The Oscars will move to YouTube in 2029, leaving longtime home of ABC
The Academy Awards will stream exclusively on YouTube worldwide starting with the 101st ceremony in 2029, reaching over 2 billion viewers with expanded access and multi-language features.
- On Wednesday, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced a multi‑year deal giving YouTube exclusive global rights to the Oscars from 2029 through 2033.
- After years of declining broadcast ratings, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences explored alternatives as ABC's decades-long broadcast relationship expires in 2028 and the network urged a shorter show.
- YouTube will stream the Oscars telecast, red‑carpet coverage, and related events live and free to over 2 billion viewers worldwide and YouTube TV subscribers in the U.S.
- Disney ABC will continue to air the annual ceremony domestically through the 100th Oscars in 2028, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said it looks forward to the next three telecasts.
- Positioning YouTube as a hub for Academy programming, the partnership will expand global access and digitize components of the Academy Collection with more than 52 million items.
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411 Articles
The glamorous Oscars move from TV channel ABC to the streaming platform YouTube in 2029. A mega deal for more reach and young viewers.
The Academy of Arts and Film Sciences, the annual host of the Oscares ceremony, has granted YouTube exclusive access to the event from 2029. This decision will meet a change...
The Oscar Academy is ending its decades of collaboration with the US television station ABC.
The platform also undertakes to broadcast related content, such as the nominees luncheon, the student and science and technology awards ceremony, interviews with Academy members and directors, educational programs, podcasts, etc.
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