Jackie Chan wielding panda bear plushies at the 89th Academy Awards. Brad Pitt serving duck face at the 92nd. Anya Taylor-Joyโs otherworldly hair flip just last year. These are some of the most iconic Glambot videos shot by director Cole Walliser, who has been operating E!โs high-speed red carpet camera, a staple of awards season, since 2016.
It was a much different entertainment landscape then, before #MeToo and #AskHerMore, the latter of which Walliser says heโs inoculated from by virtue of the slo-mo clips the Glambot generates. โFor better or worse, it doesnโt allow me to ask more!โ he chuckles from his Venice Beach office six weeks out from this yearโs Emmys, which will be Walliserโs 10th, though he admits heโs ignorant of the nominees. โI try to stay tuned out to whoโs nominated and whoโs coming because I donโt want to get nervous,โ he tells The Envelope.
Walliser, whose rรฉsumรฉ includes music videos for Pink, Katy Perry and Tinashe and commercials for CoverGirl cosmetics, saw early on with Glambot that celebrity culture was poised to break out beyond red carpet telecasts and tabloid magazines: โIf I look forward five years, whatโs the climate going to be?โ he recalls thinking. โIt was very clear that it was going to be more on socials. So I thought, โIf I start now I can be [ahead] of the curve.โโ
Nor is he concerned about the growing presence of influencers in the awards space, whether in the form of now-regular campaign stops like โHot Onesโ and โChicken Shop Dateโ to the red carpet itself. After all, Glambot is the ultimate short-form content, coming in at one second apiece, and helped pave the way for such successors.
โPart of what people gravitate to with the Glambot is the candid [nature of it],โ Walliser says. โThereโs a barrier that is broken down that people seem to enjoy.โ
It took him a few years to arrive at the synergy between slow-motion clips and behind-the-scenes content that gives the Glambot a second life on social media during the six months outside of the awards season churn.
โIt happened organically,โ Walliser says, when he asked his assistant to be prepared to take a photo of him and Chan, whom Walliser grew up watching in Vancouver, if the opportunity arose. Ultimately, โit didnโt feel right, so I didnโt ask for a picture.โ But unknown to Walliser, his assistant had been surreptitiously filming footage of Walliser directing Chan. He asked her to do it a few more times with other big celebrities. โSeeing how it works in real time was kind of interesting, so I cut it together and put it [online].
โIt wasnโt until the 2020 awards season that I really dialed into what the behind-the-scenes content would be,โ he continues. โThen the pandemic hit, so I was at home editing my footage and putting it on socials, and thatโs when it exploded.โ
Now the rise of TikTok and influencers has changed celebritiesโ relationship with social media and the entertainment ecosystem at large. The Glambot remains, but it jostles for red carpet real estate alongside streamers and indeed celebs themselves, revealing their looks on Instagram or filming โGet Ready With Meโ videos for fashion glossies like โVogueโ and โElle.โ
Does Walliser think the Glambot will go the way of โE! Newsโ?
โUntil celebrities are doing their at-home Glambots as good as I am on the red carpet, thereโs still job security!โ he says with a laugh. Still, the collaboration function on Instagram has been a godsend. โThere was a switch when [celebrities] started going, โHow do I get this? I want to post it.โโ
Walliserโs employerโs flagship pop culture program was canceled last month after 32 years on the air, which he calls an โentertainment tragedy.โ But whether exemplified by media companiesโ pivot to video, then back to print, then back to video again, or broadcasting conglomeratesโ mergers and spin-offs, Walliser believes the show, or at least the service it performs, could make a comeback.
โI think at some point weโre going to revalue these information curators that we trust and love because thereโs too much content to do it on our own,โ he says.
In the meantime, Walliser exudes serenity as he warms up for the Emmys before the hectic triple whammy of the Golden Globes, the Grammys and the Academy Awards in the new year: โI donโt have a life until after the Oscars.โ
Until then, heโll be hoping to capture the bold-faced names whoโve so far eluded the Glambot, including Rihanna, Leonardo DiCaprio, Bradley Cooper and Beyoncรฉ. Thereโs always a chance โ Beyโs Christmas Day NFL halftime performance is nominated for four Emmys.
Although Walliser doesnโt know that.