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Jamie Lee Curtis wrote a whole blog post about how offended she was by musical number during the Oscar show, a female EVP at Sony told Business Insider she was "shocked that that's what the
But three weeks after the 85th annual Academy Awards telecast, show producers Neil Meron and Craig Zadan are finally speaking out in defense of Seth MacFarlane and specifically his much-talked about "Boobs" song.
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Zadan added, "It was not about the women that were mentioned, the song was about him being a bad host and him being a juvenile, which was why he was a bad host."
But Zadan and Meron thought MacFarlane was a terrific show host, if not a misunderstood one.
"We were really really proud of Seth MacFarlane, he did an amazing job," Meron told THR. "He did the job that we wanted him to do. Seth is irreverent, he comments on things that happen in our culture, and that's what he did and we thought he did an extraordinary job."
"I spoke to somebody yesterday and they were disappointed that he didn't go further," Zadan added. "So you can't really gauge; somebody thinks it's too much, some people think its just enough... he brought in the youngest demos that the
Meron seconded that point.
"People have complained for years and years that the Oscars were becoming irrelevant. And I think what we did this year is to really make them part of the cultural conversation, and I think that's the important part that people will take away."
Considering this year's Oscar ratings were up 19 percent over last year and watched by 40.3 million people, looks like MacFarlane did something right -- even if it did outraged an entire gender in Hollywood.