Here are all the moments you didn't see on TV
Oscars 2026: Here are all the moments you didn't see on TV 56 minutes ago Nardine Saadat the 98th Academy Awards in Hollywood It's Hollywood's biggest night.
The 98th Academy Awards featured emotional speeches, comical relief and a bevy of backstage fun.
While movie magic plays a role in the show itself (the ceremony, after all, is actually hosted at the Dolby Theatre in a shopping centre), there is a lot you don't see on TV. Frankenstein production designer addressed the media with his Oscar statuette in one hand and what appeared to be a beer in the other and Mr Nobody Against Putin filmmaker Pasha Talankin re-lived his Oscars win by re-reading the envelope that announced that his movie won the award for documentary feature film. We saw some of the tightest security in recent years and witnessed the frenzied panic after one Oscar award became two when those vying for best short action film was announced as a historic tie. Here's what it's like on the scene during Hollywood's biggest night and everything you did not see on TV. Security was very tight this year Authorities in Los Angeles enhanced this year's security due to the US and Israel's war in Iran. Preparations included layered security perimeters, traffic management plans, and a highly visible police presence throughout the Hollywood area.
I saw that security presence first-hand on my way into the Loews Hotel, where media covering the event are stationed. It's just across the street from the Dolby Theatre.
The whole setup evokes a bit of movie magic, with large curtains covering the local shops and eateries to make way for the red carpet and a path to enter the Dolby features tall poles that include the name of each best picture winner from years past.
In the winners room here at the Oscars, the Academy brings in librarians to help fact check details from the night. And several reporters made a beeline to the corner of the ballroom - notebooks and pens in hand - to turn to those experts to confirm when the last time two films had tied for Oscars and how many times it had happened in Academy Awards history.
A special note from Conan Oscars host Conan O'Brien left a hand-written message under the seats inside the Dolby Theatre, to welcome nominees, their plus ones or seat fillers to the Oscars.
"These snacks may not look like much but in any movie theater they would run you $85," the note says.
When asked by the BBC if the note was real, an Academy spokeswoman told me: "It's real and it's under every seat. " Alas, it was not provided to those of us in the interview room, but the Loews did provide dinner and snacks for us throughout the night. KPop Demon Hunters stars finish their speech backstage after being cut off The Oscars are fairly famous for cutting off speeches when they go too long and that happened tonight - for a historic win.
But during their speech, they were cut off, so backstage, they got to share more of their thoughts you didn't hear on TV, including thanking their families, singers Audry Nuna and Rei Ami, IDO members and Teddy Park for this "incredible honour". Golden songwriter Mark Sonnenblick, who didn't get to speak at all during the ceremony, happily took the microphone and thanked his husband and everybody who worked on the movie, especially the animators.
"It was a real collaboration across the board.
It's a movie where part of the movie is about looking at someone that you have been taught to hate and to fear and starting to trust them, maybe even love them. And that's part of what the movie is about. He adds: "It's not 'I'm going up up up. ' It's, 'we're going up up up. And that's part of the reason that we're on stage right now. " Also backstage, film-maker director Maggie Kang doubled down on her remarks during her acceptance speech at the ceremony, saying she's "just so proud of Korean film and movies about Korea". "It just feels like we have both trophies, and I just feel immensely proud. And really, to be honest, I didn't want to disappoint Korea. " Sinners cinematographer missed something in her historic speech Sinners cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw said she missed an important point during her speech when she became the first woman to win the award in Oscars history. "A lot of little girls that look like me will sleep really well tonight because they want to become cinematographers," she said.
"Moments like this don't happen without women kind of standing up for you and advocating for you. I know that this happened because of that, so I want to say thank you".
But we know how long stuff takes. We know what this business is like, and nothing's real till it is," she says.
"But if it worked out that would be great, because I trust Zach, and he's got a lot of wacky ideas
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