Academy Now Requires Stars to Submit 'Narrative Authenticity Compliance Forms' Before Accepting Trophies; First Nominee Reports Being Asked 'Did Your Mother Love You or Were You Just Acting When You Said It Didn't?'
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.”