “For Your Consideration” ads extolling the alleged virtues of their films or programs released over the previous year. While it is unclear where or when the practice originated, it appears to have been popularized by Miramax, which rose from relative obscurity during the 1990s to become one of the most prestigious studios, at least of that decade.

Not surprisingly, then, the quantity of such ads has increased dramatically, as major firms vie to win the top awards, hoping that the associated publicity will result in more viewers and greater revenues. In deed, most of the films expected to be “Oscar-worthy” are released in the last few months of the year, occasionally opening in limited release just before the end of the year and opening wide in January. This generally ensures that these films are still in movie theatres as awards-related publicity peaks…

As might be expected, these ads have recently begun appearing online at websites popular with voting members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. Movie buffs are now archiving and tagging these online Oscar ads so they’ll be available for future study and commentary.  Source

NEW:   Download Oscar contending screenplays here

Questions for students to consider:
– what does the phrase “for your consideration” mean?
– who is the audience for these ads and what are they asked to do?
– in what ways are these ads “persuasive”?
– what information is quintessential in ads promoting TV shows/films?

– what codes/conventions/techniques does each contain?
– what is the purpose of film/TV critic quotes?
– what is the same; what is different about each ad?
– why are some ads featured on the cover of a magazine?

who designs the ads; who pays for them?
– consider the layout of the ad: what attracts attention most?
– how is mood and/or genre communicated?
– how might expression, body language or other non-verbal language communicate what is happening?

Related lesson plans:
Analyzing Oscar: Deconstructing the Academy Awards |
Deconstructing Movie Ads (pg 53)

Studios ‘For Your Consideration’ Websites (all under construction- new material added regularly)

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2024-2025 Movie Nomination/Award Dates/Broadcast Partners (updated)

Craft/Guild Awards

Guild/Craft Nominations
Announced
Winners Announced/
Broadcast/Stream
Annie (Animation) December 20, 2024 February 8, 2025
Screen Actors Guild January 8, 2025 February 23, 2025/ NETFLIX
Art Directors Guild January 9, 2025 February 15, 2025
WGA (Writers) January 9, 2025 February 15, 2025
Producers Guild (PGA) Documentaries December 10
Sports, Children December 13
Theatrical Animated Jan 13
February 8, 2025
Casting Society of America (Artios) December 16 February 12, 2025
Makeup Artists/Hair Stylists December 10 February 15, 2025
American Society of Cinematographers January 9, 2025 February 23, 2025
American Cinema Editors (ACE)
Eddie Award (Audio)
December 11, January 18, 2025
Costume Designers Guild December 13 February 6, 2025
Directors Guild (DGA) January 9, 2025 February 8, 2025
VES (Visual Effects) January 14, 2025 February 11, 2025
Motion Picture Sound Editors 
(Golden Reels)
January 6, 2025 February 23, 2025
Set Decorators Society of America January 3, 2025 February 5, 2025
Guild of Music Supervisors  January 15, 2025 February 23, 2025
Cinema Audio Society January 7, 2025 February 22, 2025

 

Major Awards

Award Nominations Announced Winners Announced Broadcast/
Stream
Hollywood Film Awards
Gotham Awards
Golden Globes December 9 January 5, 2025 CBS/
Paramount+
BAFTA February 16, 2025 Britbox US
Cinema Eye
Film Independent Spirit February 22, 2025 IMDb’s YouTube  including Film Independent’s YouTube channel
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences (Oscars) January 17 2025 March 2, 2025 ABC

 

 

 

NEW: A Look At What Might Be The Most Expensive Emmy Campaign Season Ever 
Teaching With The Emmy Awards: A Media Literacy Opportunity
Chasing Emmy– a new weekly podcast from Entertainment Weekly magazine
Updated: See the ads for Emmy nominations  shows/people here

 Special Emmy TV Websites
(many of these websites are only active during award voting season)​

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includes BET, CBS,  Comedy, MTV, Paramount , Showtime, Smithsonian, VH1

 

Emmy/Oscar News Sources:

Image result for awardscircuit.com logoAwardsCircuit.com b&cpngBroadcasting
& Cable

Awardsline

Emmy Magazine
 
Entertainment Weekly Image result for hollywood reporter magazine logoHollywood Reporter
Emmy News Image result for LA TIMES logoThe Envelope Image result for NY times logoAwards Season Image result for variety magazine logoVariety
TheWrap

 


Ads: designed for analysis and deconstruction

Movie posters are a prime example of visual communication. Movie posters, as well as the promos, have to be visually appealing otherwise they aren’t going to sell any tickets. Posters have to use an image to get the gist of an entire two hour movie. (Source)


 Useful links:
There is a reason why Hollywood movies campaign to be nominated for awards
For Your Consideration: Increasingly Lavish Emmy Campaigns
Emmy Campaigns Get Out of Hand
Film ads try to sway Oscar Voters
For Your Consideration:  How Data Analysis Was Used in the 2015 Oscar Race

See this website for a full list of “FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION” ads
Checklist of analyzing print ads
Deconstructing print ads
Movie marketing blog
Checklist for reading any ad 
Analyzing ads (& commercials)
Marketing Movies (book/website)
Advertising 101 (critique sheet)  

ANALYZING MEDIA: Movie Posters 
Ad
-wise, the Oscars in this digital age
ABC Made $72 Million on 26 Minutes of Oscar Ads