TIME Oscars 2017

The Oscars Are Sticking With PricewaterhouseCoopers. But No Phones Allowed

US-OSCARS-SHOW
Mark Ralston—AFP—Getty Images 'La La Land' producer Jordan Horowitz (C) speaks while holing an oscar and the winner card before reading the actual Best Picture winner 'Moonlight' onstage during the 89th Oscars on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California

PwC apologized in the aftermath of 2017's "wrong envelope" incident

PricewaterhouseCoopers, the accountancy firm, will still supervise ballot counting at the Oscars, despite the Best Picture mix-up at the 2017 ceremony.

After the mistake was linked to backstage tweeting, accountants will not be able to access their phones backstage, CNBC reports.

The error involved a PwC accountant handing presenter Warren Beatty the wrong envelope, which saw La La Land announced as best picture instead of rightful winner Moonlight.

PwC apologized in the aftermath of the incident and accepted full responsibility.

The firm has supervised the ballots for over 80 years, according to CNBC. PwC retained the responsibility after a presentation of “revised protocols and ambitious controls,” said Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Isaacs added that the Academy has been “unsparing” in their criticism of the firm.

PwC’s Brian Cullinan, who was thought to be tweeting around the time he handed over the wrong envelope, and his colleague Martha Ruiz will not return to work at the Oscars, The New York Times previously reported.

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