By Ed Diokno

Not again.

We’ve seen this picture before: All 20 nominees for Oscar acting awards this year are White. The last time we saw this blinding light of White was … well … a year ago.

Last year when the all-White roster of nominees were named Oscars got blasted on Twitter and #OscarsSoWhite went viral for overlooking Selma and Fruitvale and their stars and directors.

Many people – myself, included – thought the Academy of Motion Pictures wouldn’t go through all the embarrassment of an all-White class of nominees again and all the criticism that it generated. Boy, was I wrong!

“Of course I am disappointed, but this is not to take away the greatness (of the nominations),” Cheryl Boone Isaacs, the first Black president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, told Deadline. “This has been a great year in film, it really has across the board. You are never going to know what is going to appear on the sheet of paper until you see it.”

To be clear, a lot of White talent got snubbed too including Steven Spielberg, Jane Fonda, Aaron Sorkin among others.

But I thought for sure that Idris Elba (Beasts of No Nation) was a sure thing to get nominated in the Best Actor category. I hoped that Michael B Jordan (Creed) would join the acting nominees. There were outside chances (but deserving) that Will Smith (Concussion), Jason Mitchell (Straight Outta Compton) or Benicio Del Toro (Sicario) would get nominations. RELATED: Asian Americans earn Oscar nominations in animation entries Through Isaacs’ urging, the Academy increased its membership to include more people of color to perhaps widen the pool of preferences but, apparently, that effort was not enough. It seems the only way an actor or director of color can get an Oscar is in a special honorific category. That’s what happened when director Spike Lee received an honorary Oscar at the Governors Awards. Lee took the occasion to excoriate the industry saying that it was “easier to be president of the United States as a Black man than be the head of a studio.” As he accepted the honor, Lee said, “By the year 2043, White Americans are going to be a minority in this country. And all you people out there in the position of hiring, you better get smart. Because your work force should reflect what this country looks like.” “Everybody in here probably voted for Obama,” he added, “but when I go to offices, I see no Black folks except for the brother man at security.”