Golden Globes center on politics, social issues this year

Al Roker, Sheinelle Jones, Natalie Morales and Carson Daly attend the 75th annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel. Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

Credit: Getty Images

Credit: Getty Images

Al Roker, Sheinelle Jones, Natalie Morales and Carson Daly attend the 75th annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel. Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

The Golden Globe Awards, often a night of silliness running up to the Oscars, took on a much darker tone this year, both literally and figuratively.

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"Good evening, ladies and remaining gentlemen," began host Seth Meyers, addressing a ballroom full of entertainers wearing black in a show of solidarity stemming from the sexual assault scandal rocking Hollywood for months now. "It's 2018. Marijuana's finally allowed and sexual harassment isn't."

Meyers' monologue rarely strayed from social awareness and political commentary, and the intersection of serious and satire was sometimes cringe-inducing.

"For the male nominees, this will be the first time in months it won't be terrifying to hear your name read out loud," he said in an attempt to add levity. A "Get Out" joke later fell pretty flat.

Remarks from presenters and award winners and posts tweeted ahead of time underscored the more serious nature of this year's ceremony.

"This character I played represents something that's at the center of our conversation: abuse," actress Nicole Kidman after claiming best actress/limited series honors for "Big Little Lies." "I do believe and hope that we can elicit change."

Mariah Carey, among those conferring honors, expressed thoughts on Twitter before the show started:

During his opener Meyers was if nothing else self-effacing and self-aware.

"I'm a man with absolutely no power in Hollywood. I'm not even the most powerful Seth in the room tonight," he said, pointing to Seth Rogen and pivoting to politics. "Hey, remember when he was the guy making trouble in North Korea?"

That set up a joke about the "Hollywood Foreign Press" Association combined President Donald Trump's three least favorite words, other than "Hillary, Mexico and salad."

Meyers didn't shy from the origin of the #MeToo movement.

"Harvey Weinstein isn't here tonight. I've heard rumors he's crazy and difficult to work with," he said of the disgraced mogul whose career collapse preceded a number of other prominent denouements.

"I hear they're doing another series of 'House of Cards.' Is Christopher Plummer available for that, too?" he said, a reference to Plummer stepping in at the last moment to play J. Paul Getty in "All the Money in the World." Kevin Spacey was supposed to play the role but was fired from that project and the Netflix series amid a series of abuse allegations.

"I sure hope (Plummer) can do a Southern accent," Meyers said. "Kevin Spacey sure couldn't."

Meyers' monologue felt shorter than some of his predecessors' and far more somber. He concluded by acknowledging viewers might see the ballroom full of wealthy, beautiful stars professing allegiance to social justice from a cosseted, lofty perch.

"Everyone in this room knows Hollywood is so much more than that," he said, noting that most people on film sets work unglamorous jobs and got there by virtue of hard work, not powerful connections. "Those people aren't there thanks to their rich dad."