Earlier this week, a few high-profile black celebrities, including Spike Lee, Jada Pinkett Smith, and her husband Will, announced a boycott of 2016 Academy Awards in response to a second consecutive year in which only white actors were nominated for top awards.

Their efforts stirred a number of reactions. Other actors such as George Clooney and Lupita Nyong’o echoed their criticism while Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs promised reform. Social media revived its #OscarsSoWhite campaign from last year and at least one member of Congress lent the movement his support.

Perhaps less helpfully, actors Charlotte Rampling, who is nominated for an acting award this year, and Michael Caine, pushed back against the protest, implying that the campaign itself was racist. The New York Post did what the New York Post does best.

On Friday, the Academy finally acted. In the throes of a diversity crisis, it promised to double the ranks of its female and minority members by the year 2020.

“The Academy is going to lead and not wait for the industry to catch up,” Isaacs said in a statement that seemed to imply that the issue had more to do with Hollywood than the body that honors it.