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Critics organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Critics Choice Association (CCA), formerly the Broadcast Film Critics Association (BFCA) is an association of television, radio and online critics. Their membership includes critics who review film and television. Founded in 1995, it is the largest film critics organization in the United States and Canada.[2] The organization has presented the Critics' Choice Awards, aim to recognize movies (with the Critics' Choice Movie Awards and the Critics' Choice Super Awards), television programs (with the Critics' Choice Real TV Awards, the Critics' Choice Super Awards and the Critics' Choice Television Awards) and documentaries (with the Critics' Choice Documentary Awards) each year since 1995.
Formation | 1995 |
---|---|
Location | |
Membership | 637 (September 2023)[1] |
President | Joey Berlin |
Board of Directors |
|
Affiliations | Broadcast Television Journalists Association (since 2011) |
Website | criticschoice |
Formerly called | Broadcast Film Critics Association |
The association also selects a Film of the Month and recommends other films throughout the year, based on the cumulative grades each film receives in the monthly balloting. Since 2018 the association organized the Celebration of Cinema and Television, a serie of three awards ceremonies to honor African Americans, Latino, Asian Americans and Pacific Islander Americans in film and television industries.
The association was founded by Joey Berlin and Rod Lurie in 1995[3] as the Broadcast Film Critics Association.[4] It had 44 members at the time of its inaugural awards ceremony,[5] which has since grown to 500.[2] In 2019, it merged with the Broadcast Television Journalists Association.[4] The association originally aired the film awards and television awards separately, but these events were combined into a single three-hour event in 2016.[6] The association inaugurated the Critics' Choice Super Awards in 2021,[7] and awarded its first Social Impact Award to Tommie Smith.[8]
When the Golden Globe Awards went on hiatus in 2022, the Critics' Choice Awards took its January 9 airdate.[3] Beginning on November 4, 2022, the Critics' Choice Award has held the Celebration of Asian Pacific Cinema and Television.[9]
The Critics' Choice Awards have a reputation for predicting or influencing the results of the Academy Awards.[10][11] According to the Hollywood Reporter, the winners of the Critics' Choice Awards mirrored the results of the Oscars 73% of the time, and were particularly close in categories such as Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor/Actress and Best Supporting Actor/Actress. The Critics' Choice Award for Best Actress and Academy Award for Best Actress went to the same person every year between 2010 and 2021.[12]
BFCA members are professional entertainment journalists and "working critics whose reviews are broadcast on a regular basis to a wide audience, either on television, on radio, or (in special cases) on the internet." More specific requirements must be met by radio- and internet-based critics:[13]
A portion of the proceeds from the best tables at the Critics' Choice Movie Awards is donated to charities such as the Starlight Children's Foundation and Heifer International.[14]
The Broadcast Television Journalists Association (BTJA) launched in 2011 as an offshoot of the BFCA. The BTJA presented its first awards at a ceremony luncheon at the Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles in June 2011. Cat Deeley hosted the event.[15] On November 17, 2017, the BJTA Executive Committee announced the appointment of Ed Martin, a member of the BJTA since 1990, as its new president, succeeding founder Joey Berlin.[16] Martin also serves as the editor and chief television and content critic of MediaVillage.[17]
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