You never know what might happen when the movie’s biggest stars convene for theOscars. The Academy Awards are a ceremony to celebrate and honor the year’s best films. The ceremonies where the favorites dominate and the host remains PG are uninspiring. The ceremonies with major upsets, celebrity gossip, and memorable performances are the ones that live forever.

Remember: It’s a TV show. The more drama, the better the ceremony. Let’s revisit seven of the most iconic Oscar moments of the last 10 years.

2017: Moonlight beats La La Land for Best Picture

If you’re on the Academy Awards stage and start a speech with “This is not a joke,” many people will naturally think it’s a gag. Thankfully,La La Landproducer Jordan Horowitz held up the winning card and proclaimed, “Moonlight,Best Picture.” Poor Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. The duo was being honored for 50 years ofBonnie and Clydeat the2017 Academy Awards. Yet they’ll forever be associated with the Best Picture error.

How can you not feel for everyone involved inLa La Land?Dunaway says “La La Land,” and it’s a rush to the stage to hold the Oscar statuette. Within minutes, it’s all taken away. Every creative who worked onLa La Landprobably has a grudge against PricewaterhouseCoopers for the envelope snafu. It’s a rare event where someone can feel sad for those who had Best Picture snatched away and joyful for those who worked onMoonlight, a true underdog story and one of the unlikeliest Best Picture wins of the century.

2019: Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper give an emotional rendition of Shallow

There’s chemistry, and then there’s whatLady Gagaand Bradley Cooper had during their performance ofShallowat the 2019 Oscars. As theStar Is Bornco-stars rose from their seats and walked to the stage, we were in for something special. As a side note, their entrance is as cocky as it gets, and some real movie star stuff. 10 out of 10, no notes.

Cooper and Gaga performed a steamy rendition ofShallowfor the next four minutes. The meteoric hit fromA Star Is Bornhit a new stratosphere when Cooper and Gaga sang the final few words cozied up on the bench with their eyes closed. The smile Gaga gives at the end is a look only reserved for people in love. Hopefully, these two work together again. The world needs it.

2020: Bong Joon-ho thanks Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese during Best Director speech

Parasitedid the unthinkable at the 2020 Oscars. The South Korean thriller became the first non-English-language film to win Best Picture. The genuine reactions of Tom Hanks and Charlize Theron begging the producers to let the Best Picture-winning cast speak a little longer could have been on this list. However,Parasitebelongs to Bong Joon-ho, so his speech gets the nod.

Bong defeated a stacked Best Director field that included Martin Scorsese, Todd Phillips, Sam Mendes, and Quentin Tarantino. With his translator by his side, Bong gave arguably one of the greatest speeches ever made by a director. Bong thanked Scorsese for inspiring his cinematic love and Tarantino for championing his films when no one in the US would. Bong sharing the spotlight with two visionaries like Scorsese and Tarantino is as good as it gets.

2024: Ryan Gosling steals the show as Ken

Ryan Gosling is a multitalented actor with dashing looks and magnetic charisma. On 99% of nights, he’s known as Ryan. At the2024 Oscars, Ryan was just Ken. Most years, the Best Original Song nominees are performed during the telecast. Unfortunately, many songs are either forgettable or performed by unknown artists.

Like Gaga and Cooper’sShallow, Gosling’sI’m Just Kenis on the Mount Rushmore of Oscar performances. The world was in for a treat from the moment Gosling showed up in the bedazzled pink suit. From the choreography and theatrics to the showmanship and bravado, Gosling made us all channel our inner Ken for a few minutes. Gosling might be the coolest A-list star right now, and honestly, it’s unfair. you’re able to’t be that cool, talented, and handsome.

2023: Ke Huy Quan gives a heartfelt speech after winning Best Supporting Actor

Ke Huy Quan embodies the phrase, “Never give up.” Quan became a popular child star after playing Short Round inIndiana Jones and the Temple of Doomand Richard “Data” Wang inThe Goonies. Frankly, he’s the only guy in Hollywood who can make Harrison Ford smile for a picture. That deserves an Oscar itself. The roles eventually dried up for Quan, and he transitioned to below-the-line work for two decades.

Then, Quan showed up inEverything Everywhere All at Onceas Waymond Wang, the kindhearted husband of Michelle Yeoh’s Evelyn Wang. Quan’s scene-stealing performance led to dominance during the awards season, culminating with Best Supporting Actor at the 2023 Oscars. Quan’s heartfelt speech will leave you in tears, reminding everyone keep dreaming. “I almost gave up on mine,” Quan said. “To all of you out there, please keep your dreams alive.”

2022: CODA wins Best Picture

WasCODAthe best movie of 2021? Probably not. It’s still much better than people give it credit for. Sian Heder’s coming-of-age drama follows a teenage girl named Ruby (Emilia Jones), the only hearing member of her deaf family in a Massachusetts coastal town. While her family can’t hear, Ruby loves music and dreams of becoming a singer.CODAis a warm blanket of emotion. Once Ruby’s father (Troy Kotsur) feels Ruby’s vocal cords while she sings on the back of the truck, it’s waterworks.

The Power of the Dogdominated the precursor awards, but momentum forCODAgrew substantially after the Best Ensemble win at the SAG Awards.Game of ThronesTyrion Lannister once said, “There’s nothing in the world more powerful than a good story.” Though critically acclaimed,The Power of the Doghad no narrative. On the other hand,CODAwas a sentimental play and a movie that made everyone feel good coming out of COVID-19. Listen to that scream at 2:10 whenCODAwins Best Picture. That’s a good story.

2022: The Slap

Will Smith slapping Chris Rockat the 2022 Oscars was a disgraceful act. The slap completely derailed the ceremony on a night that would have belonged to Smith anyway, thanks to his acting win forKing Richard. Instead, Smith’s resume must include a line at the top about the slap.

Let’s speak freely now that the formalities are out of the way. The slap was one of the rare “where were you” moments. The ABC broadcast censored the slap, so it felt like Smith and Rock were in on the joke. My word was that that was not true. Smith slapped the you-know-what out of Rock for a joke that wouldn’t even be in the top 10 of the most offensive things the comedian has ever said. I doubt there will ever be another slap. Then again, how many could have predicted that Smith would smack Rock on a live television show?