It's a lesson many have Kelly the Coed 1 (1999)to learn the hard way: Don't tweet.
The Wall Street Journalon Monday reported that Pricewaterhousecoopers U.S. board chair Brian Cullinan was the one who handed the wrong envelope to Warren Beatty. Turns out he did so right after tweeting a photo of Emma Stone.
That tweet -- and several other photos Cullinan tweeted that night -- has been deleted.
SEE ALSO: The dramatic Oscars mishap also happened in 1964It seems that the chair of Pricewaterhousecoopers -- which has had this Academy Awards gig for more than 80 years now -- handed presenter Warren Beatty the wrong envelope, after snapping a pic of Stone.
On one side of the stage was Brian Cullinan himself, and on the other, was his colleague Martha L. Ruiz, now participating in her third Academy Awards.
As we now know, sealed inside Beatty's envelope was the duplicate card featuring Emma Stone's name, who had accepted the Best Actress award just moments before. Beatty got visibly flustered and deferred to co-presenter Faye Dunaway, who saw the words "La La Land" on the card and blurted it out.
The confusion that ensued included Beatty's on-stage explanation, Stone's backstage questioning of that explanation and, finally, a late-night statement from Pricewaterhousecoopers ultimately claiming responsibility.
ABC/Disney, which distributed the PwC mea culpa statement, did not immediately respond to requests for clarity. Neither did a PwC rep immediately return calls and emails.
Now we have a since-deleted tweet thickening the plot of an already very wild Oscars story.
The truth is out there.
Topics Oscars
Previous:And We Have A Winner! by Sadie Stein
Next:Guilt by Association
The Fabulous Forgotten Life of Vita SackvilleA Collision with the Divine by Helen MacdonaldiPhone that fell 16,000 feet from Alaska Airlines plane found intactStaff Picks: Mingus, Monologues, and Memes by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Mingus, Monologues, and Memes by The Paris ReviewAI companionship is one of the top 5 trends of CES 2024: Are we that lonely?'The Sopranos' TikTok account is pumping out 25iPhone that fell 16,000 feet from Alaska Airlines plane found intactTokyo Reeks of Gasoline by Yi SangCES 2024: Razer and Lexus made a gamer carLost Libraries by Rosa LysterLadies of the Good Dead by Aisha Sabatini SloanWe Tell Ourselves Stories in Order to Die by Jessi Jezewska StevensThe Reality of Color by The Paris ReviewTesla's refreshed Model 3 is now available in the U.S.Losing Smell by Shruti SwamyYouTube first aid searches will now show verified medical tutorialsI See the World by Jamaica KincaidFuck the Bread. The Bread Is Over. by Sabrina Orah MarkRedux: A Little Bedtime Story by The Paris Review Tesla is so sure its cars are safe that it now offers insurance for life Witches plan to cast a spell on Trump, but they'll have some spiritual opposition The Apollo 11 exhibit is the next big national tour you need to catch This NBA trade marks the end of basketball's best pre Grandma sends pics to her granddaughter every day and we're not crying, you're crying The Weird World of AI Hallucinations Sony's new SF Finally, there's a Mike Tyson iPhone emoji for every situation Girl Scouts around the world pen powerful letters about hopes for a better world Fugitive pig almost got away with it Earth discovers its friendly new neighbors in this Google doodle Google pledges $11.5 million to racial justice innovators across the U.S. 'EVE Online' players can use the game's virtual universe to identify real This is how a huge conglomerate thinks millennials want to live Brits told to eat 10 fruit and veg a day, Twitter goes into utter meltdown You'll have to wait to play old Nintendo games on your Switch Google goes after Uber in court over self Amazon refuses to turn over Alexa data in Arkansas murder trial Here are all the 'Stranger Things 2' tidbits for you to obsess over until fall Blind: the app where Uber employees are gossiping right now
2.4292s , 10116.6640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Kelly the Coed 1 (1999)】,Pursuit Information Network