(Provided
by US Weekly)
Seth
Meyers wasted no time bringing up the black-clad elephant in the room
at the 75th annual Golden Globe Awards Sunday night.
“Good
evening ladies and remaining gentlemen,” he began. It was the first
of many jokes that tackled the #MeToo movement directly. “It’s
2018,” Meyers added. “Marijuana is finally allowed and sexual
harassment finally isn't.”
“There’s
a new era underway,” the host continued. “I can tell because it’s
been years since a white man was this nervous in Hollywood.” Meyers
also sent a special message to the “hosts of other upcoming awards
shows” who were watching him “like the first dog they shot into
outer space.”
©
NBC via Getty
“For
the male nominees in the room tonight, this is the first time in
three months it won’t be terrifying to hear your name read out
loud,” Meyers said. “Did you hear about Willem Dafoe? Oh, god,
no! He was nominated!”
From the audience, Dafoe looked on in mock horror.
Addressing
the “elephant not in the room,” Meyers noted that Harvey
Weinstein decided not to show up
to this year’s award show. “Don’t worry, he’ll be back in 20
years when he becomes the first person ever booed during the In
Memoriam segment,” he joked.
Then
he moved on to Kevin Spacey, saying, “I was happy to hear they’re
going to do another season of House
of Cards,”
asking, “Is Christopher Plummer available for that, too? I hope he
can do a Southern accent, because Kevin Spacey sure couldn’t.” As
the crowd groaned, he added, “Oh, is that too mean? To Kevin
Spacey?”
Also
see: The 2018 Golden Globe Awards show (Provided by USA Today)
And
then there was the one aboutThe
Shape of Water,
which got the most nominations this year. “When I first heard about
a film where a naive young woman falls in love with a disgusting sea
monster, I thought, oh man, not another Woody Allen movie.”
As
Meyers has said in recent interviews, he was asked to host this
year’s awards in November, after the Harvey Weinstein bombshell had
broken and the #MeToo
movement
was well underway. He knew exactly what he was walking into and had a
cautionary tale to look at in the form of his late-night TV
competitor James Corden, who was ripped
apart by Rose McGowan and others
for daring to make jokes about sexual-assault at a mid-October gala
in Beverly Hills.
Also
watch: Seth Meyers on his first job as a sandwich delivery guy &
naming his car Le Seth (Provided by GQ)
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to expand
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But
the host of NBC’s Late
Night
has been grappling with these issues on his show for months, learning
on the way how to strike the right tone and use
his righteous comedy to stand up for women.
It doesn’t hurt that his wife Alexi Ashe, a former assistant
district attorney, used to prosecute sexual-assault cases and has
given him advice on how to talk—and not talk—about everything
from harassment to rape.
Meyers
had also said that Donald Trump would be playing far less of a role
on this night than he does
on a nightly basis on his NBC show,
but he couldn’t help but get in a few digs at his favorite target.
At
one point, Meyers noted that he was not the most powerful “Seth”
in the room, pointing out Seth Rogen in the audience. “Hey,
remember when he
was the guy making trouble with North Korea?” he asked.
He
also recalled that time in 2011 when he inadvertently
convinced Donald Trump to run for president
by brutally mocking him at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
In a bit inspired by Pod
Save America’s
Jon Lovett,
who also contributed jokes that night, Meyers looked toward the
night’s Cecil B. Demille honoree Oprah Winfrey and said, “If
that’s true, I just want to say, Oprah, you will never be
president. You do not have what it takes. And Hanks, Where’s Hanks?
You will never be vice president. You are too mean and unrelatable.”
Also
watch: James Franco hosts dinner for male actors nominated for Golden
Globes (Provided by US Weekly)
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to expand
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Meyers
later shared a very special edition of his popular “Jokes Seth
Can’t Tell” segment from Late
Night
featuring punchlines from Jessica Chastain, Billy Eichner, Issa Rae
and others.
The
bit ended with an appearance by Meyers’ old SNL buddy Amy Poehler,
who ribbed him for “mansplaining” the concept to her before
delivering a stand-alone punchline of her own: “Said the peach in
Call
Me by Your Name,
‘This scene is the pits.’”
But
rather than end on that silly note, Meyers turned serious, as he
often does toward the end of his “A Closer Look” segments.
Shouting
out the #TimesUp
movement,
he said, “People in this room worked really hard to get here, but
it’s clear now more than ever before that the women had to work
even harder. So thank you for all the amazing work that you’ve all
done and continue to do. I look forward to you leading us into
whatever comes next.”
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