HOLLYWOOD, CA — In groundbreaking news that has sent shockwaves through the celebrity community, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced today that all actors, directors, and public figures seeking red carpet appearances must now submit to a comprehensive reality authentication review by the newly established Department of Authenticity and Realness Compliance (DARC).
“This is about protecting the public from illusionary harm,” explained DARC spokesperson Agent Marcus Winkleworth, a man who wears six different suits depending on which camera angle he’s facing. “A celebrity’s smile must be verified as organic before they can be photographed. Their tears must be documented as genuine emotional expression, not contact lens residue.”
LOS ANGELES — In what experts are calling “the first major digital censorship scandal of 2026,” Hollywood’s A-listers are discovering they may not control their own social media presence anymore.
The controversy erupted earlier this week when actor Liam Cunningham was forced to delete a 30-second clip of himself on vacation after his social media manager flagged it as “excessively joyful” and in violation of “brand-appropriate emotional range.” Cunningham, who recently signed a multi-picture deal with A24, reportedly suffered a mild emotional breakdown before agreeing to the company’s demands.
LOS ANGELES — In a move that has sent shockwaves through Hollywood’s carefully curated image empire, the newly minted Federal Department of Celebrity Lifestyle Compliance (FDCLC) opened its offices Tuesday with a 47-page application package that Hollywood’s biggest names are now required to submit before their next paparazzi encounter.
The bureau, housed in a converted mansion in Bel Air, immediately began processing complaints against A-listers from the opening day. Jennifer Lopez was cited for “Unauthorized use of excessive hydration during public appearances” when she was photographed holding a water bottle with more than 287mg of electrolytes. Kim Kardashian was denied a media pass for “Improper positioning of body during paparazzi flash photography” according to new Section 304 of the Celebrity Image Protection Act.
LOS ANGELES — They called it a fluke. A stroke of viral luck. Then came the inevitable: it was time to sign the contract.
For the first time in internet history, a golden retriever filed a formal legal complaint against his owner for “excessive social media engagement mandates,” claiming the 12 TikTok videos per day requirement violated his “Right to Be a Dog in His Own Home.” The lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court by Mr. Barnaby Whiskers, a 4-year-old mixed-breed whose owner is none other than A-list producer J.K. “The Vlogger” Reynolds.
LOS ANGELES — Production on the highly anticipated final season of “Paw & Order” has ground to a halt as cast members—specifically, the canine cast—refuse to film without filing mandatory “Loyal Service Declarations.”
The impasse began when Biscuit, a Golden Retriever and longtime fixture on the show, lodged a formal complaint alleging “systemic biscuit inequity” under the direction of host and celebrity trainer Brenda Miller. In a sworn affidavit, Biscuit claimed, “I’ve leaped through flaming hoops for three seasons, but the biscuit ration is clearly below the collective bargaining agreement threshold.”
Coachella organizers announced today that rapper Post Malone has been “vibe-restricted” from performing at this year’s California music festival, following complaints from the Desert Cultural Preservation Council (DCPC) regarding his “overwhelmingly specific energy signature.”
“His guitar tone is simply too emotionally resonant for a family-friendly desert festival environment,” said festival curator Sarah Jenkins, a woman who reportedly cried for 47 minutes straight during rehearsal last Tuesday. “When a performer brings that much personal history to the stage, it disrupts the delicate ecosystem of passive audience absorption we’ve cultivated over the past decade.”
NEW YORK — In an industry-mind-boggling twist, The Devil Wears Prada 2 has become the first major studio release to require its lead actress to sign a “Digital Style Compliance Waiver” before accepting her role, sources say.
According to insiders, Andy Sachs (or rather, the actress portraying her) was told during her audition that “your current aesthetic violates the digital-age female empowerment mandate currently in place in fashion-forward Hollywood.”
“We had to rebrand her entire wardrobe to reflect social media consciousness,” explained a senior fashion compliance officer who declined to be named. “The new rules state that all fashion protagonists must wear neutral-toned garments that do not ’trigger algorithmic discomfort’ in streaming platform viewers.”
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has introduced a new bureaucracy to combat what they’re calling “authenticity inflation” among Hollywood winners. Starting next awards season, all nominees must file a detailed “Narrative Authenticity Compliance Form” (NACF) before they’re eligible to accept their trophies — a form that requires them to swear their childhood was not an elaborate fabrication designed to manufacture emotional resonance.
“It’s about grounding our winners in genuine human experience,” said Academy VP Brenda Whistler, speaking in a press release that was itself subject to authenticity review. “We’ve seen too many people claiming emotional devastation in interviews who are clearly just monetizing tragedy. We need a system to ensure when someone says ‘my mother died when I was eight,’ they actually mean it.”
HOLLYWOOD, April 30, 2026 — In a stunning new development that has the industry in shock, streaming platforms have begun requiring A-list talent to sign “Viewership Waivers” before wearing certain colors on red carpets, effectively turning fashion choices into legally-binding contracts. The “Color Compliance Program,” according to a press release from Netflix’s newly formed “Audience Resonance Division,” now mandates that every hue worn at high-profile premieres must be pre-approved to ensure it aligns with predicted viewer engagement metrics.