For decades, we’ve watched the Oscars contort the broadcast into an increasingly uncomfortable shape, trimming categories, rushing speeches, and relegating entire crafts to commercial breaks — all to satisfy the tyranny of the three-hour broadcast window. Today, that era ends! The Academy’s groundbreaking partnership with YouTube may be looked at as simply a distribution deal, made for money reasons. In fact, it’s liberation.
Starting in 2029 with the 101st Academy Awards and running through 2033, YouTube will hold exclusive global rights to the Oscars — making the ceremony free and accessible to over 2 billion viewers worldwide. This is the moment when the Oscars finally becomes what it was always meant to be: a true celebration of cinema, unshackled from the constraints of broadcast television.
Let’s address the elephant in the room first: runtime.
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