Anyone who has watched television over the past 50 years will be familiar with the work of comedy writer Bruce Vilanch, who appeared on and co-wrote Hollywood Squares for four years. The infamous Star Wars Holiday Special.
One of Vilanci’s greatest contributions to the world of pop culture is writing for the Academy Awards. After all, where would the Oscars be without the one-liners and upbeat musical numbers about Titanic and Good Will Hunting?

Vilanci began writing for the Oscars all the way back in 1989, eventually serving as the show’s head writer from 2000 to 2014. That means his Oscar career began and ended with an infamously disastrous television broadcast.
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As you may recall, at the ’89 Oscars, Rob Lowe and the actress dressed as Snow White obliterated the legacy of Creedence Clearwater Revival, and perhaps the medium of music in general.
Meanwhile, in 2014, hosting duties fell to Anne Hathaway and James Franco, and it was revealed that peanut butter and chocolate were the cause of the ceremony’s awkwardness. Hathaway clearly tried her best, but Franco acted as if telling goofy jokes in a tuxedo was part of some kind of court-ordered community service.

Vilanch recently guest-starred on WTF with Marc MaronAnd revealed a little more about what exactly went wrong that fateful night. He claimed that the 2014 Oscars were the biggest “disaster” ever. When Maron pointed out that Franco seemed “reluctant, reluctant” to do the show, Vilanci largely agreed, but didn’t get angry. “He wasn’t playing with her because she’s a precision machine,” Bilanchi explained. “And he’s apologized to me a million times since then.”
According to Vilanci, Franco had been nominated for Best Actor that year for “127 Hours,” and knew he would lose to lead actor Colin Firth, so when he was offered the role of host, He said he accepted the job. King George stutters (from The King’s Speech). ”
That’s what Franco thought. “Should I sit in the audience and wait to lose, or do I want to do something else?” Bilanch admitted that it was a “mistake” for the actor to later take on the hosting job, because it was “ “It wasn’t my comfort zone,” he said.
So does this mean that James Franco was so worried about being miserable during the Oscars that he decided to make sure everyone watching the ceremony was miserable too?
Bilanch further explained that many celebrities turn down hosting jobs. Because it’s a shitty paycheckBut he added that because “if you’re famous enough and rich enough, you don’t need to host that show,” and if a host does a bad job, “that stink will stay forever.” Ta.
In Franco’s case, the stench was Overwhelmed by other, even worse, odors.