The Oscars Moving to YouTube Beginning in 2029, Will Stream Free Worldwide
The Oscars will air on YouTube starting in 2029.
A loss for Network TV and one more advantage for the cord-cutters.
it will still be on OTA until then, and maybe political pressure will force them to sublease it to an OTA networkA loss for Network TV and one more advantage for the cord-cutters.
This makes streaming seem very cheap and mediocre to me.Someone wrote this in Twitter/X: "And the Oscar for Best Picture goes to... [AD. Do you or your partner have erectile dysfunction? We have a pill that can fix it!]
I've cycled in and out of Netflix too. Apple TV has some free full episodes to entice people to sign up for Apple TV Plus, which I think is something that sets them apart from other streaming services.
Do you ever watch Netflix original movies? The only good one I’ve seen was Happy Gilmore 2, starring Adam Sandler and half his family.
Proxy servers can do a lot of things these days.“will be available live and for free on YouTube to viewers around the world, as well as to YouTube TV subscribers in the United States”
Does this mean Oscars will only be available to YouTube TV subscribers in U.S. or anyone who has access to YouTube in the U.S.?
AMC was not a streaming network. Neither was HBO when the Sopranos started.Depends entirely on your taste in entertainment. Streaming is where the quality and innovation is and has been for 20-plus years. The Sopranos, Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul, The Handmaid's Tale, Ozark, Ted Lasso, Succession, Severance, The Pitt, The Studio. And those are just the biggest ones. There are a couple dozen more.
Or, y'know.....this:
2025–26 United States network television schedule - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Fair. Replace those with another three shows. Point still stands.AMC was not a streaming network. Neither was HBO when the Sopranos started.
I’ll amend your statement to broadcast tv is not where the quality is anymore. You need pay more for the good stuff.Fair. Replace those with another three shows. Point still stands.